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As the primary gateway to New Zealand, Auckland Airport is set to benefit from rising air travel to the island nation. Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand, and Auckland is by far New Zealand’s most populous city. No other airport in the country is likely to outdo Auckland as an international hub. We expect the airport to capture good medium-term growth from further airline capacity expansion to and from New Zealand. We forecast total passengers handled by Auckland to grow to more than 25% above pre-covid levels over the next decade.
Stock Analyst Note

While we had expected wide-moat Auckland International Airport to raise capital to fund its looming capital expenditure bill, the NZD 1.4 billion equity raise comes earlier than anticipated. Proceeds will be used to pay down debt in the short term, funding capital expenditure outlays as the year progresses. The issue is dilutive to our valuation, at a discount to our valuation, but not materially, so it represents about 13% of market capitalization. We maintain our NZD 8.00 (AUD 7.30) per-share fair value estimate.
Stock Analyst Note

Auckland International Airport is recovering strongly. In line with our forecasts, fiscal 2024 underlying net profit lifted 87% to NZD 277 million on the back of 43% revenue growth. International travelers are returning, and domestic passenger numbers continue to climb. Total passenger numbers were up 17% on the prior year to 19 million, which is about 88% of pre-covid-19 fiscal 2019 levels. Fiscal 2024 was also the first year of the new aeronautical price regime, with a big step-up in per-passenger airport charges. Aeronautical revenue lifted 73% to NZD 450. Retail revenue, primarily driven by passenger numbers, lifted 37% to NZD 267 million on the back of 21% higher spend-per-passenger and car park revenue.
Company Report

As the primary gateway to New Zealand, Auckland Airport is set to benefit from rising air travel to the island nation. Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand, and Auckland is by far New Zealand’s most populous city. No other airport in the country is likely to outdo Auckland as an international hub. We expect the airport to capture good medium-term growth from further airline capacity expansion to and from New Zealand. We forecast total passengers handled by Auckland to grow to more than 25% above pre-covid levels over the next decade.
Company Report

As the primary gateway to New Zealand, Auckland Airport is set to benefit from rising air travel to the island nation. Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand, and Auckland is by far New Zealand’s most populous city. No other airport in the country is likely to outdo Auckland as an international hub. We expect the airport to capture good medium-term growth from further airline capacity expansion to and from New Zealand. We forecast total passengers handled by Auckland to grow to about 30% above pre-covid levels over the next decade.
Stock Analyst Note

We lower our fair value estimate for Auckland International Airport by 9% to NZD 8.00 per share (AUD 7.20) after transitioning to a new analyst. The bulk of the downgrade is due to higher capital expenditure expectations. We estimate a capital expenditure bill of nearly NZD 7 billion over the five years to fiscal 2028, from less than NZD 2 billion in the last five. Auckland is investing in sizable projects—much of them multidecade investments—like a new terminal, ground transport facility, and car park extension. Despite the drag this investment is set to have on returns on invested capital in the medium term, Auckland’s wide economic moat remains intact thanks to its near-monopoly position in a stable regulatory environment. We expect returns on invested capital to exceed the weighted average cost of capital by the end of the next decade and beyond, as expansion projects come online. Shares in Auckland Airport screen slightly undervalued.
Company Report

Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand. We expect air travel in New Zealand to rise more than 50% over the next decade, and no other airport in the country is likely to outdo Auckland as an international hub. That combined with a favorable regulatory environment justifies a wide economic moat. Aeronautical and nonaeronautical operations each contribute about half of revenue. Retail is the biggest part of the nonaeronautical business, and relies on international passenger traffic. The property business is about half the size of retail, but has grown faster, driven by new developments and rent reviews. On the aeronautical side of the business, landing fees and per-passenger charges are reviewed every five years in consultation with the airlines, and have historically increased at or above inflation. Apart from the downward reset in fiscal 2020 due to covid-19, we expect this upward trend to prevail over the long term.
Stock Analyst Note

The ongoing passenger recovery for wide-moat Auckland International Airport and higher regulated aeronautical pricing contributed to revenue uplifts for the December half across all segments including airfield income passenger service charges, retail income, car parking, and investment property-related income. Revenue rose 53% against the first half of fiscal 2023. While increased activity pushed up operating expenses, these rose a lesser 32%, resulting in earnings up 64% (before interest, tax, depreciation, fair value movements, and investments in associates).
Company Report

Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand. We expect air travel in New Zealand to rise more than 50% over the next decade, and no other airport in the country is likely to outdo Auckland as an international hub. That combined with a favorable regulatory environment justifies a wide economic moat. Aeronautical and nonaeronautical operations each contribute about half of revenue. Retail is the biggest part of the nonaeronautical business, and relies on international passenger traffic. The property business is about half the size of retail, but has grown faster, driven by new and rent reviews. On the aeronautical side of the business, landing fees and per-passenger charges are reviewed every five years in consultation with the airlines, and have historically increased at or above inflation. After a downward reset in fiscal 2020 due to COVID-19, we expect this upward trend to resume over the long term.
Stock Analyst Note

