Tag Archives: PRSR

Stocks Update 5/4/2024

BHP – Disposals complete

IDS – USO proposal

PRSR – IC confusion

RWI – Delivering on organic growth commitments 

RYA – Passenger data 

STM – Takeover progressing 

STVG – Bumper Studios win

THW – Adnams reports

 

STM – Takeover progressing

STM Group provided an update on Thursday in relation to the takeover of the Group. While most of the STM business is to be acquired by Pension SuperFund, its SIPPS proposition is due to be acquired by Pathlines, a Bidco established by STM CEO Alan Kentish. On Thursday STM said the FCA has approved the regulatory change of control applications made by Pathlines in relation to its acquisition of the SIPPS companies. The overall acquisition remains subject to the satisfaction and/or waiver of the other conditions of the acquisition, including regulatory conditions. Outside of Pathlines, Jambo (the PSF entity) has submitted regulatory change of control applications to the Gibraltar and Maltese financial services regulators in relation to its acquisitions and these continue to progress. Encouragingly, STM says “The expected timetable of principal events remains as set out [in] the Scheme Document […] with a long stop date of 28 May 2024. All in all, good to see this progressing, with the funds expected to land in Q2, as guided. As a reminder, the takeover is pitched at 60p in cash per share up front, with additional deferred consideration of 0-7p, conditional on performance.

 

RWI – Delivering on organic growth commitments

Renewi announced the opening of its hard plastics sorting facility in Acht, Netherlands on Tuesday. The newly opened facility allows Renewi to recycle not only separately collected plastics, but also contaminated material from construction and demolition waste. The facility categories plastics into one of 18 distinct product streams that, through the implementation of advanced technology and incorporating sorting and cleaning processes, produces a purity rate for the key polypropylene and polyethylene streams of at least 95%. Renewi notes that in FY 2023 it recycled 7m tonnes or 63.4% of its total incoming waste, producing low-carbon secondary materials to meet the needs of the circular economy. The Acht initiative is part of the €100m investment commitment from Renewi set out in FY 2022 to drive a €20m EBIT uplift and management says the facility “is expected to contribute to achieving Renewi’s EBIT and topline growth targets”. I suspect that Renewi can leverage its technological know-how to establish partnerships with financially strong partners in other European countries to capitalise on circular economy opportunities. Renewi is very cheap, trading on just 8.7x consensus FY (year-end March) 2025 earnings and yielding 1.8%.

 

RYA – Passenger data

Ryanair released solid traffic data on Wednesday that show it carried 13.6m passengers in March, +8% y/y. The load factor of 93% was flat versus the same month in 2023. Growth was held back by the cancellation of c.950 flights (c.1% of the intended total) due to the unrest in the Middle East. On a rolling 12 month basis, RYA carried 183.7m passengers in the period to end-March (i.e. its FY 2024), +9% y/y, with the load factor of 94% +1ppt y/y. RYA’s revised FY 2024 guidance was for 183.5m PAX, so it is good to see the total come in a touch ahead of that. Ryanair is very cheap, trading on just 9.4x consensus FY (year-end March) earnings and yielding 2.4%.

 

STVG – Bumper Studios win

STV announced on Tuesday that its Studios business has secured a jumbo order from Game Show Network for 100 episodes of its Bridge of Lies quiz show format. The US edition will launch in June under the title Beat the Bridge. STV currently makes Bridge of Lies in the UK for the BBC, which airs in 16 territories, while a local version (El peunte de las mentiras) airs in Spain. STV’s fast growing Studios business was enhanced by the transformative acquisition of Greenbird Media in 2023, and has secured orders from many of the world’s biggest broadcasters and streamers including Apple TV+, BBC, Channel 4, Channel 5, ITV, Sky, Netflix, NBCUniversal and Warner Brothers Discovery. STVG is very cheap, trading on just 7.3x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 5.0%.

 

BHP – Disposals complete 

On Tuesday BHP announced the completion of the divestment of its interests in the Blackwater and Daunia mines to Whitehaven Coal. The assets were previously part of the BHP Mitsubishi metallurgical coal 50-50 JV. Whitehaven has paid $2.0bn in cash plus a preliminary completion adjustment of $44.1m for working capital and other agreed adjustments (so c.$1.0bn to BHP). A further $1.1bn in cash remains payable to BHP and Mitsubishi over the 3 years post completion and a potential amount of up to $900m in a price-linked earnout (capped at $350m per annum). Given investment opportunities elsewhere across BHP’s portfolio, this disposal should be viewed through a capital recycling lens. BHP is inexpensive, trading on 10.9x FY (year-end June) 2025 earnings and yielding 5.2%.

 

PRSR – IC confusion

The Investors’ Chronicle this week ran an article called “How to grow a real estate investment trust”, which focused on PRS REIT, which has successfully executed a BTR model in the UK. While noting that the fundamentals for BTR are intact (a mismatch between supply and demand for housing; high interest rates meaning that developers prefer to sell to institutional buyers to ensure faster capital recycling), the magazine notes that “it doesn’t have cash in the pot to build more” than the c.5,600 homes it has between completed units and properties at various stages of development. Earlier this week the IC article appeared to suggest that management was talking to shareholders about an equity raise, but the piece was subsequently “amended to clarify the nature of PRS REIT’s discussions with shareholders” and now says PRSR “is speaking to shareholders about its next move”, which is unhelpfully vague. Plainly, with the share price (78.2p today) so far below NAV (123.6p at end-December 2023), it is hard to see the merits of any equity raise – dilutive for existing shareholders (outside of a rights issue) and given the income-oriented nature of many REIT investors, why take on development risk when the PRSR portfolio delivers a reliable c.5% yield at the current share price? Another consideration, of course, being that a c.5% yield is hardly an outlier in this market.

 

IDS – USO proposal

On Wednesday International Distributions Services set out its stall for the reform of the Universal Service Obligation, which is a millstone on Royal Mail’s performance (due to the well documented structural decline in letter volumes from a peak of 20bn in FY 2004/05 to 7bn in FY 2022/03 and guided to fall further to c.4bn in the next five years). IDS’ proposal for reform is for a continuation of the ‘one price goes anywhere’ pricing model for the UK, with first class letters to be delivered six days a week (Monday through Saturday); differentiated first and second class (the latter to be delivered every other weekday) letter pricing; and a retention of seven days a week parcel deliveries. Given the need for legislative assent, IDS is urging Ofcom to introduce new regulations “by April 2025 at the latest” (the next UK General Election must be held by 28 January 2025, so any change will be the work of the new parliament). Royal Mail estimates that USO costs it a net £1-2m per day, so even modest reforms would be material for its bottom line (IDS’ market cap is only £2.3bn). That said, I would have liked to have seen something more radical from management – Ofcom has previously set out analyses that includes paring deliveries of letters to just three times a week. IDS is very cheap, trading on 9.1x consensus FY 2025 earnings and yielding an estimated 4.5%.

 

THW – Adnams reports

Last weekend Sky News reported that the 134 year old Suffolk brewer, distiller and pub and hotel operator Adnams “is sounding out prospective buyers and investors as the wider industry grapples with higher costs and weaker demand”. One of the options is an outright sale of the Group, with a capital raise from a third party and the sale of some of its freehold assets also potential avenues. The Adnams family has been major shareholders since its establishment in 1890. Whilst operating in a different geographic footprint (Suffolk) to Daniel Thwaites, the similarities in terms of their portfolios (both operate brewing, hotel and pub businesses) and controlling family stake suggests that Thwaites is likely to be monitoring this situation, in my view. Adnams’ latest (2022) Annual Report shows EBITDA of £2.7m on sales of £64m, with the Group having net debt of £13.9m at end-2022. Tangible net assets were £22m at end-June 2023. I’ve previously noted that THW has the capacity to invest c.£10m per annum on growth capex and something like Adnams (or some of its assets) could (emphasis) be a good fit for it, particularly given the synergies that would arise from their complementary portfolios. Of course, with Thwaites (market cap £44m) trading on a steep discount to its end-September 2023 NAV of £247m, there are other value creation (buyback, deleveraging, monetisation of pension surplus) opportunities for management to consider that wouldn’t carry any execution risk. The key attraction for Thwaites is its astonishingly low valuation – its share price is just 75p, whereas the latest published (end-September 2023) TNAV is 420p.

Stocks Update 22/3/2024

AV/ – Singlife exit completes

BOCH – Step-change in distributions

GSK – Pipeline progress; Dementia report

HLN – Overhang reduces

KMR – FY results; Well positioned

MKS – Financial services report

PRSR – Interims; Dividend now covered

RHM – Bolt-on acquisition; German contract

RKT – Enfamil thoughts 

STVG – Further Studios wins

ULVR – I scream, you scream…

 

KMR – FY results; Well positioned

Kenmare Resources released its FY 2023 results on Wednesday. The results were expected to show a moderation in performance from 2022, given developments in pricing and disruption from the lightning strike early last year. In the event, EBITDA came in at $220m, down from FY 2022’s record $298m. The balance sheet remains in great shape, with net cash of $21m at end-2023 (a year in which $30m was spent on share buybacks, cutting the share count by nearly 6%). This is important, given that the Group is set to embark on a $341m capex programme to upgrade WCP A and transition it to the Nataka ore zone over 2025-2027 – the costs of which will be easily met by operating cashflows and the $200m RCF. In a sign of confidence, a full year dividend of USc56.04 has been declared, +3% y/y. A further sign of confidence is the statement that “Kenmare is on track to achieve its annual production guidance [for 2024], although production is still expected to be second half weighted. The markets for our products have been stronger than anticipated in 2024 to date”. Kenmare is very cheap, trading on just 5.0x consensus earnings and yielding 8.2%.

 

PRSR – Interims; Dividend now covered 

PRS REIT released its H1 (end-December) results on Wednesday. The key highlight was confirmation that the “dividend [is] fully covered on an annualised run-rate basis from March 2024” which fully removes one of the question marks that had been over the Group since its IPO (albeit this question mark had steadily diminished in importance as the Group completed more of its development pipeline). Reflecting the growing portfolio of let-up rental properties, PRSR reported NRI of £23m, +17% y/y; EPRA EPS of 1.8p (+13% y/y); and operating profit of £39.2m (+73% y/y). The latter reflects fair value gains of £20.5m in the period. PRSR finished H1 with a NAV per share of 123.6p, +3.5p since the start of the financial year, as ERV growth offset a softening in the NIY. PRSR’s portfolio stood at 5,264 completed units at end-December, with a further 312 at various stages of construction. Portfolio metrics are very strong – underlying occupancy of 98%, rent collection at 99%, LFL rental growth of 11.1% and total arrears, net of bad debt provision, were £0.6m at end-January 2024. The average rent was just c.23% of tenants’ gross household income – well within the guided affordability limit of 35%. The total portfolio ERV is £63.4m (of which £3.1m relates to homes under construction), up from £57.3m at end-December 2022. Assuming a gross-to-net ‘walk’ of 20% (the H1 2024 actual was 18.5%), this produces an NRI of £50.7m. Take away annualised operating and financing costs of (say) £20m and this leaves £30.7m versus a dividend cost of 4p*550m shares out = £22m. As the pipeline completes, a 5p annualised dividend seems a reasonable possibility for some time in CY 2025. Another consideration is that the wide gap between the share price (79p this lunchtime) and NAV might leave the Group vulnerable to a takeover approach (not least given that planning and construction risk has effectively reduced to zero). While NAV has its critics where REITs in general are concerned (I’ve seen people calling it “Not Actual Value”!), PRSR’s dividend (supported by more than 5,000 revenue generating units) of 4p is rock solid. A yield of >5% seems attractive to me.

 

BOCH – Step-change in distributions

Following receipt of the necessary regulatory approvals, Bank of Cyprus revealed its long-awaited distribution in respect of FY 2023 performance on Wednesday. The Group is to pay a 25c dividend in respect of FY 2023, a 5x increase on the 5c paid in respect of FY 2022 performance, and also commence a €25m share buyback. The ECB’s approval of this distribution is a reflection of the Group’s strong financial performance and strategic progress. The total distribution corresponds to a 30% payout ratio for 2023 – BOCH had accrued for up to a 50% payout so its end-2023 transitional CET1 ratio has been revised up to 17.4% from the previously reported 16.5%. BOCH’s minimum CET1 requirement was 10.98%+P2G at the start of 2024, meaning that the Group has a very large buffer over this requirement which paves the way for further strong distributions over the coming years. While the dividend is extremely welcome, I am delighted to see a buyback, given how cheap this stock is (Bloomberg consensus has it on just 5.0x 2025 earnings, a 40% discount to NAV and yielding 9.4%).

 

HLN – Overhang reduces

In a very welcome development on Monday, it was announced that Pfizer: (a) intends to sell c.630m Haleon ordinary shares in a secondary global offering; and (b) sell £315m worth of Haleon shares to the company for cancellation. Completion of (a) and (b) would pare Pfizer’s interest in Haleon from 32% at the time of the IPO to c.24%. In the event, Pfizer upsized its public offering to 790.6m ordinary shares, priced at £3.08, with Pfizer selling a further 102.3m shares to Haleon for cancellation (reducing its share count by 1.1% to 9.1bn shares) at the same price. Post-completion on Thursday, Pfizer is now subject to a 90 day lock-up over its remaining shareholding. When Haleon first came to the market in 2022 it only had a 55% free-float due to Pfizer holding 32% and GSK c.13%. Since then, GSK has cut its stake to 4.2% and Pfizer is now down to c.22.6%, meaning a free-float of c.73%. This is all good news as it means index trackers are obliged to buy more HLN (passive investing can work to active investors’ advantage at times!). Another consideration is that Haleon said in its recent FY results that it was open to  buying back up to £500m worth of its shares this year – does ‘only’ spending £315m on buying from HLN mean it is lining up a repurchase of £185m worth of shares from GSK when the latter (currently not subject to any lock-up restrictions) next comes to market? Haleon trades on an undemanding 16.4x consensus 2025 earnings and yields 2.2%.

 

ULVR – I scream, you scream… 

On Tuesday Unilever set out plans to “accelerate Growth Action Plan through separation of Ice Cream and launch of productivity programme”. The Group will remain committed to a portfolio of power brands “in highly attractive categories [Beauty & Wellbeing; Personal Care; Home Care; and Nutrition) that have complementary operating models”. Due to Ice Cream’s “very different operating model” (frozen goods supply chain; different channel landscape; more seasonality; and greater capital intensity), “the Board has decided that the separation of Ice Cream best serves the future growth of both Ice Cream and Unilever”. The Ice Cream division, which had sales of €7.9bn in 2023, owns five of the top 10 selling global ice cream brands. ULVR says a demerger “is the most likely separation route”, but other options will be considered to maximise shareholder returns. Will full separation not expected until end-2025, this will be a management distraction for some time to come though. Separately, a comprehensive productivity programme is being launched with the aim of delivering total cost savings of c.€800m over the next three years, “more than offsetting estimated operational dis-synergies from the separation of Ice Cream”. Around 7,500 administrative jobs will be affected, while the Group will invest c.1.2% of turnover (was c.1.0%) equivalent over the next three years as part of the programme. ULVR also said that post-separation of Ice Cream, the continuing Group will have a structurally higher margin and aim to deliver “MSD USG and modest margin improvement” over time. Given recent high profile shareholder unhappiness around ULVR’s strategy, the radical steps set out in this announcement are not surprising. On Ice Cream, I expect that plenty of PE and trade buyers alike will be running the slide rule over that division, so an IPO may not be the exit route. Unilever trades on an undemanding 15.8x 2025 earnings and yields 4.0%.

 

RHM – Bolt-on acquisition; German contract

Rheinmetall announced the bolt-on acquisition of Dutch firm REEQ (Range Extended Electrical Quad) on Monday. The acquired firm specialises in “innovative light hybrid vehicles” which seems an attractive vertical given the increased use of air/sea/land drones in the security context. “Both parties have agreed not to disclose the purchase price”, rather unhelpfully, but as mentioned, it seems to be a field with strong structural growth drivers so this could prove a very helpful deal in time. This follows RHM’s agreement to purchase a 72.5% shareholding in Romanian vehicle maker Automecanica Medias SRL in February, a business it sees with an “annual sales potential of up to €300m”. The extent to which RHM can spur the consolidation of Europe’s deeply consolidated sector will further enhance its competitive position and (presumably) standing with European policymakers. RHM’s global vehicle production footprint extents to plants in the US, Canada, Australia, the UK, Austria, Netherlands, Romania and Germany. Elsewhere, RHM announced on Thursday that Germany’s Bundeswehr has commissioned it to supply 123 Boxer IFVs from 2025 in a contract worth c.€2.7bn. Rheinmetall has had a super run of late – the shares are +75% year to date – although a valuation of 17.9x consensus 2025 earnings (and 2.0% yield) doesn’t seem toppy for a high growth company.

