Research Notes

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Research Notes

Diversified compounder with acquisitive growth

SRG Global
3:27pm
May 7, 2025
We initiate coverage of SRG Global (SRG) with an ADD and $1.80 target price. SRG is an Australian diversified infrastructure services company that provides maintenance, industrial services, and engineering and construction services across >20 industries including mining, water, energy, infrastructure and utilities. SRG has a track record of delivering strong and consistent EPSA growth (+33% CAGR from FY21-24) through a combination of organic sales growth, margin expansion and acquisitions. Customer preference towards specialist maintenance providers (vs generalists), coupled with a significant increase in production volumes for key gold mining customers, should ensure that strong organic growth continues. Organic growth will be supplemented by a prudent acquisition strategy (net cash). At 13x FY25F PE, this is not being factored into the share price.

Solid quarter, albeit growth has slowed

JB Hi-Fi
3:27pm
May 7, 2025
JB Hi-Fi reported a solid 3Q25 trading update, which saw positive sales growth across all divisions, albeit growth has slowed in February/ March compared to the first 4 weeks of the quarter. Whilst no comments were made on margins or April trading in the release, management have noted that the retail environment remains challenging and competitive. We have made minor revisions to our earnings and our valuation remains unchanged. We have a HOLD recommendation with a $92 price target.

International Spotlight

Amazon.com
3:27pm
May 7, 2025
Amazon.com, Inc. engages in the retail sale of consumer products and subscriptions through online and physical stores in North America and internationally. The company’s product offering through its stores includes merchandise and content purchased for resale, and products offered by third-party sellers. It also manufactures and sells electronic devices, including Kindle, Fire tablets, Fire TVs, Rings, Blink, eero, and Echo, and develops and produces media content.

Mark-to-market changes impact FY25F earnings

HMC Capital
3:27pm
May 7, 2025
HMC’s FY25F earnings continue to be adversely impacted by fair value movements across a number of its investment holdings (HMCCP and financial assets). These non-cash mark-to-market changes see the business delivering FY25 annualised NPBT (per share) of 66c. Whilst financial markets remain volatile, the drawdowns across HMC’s healthcare and digital strategies have seen an outsize movement in the HMC share price (noting that few listed fund managers have escaped the negative share price performance CYTD). At c.46c of recurring NPBT (per share) in FY26, HMC is trading on c.14.5x (PER) – a multiple which reflects investor conservatism around management’s capacity to grow FUM at the implied target rate of 22% to 40%pa over the next three to five years. Given that HMC’s share price will likely follow the trajectory of the underlying funds, we prefer to play the HMC turnaround through its funds, be it DGT or HDN. On this basis, we retain our Hold rating with a $5.20/sh price target.

The first AI in AU

NEXTDC
3:27pm
May 6, 2025
Yesterday we published a note reviewing quarterly results from the US Megatech companies. This showed end customer demand for Cloud and AI and consequently capex for data centres continued to rise. Today NXT proved this point in announcing it had secured a 50MW hyperscale AI deal in its Melbourne facility. This was broadly in line with our expectations and we consequently make immaterial changes to our forecasts. Add recommendation and $18.80 target price retained.

Look at the big picture

IMDEX
3:27pm
May 6, 2025
The 3Q revenue update was a bit weaker than expected as constant FX revenue fell slightly against 2Q, and the FX tailwind wasn’t as material as forecasted. This has seen a 2% downgrade to our FY25 EBITDA. However, to our mind, the cadence of sensor volumes (-3% at 1H25 to +1% during 3Q and more recently +4%) is the clearest indication that the cycle has reached a positive inflection point. This, coupled with our understanding of the key leading indicators, increases our confidence in the company’s growth prospects beyond FY25. As such, changes to outer year forecasts are de minimis and our target price is unchanged ($3.20).

US deal sends DXB to new heights

Dimerix
3:27pm
May 6, 2025
DXB announced it has secured an exclusive licensing transaction in the United States with Nasdaq listed US$2bn rare disease player Amicus Therapeutics (FOLD.NAS). The licence includes a US$30m (A$48m) upfront payment and US$560m in milestone payments along with tiered royalties on net US sales. The deal shortly followed DXB’s announcement of a positive Type-C meeting with the FDA confirming the measure of proteinuria can be used as an approvable endpoint for FSGS.  The deal marks the fourth licensing transaction for DXB for its DMX-200 asset which is currently in Ph3 trials. Key upcoming catalyst is the Part 2 (n=144) readout of its Ph3 trial around August, which, pending results has potential to apply for conditional approval.

1H25: Earnings decline, flat dividend, price stretched?

