Saturday 23 September 2023

Semiconductor industry in Malaysia

 

Did you know that Malaysia is one of the top 10 semiconductor manufacturers in the world?

According to various reports, from ones by Insider Monkey to the government, Malaysia is consistently listed in the top 10 semiconductor manufacturing countries, placed between the UK and the Netherlands at around number seven or eight.

Statista reported that in 2022, approximately 32.64 billion semiconductors were produced here.

It’s because of our electrical and electronics (E&E) and semiconductor industry that Tesla has set up shop here.

As reported by Forbes Asia in its 200 Best Under a Billion 2023, demand for semiconductors has skyrocketed in the past three years, accelerated by the adoption of AI technologies.

Out of the nine Malaysian companies on the list, three had been in the semiconductors industry.

That got us thinking, how exactly did Malaysia grow to become such an established hub for semiconductors?

 

What are semiconductors anyway?

If you paid attention in science classes, you’ll remember that semiconductors are materials that have conductive properties—less than conductors, but more than insulators. This makes them useful in electronic devices, from smartphones to cars.


Image Credit: Pexels

As explained by The Edge, there are three main groups in the local semiconductor industry—

  1. firms that do outsourced semiconductor assembly and testing (OSAT)
  2. automated test equipment (ATE) manufacturers, and 
  3. designers and manufacturers of high-performance test sockets.

Rarer are actual foundries that manufacture the semiconductor chips themselves. Insider Monkey’s reporting found that there are seven operational and planned fabs (manufacturing plants that turn raw silicon wafers into integrated circuits, or ICs) in Malaysia as of December 2022.

From what we could find, two of the manufacturing plants belong to Infineon. There are two by Osram Licht—one in Kulim and one in Penang. There’s also a plant by ON Semiconductor in Seremban.

In Sarawak, there’s X-Fab, as well as another one that’s in progress under Sarawak Microelectronic Design Semiconductor and Belgium company Melexis Technologies.


Infineon’s office in Melaka /Image Credit: Infineon

There’s also SilTerra Malaysia, owned by Khazanah Nasional and initiated by then-Prime Minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad in 1995.

 

The history of the semiconductor industry in Malaysia

Malaysia’s semiconductor industry traces back to the 1970s, around the establishment of the first Free Trade Zone in 1972, a Harvard Business School paper stated.

The paper also explained that free trade zones in Malaysia, under the Free Trade Zone Act, provide companies set up within the zone tariff exemptions on imports and exports, tax holidays, tighter controls on labour organisation, and streamlined regulatory processes.


Intel representatives meeting with Dr. Lim of the Penang Development Corp. in 1972 / Image Credit: Intel

These zones are also strategically situated along well-linked highways and railway systems and typically have easy access to well-equipped seaports and Kuala Lumpur International Airport.

On top of that, Malaysia was able to offer lower labour costs at the time, the paper reported.

According to a 1999 paper by Dr Goh Pek Chen, multinational corporations (MNCs) responded well to the incentives and cheaper labour, resulting in the massive relocation of semiconductor firms to Malaysia.

With all this happening, Intel opened its 5-acre assembly plant in Penang in 1972. This was the very first offshore production facility.


Image credit: Intel

According to Intel, by 1975, the plant employed about a thousand people and became “a crucial part of the company’s manufacturing chain”, but a fire in May of that year would result in the company rebuilding a new facility the following year.

In 2021the company also announced that it would be investing over US$7 billion to build a new chip-packaging and testing factory in Malaysia. The American company certainly has played a hand in developing our semiconductor industry.

Other well-known firms such as AMD, HP, and Hitachi also came into the country in the 70s. By the early 1980s, there were fourteen MNC semiconductor firms (excluding subsidiaries) operating in the country, Dr Goh’s paper reported.

Since then, the industry has continued to grow locally, especially in Penang, which was estimated to contribute to 5% of global semiconductor exports in 2019.

 

The future of the industry

In recent years, the semiconductor industry has been experiencing shortages due to a variety of reasons, including the pandemic, according to S&P Global. There’s also the war in Ukraine disrupting supply chains, Deloitte pointed out in its 2023 semiconductor industry outlook.

Due to the lack of supply, there has been a boom in demand for semiconductors, but many, including Forbes, expect a slowing down of the semiconductor industry this year.

Malaysia Semiconductor Industry Association (MSIA) president Datuk Seri Wong Siew Hai also predicted a slowing down of the industry in January 2023.