 

RKT – Enfamil thoughts 

Late on Friday, Reckitt released a statement following the awarding of $60m to a plaintiff in relation to a case concerning necrotising enterocolitis (NEC). Reckitt and its US formula subsidiary Mead Johnson emphatically rejected the court’s findings, citing that the plaintiff’s lawyers’ allegations “were not supported by the science or experts in the medical community. This was underscored during the trial by a dozen neonatologists”. While RKT goes on to say: “it is important to note that this is a single verdict in a single case and should not be extrapolated”, the market did just that last Friday, knocking 15% or £5bn off the Group’s market cap. Reckitt says it will “pursue all options” to have the verdict overturned. I understand that there are c.500 similar NEC cases pending against RKT, and while appropriate consideration has to be given to the scientific evidence supporting the RKT case, as a GSK shareholder I’ve seen Zantac cases settled despite the lack of any scientific evidence that it is harmful. It could also be a couple of years before a line can be drawn under NEC, while the huge award in the Illinois NEC case may also prompt more suits against RKT. Let’s assume 1,000 cases where the average settlements are between $100k (similar to J&J talc settlements) and $160k (similar to Bayer Roundup settlements), with legal fees adding as much again. That suggests a hit of $200-320m, immaterial in a RKT context (the Group made IFRS operating profits of £2.5bn last year), although the $60m Illinois award (which may be overturned) and last Friday’s share price reaction suggests things could end up being materially worse. And the lead-time (presumably years) before we know what the real number is going to be, warrants a higher cost of equity for RKT until that is clarified. RKT shares trade on just 12.3x consensus 2025 earnings and yield 4.7%. This discount to ULVR (qv) seems warranted pending clarification on this matter.

 

STVG – Further Studios wins 

STV announced on Wednesday that it has been commissioned by Warner Brothers Discovery UK and Ireland to produce a brand new series of The Yorkshire Auction House; Celebrity Yorkshire Auction House; and The Derbyshire Auction House for the Really channel. The 40 episode commission is the latest of a series of wins for STV’s Studios business – it recently secured its first contract win from Netflix, while it also counts Apple TV+, BBC, Channel 4, Channel 5, ITV, Sky and Warner Brothers Discovery among its customer base. STVG is cheap, trading on 7.2x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 5.1%.

 

MKS – Financial services report 

Monday’s CityAM reported that Marks & Spencer is “close to a seven-year agreement with HSBC to transform its banking division into a financial services and loyalty “superapp”. November’s Capital Markets Day presentation from MKS said that Sparks had 17.7m subscribers, and “Combining the power of Sparks and the App” was cited as one of the strategic actions to drive growth “ahead of the market”. Per the CityAM report, M&S Bank, which offers personal finance products (loans, insurance, BNPL) and which HSBC took control of in 2004 (but which MKS is entitled to a 50% share of the profits “after appropriate contractual deductions”), is said to have “more than 3m customers”, so broadening its potential reach to c.6x as many customers could be mutually attractive for M&S and HSBC alike. CityAM, citing a source, says “a public announcement with more details of the revised partnership was expected in April”, although “it is unclear whether M&S is set to take an ownership position”. On the latter, I’d prefer not – a ‘capital lite’ approach where M&S receives commission on business generated through a superapp would be a low-risk model. Obviously, execution risk will be high for this, but the risk/reward profile seems attractive. M&S is cheap, trading on only 10.0x consensus FY 2025 earnings and is expected to pay a 2.6% dividend in respect of that year’s performance.

 

GSK – Pipeline progress; Dementia report

GSK announced on Monday that phase III data show potential for Jemperli (dostarlimab) combinations in more patients with primary advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer. “Dostarlimab plus chemotherapy is the only immuno-oncology combination to show statistically significant and clinically meaningful overall survival in the overall population”. GSK says it expects US FDA regulatory submission acceptance for an expanded indication in the overall population in the first half of this year. There are c.417k worldwide endometrial cancers every year, of whom c.15-20% will be diagnosed with advanced disease at the time of diagnosis. This is a further encouraging headline from GSK’s attractive development pipeline, which had 71 vaccines and specialty medicines across Phase I-III/registration at end-2023. Elsewhere, I note a report from Marketwatch about an internal GSK study that shows a correlation between the use of GSK’s shingles vaccine Shingrix and a lower risk of getting dementia. The report cites an analysis of 5m UK senior citizens (the UK NHS has provided shingles vaccines for the over-80s since 2013), where those who took Shingrix were 20% less likely to develop dementia over the following 7 years. GSK says that further research is needed, and while it’s too early to get excited about this, the potential here is clear. I don’t think the potential of this, or indeed the rest of the GSK pipeline, is reflected in the Group’s very cheap valuation of 9.7x consensus 2025 earnings and 3.9% yield.

 

AV/ – Singlife exit completes

On Monday Aviva announced that it has received total proceeds of £937m from the disposal of its shareholding and associated instruments in Singlife. This is fractionally ahead of the c.£930m guided in an RNS in December, with the difference immaterial in an Aviva Group context. The timing is also in-line with the “Q1 2024” guidance previously provided. Aviva has already recycled these proceeds in attractive M&A in both the UK and Canada. Aviva is very cheap, trading on 9.5x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 7.7%.

Stocks Update 19/1/2024

AMZN – iRobot disconnected?

BHP – Operational review 

BT/A – Pricing changes; Bond thoughts 

GSK/HLN – GSK places more Haleon shares

HBR – Trading update

IDS – Trading update

KMR – Trading update

LLOY – Sainsbury to exit 

MKS – Ocado Retail update

PRSR – Trading update

RHM – German order 

 

BHP – Operational review

BHP released a comprehensive operational review for the half-year ended 31 December on Thursday. As expected, this showed a strong performance across copper, iron ore and energy coal, and a more challenging half in metallurgical coal. The key highlights were 5% q/q production growth at WAIO, and 7% H1 copper production growth. In coal, NSW Energy had its best H1 in five years, but there was weakness in BMA “following significant planned maintenance and low starting inventories”. Nickel performance has been adversely affected by a sharp fall in prices, with management dropping a hint that there may be a non-cash writedown of the carrying value of its exposures here. For the FY, the Group has retained all of its production guidance for all assets, save for BMA, now seen at 23-25Mt (was 28-31Mt), while unit costs are expected to be within previous guidance, save again for BMA due to lower production. BHP says it finished H1 with net debt of between $12.5bn and $13.0bn, the top half of its target range, but this is influenced by the timing of the recent A$10bn OZ acquisition. On the development side, the $5.7bn Stage 1 of the giant Jansen potash mine in Canada is now 38% complete, with first production still targeted for end-CY 2026, while the Group sanctioned the $4.9bn Stage 2 in October. All in all, a mixed performance, which can be an occupational hazard for any individual results period given the Group’s diverse portfolio of commodities, but taking a long-term view, BHP’s skew to future-facing commodities leaves it well positioned through the cycle. The stock is inexpensive too, trading on 11.5x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 5.0%.

 

HBR – Trading update

Harbour Energy released a trading and operations update on Thursday for 2023 ahead of the release of FY results on 7 March. Headline metrics for 2023 – production (186kboepd, split 50/50 gas/liquids); OpEx ($16/boe); capex ($1.0bn) and free cash ($1.0bn) were all in-line with guidance. The Group made solid progress on its development pipeline, starting production at Tolmount East in Q4; successfully appraising the Leverett discovery where production is slated to start in late 2024; making a significant gas discovery at its 20% owned Layaran-1 well in the Andaman Sea (where a multi-well exploration campaign continues); securing regulatory approval of the Zama FDP and striking the Kan oil discovery in Mexico; and progressing the two CCS projects in the UK. On the corporate development side, the Group has agreed the transformational Wintershall Dea acquisition, which is expected to complete in Q4 2024. Distributions remain a key part of the HBR ‘pull’ and in 2023 it returned $441m through a $200m dividend and share buybacks. The Group finished last year with a super strong balance sheet, with net debt of just $0.2bn (end-2022: $0.8bn) and it expects to briefly be in net cash during the first half of this year (as 2024 UK tax payments are back-ended). In terms of other 2024 guidance (which excludes Wintershall), production is slated at just 150-165kboepd due to “an unusually high level of planned shutdowns”, well down on the 2023 level; OpEx is guided at $18/boe (economies of scale apply here); capex is guided at $1.2bn; and the dividend will be $200m again (but higher on a per-share basis). For 2025, and again excluding Wintershall, the Group expects similar production and OpEx but higher free cash flow (presumably driven by commodity price assumptions). HBR shares came under pressure on the back of this week’s update, but trading on 7.8x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 7.7% this isn’t a stock that’s remotely priced for perfection (not least given the super-strong balance sheet).

 

IDS – Trading update 

International Distributions Services, the parent company of Royal Mail and GLS, released a Q3 (end-December) trading update on Thursday. The main takeaway is that the Group is on track to meet full year guidance. Performance at the Group had been significantly negatively impacted by labour relations issues (since resolved) at Royal Mail, and the resolution of this resulted in Royal Mail seeing its best Christmas operational performance for four years. A key aspect of the deal with the unions was changes to work practices, and the results reflect the benefits of this, with sick leave -25% y/y in December (only 0.2% of the 54,000 ‘daily walks’ weren’t resourced on any given day by end-December) and increased recruitment of permanent employees on new flexible contracts leading to reduced use of agency staff. Group revenues were +9.8% y/y in Q3, helped by customer win-backs at Royal Mail (parcel volumes were +21% y/y in Q3 at 387m), and +3.8% y/y in the first nine months of the year, although the top-line growth has been offset by increased costs (pay and inflation). IDS expects a H2 adjusted operating profit that will broadly offset H1’s £169m loss. A key swing factor to look for in 2024 is Ofcom’s imminent review of the future of the Universal Service, which could unlock massive cost savings – Royal Mail has a delivery network designed for 20bn letters but it only delivers 7bn annually. However, with a UK general election on the horizon, any changes (which will require political approval) will presumably be back-ended to late 2024 or early 2025. IDS trades on a very cheap 9.8x consensus 2025 earnings, with analysts pencilling in a 4.0% dividend for the next financial year.

 

KMR – Trading update

Kenmare Resources released its Q4 2023 production report and initial FY 2024 guidance on Wednesday. The Group delivered just under 1m tonnes of ilmenite production in 2023, within its revised guidance range, with production of other products meeting or exceeding the original guidance. Softer external macro meant lower pricing, however, but the Group remains significantly cash generative – during 2023 it repaid $31m of debt, paid $58m in dividends, repurchased $30m of shares (a 5.9% share count reduction), started another material capex project (the transition to the Nataka orezone) and still finished the year with $21m of net cash (end-2022: $28m). The Group still guides to 2023 dividends of c.$50m (H1: $16.6m, implying a final dividend of >35USc). While the ilmenite production was -9% y/y, in part due to the effects of a severe lightning strike, shipments were only -3% y/y as KMR was able to use stocks to meet demand. For 2024, KMR guides to ilmenite production of 950k-1.05m tonnes, so flat y/y, but prices in early 2024 have been weaker than what was seen in the final quarter of last year. For the other products, primary zircon and concentrates volumes are guided to be a tad lower than in 2023, while rutile production is expected to be steady y/y. Cash opex is expected to be higher ($219-243m) in 2024 than in 2023 (c.$228m), in part due to higher power costs. Capex is guided at $224m, of which $189m is related to development projects such as Nataka. Kenmare will issue its FY 2023 results on 20 March. The absence of positive surprises saw the shares marked down this week, but the stock’s depressed rating (6.4x consensus 2025 earnings, 9.8% yield) is hardly demanding. For patient investors, a stock with net cash and a single resource with a 100 year mine life that accounts for 7% of global supply trading on a mid-single digit earnings multiple is clearly compelling.

 

PRSR – Trading update

The PRS REIT released its Q2 2024 (end-December) trading update on Wednesday. At the end of December it had 5,264 completed homes with an ERV of £60.3m, up from 4,913 homes with an ERV of £50.7m 12 months earlier. The number of contracted (under construction) homes has reduced from 613 at end-CY 2022 to 312 at end-CY 2023. Adding together completed and contracted sites means that the ERV of PRSR’s portfolio is now £63.4m, up from £57.3m at the end of December 2022. Asset management metrics are strong, with rent collection of 99% and occupancy of 98%. LFL rental growth for the 12 months to end-2023 was 11%, up from 6% in the prior year. Total arrears have reduced to £0.6m from £0.7m at end-December 2022. The portfolio income is very sustainable, with an affordability ratio of just c.22% of gross household income, well within Homes England’s upper guidance limit of 35%. The Q2 dividend will be announced later this month but I imagine it will be 1p/share, with the FY DPS looking (to me) like it will come in at an unchanged 4p/share, but importantly it will be covered in 2024 for the first time. The removal of the dividend risk this year (as dividends were previously uncovered); the removal of development risk as the pipeline completes; and expected interest rate reductions should be helpful catalysts for a share price rerating this year. In the meantime, the dividend offers a healthy income for patient investors. I also suspect the stock could be the subject of takeover interest given the reduced development risk profile and wide discount to NAV that it trades at. Bloomberg consensus has PRSR trading on just 7.7x 2025 earnings and yielding 5.1%.

 

MKS – Ocado Retail update

Ocado Retail released a trading update on Tuesday that showed improving momentum into the New Year. For Q4 2023 (13 weeks to 26 November), revenue was +10.9% y/y, a significant acceleration on Q3’s +7.2% y/y. This was driven by a combination of 4.8% y/y volume growth and higher average prices (+5.4% y/y). Active customers were 998k at end-Q4, +5.9% y/y, with average orders per week of 407k +6.3% y/y. For FY 2023, Ocado Retail’s revenue of £2.4bn was +7.0% y/y, despite a 0.9% y/y decline in volumes (this was clearly H1 skewed) that was driven by more selective buying by cash strapped households (average orders per week of 393k was +4.0% y/y but the average basket size was -4.5% y/y in volume terms). Ocado Retail delivered a “positive EBITDA for the full year”, although the absence of a disclosed number suggests to me that this was only modestly positive. Ocado Retail has improved MKS stock availability to c.90% of the addressable range, which is helpful for MKS’ Food business. In terms of trading since the start of FY 2024, Ocado Retail says it had “another record Christmas and hit its highest ever level of sales over the peak Christmas trading period”, noting that over 90% of peak [December 22-24] slots were sold by mid-October. On guidance, Ocado Retail says it expects to grow sales volumes “ahead of the market”, with volume growth driven by positive trends in customer acquisition, although revenue growth will be adversely impacted by mix (value) and moderating food price inflation. Nonetheless, mid-high single digit revenue growth is guided. EBITDA guidance is for continued progress on the journey to a “high mid-single digit” margin. All in all, a very solid update from Ocado Retail, with earnings from the JV set to be a tailwind for MKS for the current FY (year ending March) 2024 and beyond. Another consideration is that while the rate environment has weighed on Ocado Retail’s short term performance, in the longer term I see it as being very supportive, as more of the loss-making grocery delivery start-ups that only “made sense” in the era of loose money cut back on their operations, pushing more customers towards an Ocado Retail that has significant operating leverage. OCDO’s structural cost advantage (robotics) and scale / incumbency qualities means it has the staying power to win this contest. MKS is very cheap, trading on 10.2x consensus 2025 earnings and yielding 2.6%, per Bloomberg consensus.

