Dona Ferentes
Pengurus pengatur
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- 11 January 2016
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total upfront funding requirement is approximately $219 million (including stamp duty and transaction costs) and is to be funded with the proceeds of a fully underwritten pro rata accelerated renounceable entitlement offer with retail rights trading to raise $190 mil
Could Costa transform the Mandarins into Lemon with their Midas touchesI worked as a mandarin picker on 2PH, enormous place, was shut down for an extended period because of some blight. The management were extremely 'picky' about how you cut the fruit stems because it was catering to the fussy Japanese market where the customers bought like one fruit at a time and would reject the slightest blemish. Horrible hateful place. Uncertainties of production and markete would not make me think of CGC as a more attractive buy after this but don't really know. That's one family that owned 2PH so it has paid off if they're still owners.
Or is it just a dressed up lemon.Could Costa transform the Mandarins into Lemon with their Midas touches
"...2021 financial year, Costa delivered on its stated guidance with a $64 million underlying Net Profit After Tax (before fair value movements in biological assets and material items – NPAT-S), a 16.2% increase on CY20.
The Board declared a fully franked final dividend of 5.0 cents per share for the second half of CY21, bringing the total dividend payment for CY21 to 9.0 cents per share, fully franked.
This result further reinforced the growing importance of our international segment and the role it will play into the future as a key growth driver. It was a record performance, with increased berry plantings in our China operations delivering higher volumes and our premium blueberry varieties...."
.... that there may be another price dump?What we should do with CGC, is see if there's anything to learn from this recent price dump?
.... that there may be another price dump?
Now in a Trading Halt, but only after dropping to $2.53, or down 12%, this morning.
Must be poorly telegraphed bad news, but on which of many fronts?
- higher input costs
- recent flooding, unseasonal rain and thus crop damage
- inability to secure a workforce, especially in transient/ harvest capacities
- inability to pass costs through to consumer
- supply line disruptions
- all of above
Good afternoon Dona Ferentes.... that there may be another price dump?
Now in a Trading Halt, but only after dropping to $2.53, or down 12%, this morning.
Must be poorly telegraphed bad news, but on which of many fronts?
- higher input costs
- recent flooding, unseasonal rain and thus crop damage
- inability to secure a workforce, especially in transient/ harvest capacities
- inability to pass costs through to consumer
- supply line disruptions
- all of above
Hi JohnDeShares in agribusiness Costa Group Holdings are in a trading pause after falling more than 12 per cent lower to $2.53 just before noon.The fall came after an analyst warning about a potential earnings impact from lower citrus supply and the entrenched avocado oversupply situation.In a note, Credit Suisse analyst Larry Gandler cut Costa to neutral, from outperform, and slashed its target price to $2.80 (from $3.70) because while demand is strong for agribusiness Costa's produce, "supply and logistics remain a challenge"."It appears the 2022 citrus season is not matching our previous expectations."The 2022 citrus supply is hampered by lower quality/disease in the Southern States (navel oranges) and logistics issues (lack of freight capacity and higher shipping cost)."Credit Suisse believes Costa is navigating the situation better than the competition, but lower quality fruit and shipping delays are lowering prices."We now expect CGC AUD citrus export prices to be flat despite a near 10 per cent depreciation in the AUD-USD."Separately, avocado pricing has not quite recovered to Credit Suisse's modelling."We lowered our citrus and avocado revenue/price for 2022. We carried some Avocado weakness into future years because the industry is entrenched in oversupply."
blah, blah blah...
As i said 6 months ago.
and this has left a bitter tasteOr is it just a dressed up lemon.
Australia’s biggest fruit and vegetable wholesaler is on the hunt for a new chief executive after Sean Hallahan stepped away (after just 18 months in the job)
The question is: why has he resigned?
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