Westpac Banking Corp
3:27pm
May 5, 2025
The 3% decline in EPS (ex-notables) and flat dividend was weaker than expected. Asset quality remained resilient and loan loss provisioning continued to be conservative. There are signs of approaching tightness in regulatory capital. We make 4-5% downgrades to FY25-27F EPS and 3-8% downgrades to DPS. DCF valuation reduces 2% to $28.35/sh due to forecast changes and roll-forward. HOLD retained. However, given potential -9% TSR (including +4.6% cash yield) we recommend trimming into current share price strength.

Operating conditions remain weak

Endeavour Group
3:27pm
May 5, 2025
EDV’s sales trading update was largely in line with expectations. Management said that while off-premise demand remained subdued and its Retail business continued to recover from the impact of supply chain disruption in 1H25, Hotels sales were solid with growth across all drivers (food, bars, gaming and accommodation. Looking ahead, EDV is targeting flat to modest Retail sales growth and mid-single digit Hotel sales growth in the balance of 4Q25. Cost inflation however remains a headwind. We make negligible changes to earnings forecasts. Our target price remains unchanged at $4.35 and we maintain our Hold rating.

Cloud and AI demand still looks increasingly strong

NEXTDC
3:27pm
May 5, 2025
Roughly three months ago Data Centre stocks globally started de-rating following weaker than anticipated quarterly results from Cloud Service Providers (CSP). The CSPs in aggregate missed consensus expectations for Cloud revenue growth, mostly due to lack of supply. Investors were nervous AI demand was weakening. The April 2025 CSP quarterly results were generally better than feared. MSFT’s Cloud revenue was a beat, Google’s was in line and AWS was slightly weaker. Commentary was incrementally more bullish for AI and Data Centre demand. Capex forecasts for MSFT, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta lifted an average of ~2% pa. Capex is forecast to be US$309bn in CY25, + 46% YoY. Quarterly data points remain supportive for Data Centres including NXT.

News & Insights

Michael Knox, Chief Economist looks at what might have happened in January 2026 if the cuts in corporate tax rates in Trumps first term were not renewed and extended in the One Big Beautiful Bill

In recent weeks, a number of media commentators have criticized Donald Trump's " One big Beautiful Bill " on the basis of a statement by the Congressional Budget Office that under existing legislation the bill adds $US 3.4 trillion to the US Budget deficit. They tend not to mention that this is because the existing law assumes that all the tax cuts made in 2017 by the first Trump Administration expire at the end of this year.

Let’s us look at what might have happened in January 2026 if the cuts in US corporate tax rates in Trumps first term were not renewed and extended in the One Big Beautiful Bill.

Back in 2016 before the first Trump administration came to office in his first term, the US corporate tax rate was then 35%. In 2017 the Tax Cut and Jobs Act reduced the corporate tax rate to 21%. Because this bill was passed as a "Reconciliation Bill “, This meant it required only a simple majority of Senate votes to pass. This tax rate of 21% was due to expire in January 2026.

The One Big Beautiful Bill has made the expiring tax cuts permanent; this bill was signed into law on 4 July 2025. Now of course the same legislation also made a large number of individual tax cuts in the original 2017 bill permanent.

What would have happened if the bill had not passed. Let us construct what economists call a "Counterfactual"

Let’s just restrict ourselves to the case of what have happened in 2026 if the US corporate tax had risen to the prior rate of 35%.

This is an increase in the corporate tax rate of 14%. This increase would generate a sudden fall in US corporate after-tax earnings in January 2026 of 14%. What effect would that have on the level of the S&P 500?

The Price /Earnings Ratio of the S&P500 in July 2025 was 26.1.

Still the ten-year average Price/ Earnings Ratio for the S&P500 is only 18.99. Let’s say 19 times.

Should earnings per share have suddenly fallen by 14%, then the S&P 500 might have fallen by 14% multiplied by the short-term Price/ Earnings ratio.

This means a likely fall in the S&P500 of 37%.

As the market recovered to long term Price Earnings ratio of 19 this fall might then have ben be reduced to 27%.

Put simply, had the One Big, beautiful Bill not been passed, then in 2026 the US stock market might suddenly have fallen by 37% before then recovering to a fall of 27% .

The devastating effect on the US and indeed World economy might plausibly have caused a major recession.

On 9 June Kevin Hassert the Director of the National Economic Council said in a CBS interview with Margaret Brennan that if the bill did not pass US GDP would fall by 4% and 6-7 million Americans would lose their jobs.

The Passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill on 4 July thus avoided One Big Ugly Disaster.

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On 7 July the AFR published a list of 37 Economists who had answered a poll on when the RBA would next cut rates. 32 of them thought that the RBA would cut on 8 July. Only 5 of them did not believe the RBA would cut, Michael Knox being one of them.