 

GSK/HLN – GSK places more Haleon shares

In my 2023 portfolio review, noting that GSK had sold stock in Haleon at 328p in October, close to its 330p IPO price, I said: “I suspect it will look to sell more of its remaining 7% holding at or around this level in 2024”. I didn’t have to wait long for that prediction to come true, with GSK announcing on Tuesday evening its intention to sell down more of its stake in Haleon via an accelerated bookbuild. In the event, GSK confirmed on Wednesday morning that it sold 300m shares at 326p apiece, a modest discount to Tuesday’s close of 332.14p. This latest sale leaves GSK with 385m shares or a 4.2% stake in HLN worth c.£1.3bn – a useful future source of capital to support GSK’s growth strategy (as supportive, indeed, as the nearly £1bn of net proceeds from this week’s sale, coming just a week after GSK announced a $1.4bn acquisition). Haleon is also a winner from these sell downs, with the GSK shareholding reduction from 12.94% immediately post IPO to the new level of 4.2% mechanically increasing the free-float market cap of the company and triggering automatic buying by index trackers (HLN is a constituent of the FTSE 100). Pfizer has another 32% shareholding in HLN which it is expected to divest over time, although it should be noted that both Pfizer and GSK are subject to 60 day lock-ups post the settlement of this latest disposal. During 2023 I doubled my shareholding in HLN, with my reasoning being that the technical overhang from Pfizer and GSK was weighing on the share price, allowing patient investors to pick up HLN at a discount. As an aside, the GSK shareholding reduction also raises the prospect that HLN may consider buying back some of the residual GSK stake when it next comes to the market to sell stock. A potential source of funds to cover that outlay is a media report (Sky News) that says Indian firm Dr. Reddy’s Laboratories, is in talks to buy smoking cessation brand Nicotinell from Haleon for up to $800m. This follows the recent sale of antifungal brand Lamisil for £235m. GSK and HLN are both quite inexpensive relative to peers – GSK trades on 9.0x consensus 2025 earnings and yields 4.2%, making it one of the cheapest large cap (£64bn market cap) pharma stocks, while HLN trades on 15.8x 2025 earnings and yields 2.3%.

 

BT/A – Pricing changes; Bond thoughts

In an interesting development on Tuesday, BT announced significant changes to its consumer pricing model for both new and re-contracting customers in the UK. This follows a recent Ofcom consultation and will see the previous model of adjusting prices annually by CPI +3.9% replaced by a new system of easy to follow nominal ‘pounds and pence’ price increases – this summer, BT expects to increase mobile customers’ charges by £1.50 and broadband customers by £3, following a March price increase of 7.9% (i.e. the December annual CPI of 4.0% + 3.9%) – and these increases follow the 14% rise put through during 2023. Vulnerable customers are to be shielded from the planned increases (which is likely to be a tactical move by BT given Ofcom has yet to fully sign off on the new regime). With more than 30m retail customers in the UK alone, modest increases can lead to significant bottom line benefits, particularly as BT is materially reducing its cost base through network upgrades, a much reduced property footprint and increased digitalisation. Elsewhere, I also spent a bit of time this week digging into BT’s bond securities. Based off spot FX and disregarding early calls, the Group has £18bn of bonds outstanding with a weighted average coupon of 4.0% and maturity of 12.9 years. Clearly, market moves over the past two years means that the Group faces higher costs of new issuance than might otherwise have been, but the starting position as set out here and stock/flow effects (disregarding calls, BT has an average of £1.3bn of bonds maturing annually over the next 10 years) means that the incremental costs of new (versus retiring) issuance will not be material – a new GBP 10 year would probably come somewhere in the 5.5% area (and possibly lower if rates fall as the market expects them too). Another consideration is that BT/A is set to see a material step up in free cash flow generation once its FTTP roll-out to 25m premises in the UK concludes in December 2026. This should see net debt start to meaningfully come down thereafter – and an undrawn £2.1bn RCF and BT’s curve are both likely to be helpful in aiding this transition (on the latter, with no current scheduled maturities between 2034 and 2036, it’s not unreasonable to assume new 10 year issuances to help meet bond maturities between now and the end of FTTP in 2026) and the current absence of any maturities in 2038 and 2040 is also helpful given that 2028 and 2030 are the peak funding cliffs for BT, with maturities of £1.7bn and £2.1bn in those years respectively. Annual BT EBITDA of >£8bn; a cash dividend cost of £0.8bn; cash interest costs of (say) £0.8bn; pension contributions of £0.8bn; and post-FTTP annual capex of (say) £3bn could leave around £3bn per annum (c.25% of BT’s market cap) to divide between deleveraging, distributions and corporate development from the start of calendar year 2027 onwards. Indeed, Bloomberg consensus has BT/A net debt falling from £18.6bn in March 2026 to £18.0bn in March 2027. If my assumptions are right, we should see a meaningful rebalancing of value from bondholders to shareholders at BT/A in the medium term. BT trades on a very cheap 6.1x 2025 earnings multiple and yields 6.5%.

 

LLOY – Sainsbury to exit 

Sainsbury’s announced on Thursday that it is to commence “a phased withdrawal from our core Banking business”, with future financial services products to be provided to customers through a distributed model. During H1 of its current financial year Sainsbury’s Bank completed the sale of its mortgage book to The Co-operative Bank. Its remaining product set at that point were personal loans; credit cards; savings; insurance; and travel money. Press reports say that Sainsbury’s Bank has 1.9m customers and while I suspect that most of these are secondary banking relationships (i.e. customers of other banks who took out a Sainsbury’s financial services product as they shopped in the supermarket, while further circumstantial evidence for this hunch is that Sainsbury’s never launched a current account offering), there will be some opportunities for other banks to pick up some of these customers. As the largest High Street bank (it has a c.20% UK personal current account market share), Lloyds Banking Group will be a natural destination for some of the Sainsbury customers who will be looking for a new home. LLOY is very cheap, trading on 5.4x expected 2025 earnings and yielding 8.0%.

 

AMZN – iRobot disconnected?

Media reports this morning (Bloomberg) state that the EU is expected to block Amazon’s $1.4bn purchase of iRobot Corp on concerns that Amazon might be tempted to use its dominant position as an online retailer to favour iRobot products over those of its competitors. The reports also say that the US FTC is looking to block the deal. A $1.4bn acquisition is small beer for Amazon (market cap $1.6trn) although it would have been the Group’s fourth largest acquisition in history after Whole Foods, MGM and One Medical – which is more of a sign about how good AMZN is at internally generated value creation investments than anything else. Bloomberg consensus has iRobot delivering $929m of revenue and losing $117m at the EBITDA level in 2024, which compares to Amazon’s $636bn of 2024 income and $120bn of EBITDA on the same measure. So, not a game changer for AMZN, which has plenty of other growth levers (indeed, Bloomberg consensus has AMZN EBITDA growing to $167bn in 2026). AMZN trades on a 2025 EV/EBITDA of just 11.3x, a very cheap multiple for such a quality business.

 

RHM – German order

One of my New Year’s resolutions was only to cover material (nine digit) contract wins when updating on Rheinmetall newsflow. On Wednesday, RHM announced that the German Bundeswehr has contracted it to supply over €350m worth of 30mm rounds for the Puma IFV over 2024-27. Follow-up orders are expected. This order is synonymous with a lot of what sits in RHM’s >€30bn order book – multi-year contracts that offer multi-year visibility on revenue and earnings, while RHM is clearly a play on the structural growth in Western security investment. RHM trades on an undemanding 13.6x consensus 2025 earnings and yields 2.6%.

End of Year Review 2023

As markets have now closed for the year across Europe, including here in Dublin, it seems timely to review how the portfolio performed in 2023. Unlike a lot of investors, I don’t generally monitor short-term (weekly/monthly/annual) returns at the portfolio level – I find metrics like that to be just ‘noise’ considering that I am investing on a ‘forever view’ and would hope to never have to draw down on my capital. 

 

For what it’s worth though, my portfolio was +18.7% in 2023, which compares very favourably to both the FTSE All-Share (+3.9%) and the Eurostoxx 600 Index (+12.8%), which I view as more natural benchmarks than the relatively more tech heavy S&P 500 (+24.6% at the time of writing – US markets will close tonight my time) given that my track record in picking tech winners is very poor compared to most other sectors (and you see this mapped to my portfolio components and weightings below). Whilst the 2023 outcome is pleasing, I know the market can be fickle at the best of times and I see no reason to deviate from an investment strategy that is focused on finding businesses with strong balance sheets, good market positions and obvious long-term value creation catalysts.

 

Before we get into the review itself, a reminder that absolutely none of this – or anything else on my blog – is investment advice – I don’t make any recommendations, these are simply my own subjective opinions that may prove to be on the money, hopelessly wrong or simply somewhere in between. As always, you should do your own research.

 

Getting back to the job at hand, coming into 2023 I said that I was “looking to up my exposure to healthcare, energy, TMT, industrials and retail” and also said I expected “to see a number of takeovers/value realisation (sale of assets and return of cash proceeds to shareholders) events across the portfolio”. On the first part of that, I added to existing shareholdings in Aviva, BT, Harbour Energy, Haleon, Marks & Spencer and Premier Miton, while I bought shares for the first time in Alliance Pharma. While I am happy with all of those names, hindsight is 20/20 and I would have done better had I topped up my Amazon and DCC positions too.

 

In terms of disposals, I exited Hammerson, where I viewed the rising interest rate environment as unfavourable for a business with elevated borrowings and consumers who are exposed to cost of living pressures. STM Group agreed to be taken over at c.2x what I originally bought into the company at, with this sale expected to close during H1 2024. Eastern European Property Fund (EEP) sold its remaining property asset during the year and made an initial distribution that was larger than what I paid for its shares in the first place, with two further distributions guided for 2024. 

 

Looking ahead to 2024, I expect to buy more energy, healthcare, financial and media names where I see helpful structural drivers. STM and EEP aside, I also expect to see further transaction-related (i.e. sale of some/all of their assets) distributions coming from the likes of Palace Capital and Peel Hotels.

 

Financial Services (6.7% weighting)

The interest rate environment weighed heavily on three of my four positions in this pot, with middling performances from Abrdn (-5.6%); City of London Investment Group (-24.5%); and Premier Miton (-36.9%) as AUM struggled due to clients pivoting to safer assets that offered reasonable yields for the first time in many years. Assuming we are at peak yields now though, risk-on sentiment should support growth in AUM for equity-focused asset managers. 

 

I see attractive drivers of value for each of these into the future – Abrdn has been: (i) meaningfully paring overheads, such as through fund closures/mergers; (ii) Simplifying the business by divesting non-core assets such as minority shareholdings in Indian insurance and asset management companies; and (iii) Slashing its share count through buybacks – shares out fell from 2.00bn at end-2022 to 1.86bn by the end of November, which is especially significant given the Group’s uncovered dividend. Assuming it materialises on the back of falling risk-free rates in 2024, the bounce of the ball on market conditions (and associated AUM inflows to its equity funds) and a lower share count should see concerns about the dividend reduce. One threat to this thesis is falling NII, as ABDN has benefited from the rising interest rates in recent times.

 

For CLIG, the narrative is similar – falling rates should lead yield hunters to look for other income sources. PMI is in a similar boat, but with an extra kicker, namely the acquisition of Tellworth Investments (AUM £0.6bn) which is due to close in 2024. 

 

The three asset managers all offer good yields – ABDN 8%, CLIG 9.5%, PMI 9% per Bloomberg consensus – which compensate patient investors pending a re-rating. Sure, a prolonged market slump would pose risks to these dividends, but I suspect the bad news is in the price for these names. 

 

The fourth Financial Services company I have is STM Group, which gained 90% this year after agreeing to a takeover. This represents a satisfactory 2x return on investment. 

 

Industrial Goods & Services (11.0% weighting)

I have five holdings in this sector pursuing differentiated strategies and executing well against these. 

 

Rheinmetall, which is strongly exposed to the structural growth in Western defence budgets, gained 54% this year as its order book swelled on foot of rising threats to the free world. 

 

International Distributions Services rose 28% as investors bet that the resolution of a ruinous industrial dispute will lead to a step change in performance. 

 

DCC gained 42% on a re-rating driven by strong underlying performance and (I suspect) an investor re-evaluation of ESG rules of engagement. 

 

Irish Continental Group had a quieter year, adding just 1%, not helped by challenging deep sea trading conditions, but the Group’s ongoing opportunistic on-market share purchases suggest management sees a better underlying performance. 

 

Piraeus Port Authority (+47%) continues to reap the benefits from the rebound in cruise travel and its partnership with China’s COSCO, although security threats in the Red Sea and Eastern Mediterranean are a challenge given its position as the largest port in South-East Europe.

 

Personal / Household (9.1% weighting)

External headwinds (inflation-linked both in terms of input costs and consumer disposable incomes; and also FX) and tough comparatives turned off investors from the two brand behemoths in my portfolio, Reckitt (-6%) and Unilever (-9%) in 2023. Uninspiring strategy refreshes did little to excite the market either, although neither business model lends itself to excitement.

 

That being said, both companies have been buying back their own shares this year, which seems like tidy business given their undemanding (mid-teen earnings) ratings. Both businesses have also been modestly reshaping their portfolios in recent times, which should provide a further tailwind when the aforementioned external headwinds give way to more normalised trading conditions and volume recovery.

 

Healthcare (5.6% weighting)

Addressing my underweight position in this sector has been a priority for some time. This year I added Alliance Pharma to the portfolio – I view this as a cheap (2024 consensus PE of just 7.5x) business with a nice product suite and strong focus on free cash flow generation. I also doubled my holding in Haleon. I know this is a 2023 review but it is worth mentioning that I increased my holding in Smith + Nephew in 2022. I expect to invest more capital in this sector in 2024.

 

Haleon is essentially flat (-1.7%) this year, but that doesn’t surprise me given that c.40% of the share register is ‘loose’ – still held by the original selling shareholders GSK and Pfizer – GSK sold stock at 328p in October, close to the 330p IPO price, and I suspect it will look to sell more of its remaining 7% holding at or around this level in 2024. This technical overhang is holding back the share price, but the fundamental HLN story is one of strong brands generating strong cash flow, leading to rapid debt paydown. I also wonder if HLN may consider using its cash flows to offer to repurchase some of the GSK shareholding in 2024.

 

GSK was also flattish (+0.9%) during 2023, despite making strong progress on its development pipeline – at the end of September it had 67 vaccines and specialty medicines at various stages of development – and also making progress in resolving the Zantac distraction. A multiple of only 9.3x consensus 2024 earnings suggests the market is giving minimal credit to the firm for the clear progress it is making.

 

Smith + Nephew is executing well against its strategic priorities, raising FY revenue guidance in its Q3 trading update in November, while all three divisions are showing healthy momentum. The market is not yet giving management credit for this, with the shares -2.8% this year, but if the recovery is maintained, I think the stock will perform well in 2024. As an aside, I think the GLP-1 impact on orthopaedics is overplayed by the market – there are clear demographic tailwinds (ageing and wealthier populations) for the likes of SN/.

 

Alliance Pharma is essentially flat on where I bought it earlier this month.

 

Basic Resources (12.5% weighting)

In this vertical I have BHP (+4.7% in 2023) and Kenmare Resources (-10.0% in 2023).

 

As one of the world’s largest mining groups, BHP is somewhat at the mercy of economic developments, including commodity pricing. But the Group has continued to execute nicely on the corporate development side, completing the A$10bn OZ Minerals acquisition, strengthening its position in copper (and to a lesser extent gold), while its giant Jansen potash mine in Canada is now expected to commence production in CY2026. The Group is also working on projects to materially increase iron output at WAIO, a timely move with pricing strengthening to an 18 month high this week. As a globally significant producer of future-facing commodities, including those essential to progressing decarbonisation and supportive of increased urbanisation, BHP is perfectly strategically positioned, in my view.

 

Kenmare Resources (market cap £352m) is of a different scale to BHP, but it is nonetheless a very attractive proposition, producing 7% of the world’s titanium feedstocks from a single asset with a c.100 year remaining reserve life. The Group is highly cash generative, allowing it to undertake accretive capex and share buybacks. A severe lightning strike and upward inflationary pressures on capex weighed on the share this year, as did expectations of weaker commodity prices, but its low rating (Bloomberg has it on 4.1x consensus 2024 earnings) surely discounts more than enough bad news. I think this stock would be cheap at twice the price.

 

Oil & Gas (2.6% weighting)

Similar to healthcare, I have been adding to positions here in a push to increase my weighting to this sector. My conviction view is that we are in an energy supercycle, driven by years of underinvestment. Yes, decarbonisation is a laudable policy objective, but the effective achievement of this is decades away.