Auckland International Airport’s fiscal 2023 underlying profit of NZD 148 million or NZD 10.1 cents per share, marked a return to profit but is still 46% below 2019. Passenger numbers nearly tripled from 2022, though the rebound slowed in the June half. Full-year international passengers were 67% of 2019 levels, and domestic passengers 84%. We expect passenger numbers at 2019 levels by 2025. We estimate underlying earnings of NZD 278 million in fiscal 2024, near the upper end of guidance for NZD 260 million to NZD 280 million, and we think earnings can double in the next decade. The airport restarted dividends with a NZD 4.0 cent second-half payment, and we estimate NZD 13 cents in total for fiscal 2024, at the low end of the target 70%-90% payout ratio.
Stock Analyst Note

Vaccines don’t end pandemics; vaccinations do. This fact has hampered the recovery expectations of many businesses, perhaps none more so than international travel. Despite the encouraging availability of several COVID-19 vaccines, which have largely tracked our expectations, the slow pace of vaccinations globally has kept the borders of Australia and New Zealand mostly closed to outside tourism. We still think there’s pent-up travel demand among consumers, which should result in rapid growth in lucrative international traffic at each airport once borders are open. But with Australia’s Health Department suggesting borders could remain closed through the better part of calendar 2021, and New Zealand likely following suit, we’ve pushed back our expected start to this rebound until late this year versus roughly March 2021 previously. Nonetheless, our fair value estimates for each company remain unchanged, at AUD 6.20 per security for Sydney Airport and NZD 6.50 (AUD 6.00) per share for Auckland, with Sydney screening as the more attractive of the two at present.
Stock Analyst Note

Wide-moat Auckland Airport has taken sizable steps to manage through the coronavirus, but the near term will remain challenging. We’ve delayed our anticipated reopening of the New Zealand border to overseas passengers by about six months to early calendar 2021, leading us to cut our fair value estimate to NZD 6.50 (AUD 6.00) per share from NZD 6.65 (AUD 6.20). Even when opened, we don’t see international traffic surpassing 2019 levels again until fiscal 2024. Nonetheless, we expect New Zealand will remain an attractive tourism destination, and forecast 6% average annual traffic growth over the next decade.
Company Report

Auckland Airport is the largest airport in New Zealand, and most visitors to the country pass through its doors. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, it handled more than 11 million international and 9 million domestic passenger movements on a yearly basis. We believe the firm has carved a wide economic moat because it is a near-monopoly operating in a favourable regulatory environment. Long-run risks to returns are minimal, but largely revolve around a slowdown in tourism and traffic, given the firm's substantial fixed asset base and plans for further sizable capital investments. On balance, Auckland Airport benefits from substantial competitive advantages, and we forecast solid returns on capital over the long run.
Stock Analyst Note

Uncertainty in the timing of a passenger rebound at Auckland and Sydney Airports continues to hang over the companies. Recent commentary from Qantas and government officials suggests international traffic to and from Australia (and by proxy, New Zealand) may not resume until June 2021. We're more optimistic, estimating a ramp up starting in late calendar 2020 based on potential travel “bubbles” like the proposed trans-Tasman route, further supported by a likely COVID-19 vaccine in first-half 2021. However, the exact timing of the recovery is less important to our valuation than the certainty of the eventual return. We continue to expect both airports will benefit from rising international tourism over the long term, and maintain our estimated AUD 6.80 fair value for narrow-moat Sydney and NZD 6.65 (AUD 6.20) fair value for wide-moat Auckland Airport.
Stock Analyst Note

April traffic for wide-moat Auckland and narrow-moat Sydney Airports has begun to fully reflect the coronavirus challenges, with passengers unsurprisingly down 97.5% from a year ago. Given both airports are open for essential travel only, we anticipate passenger movements will remain near zero for at least two more months, evidenced by Sydney Airport’s reported May month-to-date movements, down 98% versus the PCP.
Stock Analyst Note

The near-term operating environment for Auckland Airport has deteriorated over the past several weeks, with travel restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic driving a precipitous decline in passenger volumes. We again lower our fiscal 2020 traffic forecasts, to a 25% decline in fiscal 2020 from 15% previously, with a fall to nearly zero passengers from April to June 2020. We expect global travel to return to normal through 2021 and envision Auckland Airport traffic hitting fiscal 2019 levels in fiscal 2023, a year later than our prior assumption.
Stock Analyst Note

The COVID-19 pandemic is drastically dampening global air travel as people avoid flying or are restricted by government-imposed border controls. We have assessed our valuations for Auckland Airport and Sydney Airport amid the rapidly evolving global pandemic and have downgraded both stocks given their weaker short-term earnings outlook. However, we make minimal changes to our mid-cycle forecasts as we anticipate travel returning to normal by early calendar year 2021. We continue to expect growth in the Asian middle class to drive relatively strong passenger growth over the long term.

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