Research Notes

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Research Notes

3Q25 Result

Regis Resources
3:27pm
April 30, 2025
RRL released its 3Q25 results following pre-reporting, highlighting another strong quarter across production, costs, and cashflow. Production and sales of 89.6koz and 80.9koz, respectively, keep the company on track to comfortably meet FY25 guidance, demonstrating operational consistency and delivery against stated targets. During the quarter, RRL repaid its remaining A$300m debt ahead of schedule and ended the March quarter with A$367m in net cash. We maintain our ADD rating with a target price of A$4.80 per share (previously A$4.65).

3Q25 trading update sees soft conditions continue

PeopleIn
3:27pm
April 30, 2025
PPE released its 3Q25 trading update, with weather impacts seeing underlying quarterly EBITDA decline c.9% (yoy). Looking forward, conditions remain a challenge, suggesting little prospect for a material 4Q25 improvement, albeit things do not appear to be getting worse. It remains our expectation that PPE’s earnings are bumbling along the cyclical low, whilst the business is also trading at a relatively low PER multiple (8x FY26F). We reiterate our positive view, whilst changing our rating to Speculative Buy (previously Add), adjusting our price target to $1.05/sh, pending a cyclical turnaround (the timing of which remains uncertain).

Weather impacts 3Q, but sell off unlocks opportunity

Sandfire Resources
3:27pm
April 29, 2025
Wet weather impacts production at both MATSA and Motheo but SFR remains confident it will reach FY25 guidance with a significant uplift expected in 4Q25. We upgrade to an ADD rating with a A$11.60ps TP (previously A$11.80ps) with the recent sell-off unlocking a buying opportunity.

Increased conviction

Mineral Resources
3:27pm
April 29, 2025
MIN reported a mixed production result but a significantly improved and better than expected cost result across both lithium and iron ore. Upgrades on MIN’s Onslow Haul Road remain on track to complete in 1Q26 and it is still confident in reaching nameplate capacity of 35Mtpa in the same period. Our confidence in MIN being able to execute at Onslow over the next 6 months has increased following the positive updates in today’s quarterly. Additionally, lower than expected unit costs YTD across its lithium assets and Onslow have resulted to increases in our EBITDA FY25/FY26 forecasts by +14%/+6%. We upgrade to an ADD rating with a A$23ps Target Price (previously A$18ps).

3Q25 Result

Catalyst Metals
3:27pm
April 29, 2025
CYL delivered another consistent quarter of production from its flagship Plutonic Gold Mine, despite minor challenges associated with weather events (Cyclone Sean). Production has commenced at Plutonic East, underpinning CYL’s growth strategy at Plutonic, while exploration efforts at Trident continued to highlight the belt’s longevity and endowment. The divestment of the high-cost Henty Gold Mine enables CYL to focus on Plutonic and strategically position the optionality of its high-grade Victorian asset portfolio. We maintain our ADD recommendation, lifting our TP to A$7.15ps (previously A$5.69ps) a function of a revised commodity price deck.

3Q Result & De Grey Acquisition

Northern Star Resources
3:27pm
April 29, 2025
NST have issued modest revisions to FY25 guidance, 1,630-1,660koz at A$2,100-2,200/oz (previously guided 1,650-1,800koz at A$1,850-2,100/oz). Capital cost guidance has also been revised at the Kalgoorlie and Yandal production hubs by A$44m at new CAPEX midpoints. Despite the downgrade, we remain positive on the stock for 1) Golden Pike delay is a non-systemic issue only affecting the near-term, 2) Gold price movements may potentially make up lost ground on revenue relative to production ounces and 3) the successful of acquisition of De Grey Mining. We maintain our ADD rating, TP A$24.50ps (previously A$21.57ps), reflecting our updated gold price deck and integration of the De Grey Mining acquisition.

Evidentia a bit softer than hoped

Generation Development Group
3:27pm
April 29, 2025
GDG has released its 3Q25 update. Whilst it was a strong quarter for the Investment Bond business, Evidentia FUM growth was below market expectations and the business will require a strong Q4 to hit its FY25 FUM target. We lower our GDG FY25F/FY26F EPS by 1%-5% on reduced Evidentia and LIS FUM forecasts. Our PT is set at A$5.25 (previously A$5.59) on our earnings changes. We think GDG has a great story, and management has executed very well. With the stock trading at a >10% discount to our PT, we maintain our ADD recommendation.

Dear Mr President...

Flight Centre Travel
3:27pm
April 28, 2025
Given recent downgrades from other travel/airline industry peers due to political and macro-economic uncertainty, FLT’s downgrade wasn’t a surprise. The mid-point of new guidance now implies that 2H25 will be weaker than the 2H24. Given its balance sheet strength and depressed share price, the up to A$200m share buyback is a good use of FLT’s excess capital and is nicely EPS accretive. Due to all the uncertainty, the question is whether operating conditions will get worse before they get better. However, what we do know from past economic and geopolitical events, is that after a downturn, travel demand rebounds. We are buyers of FLT during this period of short term uncertainty and share price weakness because when operating conditions ultimately improve, both its earnings and share price leverage to the upside will be material.

