Cabbeen Fashion Limited
Cabbeen (‘company’) is a
China-based designer of apparel for men, women, and children. Its own brands
are designed in its four workshops around the world, and production is
outsourced to independent manufacturers throughout China.
The company primarily serves tier
two and tier three Chinese cities through a distribution network totaling 831
retail stores. It generates revenues via online sales (~49% of revenues),
wholesale distributors (20%), consignment distributors (31%), and a
self-operated store.
The business is currently facing
headwinds as a result of repeated covid lockdowns in mainland China, which is
dampening demand and leading to curtailment of physical store investments and
purchase orders. Management have indicated declines in net profits of over 50%
compared to FY21 (see below) due to partial suspension of the company’s
logistics centre and physical stores in various cities in China.
Such a business is also expected
to face issues of rapid inventory obsolescence due to fickle tastes and changes
in fashion. The financial track record, however, is reasonably stable.
It reported FY21 revenues of 1.4b
rmb (FY20: 1.8b), ebitda of 264m (FY20: 298m) and net profits of 169m (FY20:
195m).
The primary reason for declines
in revenues and profits compared to FY20 is the reduction in manufacturing of PPE
masks, which was discontinued in 2021 due to thinning margins.
The balance sheet reveals net
cash of 286m, net current assets of 939m (incl 103m of investment properties
leased out), and net tangible equity of 1.4b. There are investments and loans
to a loss-making associate, however, totaling 117m – apparently for
construction of office premises in Guangzhou.
The market cap currently stands
at under 980m, which is under 6x FY21 earnings and mostly backed by net current
assets alone.
Dividend payouts have been
consistent and high, amounting to 77m in FY21, which was over 40% of net
profits, and yielded ~8% at market. In addition, the largest shareholder had
purchased stock as recently as March at prices much higher than today.
Management expects higher
revenues and earnings from online sales (including TikTok) as Chinese
millennials continue to favor homegrown brands. The track record doesn’t
warrant undue skepticism. Further, the current valuation of the equity is close
to its likely minimum liquidation value, and appears to sell for considerably
below its worth to a private owner.