 

Harbour Energy (+1.4%) was headed for a lacklustre 2023, weighed down by restrictive UK government energy policy. In the background though, it has remained cash generative and focused on distributions, including buybacks that reduced the share count from 847m shares at end-2022 to 770m at end-November 2023. That share count will grow again in the short term once the recently announced transformative acquisition of Wintershall Dea closes next year, but that will leave HBR in a far stronger position, with much larger scale, low leverage, increased reserve life and higher exposure to gas.

 

For Woodside Energy (-16.4%), despite the poor share price performance, 2023 was a year in which it made significant progress on its development portfolio, which should unlock structurally higher cashflows from here. Like Harbour, it is looking at a transformative acquisition through a potential merger with Australian gas peer Santos.

 

Banks (9.9% weighting)

The interest rate environment gave both of my holdings in this sector a tailwind coming in to 2023. While we may well be at peak rates, the banks have other cards to play – strong distributions, revenue resilience through structural hedges and benefits from diversification initiatives, while disciplined post-GFC underwriting should minimise soured loans.

 

Lloyds Banking Group (+5.1%) and Bank of Cyprus (+102%) have both seen strong profitability (and associated capital generation); resilient asset quality; and disciplined cost management. 

 

Distributions are key parts of both banks’ investment cases. Lloyds pared its share count from 67.3bn at the start of the year down to 63.6bn at end-December through buybacks. Bank of Cyprus received the green light to pay dividends for the first time in 12 years back in April, which is a testament to the remarkable job management has done in turning that business around.

 

Retail (3.6% weighting)

My decision to double my holding in Marks & Spencer at the very start of January proved to be an inspired one, with the stock increasing by 121% this year. 

 

The transformation in the prospects of both Food and Clothing & Home are a testament to the management team, with the Group gaining market share in both segments despite the well-documented pressure consumers are under. One underappreciated part of the MKS story is its rapid financial deleveraging – it is headed for net cash on a pre-IFRS16 lease basis in the not too distant future on my numbers – and while a number of commentators are saying its low double digit earnings multiple is up with events, I would argue that it hasn’t seen balance sheet strength like this since before the GFC (at least).

 

Another consideration is that several of its rivals look to be under significant pressure, which may create opportunities for MKS to mop up more market share if the High Street retrenches further. 

 

Insurance (2.9% weighting)

Like Retail I only have one name in this segment, with Aviva flying the flag here. The shares have had a flattish 2023 (-1.8%) despite continuing to make strong distributions – I suspect the interest rate environment did the damage here (as income investors could – and did – look elsewhere for yield), but that seems likely to reverse in 2024 – Aviva yields 8%, roughly double the yield on the FTSE All-Share.

 

Food & Beverage (8.6% weighting)

A tougher year for my names in the sector. Nonetheless I see both Kerry and Origin as being well positioned for the megatrends of nutrition, sustainability and food security.

 

Kerry Group had a more challenging 2023 (shares -6.6%), with the Q3 trading update seeing EPS guidance pared to the “low end of the previously stated 1% to 5% CER range”. Similar to the likes of Unilever and Reckitt (both qv) it has compensated for some of the pressure by launching a share buyback (€300m in its case), its first since 2007. Kerry had a relatively quiet 2023 on the M&A front, but its strong balance sheet (consensus net debt / EBITDA of only 1.1x for end-2024) means it could step up the pace of dealflow (with obvious implications for EPS momentum) in 2024.

 

Origin Enterprises has also seen more challenging (recent) external trading conditions, with its share price falling 20% in 2023, but like Kerry it remains very cash generative and is currently working through another (€20m) share buyback programme – an excellent use of surplus capital given its current low rating (Bloomberg has it on 6.7x FY 2024 earnings).

 

Travel & Leisure (5.9% weighting)

My exposures here are mainly in Ryanair, with smaller shareholdings in two UK hotel businesses.

 

Ryanair (+56%) had a super 2023, benefiting from the ongoing resilience in international air travel and structural advantages over a number of its competitors. Its significant cash generation is supporting a multi-billion euro fleet programme and shareholder distributions.

 

Peel Hotels delisted a number of years ago. It sold two hotels in April, which moved the Group into a net cash position. It has a NAV of just over £1 a share while its shares last traded on the AssetMatch platform at just 30p. Buybacks plainly make sense given such a mismatch, which would provide the twin benefits of an exit for the impatient and NAV accretion for those of us in no hurry to check out. Hopefully 2024 will see the Group sell some or all of its four remaining hotels.

 

Daniel Thwaites (shares -17% in 2023) is similar to Peel in that its shares (currently 85p on the Aquis index) are at a huge discount to the latest (September 2023) NAV of 420p a share. Where the two differ is that Thwaites has (manageable) net debt, a function of its growth strategy (it has been investing heavily in its hotel portfolio in recent years). Buybacks look less likely here, but I think Thwaites can (and should) look to grow its 10-strong hotel portfolio by one hotel a year out to the rest of this decade at least.

 

Media (1.3% weighting)

My sole exposure to this sector is Scotland’s STV, which completed the transformative acquisition of Greenbird Media earlier this year, lifting its Studios business to >60% of earnings. The Group’s strategy of using the commercially dominant legacy linear broadcast business, which has the same audience share as its 10 or so next largest commercial rivals combined (BBC doesn’t carry ads), as a cash cow to finance its growing Digital and Studios businesses is paying off handsomely. The share price, -29% in 2023, isn’t yet reflecting this, with a valuation of just 7.5x consensus 2024 earnings suggesting that the market sees STV as ex-growth. I believe the opposite is true, and that these shares can re-rate strongly from here. 

 

Utilities (9.9% weighting)

My ‘green’ exposures in the portfolio had a mixed 2023, with Greencoat Renewables (-10%) struggling as a result of the interest rate environment (it’s a favourite of income investors) while Renewi posted a 7% gain, helped by bid interest (later withdrawn) from Macquarie.

 

I do think Renewi was right to reject the Macquarie approach as, in my view, it fundamentally undervalued the Group – the initial proposal of 775p/share in September represented a multiple of just 8.4x EBITDA – which seems skinny for a leading circular economy player. I think RWI’s fair value is at least £10/share (For balance, Bloomberg analyst consensus gives a blended price target of 829p).

 

Greencoat Renewables’ strongly cash generative model means that it should, in my view, be able to continue to add to its pan-European renewable assets portfolio. If policy rates start to come down in 2024 as expected, this should give the shares a lift, as utilities are viewed as ‘bond proxies’ by income investors. 

 

Real Estate (4.4% weighting)

My four remaining real estate holdings (the residual Hammerson position was offloaded in early 2023) had a mixed year.

 

EEP sold its remaining asset, the Markiz building in Istanbul, at a good price and made an initial distribution in late 2023 of 45p/share that more than covered my original in-price. This was a very satisfactory outcome given the challenging conditions for Turkish real estate in recent years. Further distributions are guided for 2024 as the company winds itself up.

 

Palace Capital posted a modest gain of 4% this year despite the interest rate headwinds for property stocks and concerns about UK commercial real estate valuations. This is because the Group has reduced net debt to de minimis levels, while also successfully executing multiple better-than-book-value disposals and ongoing share buybacks at a meaningful discount to NAV. It’s not unrealistic to think that PCA could sell all of its remaining properties by the end of 2024 if rates come down as much as futures pricing suggests they will.

 

PRS REIT (-3%), as an income play, struggled in this rate environment. However, the completion of substantially all of its development pipeline means development risks have sharply reduced and the dividend should be covered by underlying earnings in 2024. Lower risk free rates should be a tailwind for the share price in 2024, in my opinion.

 

SPDI (-30%) had a sluggish 2023, making some progress on the Arcona tie-up but the Ukraine war remains a headwind for fully completing that transaction. Arcona is delivering well on its strategy though, which offers the prospect of indirect NAV accretion via SPDI’s shareholding in Arcona. The stock is not without its risks though.

 

Telecoms (1.2% weighting)

My sole exposure to this space is BT/A, whose shares rose ‘only’ 10%, held back by what I suspect are technical factors (perception of loose shareholdings). As with the likes of Haleon though, these technical factors mask a fast-improving fundamental story, with BT/A returning revenue and EBITDA growth, while it has a clear glide path to a step-change in free cash flow generation from the completion of the FTTP capex and execution of its cost take-out programme. The stock is very cheap at 6.6x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 6.2%.

 

Construction/Materials (2.2% weighting)

My sole exposure here is CRH, which had a sparkling year, rising 73% as the market cheered on improving fundamentals (including its positive exposure to US government infrastructure-led stimulus) and the technical lift from changes to its listing arrangements. It has a highly cash generative business, supporting accretive M&A, buybacks and dividends.

 

Technology (2.6% weighting)

My exposures here are two megacaps, Amazon and Prosus.

 

For Amazon (shares +83%) 2023 was a terrific year, with the Group advancing on all fronts (AWS, retail, advertising, subscriptions). The Group seems on track to lift revenue from 2022’s $514bn to $1trn+ by 2028. Profitability is about to lift off too, due to cost take-out initiatives and the Group’s growth into its previous excess capacity. The stock is not the cheapest at 13.4x consensus 2024 EV/EBITDA, but that is not a demanding multiple for a business of this quality. 

 

Prosus had a very frustrating 2023, with the share price falling 8%, essentially mirroring its main asset, a quarter share in Tencent (-7%). However, PRX trades at a discount to the value of its shares in Tencent alone, so the underperformance makes no sense given that: (i) PRX has been selling shares in Tencent to finance ongoing buybacks at a sharp discount to NAV; and (ii) PRX has brought forward plans to deliver profitability from its own-operated asset base. If sentiment towards China turns more positive, PRX could have a very good 2024.

Stocks Update 13/10/2023

AMZN/MKS – Waitrose/Amazon report

BOCH – O-SII buffer increased

CLIG/PMI – AUM updates

GSK – Vaccine partnership; Zantac

KMR – Production report – normalising

PRSR – FY results – likely up with events (for now)

RHM – Third call-off

STM – Recommended acquisition

 

STM – Recommended acquisition

The protracted takeover of STM Group took a big leap forward on Tuesday, with the announcement of a recommended acquisition of the company by Jambo SRC, a Bidco set up by Edi Truell’s PSF. As expected, the consideration will be 60p paid up front in cash and a deferred consideration element of 0-7p per share depending on net attrition levels. Before the initial PSF approach STM had last seen a share price with a 6 handle in 2018, so I expect that this acquisition will be heavily backed by investors. To date, Bidco has procured irrevocable undertakings in favour of the Scheme Resolution from shareholders representing 24.2% of STM shares; and 36.1% in relation to the other GM resolutions. On timing, as you’d expect given the complexities of a multi-jurisdictional group, it is expected that the Scheme will become Effective during H1 2024 (the Court and General Meetings are expected to be held in Q4 2023) – the long stop date is 28 May 2024. The 60p cash consideration will be paid within 14 days of the Scheme becoming Effective, with the deferred consideration determination set to follow 12 months after that. I bought STM at 34.5p in November 2021, and have received 2.1p in dividends (pre-tax) since then, so a c.2x return in 2-2.5 years is a satisfactory outcome. Given the current depressed valuations elsewhere in the market (including within the same sector), I am minded to be a seller at 60p (and forego participation in the deferred consideration) if the bid price gets to that level before the Scheme becomes effective.  

 

PRSR – FY results – likely up with events (for now)

The PRS REIT released its FY (year-end June) 2023 results on Tuesday, alongside a Q1 2024 trading update. PRSR says its “assets are performing strongly, and rental demand continues to grow”, which is unsurprising given the supply/demand mismatch in the UK housing market. Reflecting the completion of its development pipeline (PRSR had 5,080 units at end-June, up from 4,786 12 months earlier) and higher rents, PRSR’s FY revenue of £49.7m was +18% y/y, although higher costs (debt, admin and property) meant a more pedestrian 3% y/y uplift in EPRA EPS to 3.1p. Net assets finished the year at 120.1p, also +3% y/y as development surpluses and rising rents more than cancelled out higher yields (+34bps to 4.47% during FY 2023). At the end of September 2023 PRSR’s portfolio had grown to 5,129 completed units with a further 395 contracted. Once the contracted units are built then the portfolio will have an ERV of £60.7m, which will finally align the distributable income to the annual dividend cost (£22m a year; while in FY 2023 PRSR’s property costs were £10m, admin costs £8m and finance costs £16m). Operating metrics in the portfolio remain robust – rent collection was 99% in the FY, with occupancy at 97% at end-June and arrears increased by only £0.4m during FY 2023. Like-for-like blended rental growth was c.7% on stabilised sites. Further comfort can be drawn by the fact that average rent as a proportion of gross household income is just 22% across PRSR’s estate, down from 25% in FY 2022. On the balance sheet, 82% of PRSR’s debt is covered by long-term facilities with an average term of 16 years and average blended rate of 3.8%. Gearing is modest at 37% LTV. How to think about PRSR? Post the release of the results some commentators pointed at the yawning gap between the market price and the 120.1p NAV, but I don’t think that’s the right approach. Certainly, a 4p dividend and a ‘fair value’ of 1x NAV implies a 3.3% dividend yield, which seems too light given ‘safer’ alternatives – Lloyds Bank is offering a 5.15% one year deposit rate for new customers. I don’t see a lot of scope for the 4p dividend to grow either given that it’ll only be covered this (financial) year and there’s presumably upward pressure on finance costs on the variable element of PRSR’s borrowings. If you treat the 4p dividend as an annuity and require a 5% yield that implies a fair value of 80p/share, if you require a 6% yield that gives a fair value of 67p (today’s share price of 73.3p suggests the market currently demands 5.5%!). I think the market is looking at PRSR in that context, so it will require a moderation in market rates before the shares re-rate to anything like the NAV. That said, I am a happy holder – I get a 5% running yield off my average in-price of 80p, supported by a portfolio that has more than 5,000 revenue generating units.

 

KMR – Production report – normalising

On Thursday Kenmare Resources released its Q3 production update. As expected, this showed a normalisation following the disruption caused by (of all things) a lightning strike in the first half of the year. Ilmenite production rose 32% q/q and is expected to continue at this rate in Q4. Revenues in the quarter were impacted by the timing of shipments (slipping into Q4 from Q3) but this shouldn’t impact FY numbers. As a result of the stronger production in Q3, Kenmare says it is “firmly on track to achieve revised 2023 guidance”. Another highlight from Q3 is the execution of a $30m buyback that reduced the share count by a further 5.9%, making 2023 the third successive year in which the Group has bought back shares. On capex, the Group guides that the cost of the upgrade of WCP-A and transition to the Nataka ore zone will now cost 15% more than in the pre-feasibility study estimate (so 15% onto the initial $247m, manageable in the context of consensus EBITDA of $199m in 2024), presumably reflecting external inflationary pressures. On a more positive note, the Rotary Uninterruptible Power Supply (RUPS) is now back in service following design corrections, helping to protect against grid power instability. In terms of pricing, weaker global macro weighed on achieved prices for ilmenite in Q3 and while zircon pricing has been stable so far, the Group expects they will come “under increasing pressure” as a result of reduced global construction activity. All in all, KMR continues to demonstrate strong control over the controllables and while external conditions can weigh on short-term performance, the long-term demand drivers for its products are sound. KMR is extremely cheap on conventional metrics, with Bloomberg consensus putting it on 3.8x 2024 earnings and yielding 10.5%.

 

GSK – Vaccine partnership; Zantac

On Monday GSK announced an exclusive strategic vaccine partnership with Zhifei in China. The Group says this “will significantly extend availability of [shingles vaccine] Shingrix in China” and “also supports potential future co-development and commercialisation of Arexvy”, GSK’s RSV vaccine for older adults, in the same market (Arexvy has regulatory approvals in the US, EU and Japan, but not yet in China). The partnership will run for an initial three year period from 1 January 2024. As part of the agreement, Zhifei will purchase £2.5bn worth of Shingrix over the initial three year period, with purchases on a phased basis (more towards the back end of the agreement). This is material in the context of GSK’s plan to double global Shingrix sales to more than £4bn by 2026. GSK has the option to make Zhifei its exclusive Chinese partner for the distribution of Arexvy. China, with its ageing and increasingly wealthy population, is plainly an attractive market for Shingrix and Arexvy. To this end, this partnership is very welcome news for GSK. Elsewhere, GSK announced on Wednesday that it had reached a confidential settlement in the Cantlay/Harper case filed in California state court, ahead of the scheduled trial date of 13 November. It has also settled three bellwether cancer cases in the same state. Details of the settlements were not provided, but given that they allow the Group to draw a line under more of the Zantac distraction (I suggest that this is the right wording, given the scientific evidence all appears to be on GSK’s side) they are nonetheless welcome to see. GSK is one of the cheapest ‘big pharma’ names, trading on just 9.8x 2024 earnings and yielding 4.0%.