Demand starting to soften

Brambles
3:27pm
April 28, 2025
BXB’s 3Q25 trading update overall was slightly weaker than expected with year-to-date (YTD) constant FX sales rising 3% vs our 5% forecast. While management reiterated FY25 constant FX underlying EBIT growth guidance of between 8-11%, sales growth guidance was narrowed to 4-5% (vs 4-6% previously). FY25 free cash flow (before dividends) guidance was increased to between US$900-1,000m (vs US$850-950m previously) due mainly to lower pooling capex on the back of softer like-for-like (LFL) volumes and better asset efficiency. We decrease FY25-27F underlying EBIT by 1% with reductions to constant FX estimates partially offset by updates to FX assumptions. We now forecast FY25 constant FX sales growth of 4% and underlying EBIT growth of 8%, which is at the lower end of management’s guidance ranges. Our target price declines to $19.75 (from $20.50) and we maintain our Hold rating.

Solid operationally, but balance sheet and lithium price create overhang

Liontown Resources
3:27pm
April 28, 2025
LTR posted a solid quarterly result with production and costs slightly ahead of market expectations. Cash declined by -10% to A$173m and net debt now sits at A$526m without including leases obligations. In our view, LTR’s balance sheet remains an issue should lithium prices remain at current levels or trend lower over the near term, which is becoming a higher possibility. We maintain our HOLD rating with a A$0.52ps TP (previously A$0.ps).

News & Insights

Michael Knox outlines the economic outlook for growth and inflation in the U.S., the Euro area, China, India, and Australia, drawing data from the International Monetary Fund, the Congressional Budget Office, European sources, and his own analysis for Australia.

Today, I’m presenting the first page of my updated presentation, which focuses on GDP growth and inflation expectations for major economies. Before diving into that, I want to clarify a point about U.S. trade negotiations that has confused some media outlets.

In the previous Trump Administration ,there was single trade negotiator, Robert Lighthizer, held a cabinet position with the rank of Ambassador. This time, to expedite negotiations and give them more weight, Trump has appointed two additional cabinet-level officials to handle trade talks with different regions. For Asian economies, Scott Bessent and Ambassador Jamison Greer, who succeeded Lighthizer and previously served on the White House staff, are managing negotiations, including those with China. For Europe, Howard Lutnick, the Commerce Secretary, and Ambassador Greer are negotiating with the European Trade Representative. When the EU representative visits Washington, D.C., they meet with Lutnick and Greer, while Chinese or Japanese representatives engage with Bessent and Greer.

In my presentation today, I’m outlining the economic outlook for growth and inflation in the U.S., the Euro area, China, India, and Australia, drawing data from the International Monetary Fund, the Congressional Budget Office, European sources, and my own analysis for Australia.

For the U.S., the best-case scenario is a soft landing, with growth slowing but remaining positive at 1.3% this year and rising to 1.7% next year. This slowdown allows the Federal Reserve to continue cutting interest rates, leading to a decline in the U.S. dollar. This in turn ,triggers a recovery in commodity prices. These prices have stabilized and are now trending upward, with an expected acceleration as the dollar weakens.

U.S. headline inflation is projected to be just below 3% next year, with higher figures this year driven by tariff effects.



Global Economic Perspective

In the Euro area, growth is accelerating slightly, from just under 1% this year to 1.2% next year, with inflation expected to hit the 2% target this year and dip to 1.9% next year.

China’s GDP growth is forecast  at 4% for both this year and next, a step down from previous 5% rates, reflecting a significant slump in domestic demand and very low inflation  Chinese Inflation is only  :   0.2% last year, 0.4% this year, and 0.9% next year.  Despite a massive fiscal push, with a budget deficit around 8% of GDP, China’s debt-to-GDP ratio is rising faster than the U.S.. Yet this is  yielding more modest  domestic growth.

India, on the other hand, continues to outperform, with 6.5% GDP growth last year, 6.2% this year, and  6.3%  next year, surpassing earlier projections.

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In our International Reporting Season Review, we provide an overview of the March 2025 quarterly results season for companies in the Americas, Europe and Asia.

Positive earnings surprise

In our International Reporting Season Review, we provide an overview of the March 2025 quarterly results season for companies in the Americas, Europe and Asia. For all the volatility in markets caused by US trade policy, the results were positive. For all the 187 high profile and blue-chip companies in our International Watchlist, the median EPS beat vs consensus was 3.2%, nearly twice that recorded in the December quarter (1.8%). 37% of companies exceeded consensus EPS expectations by more than 5% and only 9% missed by more than 5%. Communication Services was the most positive sector, led by Magnificent 7 companies Alphabet and Meta Platforms. The median EPS beat in that sector was 13%. Consumer Discretionary was the biggest disappointment (though only a mild one) with EPS falling 0.6% short of analyst estimates on a median basis.