However, in Deloitte’s report, the firm believes that the downturn in the industry could provide an opportunity for the industry to shift its focus on a variety of pressing issues.

This includes achieving environmental, social, and governance (ESG) goals, addressing issues in the talent equation (whether it be shortages or layoffs), and looking into building new fabs or expanding existing facilities.

An excerpt from Eastspring Investments and PwC Singapore’s report

All this aside, Malaysia’s semiconductor industry is still expected to grow with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 7% to reach an output of US$46 billion or RM212.52 billion by 2028, an Eastspring Investments and PwC Singapore report stated.

More than 50 years since the first Free Trade Zone in 1972, semiconductors still seem to be an electrified industry in Malaysia, putting our nation on the global map as an E&E powerhouse and bringing in powerful investors such as Tesla.

 

https://investpenang.gov.my/how-malaysia-fostered-a-semiconductors-industry-that-brought-in-investors-like-tesla-intel/

Source: Vulcan Post

Friday 22 September 2023

Maybank

 


BONIA

 


Kossan

 




Supermax

 


TOPGLOVE


 

HARTALEGA

 


GUAN CHONG BHD

 


Tenaga

 


BURSA MALAYSIA BHD

 




POH HUAT RESOURCES HOLDINGS BHD

 































POHUAT 
Financial Information  

Market Capital (RM) : 361.79m
Number of Share : 278.30m

Share Price:  RM 1.30
EPS (cent) : 20.37  
P/E Ratio : 6.38 

TTM Revenue : 548.64M
TTM Profit : 56.70M
TTM Profit Margin : 10.3%

CAGR - Revenue : 2.7%
CAGR - PAT : 8.6%

Dividend (cent) : 8.000 ^
Dividend Yield : 6.15%

ROE : 10.25% 

NTA (RM) : 1.988
P/B Ratio : 0.65

SARAWAK CONSOLIDATED INDUSTRIES BHD

 














Quality:  Gruesome.  Making losses every year

Management:  -

Valuation: -

Investing can be very simple.   When the company does not satisfy your quality criteria for a great company, just move on.  Do not proceed to deeper study of this company.  Use your precious time for more productive work.

LII HEN INDUSTRIES BHD


Sunway Berhad

 


SAM ENGINEERING & EQUIPMENT (M) BHD

 




























MALAYSIA BUILDING SOCIETY BHD

 

Its earnings had been volatile:  not the consistent and growing EPSs that I like.

Those owning this stock would have had a roller coaster ride.  Only certain way to profit from this "investment" is to have bought at the time when its price was obviously low.  (Of course, this statement applies to all your stock purchases too, but it is particularly important in stocks with cyclical and volatile earnings and prices.)



SUPERLON HOLDINGS BHD

 


OKA CORPORATION BHD

 



























Quality:  Good

Management:  Good

Valuation: -

MALAYAN UNITED INDUSTRIES BHD


 










So many years of losses.  What can we conclude?

Quality:  Gruesome

Management:  E 

Valuation:  -


KAWAN FOOD BHD

 


DIALOG GROUP BHD

 


SERBA DINAMIK HOLDINGS BHD

 




















Newly listed in 2017.  Much hyped stock in its early years of listing.  Always focus on the business, its model, its source of revenues and its earnings.  Be aware of how it finances its business activities.  Is growth in revenue good or bad for its business?  Note growth can be good and can be bad.

In general, avoid buying IPOs (ITS PROBABLY OVERPRICED) and avoid stocks with little track record (ASK FOR AT LEAST A 5 YEAR TRACK RECORD).   

Be patient.  Your risks are much diminished once you have clarity of the company's ability and future potential.  You have the leisure to buy at the time of your choosing.  Do not be harmed by FOMO (fear of missing out).  :-)

MUHIBBAH ENGINEERING (M) BHD

 


HONG LEONG INDUSTRIES BHD

 



GREATECH TECHNOLOGY BHD

 













PARAMOUNT CORPORATION BHD

 


PRESS METAL ALUMINIUM HOLDINGS BHD





LOTTE CHEMICAL TITAN HOLDING BHD

 


Thursday 21 September 2023

Shangri-La"s Hotels (M) Bhd

 


Harrisons Holdings

 


Chin Hin

 


HEIM

 


Carlsberg

 


Pantech

 


Bumi Armada

 


HexCare (previously Rubberex)

 


Hextech

 


PetronM

 


EPF: the median savings of all ethnicities point to a serious need to shore up savings adequacy.

 https://theedgemalaysia.com/node/682163


Why policy takeaway is not Chinese have the most and bumiputeras the least EPF savings and income
20 Sep 2023, 02:30 pm

THE low level of retirement savings among Malay and other bumiputera private sector wage earners compared with their fellow Malaysians of Chinese and Indian ethnicity recently made headlines when lawmakers provided such numbers in parliament when arguing against more premature withdrawals of statutory retirement savings from the Employees Provident Fund (EPF).

