galumay
learner
- Joined
- 17 September 2011
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There are still stocks that are going up in the present market, or at the very least, not showing the determined and pronounced downtrend of MND. It has been trading below the EMA since July.
I'm just curious, and certainly there's no obligation for you or anyone else to respond, but is there a point at which the losses will be unacceptable, or is it a case of "too late now to sell"? Or "I believe in this stock, am emotionally invested in it, so will find any point that will allow me to rationalise holding."
I for one wouldn't mind seeing them announce a buy back, the price seems sensible at the moment, they are sitting on a bunch of cash and I personally prefer buy backs and organic growth over growth by acquisition.
AGMs is today 10am WST will be interesting to see if the board makes any outlook statements for the half and FY...
So to me it's not a bargain yet given industry conditions.
You certainly need a contrarian view of the sector to see them as a bargain! I have that view, but I know its not commonly shared. What is hard to dispute is that of the mining services companies, MND are in one of the strongest positions, a good balance sheet, low debt, and reasonable prospects given the downturn in the sector overall.
Even allowing for a continuing decrease in dividends in line with lower earnings thru this part of the cycle, they will return very healthy yields and the prospect of price growth as the sector improves over time if you pick them up at current prices.
Thank you for explaining your approach. I respect your right to it, though rather hope you note McLovin's remarks.For me Julia there is no reason to sell, to respond in order to your points, a loss is not made until I sell, and in general a loss is unacceptable full stop. The point at which I would sell would be if the fundamental reasons I bought changed to the extent that i could no longer justify holding. Its never "too late now to sell", its very often too soon to sell in my view. If you sell everytime the market, or a share drops you will realise a lot of losses! Finally I am not emotionally invested, I am rationally invested. The fundamentals of MND are compelling IMO, I do take a contrarian view of the extent and length of the impact of the mining industry coming to the end of a boom cycle and I am also more than happy to hold thru cyclic markets like the resources sector.
Glad you are prepared to share your thoughts: that's what makes the forum interesting.I suspect that you are more asking from a trading point of view than an investing one, but I thought I would share my thoughts regardless.
You certainly need a contrarian view of the sector to see them as a bargain! I have that view, but I know its not commonly shared. What is hard to dispute is that of the mining services companies, MND are in one of the strongest positions, a good balance sheet, low debt, and reasonable prospects given the downturn in the sector overall.
Even allowing for a continuing decrease in dividends in line with lower earnings thru this part of the cycle, they will return very healthy yields and the prospect of price growth as the sector improves over time if you pick them up at current prices.
Thank you for explaining your approach. I respect your right to it, though rather hope you note McLovin's remarks.
Glad you are prepared to share your thoughts: that's what makes the forum interesting.
But re my asking from a trading pov rather than an investing one, actually no. I've had a few goes at short term trading over the years with only mediocre results, so don't do that at all these days, along with no investment in airlines or miners.
I'd be happy to invest in MND again (made good $ from it in the past) but will never, ever buy into a downtrend, especially when the whole mining/services sector is looking lumpy to say the least.
No drama, also I always read McLovin's comments with interest, he is more pessimistic than I on the outlook for the sector, my beliefs are biased by my close involvement in the industry for the last 35 years, Mono's are one of the best contractors in the game, everyone uses them, and I know how much work there is for contractors in this game even in a slowing of the boom and transition to production from construction.
You're in a much better spot to know what's going on on the ground than I am. I hope I'm wrong and you're right.
You're in a much better spot to know what's going on on the ground than I am. I hope I'm wrong and you're right.
Sometimes thats a disadvantage I think! I really appreciate the trouble you went to post up those graphs, it was food for thought and made me go and look into the numbers in more detail.
I think one of the things that data is masked by is the massive size of infrastructure growth in the country as a result of the boom, if you look at mining sector production prior to about 2003 and then the massive and incredible growth in production over the next 10 years or so you get a picture of just how much more infrastructure is out there now.
I know from my travelling all over Australia and looking at it the growth has been incredible in the last decade, all over the country in the northern half especially. This infrastructure will need maintenance and replacement and we have yet to see the escalation in that sort of work because most of it is so new.
I dont doubt the sector is still in for a rough ride, but the good companies will pick up work from the ones that cant survive the downturn and then their will be growth in maintenance and replacement as well as a steady stream of construction projects (at a much lower rate).
Have we seen the bottom? Probably some way from it, but I am not looking to find the bottom, I just believe there is a reasonable liklihood of companies like MND & NWH being undervalued at the moment and that I will get a healthy yield while I wait for the price to move back in my favour, I am not in any rush and I certainly wouldnt suggest that there is any quick money to be made in the sector.
Ultimately the rest of the world needs our metals and energy resources and thats not going to change in the forseeable future.
I'd be curious where you think the bottom of the cycle is, galumay? To me it doesn't seem like you have to make wildly outrageous assumptions about the business to end up with a SP that is significantly lower from here.
These two charts kind of tell me a lot about the whole industry, although they pertain to MND. The trend from 2003 on is pretty clear as is where MND was before the boom. Coming off a super-cycle like we have had it just seems to me like there will be one almighty hangover for this industry and despite how well managed MND they will feel it. I kind of think of mining services as flowers in the desert; when it rains they can look amazing, but it doesn't last.
View attachment 60352
Actual and consensus capex profile from BHP-AU
View attachment 60379
Same deal for RIO-AU
View attachment 60380
Same deal for FMG-AU
View attachment 60381
etc.
And then from the RBA from a speech this week by Stevens at CEDA:
View attachment 60382
I do not believe that the RBA is expecting a V-shaped recovery at the end of the forecast period.
An assumption of no growth, or even only slight declines, in any part of investment assessment is wildly at odds with what is clearly observable and assessable. The outlook is outright poor. Embedded in the above is an allowance for still high levels of capex for LNG developments for the time being. The miners are the ones spruiking about EM demand coming from India etc. on top of existing demand from China. So it is not as if there is a hidden China in the world which has not yet discovered they need ore and coal. They have also over-invested as a whole, as occurs though a cycle peak.
Perhaps the way to reconcile the poor outlook above and a possible organic outcome which is not traumatic is to believe that cost overruns will be gigantic relative to budget. Not sure how strong a case that is though.
The constant remains...what is this thing worth? A poor operational outlook does not make something a bad investment.
I'd be curious where you think the bottom of the cycle is, galumay? To me it doesn't seem like you have to make wildly outrageous assumptions about the business to end up with a SP that is significantly lower from here.
These two charts kind of tell me a lot about the whole industry, although they pertain to MND. The trend from 2003 on is pretty clear as is where MND was before the boom. Coming off a super-cycle like we have had it just seems to me like there will be one almighty hangover for this industry and despite how well managed MND they will feel it. I kind of think of mining services as flowers in the desert; when it rains they can look amazing, but it doesn't last.
View attachment 60352
Being primarily a construction engineering company, where are the future significant construction projects? Galilee Basin coal, rail and port in Qld. and FLNG/LNG in W.A.
Iron ore is covered for a while. Steel mills, Alumina Plants, Power Stations, Aluminium Smelters? None.
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