On 7 July the AFR published a list of 37 Economists who had answered a poll on when the RBA would next cut rates. 32 of them thought that the RBA would cut on 8 July. Only 5 of them did not believe the RBA would cut on 8 July. I was one of them. The RBA did not cut.

So today I will talk about how I came to that decision. First, lets look at our model of official interest rates. Back in January 2015 I went to a presentation in San Franciso by Stan Fishcer . Stan was a celebrated economist who at that time was Ben Bernanke's deputy at the Federal Reserve. Stan gave a talk about how the Fed thought about interest rates.

Stan presented a model of R*. This is the real short rate of the Fed Funds Rate at which monetary policy is at equilibrium. Unemployment was shown as a most important variable. So was inflationary expectations.

This then logically lead to a model where the nominal level of the Fed funds rate was driven by Inflation, Inflationary expectations and unemployment. Unemployment was important because of its effect on future inflation. The lower the level of unemployment the higher the level of future inflation and the higher the level of the Fed funds rate. I tried the model and it worked. It worked not just for the Fed funds rate. It also worked in Australia for Australian cash rate.

Recently though I have found that while the model has continued to work to work for the Fed funds rate It has been not quite as good in modelling that Australian Cash Rate. I found the answer to this in a model of Australian inflation published by the RBA. The model showed Australian Inflation was not just caused by low unemployment, It was also caused by high import price rises. Import price inflation was more important in Australia because imports were a higher level of Australian GDP than was the case in the US.

This was important in Australia than in the US because Australian import price inflation was close to zero for the 2 years up to the end of 2024. Import prices rose sharply in the first quarter of 2025. What would happen in the second quarter of 2025 and how would it effect inflation I could not tell. The only thing I could do is wait for the Q2 inflation numbers to come out for Australia.

I thought that for this reason and other reasons the RBA would also wait for the Q2 inflation numbers to come out. There were other reasons as well. The Quarterly CPI was a more reliable measure of the CPI and was a better measure of services inflation than the monthly CPI. The result was that RBA did not move and voiced a preference for quarterly measure of inflation over monthly version.

Lets look again at R* or the real level of the Cash rate for Australia .When we look at the average real Cash rate since January 2000 we find an average number of 0.85%. At an inflation target of 2.5 % this suggests this suggest an equilibrium Cash rate of 3.35%

Model of the Australian Cash Rate.
Model of the Australian Cash Rate


What will happen next? We think that the after the RBA meeting of 11 and 12 August the RBA will cut the Cash rate to 3.6%

We think that after the RBA meeting of 8 and 9 December the RBA will cut the Cash rate to 3.35%

Unless Quarterly inflation falls below 2.5% , the Cash rate will remain at 3.35% .

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Investment Watch is a quarterly publication for insights in equity and economic strategy. Recent months have been marked by sharp swings in market sentiment, driven by shifting global trade dynamics, geopolitical tensions, and policy uncertainty.

Investment Watch is a quarterly publication produced by Morgans that delves into key insights for equity and economic strategy.

This publication covers

Economics - 'The challenge of Australian productivity' and 'Iran, from the Suez blockade to the 12 day war'
Asset Allocation
- 'Prioritise portfolio resilience amidst the prevailing uncertainty'
Equity Strategy
- 'Rethinking sector preferences and portfolio balance'
Fixed Interest
- 'Market volatility analysis: Low beta investment opportunities'
Banks
- 'Outperformance driving the broader market index'
Industrials
- 'New opportunities will arise'
Resources and Energy
- 'Getting paid to wait in the majors'
Technology
- 'Buy the dips'
Consumer discretionary
- 'Support remains in place'
Telco
- 'A cautious eye on competitive intensity'
Travel
- 'Demand trends still solid'
Property
- 'An improving Cycle'

Recent months have been marked by sharp swings in market sentiment, driven by shifting global trade dynamics, geopolitical tensions, and policy uncertainty. The rapid pace of US policy announcements, coupled with reversals, has made it difficult for investors to form strong convictions or accurately assess the impact on growth and earnings. While trade tariffs are still a concern, recent progress in US bilateral negotiations and signs of greater policy stability have reduced immediate headline risks.

We expect that more stable policies, potential tax cuts, and continued innovation - particularly in AI - will support a gradual pickup in investment activity. In this environment, we recommend prioritising portfolio resilience. This means maintaining diversification, focusing on quality, and being prepared to adjust exposures as new risks or opportunities emerge. This quarter, we update our outlook for interest rates and also explore the implications of the conflict in the Middle East on portfolios. As usual, we provide an outlook for the key sectors of the Australian market and where we see the best tactical opportunities.


Morgans clients receive exclusive insights such as access to our latest Investment Watch publication. Contact us today to begin your journey with Morgans.

      
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