 

CLIG/PMI – AUM updates

City of London Investment Group and Premier Miton Group both released end-September FUM and trading updates this morning. To start with CLIG, its FUM were $8.9bn at end-September, down from end-June’s $9.4bn. Within that, net flows were -$152m, so performance did the damage. CLIG is focusing its marketing efforts on the long-term outperformance of its strategies and the value opportunities in closed-end funds “as discounts remain close to the widest levels seen over the past two decades”. The run-rate for pre-profit share operating profit is c.$3.4m per month. The annual cost of the dividend is £16m a year, so that looks safe. Turning to Premier Miton, the Group finished FY 2023 (year-end September) with £9.8bn of closing AUM, down from £10.5bn at end-June. Here it was net outflows of £0.7bn (£0.5bn from a single client) that did the damage, with performance resilient – 73% of funds are in the first or second quartile of their respective sectors since launch or fund manager tenure. Management is “comfortable with market expectations for its financial performance for the year to 30 September 2023”. As with CLIG, market sentiment is currently turned off PMI’s core offering (UK/European small caps) but with Morgan Stanley having recently said that UK risk assets are the cheapest in the world, a turn in sentiment should disproportionately benefit PMI. I’ve previously said that I think PMI’s offering is too expansive (does it really need 41 open-ended funds and four investment trusts?) and I’m pleased to see management say that “several restructuring changes [were] completed during the year” and “there has been an ongoing focus on ensuring costs…are fully aligned with revenue expectations” and “plans to further streamline our business where appropriate”. PMI is also open to M&A, saying it is “currently in the late stages of progressing one bolt on acquisition with a focus on the UK alternatives space”. PMI’s FY results will be released on 5 December. On current valuations, CLIG is on 9.6x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 9.5%, while PMI is on 8.5x consensus FY 2024 earnings and yields 10.1%. Sure, there are risks to those estimates, but if I’m wrong and they are re-set, those starting positions should mean that the yield remains very strong. I am minded to add to my financials positions. 

 

RHM – Third call-off

Rheinmetall announced on Tuesday that it has booked an order to supply over 150,000 155mm and DM121 rounds worth in the “mid-three-digit million-euro range”. Fulfilment will come from RHM’s recently acquired Spanish subsidiary Expal. Although Germany has placed the order, these rounds will be sent to support Ukraine. “Tens of thousands” of the rounds will be delivered in Q4 of this year, with the balance following in 2024. This is the third call-off under the framework agreement between the German Bundeswehr and RHM that runs to 2029 and represents gross potential order volume of c.€1.2bn. Rheinmetall is a play on the structural Western security growth story, with its associated long term contracts (RHM has a €30bn+ order book) that provide strong visibility. As I’ve argued previously, I don’t think this is reflected in an undemanding multiple of 14.3x consensus 2024 earnings. RHM yields 2.6%.

 

BOCH – O-SII buffer increased

On Tuesday the Central Bank of Cyprus announced the outcome of its annual reassessment of the designation of credit institutions that meet the definition of Other Systemically Important Institutions (O-SII) for 2023. In accordance with this reassessment, five credit institutions have been designated as O-SII institutions, including Bank of Cyprus, whose total O-SII capital buffer requirement is being increased from the 2.25% as of 1 January 2023 to 2.25% by 1 January 2025 (an intermediary 1.875% requirement applies from 1 January 2024). The only other Cypriot bank to see a hike in its O-SII requirement is Hellenic, which will go from 1.00% as at 1 January 2023 to 1.50% on 1 January 2025. For good order, Eurobank Cyprus (0.75%); Astrobank and Alpha Bank Cyprus (both 0.25%) saw no change in their requirements on foot of this exercise, but with Greece’s Eurobank looking set to acquire Hellenic (and presumably merge its Cypriot entity into it in order to maximise synergies) I expect that Hellenic/Eurobank will have its O-SII buffer requirement looked at again next year. The extra 75bps capital requirement for BOCH is very manageable given: (i) the CET1 requirement of 10.26% + P2G at end-June 2023 compares to a CET1 ratio of 16% as at the same date, so huge headroom to absorb the 75bps, which is being phased in over two years; and (ii) the strong capital generation of the BOCH model (220bps of organic capital generation in H1 2023 alone). Bank of Cyprus’ strong capital position allows it considerable optionality in terms of distributions; tactical M&A (while the Group has high market shares, the very fragmented nature of the Cyprus banking market presumably allows for some bolt-on transactions); organic growth; and investment, all whilst maintaining a strong capital position. Bank of Cyprus is extremely cheap on conventional metrics, trading on 4.2x consensus 2024 earnings and 0.6x P/B for an expected ROE of 15.3%. The consensus dividend for FY 2024 equates to a 10.2% yield.

 

AMZN/MKS – Waitrose/Amazon report 

Monday’s Times of London reported that Waitrose is discussing a grocery delivery tie-up with Amazon as it looks to grow its online sales. Waitrose has struggled in this channel since losing its Ocado partnership to M&S. However, I’m sceptical on this report given that the John Lewis Partnership seems to have limited capital to invest meaningfully in such an initiative and there is a risk that any tie-up could prove cannibalistic of Waitrose’s own online sales. A further doubt to my mind is that John Lewis’ Executive Chair has signalled that she will be stepping down by 2025, creating uncertainty around JLP’s strategy that hardly chimes with the multi-year commitment that a serious grocery delivery venture would represent. Watch this space. AMZN’s statutory earnings are expected to almost treble between FY 2023 ($2.19) and FY 2026 ($6.15) according to Bloomberg consensus . That the Group sits on sub-10x EV/EBITDA for 2025 (and 12.1x for 2024) suggests to me that it’s undervalued.

Stocks Update 4/8/2023

AMZN – Strong Q2 results

AV/ – Topping up

GRP – The wind in Spain

GSK – Incremental pipeline progress

HBR – Track 2 status for CCS projects

HLN – Solid H1 results

KYGA – H1 results, Bolt-on Chinese acquisition

PCA – Another better-than-book-value disposal 

PRSR – Dividend in-line

PRX – Disposal at a very keen price

RHM – Closes Spanish acquisition

RYA – Bumper passenger figures (again)

SN/ – H1 results, upgraded guidance

 

AV/ – Topping up

On Wednesday I topped up my Aviva shareholding by around a tenth. The stock yields 8.4% (and this dividend is expected to grow as the Group reduces the share count through buybacks) which is plainly attractive; supported by a franchise that has strong market positions across its core geographies of the UK, Canada and Ireland. Management has done an excellent job of streamlining the Group in recent years, shedding non-core overseas businesses, zapping costs and reducing funding expenses by retiring legacy instruments (and I see scope for more action on this front). A solid capital base provides plenty of scope for future buybacks of ordinary and other equity instruments. Bloomberg consensus has AV/ trading on just 6.9x 2024 earnings, which seems far too cheap to me. 

 

AMZN – Strong Q2 results 

Amazon released its Q2 results last night which showed a very strong performance. Net sales of $134bn were +11%, beating consensus by 2%/$2.5bn, EBITDA of $26.5bn was $3.6bn/15.5% ahead of consensus; and net income of $6.75bn was $2.7bn/66% higher than what the market was expecting. Two particular highlights for me within the results were cash generation and AWS. On cash, operating cashflow of $16.5bn was nearly 2x Q2 2022’s $9.0bn; while investing outflows moderated to $10bn from the prior year’s $12bn, driven by a $4bn y/y reduction in cash capex as AMZN has been focused on growing into its excess capacity. The Group finished the quarter with $50bn of gross cash, providing considerable optionality. AWS revenues were +12% y/y to $22bn, although its operating income slipped to $5.4bn from $5.7bn in the prior year Q2. The margin decline appears to be mix-driven. Looking ahead, AMZN guides to Q3 revenues of $138-143bn and operating income of $5.5-8.5bn, ahead of pre-results consensus of $138bn and $5.5bn respectively. Amazon is cheap on conventional metrics – just 12.7x EV/EBITDA for 2024, falling to 10.5x for 2025 – for reference, the S&P 500 is on 12.5x EBITDA and I suggest that AMZN should be trading at a material premium to the market.

 

SN/ – H1 results, upgraded guidance

Smith + Nephew released its H1 results on Thursday. Revenue of $2.7bn was +5% on a reported basis (+7% underlying), with operating profit widening from $242m to $275m (the margin was +70bps to 10.0%) despite a 160bps contraction in the trading profit margin to 15.3% “reflecting expected seasonality and higher input inflation, transactional FX and increased sales and marketing to drive growth”. Adjusted EPS slipped from 38.1c to 34.9c. An unchanged interim dividend of 14.4c has been declared. For the full year, management has increased underlying revenue growth guidance to +6-7% from +5-6%, with the trading profit margin expected to be at least 17.5% (in line with prior guidance). A tax rate of c.17% is now expected, down from the previous c.19% assumption. All in all, the upgraded guidance is very good to see, supported by positive strategic execution on the Group’s turnaround plans. The stock trades on 14.9x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 2.8%, which seems quite inexpensive to me.

 

HLN – Solid H1 results

Haleon released its H1 (end-June) results on Wednesday. The Group revealed a very strong revenue performance, +10.6% to £5.7bn, of which +10.4% was organic driven by price (+7.5%) with volume/mix contributing 2.9%. Power brands delivered 10.1% organic growth, with 55% of brands gaining or holding market share year to date. Operating profit (adjusted, CER) advanced at a slightly slower pace of 8.9% to £1.3bn, with the adjusted margin of 22.2% -40bps in CER terms. Cash generation was strong, £749m operating cashflow (up from £680m in the prior-year period) and £369m free cash flow (down from £553m in the prior year, driven by a £216m y/y increase in finance costs), helping net debt to finish the half at £9.5bn (3.4x TTM EBITDA), £1.2bn below the July 2022 net debt of £10.7bn. The Group has agreed to sell Lamisil, with completion expected in Q4, for an associated cash inflow of £250m, which will help push net debt / EBITDA below 3x. An interim dividend of 1.8p/share has been declared, payable in October. On the outlook, HLN guides to 7-8% organic revenue growth (was “towards the upper end of the 4-6% range”) and 9-11% adjusted operating profit growth in CER, implying a different operating leverage outturn for H2 to what we saw in H1 – there may be some downside risks to this I suspect, but hardly material to the investment case. The Group reaffirmed that it intends to deliver annualised gross cost savings of c.£300m over the next three years, with the benefits largely expected in FY 2024 and FY 2025. I’m very positive on Haleon, I like its portfolio of strong brands, its cash generative qualities and the discount it trades at relative to peers (a function of the overhang from GSK and Pfizer shareholdings). It’s on my watchlist for buying more of in the short term. The stock trades on 16.8x 2024 earnings and yields 1.95%.

 

KYGA – H1 results, Bolt-on Chinese acquisition

Kerry Group released its H1 (end-June) results on Wednesday. Group revenue was €4.1bn representing 5.1% organic growth. Within that, volumes were +0.6% with pricing providing the balance. EBITDA of €518m was unchanged y/y with a 20bps margin reduction offsetting topline growth. Adjusted EPS of 180c was +2.1% in CER. An interim dividend of 34.6c has been declared, up from 31.4c last year. Net debt has reduced by €0.4bn since the start of the year to €1.8bn, reflecting the disposal of the Sweet Ingredients Portfolio. At 1.6x EBITDA, this puts the Group into a strong position to exploit growth opportunities, such as the Chinese acquisition noted below. The Group reaffirmed its FY outlook guidance of growth in adjusted EPS of 1-5% in CER terms. Elsewhere, Kerry Group announced on Tuesday that it is to acquire Shanghai Greatang Orchard Food Company in China. The business has c.120 employees and is a “leading producer of local authentic and innovative taste solutions”. It is expected to deliver FY 2023 revenues of €38m. Kerry sees the transaction as complementing its existing Chinese footprint, “most notably in the significant foodservice hotpot market”. The initial consideration is €91m, a punchy multiple of close to 2.5x sales, with potential milestone payments of a further €99m due across the next three years, depending on the achievement of performance targets. While this is small in a Group context (Kerry’s market cap is €16bn), KYGA has a proven track record of successfully acquiring and integrating businesses, driving impressing CAGR in earnings and dividends over its many decades as a public company. Kerry trades on 18.6x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 1.4%, not cheap but this is a high quality business.

 

GRP – The wind in Spain

Greencoat Renewables announced on Tuesday that it has agreed the forward purchase of the 50MW Andella wind farm, its third acquisition in the Spanish market. Separately, it has closed the acquisition of the 50MW Torrubia solar park. Andella is under construction, with commencement of commercial operations expected in Q2 2024. The project consists of 10 Siemens Gamesa 5MW turbines. This transaction makes strategic sense for GRP, providing further asset and geographic diversification to a Group that operates across Ireland, Germany, France, Finland, Sweden and Spain. The acquisition of Torrubia was agreed in December 2020 under a forward purchase agreement. GRP’s total borrowings are now at an undemanding 47% of GAV, well inside its self-imposed 60% limit. While debt is an option to pay for Andella (estimated to cost €90-95m), it is worth noting that the Group has a very cash generative model – in FY 2022 it had operating cash flow of €102m while the cash cost of the dividend is €73m/year. I’ve said before that GRP is likely a preferred partner for developers of European renewable assets to arrange forward sale agreements with, given its strong balance sheet, familiarity with a range of technologies (wind, solar, battery power) and suppliers and proven ability to execute transactions across different markets. GRP trades on an undemanding 12.3x 2024 consensus earnings and yields an attractive 6.2%.

 

PRX – Disposal at a very keen price

Prosus announced on Tuesday that its 100% owned PayU business has agreed to sell its Global Payment Organisation (GPO) to Rapyd for US$610m in cash. Following the sale, PayU will focus on its rapidly growing Indian payments and credit business, which serves more than 450,000 merchants and has more than 2m credit customers. GPO handled US$34bn of payment volumes in FY 2023, >300% above FY 2018 volumes. Recent media reports had said that PayU was considering a sale of its ex-India business, so this is not a particular surprise. What is a pleasant surprise though is the reported multiples for the transaction, which is subject to customary regulary approvals and closing conditions, 13.0x CY 2024E EBITDA on a standalone basis, which is a c.17% premium to peers. On completion, the deal will further strengthen PRX’s balance sheet (it last reported net cash of US$0.3bn) and is another helpful step to simplifying the business, which suffers from a conglomerate discount (its NAV per share is €107, of which €80 of NAV per share relates to Prosus’s shareholding in Tencent alone, so the Prosus share price of €68.65 earlier today implies you get all of Prosus’ other assets outside of Tencent, including its net cash, at a negative valuation). In related PRX news, I note that Indian media reports this week said that PayU is considering an IPO of its Indian operations, which offers an opportunity for PRX to monetise this asset.

 

PCA – Another better-than-book-value disposal 

Palace Capital announced on Wednesday that it has sold 22 Market Street, an office property in Maidenhead, for £9.6m before rent incentives. The net price of £9.0m is 9.7% ahead of the end-March 2023 book value. PCA will use £3.5m of the proceeds to repay bank debt, with the balance sheet strengthening to a net debt position of £0.1m. Gross debt is £20.2m and cash is £20.1m, so presumably the Group is balancing break fees on loan facilities and the keener rates available on deposits at this time. Further portfolio disposals will fund distributions to shareholders as PCA continues to divest its real estate assets. It is hard to square today’s 248p share price and ongoing better-than-book-value disposals with the end-March 2023 EPRA NTA of 296p/share.

