Nor a company I am fond of.Missed the low of today, decided not to chase now since I don't hold anymore (out in July at breakeven)
One of our relationship managers warned of a long time ago because he deals in rural businesses.
my trader buddy got scorched with this during the GFCNor a company I am fond of.
Many years i sent She who is never wrong to the Midland branch to pick up some product. She was ignored and when finally when the counter hand decided ot serve her treatd her as if she was diseased.
Had a go at the manager and gave him a mouthful.
Been with Wesfarmers and its various names since then, over 40 years now
Still reckon that Elders is not for me. Company is probably good but the experience She had certainly left a sour taste. Employ duds and it keeps moving up or down the chain.Settle down team , Elders still trading well above the 52 week low $5.99 ~ IRE down 32% thats one to get upset about!
Yeah, I was a little surprised.I don't understand................unfortunately, I don't hold..........it's up $1.00
Elders $ELD reported net income for the full year that met the average analyst estimate. Net income $100.8 mln, -38% y/y, estimate $100.7 million (Consensus). Underlying profit $103.7mln, -32% y/y, estimate $101.4mln. Underlying Ebit $170.8mln, -26% y/y, estimate A$168.6mln
Elders boss Mark Allison says the rural services company is well placed to weather the dry summer conditions forecast for many of Australia’s agricultural regions, having diversified the business to a point where it is protected from extreme weather patterns and market shocks.
Referring back to previous weather patterns over the past decade, Mr Allison said Elders had proven itself to be a resilient company that delivered stable returns.
“(If you look at) Elders results through El Niño, La Niña, bushfires, pandemic - it doesn’t make any difference - and the key reason is because of the multiple diversifications in the business,” he said.
“We’ve got geographical diversifications, but there’s also product and service diversification - there’s channel diversification. So we’re wholesale and retail, and there’s business model diversification.
Based on previous crashes, not even sure these agricultural stocks will hold on the next downturn...
- Revenue declined by 6% to $3.13bn
- underlying earnings before interest and tax fell 25% to $128m.
- Net profit after tax to shareholders dropped 55% to $45.1m. These results reflect the impact of lower livestock prices and reduced demand for crop protection products early in the year, though a recovery in livestock markets and improved trading conditions in the second half provided some relief.
- Costs rose 14% to $509.6m, driven by acquisitions and investments in growth initiatives, further pressuring margins.
The company emphasised its focus on diversification, which allowed it to partially offset regional and product-specific challenges. Notable achievements included the launch of Elders Wool, a state-of-the-art wool handling facility, and the expansion of its geographic footprint through 13 acquisitions and 21 additional points of presence. Despite these efforts, return on capital fell to 11.3%, down from 16% the previous year.
The board declared a final dividend of 18 cents per share, bringing the total dividend for the year to 36 cents, down from 46 cents in 2023. This reflects an elevated payout ratio of 88%, attributed to the lower earnings base.
and nowBased on previous crashes, not even sure these agricultural stocks will hold on the next downturn...
I would so much like to invest in these stocks Aac, RFF etc but performance are not there...
am treating this sector as 'safe-havens ' ( rather than multi-baggers )Based on previous crashes, not even sure these agricultural stocks will hold on the next downturn...
I would so much like to invest in these stocks Aac, RFF etc but performance are not there...
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