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Daimler AG DDAIF – US OTC. Olivier Fontenelle 10/30/2013. Main Business Lines. Key future success drivers. Significant product launches Recent revenue and profit growth N ew China strategy Positive macro environment “Turnaround story”. Recent Results.
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Daimler AGDDAIF – US OTC OlivierFontenelle 10/30/2013
Key future success drivers • Significant product launches • Recent revenue and profit growth • New China strategy • Positive macro environment • “Turnaround story”
Recent Results • September sales were all time highs: 142,994 vehicles WW • Driven by sales of E-Class, A-Class and CLA-Class • 5% YoY increase in Q3 revenues • 53% YoY rise in Q3 profits
New Products Automotive industry is highly cyclical, the development schedule drives sales. MB is in the middle of a huge product refresh, with highly competitive vehicles.
CLA and GLA • Both based on new small compact platform, shared with A and B class. 90% YoY WW increase for the class. • CLA - $29,900 starting price, the first car >30k for MB. • Audi A3 was pricing reactionary, matching CLA. • GLA – small crossover to take on high volume market • Competing with BMW X1, Audi Q3, Range Rover Evoque • “Gen Y – appeal”
S-Class • Top of the line model, highest profit margins • Extremely positive industry reviews • 30,000 sales in 3 months! 2012 sales of “only” 65,000 cars. • Expected to be #1 in class by a wide margin.
Problems in China… “Mercedes-Benz has struggled in China since the start of 2012, when overall demand for luxury cars began weakening amid an economic slowdown in the world's second-largest economy that affected luxury car brands in general. Mercedes fared worse than most because of a dearth of new or redesigned models and what industry insiders and key operators of Mercedes-Benz dealers described as a short-sighted volume grab that hit the brand's profitability. Mercedes-Benz's sales rose just 4 percent to 206,150 cars, last year. By contrast, sales of Audi cars rose 32 percent to 407,738 cars, while BMW's volume increased 41 percent to 313,638 cars.”
New China Strategy • Goal: Boost sales to 300,000/annually by 2015 How? • $2+ billion investment in China-based manufacturing: • 70% cars sold in China to be made in China by 2015. (cost reduction) • Includes GLA • By comparison, Audi builds 90% cars it sells in China, in China. • 12% equity investment in BAIC -> planned IPO • Doubling dealer network from 100 to 200.
The macro-environment • European economy is rebounding, and care sales are following. • “The situation is clearly improving,” Carlos Da Silva, a Paris-based analyst with IHS Automotive, said in an e-mail. “Europe is not in brilliant shape, yet the underlying trend of the market is calling for a certain dose of optimism.” • “Investor confidence in Germany, Europe's biggest economy and largest car market, rose to a three-year high this month. Consumer confidence in the UK, which ranks second in the region's car sales, was at a six-year high in September.”
MB International Exposure Strong growth in UK (+28%), Turkey (+31%), Russia (+20%), China (+26%) Still #1 in Germany with 9% market share. #1 in Japan (+32%)
Why not other automakers? Mercedes is coming back from the bottom. They: • Had declining sales • Had the lowest profit margins of the major luxury brands. • Lost the ultra-luxury war (RIP Maybach). • Declining quality perception. • Missed the boat on China, especially to Audi. • Not been #1 since 1999 • Currently beating BMW by ~2500 cars in the US. #3 Lexus by 25,000
Important Indicators Q3 Sales MB Cars: up 14%, Trucks: up 4%, Vans: up 17%, Buses: 17% Profit Margins: • Q1 2013 Profit Margin: 3.4% (one time costs included) • Q2 2013 Profit Margin: 6.6% • Q3 2013 Profit Margin: 7.3% Long-term target: 9-10% Audi/BMW ~ 10%+ EBIT YoY growth of 15%
Financial Indicators and Proposal TTM P/E: 10.16 Forward P/E: 14.76 PEG: 10.58 Proposal: ~$3000 or 37 shares *OTC Trade poses little/no risk thanks to the high liquidity of DDAIF
Risks • China is very competitive. They could flounder their new strategy and not catch up with Audi and BMW. • Global macroeconomy is still not stable, especially in Europe. China poses macroeconomic risk. • New entry-level products could erode short term profit margins more than expected, and will not be offset by sales volume. • Truck demand could decrease due to weak heavy industry demand. India is down >10% YoY, and Russia is missing forecasts in this business unit.