 

RYA – Bumper passenger figures (again)

Ryanair announced on Wednesday that it carried 18.7m passengers in July, the first time in the Group’s history that it carried >18m guest in one month. The July passenger figure is 11% above the outturn for the same month last year.  The load factor of 96% was in line with the same month last year. On a rolling 12 months basis, RYA carried 175.3m PAX in the period to end-July, +23% y/y on average loads of 94%, +7pc y/y. RYA guides to 183.5m passengers in FY (year-end March) 2024, +9% y/y. On the strength of these data, the Group should easily meet this new target. Ryanair trades on just 10.3x consensus 2024 earnings, which seems extremely cheap for a high quality sector leader, in my view.

 

HBR – Track 2 status for CCS projects

Harbour Energy said on Monday that its 60% owned Viking CO2 transportation and storage network and Acorn CCS project have both been awarded Track 2 status as part of the British government’s CCS cluster sequencing process. This means that both projects now move into FEED and discussions with the government over licence terms, ahead of FID. Viking has the potential to transport and store up to 10m tonnes of CO2 annually by 2030 and 15m tonnes by 2035, with independently verified storage capacity of 300m tonnes of CO2 across the depleted Viking gas fields. This is a welcome step for HBR, particularly viewed through the lens of ESG ratings (and associated future borrowing costs and marketability of the Group to investors). Harbour Energy is one of the cheapest stocks in my portfolio, trading on 6.2x consensus 2024 earnings and yielding 7.7%. Its net cash position is a further attraction.

 

GSK – Incremental pipeline progress

GSK said on Monday that the US FDA has approved the use of Jemperli (dostarlimab) plus chemo for primary advanced or recurrent endometrial cancer. This is the first immuno-oncology treatment approved in the frontline setting for this patient population in combination with chemotherapy. This widens the addressable market for Jemperli by up to 18,000 per annum in the US, good news for patients and GSK alike. GSK’s Q2 results last week showed that the Group has 68 vaccines and medicines across Phase I-III as at the end of June, a pipeline that I don’t see as being fairly reflected in an undemanding valuation of just 8.8x expected 2024 earnings. The stock also yields 4.5%.

 

RHM – Closes Spanish acquisition

Rheinmetall closed its €1.2bn acquisition of Spain’s Expal Systems on Tuesday. The acquisition materially expands the Group’s ammunition production capacity and product range at a time where there are huge cyclical (Ukraine) and structural (a demonstrated need to rebuild Western inventories) demand drivers for medium and large calibre munitions. Expal covers the full gambit from propellant to fuse. Reflecting the aforementioned demand drivers, it is no surprise that RHM will keep all of Expal’s existing locations in Spain and the US operational, “with further expansions planned”. I’m very positive on RHM, which is well positioned for the changed security backdrop. The stock trades on an undemanding 14.3x 2024 earnings and yields 2.6%.

PRSR – Dividend in-line

PRS REIT announced on Wednesday that it is declaring an unchanged 1.0p/share quarterly dividend for Q4 (to end-June 2023). This is in-line with expectations. Recent updates from the Group show that the dividend is on course to be covered in FY 2024 and that the Group has completed >90% of its development pipeline, both of which significantly reduce the risk profile around the Group. PRSR yields 4.9%, not as elevated a yield as other income plays, but it is safe with more than 5,000 properties contributing to its rent roll.

Stocks Update 28/7/2023

BT/A: Strong revenue and EBITDA performance

CLIG: Pre-close trading update

GRP: NAV and dividend update

GSK: Strong Q2 results; More pipeline progress 

LLOY: H1 results, guides to higher ROTE 

PCA: Trading update, strong disposal activity

PRSR: Pre-close trading update

RKT: H1 results, upgrade

RYA: Q1 results, upgrades seem likely

ULVR: H1 results ahead of expectations, guidance raised

 

BT/A: Strong revenue and EBITDA performance

BT released its Q1 (end-June) trading update on Thursday. This showed a strong start to the year, with revenues +4% and EBITDA +5% compared to the prior year. While this was helped by the application of higher retail prices, the Group’s strategic initiatives are also reflected in this outturn, with Openreach now 44% (11m/25m premises, with 55k being added each week) of the way through the massive FTTP capex programme, with a total network take-up rate of 32% (total FTTP connections are 3.5m). All guidance for FY 2024 has been retained, but with consensus (pre-Q1) for FY revenue and EBITDA growth of 1.7% and 1.6% respectively, I suspect the Q1 actuals point to upgrades. Outgoing CEO Jansen said: “our strategy is working and BT Group is set up for success”. This is an assessment I share, with the Group set to benefit from the twin tailwinds of FTTP (due to end in 2026, resulting in a material step-down in capex and BT being left with a best in class network) and a large-scale cost take-out programme. I don’t see the current multiple (Bloomberg has the telco trading on just 6.9x 2024 earnings, with a dividend yield of 6.2%) as providing any real consideration of these tailwinds.

 

LLOY: H1 results, guides to higher ROTE 

Lloyds Banking Group released its H1 results on Wednesday. The results showed a robust performance, “with strong net income and capital generation alongside resilient asset quality”. Taking those in turn, net income of £9.2bn was +11% y/y (stable vs H2 2022), helping to deliver a statutory net income of £2.9bn. NIM in Q2 was 314bps, -8bps q/q “given expected headwinds from mortgage and deposit pricing”. Business income of £2.5bn was +7% y/y. OpEx of £4.4bn was +6% y/y, but still growing at a slower pace than the top-line. The Group delivered a strong ROTE of 16.6% in H1, again Q2 was a tad softer (13.6%) although this is still well above COE. Capital generation was a solid 111bps, which includes a £800m FY pension contribution and the phased unwind of IFRS 9 relief. The CET1 ratio of 14.2% remains comfortably above the target of c.12.5% plus a c.1% management buffer. The impairment charge of £0.7bn equates to just 29bps “reflecting broadly stable credit trends”. TNAV was 45.7p, -3.9p from Q1 reflecting derivatives moves. LLOY has declared an interim dividend of 0.92p, +15% y/y. On distributions, the Group announced a £2bn buyback in February, which it is 75% of the way through. In terms of the outlook, LLOY now guides to: (i) Banking NIM of >310bps (was >305bps); (ii) OpEx of c.£9.1bn; (iii) CoR of c.30bps; (iv) ROTE of >14% (was c.13%); and capital generation of c.175bps. To my mind, a >14% ROTE should have the stock trading above 60p given a starting TNAV of 45.7p (indeed, the consensus share price target on Bloomberg is 60.3p). LLOY trades on just 5.9x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 6.9% (cash dividend alone, adding in buybacks gives a double digit distribution yield), very cheap to my mind.

 

RKT: H1 results, upgrade

Reckitt released a solid set of H1 results on Wednesday, revealing growth across all business units. Net revenue in the half was +6.0% y/y in LFL CER terms, but operating profit was -2.4% y/y on the same basis due to a 2.6% currency headwind. The adjusted diluted EPS of 173.0p was -3.1% y/y (reported), nonetheless management has increased the dividend by 5% to 76.6p. On the outlook, management reiterates guidance for LFL net revenue growth of 3-5% but has upped guidance for margins to be slightly above 2022 levels (was “in line or slightly above” previously). The Group also reiterated medium-term guidance for mid-20s margins by the mid-2020s. Net debt was £7.9bn at end-June, an improvement / reduction of £0.7bn y/y. Management see net debt / EBITDA falling below 2.0x by year end and remains “committed to returning excess cash to shareholders”. Alongside the upgrade to guidance, the strengthening of the balance sheet is very welcome to see. Reckitt trades on an undemanding (relative to peers) 16.3x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 3.4%. 

 

ULVR: H1 results ahead of expectations, guidance raised

Unilever released a good set of H1 results on Tuesday, with underlying sales growth ahead of expectations both in terms of pricing and volumes. USG was +9.1% y/y in H1, with all divisions posting growth of between 5.7% and 10.8%. On a GAAP basis, reported turnover was +2.7% y/y to €30.4bn, with operating profit jumping 23% y/y to €5.5bn, supported by a 290bps expansion in margins (to 18.1%). An unchanged quarterly dividend of 42.68c/share has been declared, while the Group has been progressing (~75% complete) a €3bn share buyback programme. The newish CEO signalled that he will be setting out plans “to step up our performance and unlock our full potential” at October’s Q3 results. On the outlook, ULVR sees FY USG of >5%, ahead of its multi-year growth target, with inflation set to moderate as we move through the year. Net debt ticked up to €24.3bn from €23.7bn at end-December, reflecting a €750m buyback and dividends paid. The rate environment helped the pension surplus widen to €2.8bn from €2.6bn at end-December. Unilever trades on a not unreasonable 17.6x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 3.8%.

 

GSK: Strong Q2 results; More pipeline progress 

GSK released a strong set of Q2 results on Wednesday. Sales were +4% (+11% ex-COVID), with Vaccines +18%, Specialty -7% (but +12% ex-COVID) and General Medicines +8%. Adjusted operating profit was +11% with adjusted EPS +16%. The Group has had a very successful period in terms of R&D, including securing a key approval for Arexvy (the world’s first RSV vaccine) in the US and EU; Shingrix approved for over-18s in Japan; and positive phase III data for the MenABCWY vaccine candidate. On the corporate development side, the Group completed the acquisition of RCC specialist Bellus Health. In terms of the outlook, GSK has upgraded 2023 guidance for growth across revenue (from 6-8% to 8-10%); adjusted operating profit (from 10-12% to 11-13%) and adjusted EPS (from 12-15% to 14-17%). Net debt was £18.2bn at end-June, +£1.0bn since the start of the year reflecting the £1.4bn cost of Bellus Health. At end-June GSK had a pipeline of 68 medicines and vaccines across Phase I-III. With regard to that, I note that GSK said on Monday that its majority owned (Pfizer and Shionogi are the other shareholders) ViiV Healthcare’s cabotegravir PreP has received a positive Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use opinion from the European Medicines Agency. This follows phase IIb/III studies comparing the (injectable) medicine, given as few as six times per year, to daily tablet alternatives. Cabotegravir is currently approved for use in seven countries, including the US, Australia, South Africa and Brazil. GSK trades on only 9.2x consensus 2024 earnings and offers a 4.3% dividend yield. This feels like an ‘ex growth’ multiple to me that doesn’t give due regard to the Group’s R&D pipeline.

 

RYA: Q1 results, upgrades seem likely

Ryanair released Q1 (end-June) results on Monday that showed a strong performance, helped by Easter, the extra (Coronation) holiday in the UK and soft prior-year comparatives. The carrier had 50.4m PAX in the quarter, +11% y/y; loans of 95% (+3pc); revenue of €3.7bn (+40% y/y, with average fares +42% y/y); and strong operating leverage (OpEx rose ‘only’ 23% y/y to €2.9bn) helped produce net income of €663m, +290% y/y. RYA finished the quarter with net cash of €980m, up from €560m at end-March. While the Group has a huge fleet capex programme planned for the coming years, dividends and/or a buyback are also surely likely to feature in the current capex cycle, possibly as early as the FY 2024 results next May. RYA struck a cautious tone in its outlook statement, paring FY PAX guidance marginally to 183.5m (was 185m) due to Boeing delivery delays (this was previously flagged, to be fair); and citing both a moderation in revenue growth (in part due to base effects, but also a “softening in close-in fares”) and poor H2 visibility. Accordingly, RYA sees FY net income “modestly ahead of last year” but that seems very conservative to me given the starting position of Q1 net income being +290% y/y, so my hunch is that the path of least resistance for earnings guidance lies to the upside. Ryanair’s shares look as cheap as its seat fares, trading on just 10.1x current consensus earnings.

GRP: NAV and dividend update

Greencoat Renewables provided a Q2 (end-June) NAV and dividend update on Wednesday. The Group’s NAV was 113.2c at end-Q2, while a dividend of 1.605c/share has been declared. The NAV was +1.2c q/q while the dividend was (in line with guidance) unchanged. Greencoat offers a prospective dividend of 6.1% and trades at a 7% discount to end-June NAV. To my mind it’s cheap.

 

CLIG: Pre-close trading update

City of London Investment Group released a pre-close trading update for the year to end-June 2023 on Tuesday. On a consolidated basis, FUM were $9.4bn/£7.4bn at end-June, which compares to $9.2bn/£7.6bn at end-June 2022. Unhelpfully, the Group saw net outflows of $357m during the year, despite aggregate investment performance having been ahead of benchmark (the glass half full response to that being that it should make for easier sales pitches in the second half of this calendar year). The Group is accruing income at a weighted average rate of c.71bps of FUM, so taking into account fixed costs of c.£1.9m per month gives a run-rate for operating profit (pre-profit share and amortisation) of an annualised £31.2m. For FY 2023, CLIG guides to basic EPS of 30.4p which leaves the FY 2023 proposed dividend of 33p slightly uncovered. FY results are due on 18 September. From an administrative standpoint, I note that CLIG will switch its reporting currency to USD with effect from 1 July 2023. All in all, the fund outflows are unhelpful, but this is hardly unusual in these markets. Bloomberg has CLIG trading on 12.0x estimated FY 2024 earnings and yielding 9.6%.

 

PCA: Trading update, strong disposal activity

Palace Capital released a trading update on Wednesday ahead of its AGM. The key highlight is the strong progress that the Group has made on disposals, with eleven investment properties sold since the start of its financial year (i.e. since1 April) for an aggregate £57.9m or 6.4% ahead of the end-March 2023 book value. Of these, three were sold since the release of FY results on 15 June for a combined £16.8m, including one of the Group’s largest assets (1 Derby Square, Liverpool) which was sold for £12.0m or 10.1% above the end-March book value. The Group continues to progress the sale of residential units at the Hudson Quarter (York) apartment scheme, with five units sold for £2.2m since 1 April and a further one under offer, leaving 18 units remaining. The Group continues to manage the portfolio well, agreeing three new lettings, three lease renewals and two rent reviews delivering £0.5m of additional annualised contracted rent, +2% versus the end-March ERV. Rent collection in Q1 (to end-June) was 99%. Net debt was just £7.1m (a pro-forma LTV of 5.2%) as at 24 July. The Group has repurchased 1.9m shares since the start of FY 2024, which have accreted 2.8p to EPRA NTA (pro-forma for this and better-than-book-value disposals, EPRA NTA is 304p/share). Management is “reviewing its options for returning further cash to shareholders later in the year” – my strong preference would be for this to be via a tender offer and/or on-market buybacks given the tax treatment of individual shareholders. The pro-forma EPRA NTA of 304p compares to a share price of 238p earlier today – I think this stock is inexpensive here, although the risk/reward trade off (c.25% upside to NAV versus risks from UK CRE valuations / realised disposal proceeds) means it may stay inexpensive until more of the real estate assets are converted into cash. 

 

PRSR: Pre-close trading update

The PRS REIT released its Q4 (end-June) trading update on Tuesday. The key highlights were strong LFL rent inflation of 7.5% and resilient asset performance. PRSR notes that average rents across the portfolio are 25% of gross household income, which is very reassuring. At end-June 2023 PRSR’s portfolio was 5,080 completed units (end-June 2022: 4,786) with an ERV of £55.0m (end-June 2022: £47.8m) and a further 444 homes under construction (end-June 2022: 693). Taking the contracted homes into account gives an ERV of completed and contracted sites of £58.8m, up from £52.2m at end-June 2022. Rent collection in the year was 99% with occupancy at 97% at end-June (I would read the latter as reflecting timing of completions as opposed to any demand weakness). The Group has a strong funding base, with 82% of debt covered by long-term facilities with an average term of 16 years and a blended interest rate of 3.8%. The Group has access to a £75m floating rate facility. PRSR has 549m shares in issue, so a 4p/year annual dividend has a cash cost of c.£22m. The ERV of £55.0m, so assuming a 20% gross-to-net walk gives net rental income of £44.0m, with (say) £400m of net debt at a cost of (say) 4% incurring interest costs of £16m. This leaves £28m to cover the dividend of £22m plus management fees. To this end, the achievement of a ‘covered’ dividend in FY 2024 is something that will further de-risk the PRSR investment story, allied to the removal of development risk once the rump of homes under construction are completed. My sense is that PRSR is likely to attract bid interest given the discount to NAV it trades on (the share price earlier today was 81.8p, versus a NAV of 117.1p at end-December) plus strong income generation attributes (annualised dividend of 4p/81.8p share price = 4.9% yield) underpinned by >5,000 individual income generating units and the UK’s structural undersupply of housing.