Alphabet and Meta among the best performers

Across our Watchlist, some of the best performing stocks in terms of EPS beats were Alphabet, Boeing, Uniqlo-owner Fast Retailing, Meta Platforms, Newmont and The Walt Disney Company. Notable misses came from insurance broker Aon, BP, PepsiCo, Starbucks, Tesla and UnitedHealth. The latter saw by far the worst share price performance over reporting season, its earnings weakness compounded by the resignation of its CEO and the launch of a fraud investigation by the Department of Justice. British luxury fashion label Burberry had the best performing share price as it gains traction in its turnaround plan.

Tariffs were the main talking point (of course)

The timing of President Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ on 2 April, just before the March quarter results started rolling in, guaranteed that US tariffs would be the main talking point throughout reporting season. Most companies took the line that higher tariffs presented a material risk to global growth and inflation. The rapidly shifting sands of US trade policy mean the impact of tariffs is highly uncertain. This didn’t stop many companies from trying to estimate the impact on their profits. This ranged from the very precise ($850m said RTX) to the extremely vague (‘a few hundred million dollars’ hazarded Abbott Laboratories). The rehabilitation of AI as a systemic driver of long-term value was a key theme of reporting season, with many companies reporting what Palantir Technologies described as an ‘unstoppable whirlwind of demand’ and others indicating an increase in planned AI investment. The deterioration in consumer confidence was another key talking point, though most companies could only express concern about a possible future softening in demand rather than any actual evidence of a hit to sales.

Our International Focus List continues to outperform

In this report, we also report on the performance of the Morgans International Focus List, which is now up 25.3% since inception last year, outperforming the benchmark S&P 500 by 20.4%.


Morgans clients receive exclusive insights such as access to our latest International Reporting Season article.

Contact us today to begin your journey with Morgans.

      
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The U.S. and China, through negotiations led by the Chinese Deputy Premier and U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, agreed to a 90-day tariff reduction from over 125% to 30% and 10% respectively

US and Chinese actions had led to an unintended embargo of trade between the world’s two largest economies.

In recent days there has been discussion of the temporary “cease fire” in the tariff war between the US and China.

The situation was that both countries had levied tariffs on each other more than 125%. This had led to a mutual embargo of trade between the two world is two largest economies. Then as a result of negotiation between the Deputy Premier of China and US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent both China and the US agreed to a 90 day pause in “hostilities” where both sides agreed to reduce the US tariff on the China to 30 percent and the Chinese tariff on the US to 10%.

Some suggested that this meant that “China had won” others suggested that the “US had won.” To us this really suggests that both parties were playing in a different game. The was a game in which both sides had won.

To understand why this is the case we must understand a little of the theory of this type of competition. Economists usually use discuss competition in terms of markets where millions of people are involved. In such a case we find a solution by finding the intersection of supply and demand which model the exchange between vast numbers of people.

But here we are ware talking of a competition where only two parties are involved.

When exceedingly small numbers like this are involved, we find the solution to the competition by what is called “Game Theory.”

In this game there are only two players. One is called China, and the other is called the US. Game theory teaches us that are there three different types of games. The first is a zero-sum game. In this game there two sides are competing over a fixed amount of product. Again, this is called " A zero sum game “. Either one party gets a bigger share of the total sum at stake and the other side gets less. This zero-sum game is how most of the Media views the competition between the US and China.

A second form is a decreasing sum game. An example of this is a war. Some of the total amount that is fought over is destroyed in the process. Usually both sides will wind up worse than when they started.

Then there is a third form. This form is called an ‘increasing sum game.’ This is where both sides cooperate so that the total sum in the game grows because of this cooperation. We think that what happened in the US and China negotiation was an increasing sum game.

As Scott Bessent said at the Saudi Investment Forum in Riyadh soon after the agreement was signed, “both sides came with a clear agenda with shared interests and great mutual respect.”

He said, “after the weekend, we now have a mechanism to avoid escalation like we had before. We both agreed to bring the tariff levels down by 115% which I think is very productive because where we were with 145% and 125% was an unintended embargo. That is not healthy for the two largest economies in the world.”

He went on, “when President Trump began the tariff program, we had a plan, we had a process. What we did not have with the Chinese was a mechanism. The Vice Premier and I now call this the ‘Geneva mechanism’”.

Both sides cooperated to make both sides better off. Bessent added “what we do not want, and both sides agreed, is a generalised decoupling between the two largest economies in the world. What we want is the US to decouple in strategic industries, medicine, semiconductors, other strategic areas. As to other countries; we have had very productive discussions with Japan, South Korea, Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand. Europe may have collective action problems with the French wanting one thing and the Italians wanting a different thing. but I am confident that with Europe, we will arrive at a satisfactory conclusion.

We have a very good framework. I think we can proceed from here.”

What we think we can see here is that the United States and China have cooperated to both become better off. This is what we call an increasing sum game.

They will continue their negotiation using that approach. This will do much to allay the concerns that so many had about the effect of these new tariffs.

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