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Exel Composites - Preparing for larger volumes

Exel’s Q1 was expected to be soft but it turned out quite weak. This year will continue to see rather modest profitability while long-term potential still exists.

Weakness largely attributable to low Wind power volumes

Exel’s Q1 revenue fell 16% y/y to EUR 28.8m vs the EUR 32.2m/33.6m Evli/cons. estimates. H1 was seen soft due to lacking Wind power orders however such volumes came in at EUR 1.5m in Q1 vs our EUR 5.9m estimate. The figure was lower than Exel expected, in addition to which there was softness in Equipment and other industries. Transportation still saw strong development, yet small and mid-sized customers continued to reduce inventories as seen already in H2’22. Exel has already taken some cost actions and although there weren’t any notable cost-related surprises the demand softness led to an adj. EBIT of EUR 0.0m, compared to the EUR 1.2m/1.4m Evli/cons. estimates. Exel consequently downgraded its guidance as any significant demand recovery is unlikely to begin before H2’23, while the company will also incur some EUR 1m in additional expenses this year as it seeks to ensure its competitiveness within Wind power.

We also cut our FY ’24 EBIT estimate by more than 20%

Wind power’s development program is unlikely to change the company’s focus on turbine blade reinforcement elements; rather it should enhance Exel’s ability to deliver the needed volumes. Wind power may see some volume improvement already later this year, but the next couple of quarters are likely to remain soft before high growth again really begins to come through next year. Wind power aside, Exel looks to better capture sustained growth by focusing more on larger accounts. Exel’s strategy worked well in the past few years as it achieved a CAGR of 12% in FY ’19-21 however now seems to be a time for enhancing commercial focus. Such strategy themes (focus on high-volume accounts) aren’t very surprising in the light of Exel’s business model, in which a relatively high amount of customer account concentration tends to optimize profitability.

Valuation not particularly cheap in the short-term

Exel has a lot more potential thanks to its existing applications and their further scaling over the coming years, yet the 13x and 8x EV/EBIT multiples appear neutral on our estimates for FY ’23-24. Our new TP is EUR 4.3 (5.8); our rating is now HOLD (BUY).

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