Stocks Update 14/7/2023

AMZN – Prime Day 

BT/A – CEO succession; M&A rumours 

DCC – AGM trading update, in-line

HLN – Cost-cutting report 

IDS – Industrial relations risks reduced

KMR – Production update, another buyback

LLOY – Passes stress test

MKS – Ocado JV report

PMI – AUM update 

PRSR – Debt refinancing and trading update

RHM – Contract wins

RWI – In-line Q1 trading update

STM – Takeover approach 

 

STM – Takeover approach 

Citing a PwC survey, Monday’s Financial Times reported that “the asset management industry faces dramatic consolidation over the next four years as one in six companies could disappear because of a mix of market volatility, high interest rates and pressure of fees”. Given this backdrop, it is unsurprising that the survey found that “almost three-quarters of asset managers are considering acquiring or merging with a competitor”. Some 24 hours later, STM Group announced it has “reached agreement in principle on the key terms of a possible cash offer for the entire issued and to be issued share capital of the company…at a price of 70 pence per share”. This compares to the undisturbed price of 27.5p/share and STM last saw a 70p price back in 2018, so presumably most shareholders (including this one) are going to be comfortably in the money if this proceeds to a takeover at the indicated price. STM says that if a firm offer is made, the Board will recommend it unanimously. PSC has been granted customary access to due diligence materials. Any transaction would be subject to all relevant regulatory approvals (STM is a multi-jurisdiction player). PSC has until 5pm on 8 August to announce a firm intention to make an offer. I bought into this stock at 34.5p in 2021 so will be very happy to sell at a >100% pre-tax total return in the event that a firm bid at the indicated level materialises. Earlier today the shares were trading at 50p, a wide discount to the indicated level, presumably suggesting that the market sees execution risk around this transaction. One to watch. 

 

RWI – In-line Q1 trading update

My largest position, Renewi, released a Q1 (to end-June) trading update on Thursday. Citing the expected (and guided) normalisation of recyclate prices, Group revenue and EBIT are both lower compared to in the prior year period. The impact of this has been mitigated through cost measures and strategic initiatives. There was a modest (+€18m q/q) increase in net debt to €388m reflecting capital investment at facilities in Belgium and Netherlands. Recently commissioned projects relating to bio fuels; high quality plastic; and advanced sorting lines are said to be “performing well”. Management “expects to deliver full year results in line with market expectations” and reiterates the structural growth opportunity from the move to a more circular economy. RWI will host a CMD on 4 October which should hopefully spur more interest in the Group. Renewi is very cheap on conventional earnings metrics, trading on just 7.1x consensus 2024 earnings and 4.5x EV/EBITDA.

 

KMR – Production update, another buyback

Kenmare Resources released a Q2 production report on Thursday. The Group says that H1 production has been lower than expected due to lingering effects from the severe lightning strike experienced in Q1 and power reliability impacts in Q2. This has resulted in a paring of FY guidance for ilmenite (to 980k to 1.04m tonnes from 1.05-1.15m tonnes), but guidance for other products remains unchanged. A sequential improvement in production is guided for H2, “supported by higher grades and increased tonnes mined”. Happily though, “cash generation has remained strong, supported by product pricing and shipments”. In addition to paying record dividends and scheduled debt repayments, the Group “has continued to build cash” (net cash finished H1 at $42m from $26m at end-2022) leading management to consider a share buyback of c.$30m (so, c.5% of the current market cap), with a further update on this to be provided in the H1 results release in mid-August. I’m a big fan of Kenmare – it has a rock solid balance sheet and a low cost operation that produces c.8% of global titanium feedstocks and a very low valuation. Buybacks are an excellent use of its surplus cash at the current cheap rating (the stock trades on only 4.9x consensus 2024 earnings, which is all the more remarkable given the net cash position). 

 

DCC – AGM trading update, in-line

DCC released a Q1 (to end-June) trading update on Thursday ahead of its AGM held later that day. This is a seasonally quiet time of the year, so there’s not a lot to be discerned from what was nonetheless a solid performance “operating profit was in line with expectations and modestly ahead of the prior year”. DCC notes that it “remains active from an acquisition perspective, with a good pipeline of development opportunities”. M&A has been a key part of the DCC story for many years, so I wouldn’t be surprised to see some useful accretive deals announced in November’s interims. The Group reiterated its qualitative FY guidance for “another year of operating profit growth and continued development activity”. DCC is cheap, trading on just 9.4x consensus 2024 earnings, and yielding 4.5%. 

 

PMI – AUM update

Premier Miton released an underwhelming Q3 AUM update this morning, with AUM closing at £10.5bn at end-June, down from £11.0bn at end-March. This was driven by net outflows of £449m in the quarter. Underlying fund performance was solid, with 81% of funds in the first or second quartile of their respective sectors since launch or fund manager tenure. Given the mechanical relationship between AUM and revenue this delta is unhelpful, but I suspect that PMI has a lot of cost levers it can pull, most obviously in the very wide suite of products it offers – 41 open-ended funds, four investment trusts and two external segregated mandates. Management may also wish to use its strong balance sheet to participate in sector consolidation as a further route to improving the earnings outlook. The stock trades on 10.1x consensus 2024 earnings with an implied yield of 8.1%, although the risks to both of those are presumably to the downside.

 

PRSR – Debt refinancing and trading update

The PRS REIT announced on Monday that it has replaced its old £150m RCF from RBS and Lloyds with two new facilities, a new £102m facility fixed for 15 years and a new two-year £75m RCF (the short tenor of the RCF reflects its intention “to refinance this element over that period”. The Group has hedged the new RCF against adverse rate moves. The new facilities have been agreed with L&G and RBS. The Group has immediately deployed all of the new fixed facility and £13m of the RCF to fund already completed and stabilised sites, with the balance of £62m of floating-rate debt to be used against sites completing before the calendar year end. As a result of the new agreement, PRSR has fixed long-term debt facilities totalling £352m with a blended rate of just 3.8% and an average term of 16 years. Just 18% of PRSR’s debt is covered by the new RCF. PRSR also updated on its portfolio performance in this update, saying that occupancy (pro-forma for tenants who have paid deposits) is 98%; rent collection in the 11 months to end-May was 100%; total arrears stand at just £0.6m; and LFL rents rose 6.5% in the 12 months to end-May, representing a quickening on the 5.7% reported for the 12 months to end-March. Affordability at the portfolio remains strong, with average rent / household income at just c.25%. A trading update covering Q4 (PRSR’s year end is June) will be released later this month, with FY results expected in October. All in all a satisfactory update. PRSR’s attractive portfolio of more than 5,000 residential units (mostly family homes) in the UK trades at a wide discount to NAV, reflecting the prevailing rate environment. However, I think that it makes the Group vulnerable to a takeover approach from one of the players seeking to grow in the attractive (given the structural mismatch between supply and demand) UK PRS sector. Bloomberg data have PRSR trading on 0.63x consensus 2024 NAV and yielding 5.0%.

 

BT/A – CEO succession; M&A rumours 

Following days of media speculation, BT confirmed on Monday that Philip Jansen will “at an appropriate moment over the next 12 months” step down as CEO of the Group. “In preparation for this, the Nominations Committee of the Board has been conducting a formal succession process”. Jansen leaves behind a rich legacy of growth capex (FTTP investment); strategic repositioning (moving BT Sport into a JV ahead of a likely full exit); and cost reduction (premises, headcount). Many of the benefits from this will become apparent in the reported financial performance (and, in particular, cash generation) from the middle of this decade (i.e. the step-down in FTTP capex; material cost savings are back-ended as property leases expire and cumulative staff attrition). Elsewhere, press reports (Daily Telegraph) this week claimed that “BT is on high alert for a takeover spearheaded by its major shareholder Deutsche Telekom”. DT owns 12% of BT/A, putting it second on the share register behind Patrick Drahi / Altice on 25%. The press report suggested that an alignment of views on the strategic direction of BT/A could see DT and Altice team up for a bid for the Group. While a bid would make sense given how inexpensively rated BT/A is here and the step-up in cash generation I expect to see in the medium term, it would be challenging to execute given BT’s large pension liabilities; indebtedness (in particular given the current rate environment) and the requirement to persuade policymakers that handing a strategic UK asset to overseas companies is desirable. Bloomberg consensus has BT/A trading on a bargain basement 6.9x 2024 earnings and yielding 6.1%.

 

MKS – Ocado JV report

Monday’s UK Times reported that MKS is looking to “refresh its ailing Ocado deal”. The article noted some frustrations from MKS’ senior leaders regarding product availability and cross-selling through the Ocado Retail JV. The sentiment was perhaps best summed up by Chairman Archie Norman who said he was “not happy” with its performance and acknowledged that there was “work to do”. The Ocado Retail JV was set up in 2019 after MKS agreed to pay up to £750m to buy a 50% stake with a view to transforming its UK distribution channels. Following a home shopping boom during the COVID-19 period, the reopening of physical retail has seen a deterioration in financial performance, albeit the extent of the step-down is exaggerated – in my view – by negative scale economies arising from material capacity additions to the JV’s network of Customer Fulfilment Centres (CFCs). The recent announcement of the mothballing of the least efficient CFC should help to narrow the gap between supply and demand. MKS was due to pay up to £191m to Ocado for the final instalment of the JV contribution, but that figure is now expected to be c.£120m reflecting performance. With Ocado Retail operating at effectively breakeven in FY 2023, the upside from a successive operating (and by extension financial) ‘reset’ of the JV could be quite meaningful. A restructuring of the JV could also be on the cards – could MKS buy out Ocado from the JV and instead agree to licence its technology, pushing more of its own product down the JV ‘pipe’? Another consideration is that the step-change in the interest rate environment is likely to see a lot of the PE-backed sub-scale grocery delivery start-ups reduce their presence in the market, with Ocado Retail well placed to capture any ceded market share. MKS has had a good run in the year to date, +58%, but is still inexpensively rated on 11.4x consensus 2024 earnings.

 

RHM – Contract wins

Rheinmetall announced on Monday that Germany and the Netherlands have entered into a €1.9bn framework contract with Rheinmetall for a total of 3,058 ‘Caracal’ airmobile 4×4 vehicles used by the respective countries’ SOF. The first of the vehicles are to be delivered in Q1 2024. The Caracal was developed by a partnership comprising RHM, Mercedes-Benz and ACS GmbH. Separately, on Thursday RHM announced that the Bundeswehr has increased its order volume for 120mm MBT rounds to €4bn, with an element of this framework contract to be allocated to Ukraine. RHM notes that the contract assures solid utilisation of capacity “for years to come”. Rheinmetall has announced multiple contract wins in recent times, most of which (like those announced this week) are of the multi-year variety (providing strong earnings visibility) and showcasing how its product suite can meet Europe’s evolving security requirements. I don’t feel that this is reflected in the Group’s underwhelming valuation of 13.9x consensus 2024 earnings. The stock yields 2.7% at current levels. 

 

IDS – Industrial relations risks reduced

International Distributions Services announced on Tuesday that the members of the CWU voted in favour of the ballot on changes to work practices and remuneration by a three-to-one margin. “The agreement provides Royal Mail a platform for the next phase of stabilising the business whilst continuing to drive efficiencies and change”. The deal provides certainty on costs for the next three years while RMG will align operations closer to meeting its customers’ requirements. Royal Mail will operate on later start-and-finish times to better respond to the market demand for more ‘next day’ parcels; remove 18 flights a day from the schedule; operate different seasonal hours (from 35 to 39 hours per week throughout the year) to align to peaks and troughs in demand (e.g. Christmas and summer); combine Royal Mail and Parcelforce to operate a single parcel network for larger parcels (removing the farcical situation where some customers were getting parcel deliveries from two parts of the Group in the same day); reduced manual mail sorting; and operate to a seven day week to meet customer needs. RMG has committed to: no compulsory redundancies (I expect that headcount will steadily reduce from natural attrition regardless of this); changes to sick pay, attendance standards and ill health retirement; a 10% salary increase and one-off lump sum of £500 for CWU grade employees; and a profit share operating in the period up to FY 2025 (market expectations for profitability in that period are muted). I suspect that the profit share element to this deal may have more of a permanent quality to it, but this may be no bad thing if it allows for more variable pay (which in turn gives more flexibility in the event of a future downturn in business performance. All in all, it is good that this sorry chapter of IDS’ history seems to have drawn to an end. Longer-term performance will now be driven by the successful implementation of greater automation and resultant efficiencies. Bloomberg consensus expects IDS to be loss-making again in FY 2024 before returning to profit in FY 2025, where the stock trades on 9.9x that year’s consensus earnings.

 

LLOY – Passes stress test 

Lloyds, like the other seven financial institutions subject to the Bank of England Stress Test, confirmed on Wednesday that it has comfortably passed it. The BoE calculated that LLOY’s transitional CET1 and leverage ratio, post the application of management actions, were a healthy 11.6% and 4.5% respectively, well ahead of the respective hurdle rates of 6.6% and 3.5%. The assumptions under the stress test were severe – an initial rise in base rates to 6%; inflation peaking at 17% and taking five years to return to the BoE’s 2% target; a 5% year one fall in GDP; unemployment peaking at 8.5%; house prices and commercial prices falling 31% and 45% respectively over three years. The scenario also reflected other risks such as conduct and traded risk. That LLOY came through this with such a strong capital position is a reminder not just of the Group’s strong credit profile but also of its capital position, which affords space for attractive buybacks and dividends. Bloomberg consensus has LLOY trading on very cheap multiples – 5.9x 2024 earnings, 0.65x P/B (for an 11.1% ROE) and yielding a cash dividend of 7.0%.

 

AMZN – Prime Day 

Amazon held a 48 hour ‘Prime Day’ this week. The company said that the first day of it “was the single largest sales day ever on Amazon”, noting that third party sales outpaced its own retail business. The Group said that 375m items were purchased on the site over the promotional window, but declined to place a monetary value on those (or the split between own and independent brands). Amazon did, however, note that its best selling product was the Fire TV Stick, which may be reflective of the Group’s improved entertainment offering, which I view as an important pull factor for its wider customer proposition. Amazon shares are up c.60% since the start of the year but are not expensively rated for a firm of this quality at just 13.8x consensus 2024 EV/EBITDA. Amazon will release Q2 numbers later this month which will be closely watched for signs on the health of the consumer.

 

HLN – Cost-cutting report 

Thursday’s Guardian reported that Haleon is planning to cut “potentially thousands” of jobs from its 24,000 strong workforce. The newspaper said that staff have been briefed on redundancies this week, with a consultation process set to run until 25 August and departures to take effect in September. These redundancies are seen in the context of the Group’s plans to shave £300m a year off its cost base over the next three years. Execution of this would be impactful for the bottom line, given consensus GAAP net income for this year is £1.5bn, although this is likely to be at least partly priced in with market consensus seeing GAAP net income rising to £2.0bn by FY 2026. Bloomberg has HLN trading on 16.3x 2024 earnings and yielding 2.1%, cheaper than global pure-play consumer healthcare peers.

Stocks Update 30/6/2023

CRH – Share buyback

GSK – Further progress

IDS – Super-hub to supercharge efficiency

LLOY/PRSR – Citra PRS deal

PRX – FY results, pivot from ‘sow’ to ‘reap’

SPDI – FY results, waiting for Godot 

STM – FY results, stock trades in-line with net cash

 

PRX – FY results, pivot from ‘sow’ to ‘reap’

Prosus released its FY 2023 results on Tuesday. The market responded positively to the update, in particular the confirmation of an unwind in the Naspers/Prosus cross-holding structure that will result in a simplified corporate structure, where PRX is 43% owned by Naspers. The Group has traded at a persistent discount to the sum of its parts, which management has tried to address through the gradual disposal of Tencent shares to finance share buybacks. The Group has achieved a 14% share reduction in the past 12 months, spending $10.5bn on buybacks (boosting NAV per share by 6%). The underlying performance of its businesses is doing well, as evidenced by a 36% pro-forma increase in consolidated revenues. Management is reaffirmed its confidence in the delivery of profitability in H1 2025, noting that margins improved 6 points sequentially in H2 2023. Consolidated e-commerce trading losses peaked at $450m in H1 2022 but reduced to $369m in H2. That PRX invested $10.5bn on buybacks and $2.5bn on capital injections into companies shows the pivot from ‘sow’ to ‘reap’ in its investment strategy. Net debt was just $0.5bn at end-March, and the Group received a $750m Tencent dividend in June. Prosus shares were trading at just €66.50 this afternoon, about a third before its ‘spot NAV’ of €104/share at end-Thursday. 

