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Exel Composites - Looking to deliver more volumes

Exel’s results are yet to see demand pick up, and although valuation isn’t demanding uncertainty still limits upside.

Still very soft results, however H2 should show gains

Exel’s Q2 was expected to be still somewhat soft, but the EUR 25.4m revenue came in well below our EUR 34.3m estimate as e.g. Wind power and Transportation, which had high Q2’22 deliveries, saw low demand especially in North America. Many key industries continued to reduce inventories, yet Exel saw demand developing largely according to its expectations and sees its delivery volumes begin to recover towards the end of the year. Q2 revenue declined by another 12% q/q, in the light of which the EUR 0.1m adj. EBIT already showed some results in terms of lower costs. Exel has some further scope to cut costs, and achieved results in terms of margin management, yet lacking volumes left adj. EBIT far from our EUR 1.2m estimate.

Many applications have already shown promise

Raw materials prices should remain stable, and pricing hasn’t been an issue for Exel, while cost cuts help results only so much. We estimate Q3 revenue to decline 11% y/y (meaning 18% q/q growth) while the EUR 35m revenue we estimate for Q4 should be enough to produce a healthy level of EBIT (we estimate EUR 2.5m Q4 EBIT). The demand and inventory cycles now produce large variations in results, and recent areas of particular softness (e.g. North American Wind power and Transportation) are also likely to make up much of the volume recovery going towards next year. Exel updates its strategy this fall; it’s clear Wind power remains a key driver (e.g. the Indian JV), but there should be other products to capitalize on (incl. conductor core rods) and ways to specify growth path in e.g. Transportation and Defense.

H2 figures to reflect the pace of demand improvement

Q4 might show a strong EBIT, but we see FY ’23 adj. EBIT halving to EUR 3.9m, a very modest level which means FY ’23 earnings multiples are elevated (20x EV/EBIT on our estimates). Exel’s valuation can’t be really described as expensive since profitability is to improve from here on, and the 7.5x EV/EBIT on our FY ’24 EBIT estimate of EUR 8.5m isn’t that challenging especially when such a level of EBIT would still be shy relative to long-term potential, yet the fog around demand pick-up keeps uncertainty high. Our new TP is EUR 3.5 (4.3); retain HOLD rating.

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