The title of this post was prompted by a good friend and fellow value
investor. He recently emailed me to tell me that he was as busy as a one-legged
man in an arse-kicking contest. Well, it is reporting season on the ASX
after all.
The one-legged man construct was a very clever use of vivid imagery by
Charlie Munger to hammer home his message concerning the advantages of
multi-disciplinary learning. I use this imagery on myself with a slight
twist- there is always something that I do not know, and hence, I am the
one-legged investor in the ASX bottom picking contest.
Readers will note that I have even changed the blog name to reflect
this.
And herewith, without further ado, are my snippets from recent half year
results:
CSL continues to forge ahead. R
& D is now a whopping US$190m per half year.
CBA is benefitting from Ian Narev’s
focussed approach, centred on improving core competencies and customer service
via use of technology. A recent
interview with the Business Spectator illuminates further Narev’s risk
management approach. My preferred bank
by a country mile, but not at current prices.
CPU results were lacklustre. A
big chunk of earnings contributed by margin income, which is unsustainable in
the long term.
REA FY revenue estimated at
$300m, and market cap is now over $3.3b yielding a market cap/sales ratio of 11. IPP 2012 revenue is $15m and market cap is
$180m yielding a market cap/sales ratio of 12. Both still growing strongly http://www.propertyportalwatch.com/2013/02/iproperty-reports-record-traffic-in-january/
CCV reported good growth in personal
finance. Heads up TGA.
COF- three directors picking up
shares.
BSA- continuing with dismal
results.
FFI revenue and profits slightly
down, affected by difficult trading conditions and rising costs. Full effect of
property deals will not flow until 2014. ACCC inquiry into supermarkets behaviour may
improve FFI’s margins in the future.
FGE HY results- as expected.
Revenue of $504m, EBITDA $62m, NPBT of $50m, NPAT $34m. Cash on hand of $187m, order book $1.04b, and
work won over last 6 months total $600m, with management providing a strong
outlook for growth. Contrast this with sombre outlook from MND, which has
spooked the market. Capex $11m. If iron ore prices continue to stabilise,
projects by RIO, FMG and Roy Hill will go ahead, and FGE is the front running
incumbent for these huge projects.
CLO- cash holding increased to
$177m. Record order book.
SRV results held up despite
difficult conditions (77% occupancy). Operations
churned out cashflow of $18m this half. US
is now cashflow neutral, with 2 floors turning mature, and 19 floors still
immature. Earnings figure boosted by $3m due to artificial change in accounting
treatment with the lowering of depreciation rate for leases from 15% to 10%.
But the focus is clearly on cashflow. With a market cap of $330m, and backing out
cash of $100m, SRV has an EV of $230m underpinned by over $30m in operating
cashflow.
FMG- Operating Cashflow barely
enough to cover Interest during last half when IO price collapsed despite
average realised price of US$116 per metric tonne. There is no room for hiccups here due to the
high leverage. On the bright side, FMG announced commencement of last phase of
Solomon, which will benefit FGE.
IFM continues to improve under
the guidance of its founder CEO. Revenue up 4% but NPAT surged 30%. A reminder
that I missed this opportunity at prices under 20 cents. SP is now over 40 cents.
CDA has hit the ball completely
out of the ballpark. Metal detection
division’s revenue of $91m for the last six months is nearly equal to one year
of sales last FY. Mining technology is
also increasing strongly, albeit from a lower base. I am a bit worried about
the Daniel’s acquisition. Management has upgrade guidance from $40m to $50m
NPAT for this FY. I reckon this will be exceeded. Metal detection market is
mind blowingly huge, even management has no idea how to quantify it.
Readers with a statistical bent will note the
preponderance of shares starting with the letter C.
No comments:
Post a Comment