 

STM – FY results, stock trades in-line with net cash

STM belatedly released its FY 2022 results on Tuesday. Headline results (revenue £24.1m; underlying profit £3.3m; net cash £13.9m) were all in-line with prior guidance. The FY dividend was trimmed from 1.5p to 1.2p, reflecting exceptional outlays relating to the strategy review, the results of which are still to be revealed. The Group called out: (i) its annuity style model, which accounted for 91% of reported revenue in 2022; (ii) the benefits from its IT transformation programme, with all personal pension businesses (aside from the recent Mercer acquisition) now all on the one administration system; and (iii) the previously announced ‘interest sharing’ policy, which will benefit the top-line. Management says that: “we are conscious that we have not yet realised our true potential, and are working towards a revised strategy to maximising the opportunities and to deliver shareholder value”, while the Chairman notes: “the Board believes that there is embedded shareholder value within the Group that is not reflected by the current market capitalisation”. While the ‘big reveal’ of the strategy review is yet to happen, it looks like a focus on higher potential areas – “it is important that we focus on those areas that have the potential to deliver a step-change in profitability”, which may mean the exit from a number of the markets that STM currently has a presence in. The guidance for the current financial year is vague, despite the Group being half-way through the year: “we will achieve a solid 2023 performance when compared to 2022”. STM’s market capitalisation of £15.1m compares to its end-2022 net cash of £13.9m, suggesting that the market is currently ascribing very little value to a profitable underlying business. Hopefully the strategic review will address this. 

 

SPDI – FY results, waiting for Godot 

Secure Property Development & Investment (SPDI) belatedly released its FY 2022 results earlier today. The Group’s strategy in recent years has been to swap most of its real estate assets for shares in the larger Dutch listed (but similarly Eastern European focused) Arcona Property Fund, while selling off the rest. The Group finished 2022 with a NAV of 9p/10c per share (end-2021: 18c/share), well above the current share price of 5.625p. SPDI has 1.1m shares (worth €6m at the current market price or €12.75m based on 1x Arcona’s NAV) in Arcona plus a further 260k warrants in the Group. SPDI’s operating results reflect a smaller asset base in the year due to asset sales/transfers. The Group has moved to minimise OpEx accordingly. In 2022 SPDI completed the transfer of two Romanian commercial assets to Arcona, but the transfer of the remaining Ukrainian landbank has been held up by the Russian invasion. On the non-Arcona disposals, I note that SPDI says that the Romanian assets it sold (a premises leased to an international school and a landbank) achieved higher prices than Arcona was willing to pay for them. Less helpfully, a €2.5m loan receivable is being transferred into a JV structure, which may complicate moves to monetise that asset. The remaining property assets in SPDI are a logistics park in Bucharest and land plots in Romania and Ukraine. Seven residential units in Bucharest were sold during 2023. There are a number of swing factors that could materially change SPDI’s NAV either to the upside or downside. In October the Cyprus courts will hear a case between SPDI and Bluehouse. SPDI strike a bullish tone on that “our legal advisers and our board are confident [the case] will end up to our benefit”. Bluehouse is seeking up to €7.5m from SPDI, which has a provision of €2.5m in relation to this matter. The downside risk if Bluehouse gets what it’s looking for is 3.9c/share of NAV (i.e. €7.5m-€2.5m divided by 129m shares outstanding). In Ukraine, the Group has marked its property assets at c.60% of the valuation provided by CBRE, which may prove conservative (although there is plainly a risk that these assets go to zero too). The gross value of SPDI’s Ukrainian assets is €1.9m / 1.5c per share. Moving them to CBRE’s valuation would add 1.0c/share to NAV, zeroing them takes 1.5c/share from NAV. Elsewhere, I note that the Arcona shares are valued at 1x NAV as opposed to market value, nonetheless I am reasonably comfortable with that approach as Arcona has been repurchasing its own stock at a discount to NAV and appears to have a strong strategy for maximising the value of its real estate portfolio. Management reiterate that they “expect 2023 will be the last year of SPDI operations as we know them with its net assets turned into [Arcona] shares and cash, and opex being reduced to a minimum”. I suspect that 2023 is too optimistic a timeframe, however. I am loath to commit any further capital to SPDI given the experience to date, but given: (i) my very low exposure (c.40bps of the portfolio); and (ii) the asymmetric potential from the Bluehouse and Ukraine factors discussed above, I’m happy to let this one run to see how it plays out.

 

LLOY/PRSR – Citra PRS deal 

Earlier today it was announced that Barratt Developments has agreed the forward sale of 604 units to Citra, a PRS subsidiary of Lloyds Banking Group. The consideration is £168.4m, immaterial in a Group context (LLOY’s market cap is £28bn) but a useful vote of confidence in the UK PRS sector generally. This transaction may also prompt increased interest in PRS REIT, which has a portfolio of more than 5,000 modern homes. Its latest disclosed IFRS NAV and EPRA NTA per share was 117.1p at end-2022 but the stock trades well below that (it was 80.2p this lunchtime). From LLOY’s perspective, while not material in a Group context, it is nonetheless a helpful addition to the business income line. LLOY trades on a very inexpensive 0.6x NAV for an expected 11% ROE and yields 7.1%, based on consensus 2024 numbers. 

 

IDS – Super-hub to supercharge efficiency

Last weekend’s Sunday Times carried an interesting piece on Royal Mail’s new super-hub for parcels at Daventry in Northamptonshire in the East Midlands. Under the sub-heading of “Embattled postal company ups the stakes in the fight to win the parcels market”, it sets out (with the aid of a snazzy promotional video, suggesting the article was placed by IDS’ PR people) how the vast automated centre will deliver tangible operational efficiencies and customer benefits that will bring Royal Mail closer to industry best-in-class metrics. It officially opened today (Friday) with the capacity to handle 235m parcels a year. It will have the ancillary benefit of easing pressure on Royal Mail’s 37 mail centres (and 1,200 delivery offices) elsewhere in the UK, which should help to address service metrics that have attracted criticism of Royal Mail’s performance in recent times. The super-hub is designed to take e-commerce parcels directly from retailers, representing a win-win (leveraging Royal Mail’s enhanced distribution reach and hopefully attract new e-commerce business to Royal Mail). At capacity, the facility will handle 1,600 trucks a day, scanning parcels and then sending them down the right ‘chute’ for onward despatch in under seven minutes. Royal Mail has also built a new train station to support distribution, while its goods yard has parking bays for 500 vehicles. In addition, tracking data will provide better real-time customer information on where their parcel is. Royal Mail opened a similar parcels hub in Warrington in June 2022, which helped to lift automation of parcels handling from 33% in 2021 to 50% during 2022 and this new super-hub should get the business to 90%. The anticipated step-change in efficiency was a pull factor for me to buy into Royal Mail’s parent company IDS, but the share price performance has suffered due to the well-documented (and hopefully now resolved) labour relations unrest in the company. Ocado’s experience shows that these massive automated fulfilment centres are tricky to get right, so hopefully execution will match ambition at IDS. In time, there will presumably be more of these centres rolled out to further enhance efficiency (with all that implies for margins). Bloomberg consensus has IDS trading on a 2024 EV/EBITDA multiple of 6.4x, falling to just 3.6x in 2026 as earnings recover from the huge disruption from labour relations issues seen over the past year or so.

 

CRH – Share buyback

CRH today announced the completion of the latest ($0.7bn) phase of its share buyback programme which ran throughout Q2 2023. This brings cash returns via buybacks to $5bn since May 2018. The Group has launched a new $1bn buyback which will run to no later than 22 September 2023. CRH trades on an undemanding 13.0x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 2.6%.

 

GSK – Further progress

GSK announced on Monday that it has received a positive CHMP (the European Medicines Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use) opinion recommending authorisation of daprodustat for symptomatic anaemia associated with chronic kidney disease in adults on chronic maintenance dialysis. This is based on data from three global Phase III trials. In terms of the addressable market, GSK notes that 700m patients worldwide have chronic kidney disease, of whom one in seven also develop anaemia. GSK has had similar approvals from regulatory authorities in the US (FDA) and Japan (Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare) for its products recently. Elsewhere, Japan has approved the use of Shingrix for the prevention of shingles in at-risk adults aged 18 and over. Shingrix had previous approval for over-50s in Japan. GSK describes this as a “significant expansion” in a country where about 600,000 people develop shingles every year. While neither of these pipeline announcements in and of themselves are likely to prove transformative for GSK, they are nonetheless incremental positives for the Group. On a similar note, on Wednesday GSK announced that it has closed the US$2.0bn acquisition of BELLUS, a biopharmaceutical company whose flagship asset is a drug in Phase III for the first-line treatment of adults suffering from refractory chronic cough. GSK says the deal is expected to be EPS accretive from 2027 and has the potential to deliver significant sales “through 2031 and beyond”. GSK trades on a very undemanding 9.0x consensus 2024 earnings and yields 4.3%.

Stocks Update 14/4/2023

BHP – OZ shareholders approve takeover

BOCH – ECB green-lights dividends

HBR – CCS project

KMR – Production report

PMI – AUM update

PRSR – Trading update

PRX – Tencent share sale reports

RHM – More contract wins

KMR – Production report

Kenmare released its Q1 (end-March) production report on Wednesday. The period was an operationally challenging one for KMR, due to the previously announced severe lightning strike in February. Despite this, management is retaining production guidance for the FY. On the external environment, management says: “the market for ilmenite stabilised in Q1 2023, with evidence of spot prices increases in recent weeks supported by recovering Chinese pigment demand”. Q1 production of heavy mineral concentrate was -18% y/y due to the lightning strike, but the Group was still able to achieve a 17% y/y rise in shipments of finished products, helped by increased transshipment capacity and availability of ocean-going vessels. The Group also leaned into inventories to support shipments, with the closing stock of finished products reducing from 213,500 tonnes at end-2022 to 169,300 tonnes at end-Q1 2023. The Group will hold a CMD on 26 April at which guidance on the capex associated with the WCP relocation to the Nakata ore zone will be provided. KMR is one of the cheapest stocks on the market, trading on just 5.3x expected 2024 earnings and offering a prospective yield of 5.4%. With a c.100 year mine life; a strong (net cash) balance sheet; and a resource of c.8% of global titanium feedstocks in-place, I think this stock is: (i) very cheap; and (ii) very well positioned.

 

PRSR – Trading update

The PRS REIT released a Q3 trading update on Wednesday. The release heralded the achievement of a nice milestone, with the Group completing its 5,000th BTR home in the quarter, consolidating its position as the largest single-family BTR portfolio in the UK. By the end of March (end-Q3), PRSR had 5,010 completed homes with an ERV of £52.7m, up from 4,616 with an ERV of £45.5m at end-March 2022. Adding in contracted (under development) housing units (516 at end-March, down from 822 at end-March 2022 as construction works have progressed) gives a portfolio ERV of £57.9m, up from £57.3m at end-December and £51.7m at end-March 2022. The Group collected 101% of the rent invoiced during Q3, which reflects seasonality (collections were 100% across Q2 and Q3). Other portfolio metrics are also encouraging. Like-for-like rental inflation on stabilised sites is running at 5.7%; affordability is strong, with average rents at c.25% of average household incomes; and occupancy was 97% at end-March (98% after adjusting for reserved units). As expected, there was no NAV update, although as I’ve said before in relation to UK real estate plays, I’m not sure a lot of faith can be put in them given the uncertainty. The strong rent performance though from PRSR in the Q3 update provides further reassurance around the 4p/share annual dividend, which equates to a yield of 4.7% at the current share price. As development risk continues to reduce as the remaining schemes complete, I suspect that PRSR is likely to become a merger / takeover candidate. 

 

PMI – AUM update

Earlier today Premier Miton Group released its Q2 (to end-March) AUM update. This shows that AUM was £11.0bn at the end of the period, which compares to £10.6bn at the start of its financial year. During Q2 there were £40m of net outflows, which compares to £8m of net inflows in Q1. Importantly, 76% of PMI’s funds are in the first or second quartile of their respective sectors since launch or fund manager tenure, a useful calling card when canvassing for new business. Given the mechanical link between AUM and revenues, it is good to see AUM has grown in the year to date. Bloomberg data have PMI on an undemanding multiple of 11.5x expected 2024 earnings and yielding an attractive 9.3%.

 

BOCH – ECB green-lights dividends

In a welcome update on Thursday, Bank of Cyprus announced that the European Central Bank has provided its approval for the Group to pay a dividend, its first in 12 years. BOCH shareholders will be asked to approve a 5c/share dividend in respect of FY 2022 at the AGM to be held on 26 May. The cost of this dividend will be €22.3m, or c.20bps of CET1, and it represents a 14% payout ratio for FY 2022. This approval reflects the heavy lifting the Group has done in terms of de-risking its balance sheet and strengthening its profitability, including material reductions in operating costs. The Group is guiding that it will build the dividend “prudently and progressively over time, towards a payout ratio in the range of 30-50% of the Group’s adjusted recurring profitability”. Consensus has BOCH trading on just 3.8x 2024 earnings and offering a prospective yield of 11.6%. This stock is extremely cheap, in my opinion.

 

BHP – OZ shareholders approve takeover

Shareholders in OZ Minerals this week approved the scheme of arrangement under which BHP will acquire the copper, gold and nickel producer for A$10bn. The scheme is expected to become effective on 18 April and be implemented on 2 May. This is a good deal for BHP, deploying surplus cash to strengthen its position in two future-facing commodities (copper and nickel) while also growing Group gold output by roughly two-thirds. BHP trades on an undemanding 11.2x consensus earnings for 2024 and offers an attractive yield of 6.1%. 

 

RHM – More contract wins

Rheinmetall announced on Wednesday that its Materials and Trade division has secured an order to produce engine blocks for a hybrid vehicle being produced by Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation. The order, which encompasses over 500,000 is valued in the “mid-double-digit million euro range”. Production will commence in China in 2024, utilising existing capacity. RHM said it “is now booking a growing number of orders for components and systems for modern, environmentally friendly mobility”. Separately, earlier today RHM said that it and KMW have secured an order from Norway to supply the country with 54 of the latest version of the Leopard 2 MBT, with an option for a further 18 units. Rheinmetall’s share of this order is €129m, rising to €173m if the option is taken up by Norway. The order will take four years to complete. These are the latest in a long line of contract wins for Rheinmetall and its partners. Bloomberg consensus has RHM’s revenues rising from €6.4bn in 2022 to €11.3bn in 2026. A forward (2024) PE multiple of 14.6x seems too low for me given the structural growth drivers for RHM.

 

PRX – Tencent share sale reports 

Media reports on Wednesday said that “Prosus planned to deposit an additional 96 million [Tencent] shares into [Hong Kong’s] stock clearing system, typically a precursor to selling”. In recent months Prosus has been drip-feeding out its Tencent shares to finance a large-scale share buyback to narrow the gap between its share price (€67 this morning) and its NAV (€108 per share as of 13 April 2023). To this end, I don’t consider this to be ‘new news’ as such.

 

HBR – CCS project

Harbour Energy said on Tuesday that it and bp have entered into an agreement to develop the Viking CCS (carbon capture and storage) transportation and storage project. The envisaged structure is for HBR to be operator and 60% shareholder, with bp taking a 40% stake. The Viking CCS “has the potential to meet one third of the UK Government’s target to capture and store up to 30 million tonnes of CO2 a year by 2030”. The project, which is still subject to UK government approval, seems to be significantly derisked (in as much as it can be at this juncture) by HBR and bp already having an interest in the LOGGS pipeline, which is intended to be repurposed as part of the project; and Viking CCS having access to a planned new CO2 shipping terminal at Immingham Port, from which CO2 from emitters will be transported for permanent storage within the depleted Viking gas fields. A FID is expected in 2024. HBR has previously talked up its green credentials, so this development is unsurprising, while at the same time a useful counter-point to anti-North Sea producer rhetoric (i.e. being part of the climate solution as opposed to part of the problem). Bloomberg has HBR trading on just 4.5x 2024 earnings and offering a prospective yield of 7.7%. It’s very cheap, in my view.