While the median savings among EPF members of Chinese and Indian ethnicity in May 2023 were higher than that of Malays and other bumiputera, the reality is that the median EPF savings is low even among the Chinese, who make up about 24% of the provident fund’s membership.


According to EPF data, the median savings among the 3.1 million Chinese EPF members was RM47,385 as at May 2023, which works out to only RM197 per month for 20 years. That is just under one-fifth of the prevailing minimum civil service pension of RM1,000 a month — hardly enough to get by, even though the figure looks high when stacked against the median savings of RM7,078 (RM29 a month for 20 years) among the seven million Malay EPF members.

Savings adequacy is also a concern among the one million EPF members who are of Indian ethnicity, even though their median savings of RM15,985 (RM67 a month for 20 years) is above that of the median savings of RM4,579 (RM19 per month over 20 years) among the 1.4 million non-Malay bumiputera EPF members (see Table 1).

That median EPF savings of Malay members are higher than that of non-Malay bumiputera should not cloud the fact that the median savings of all ethnicities point to a serious need to shore up savings adequacy.


With only 19%, or 2.5 million, of the 13.3 million EPF members meeting the EPF’s basic savings by age, not all 3.1 million Chinese EPF members automatically have enough to retire. In short, ethnicity has scant meaning on one’s adequacy of retirement savings relative to more useful details like age, trajectory of wages, education, skills and the industries the EPF members are in.

Experts generally agree that the low level of EPF savings has much to do with low income. Rather than dwelling on ethnicity, policy action that focuses on upskilling and creating higher-income jobs and raising economic complexity should result in greater productivity and higher wages for all Malaysians. 

Wednesday 20 September 2023

Comparing Farm Fresh with Dutch Lady

Market cap of Farm Fresh (RM'000) 2,283,742

Market cap of Dutch Lady (RM'000) 1,433,600


Farm Fresh 
Adj PER – Latest 45.35
Dutch Lady 
Adj PER – Latest 14.03

Performance Info
Farm Fresh 
ROE - 5 Yr Avg10.56 
ROE - Latest FY 7.94
Dutch Lady 
ROE - 5 Yr Avg 62.91 
ROE - Latest FY 11.66


Farm Fresh 
Latest YR D/E 0.55 
NAB/Share (RM) 0.34 Latest PX / NAB 3.59
EV/EBITDA 25.43
Dutch Lady 
Latest YR D/E 0.02 
NAB/Share (RM) 6.20 Latest PX / NAB 3.61
EV/EBITDA 14.72

KSL

 






















Quality:  Gruesome

Management: -

Valuation:  -

MKT Capt (RM m) 1,182.8
Total Equity 3,295.6 m


ROE - 5 Yr Avg  4.62

ROE - Latest FY 5.45

PX Growth Rate - 5 Yr Avg (%) 9.93

DPS Growth Rate - 5 Yr Avg (%) NM

EPS Growth Rate - 5 Yr Avg (%) -7.74

Latest YR D/E 0.02

NAB/Share (RM) 3.24

Latest PX / NAB 0.35


I will avoid this stock.  Does not fulfill my investing criteria.

Scientex

 


Scientex Packaging (Ayer Keroh) Bhd

 

























20.9.2023

For the three months ended 31 July 2023, group revenue increased 4.4% to RM185.32 million from RM177.49 million in the preceding quarter mainly due to higher demand from both domestic and export markets. Despite the higher revenue, the Group registered a loss before tax of RM7.86 million compared to a profit before tax of RM12.83 million in the preceding quarter, primarily attributable to the goodwill impairment of RM22.71 million in relation to its operations in Myanmar. Excluding the impact of the goodwill impairment, the Group’s profit before tax increased by 15.8% compared to the preceding quarter mainly due to the increase in revenue.