skc
Goldmember
- Joined
- 12 August 2008
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There is a good article on BAU in the AFR weekend magazine.
It explains how the land does not require state royalties to be paid, instead they go to the land holder as some of the land was settled before state royalty agreements came about. So the locals with bauxite on their land support the company, while the locals with no bauxite do not support the companys plans. Some people in the town support the company as they think it will bring jobs to a town, which is currently struggling. Others think it will destroy the amenity of the place.
Worth having a look at.
Loving this thread skc, keep it up!
I keep forgetting to look at it, and when I come back so many interesting things have happened.
Someone better edit wikipedia and put your name in here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_(investment)
cheers skc like the thread and sharing your ideas.
Hehe some of the ZGL volume was from me after reading your post, not nearly enough to account for the move though, good find, more companies in that sort of vein would be great for me.low PE companies, with net cash, good profit growth, good ROE and trending up are very hard to find unless you physically read every companies presentations, annual reports and keep track of them to enter at an opportune time. I like them because it usually makes for very limited downside but quite large upside with earnings expansion and pe expansion.
Only concern I have is that it seems to be a family run company and the recent buyback and the issuing of shares to senior management, the chairman and his 2 sons is increasing their hold on the company. I think between them and the chairman's brother they hold about 70% of the company.
On the plus side they do pay a dividend, I'm not sure why they do as it doesn't seem to be the most efficient way for them to get money out of the company but I'm not aware of the rules regarding foreign dividend income in Singapore but from what they wrote they don't seem to have to pay witholding tax to Australia. Their wages are also not excessively outlandish, 400+k for the chairman is on the high side but his sons get about 200k and the buyback was done at much lower prices so should help push up eps.
SOO seems like a interesting company. No debt, good ROE. Not sure if paying a dividend is the best use of capital, also wondering if they can maintain margins in very competitive solar industry.
I will be watching the 1/2 year report with interest.
But CIF is actually a reasonably viable business and has a significant cash holding (~$220m, 69c per share). Operating cash flow after interest cost was ~$90m (~28cps), which comfortably funds the dividend of 14cps, representing a yield of ~12%.
Now put these numbers in a different light... let's say cash in bank may earn at best 5%, so those cash would earn only ~$11m. This means the real operating business is generating ~$79m FCF (24cps), and you can buy them at ~46c (current share price $1.15 minus cash component of 69c)... or over 50% return.
CIF is not without risk of course... debt stands at $1.5Band balance sheet is complicated by a bunch of FX and interest rate derivatives. NTA is negative thanks to a lot of goodwill, but the market is almost pricing a liquidation so it's worth a caulcated speculation imo.
For exit I am looking for the 24c FCF to be valued at least 5x, or $1.20, plus cash of 69c bringing the target to ~$1.9. I am wrong if the cashflow situation changes for the worse.
New Position
Buy 70,000 PGA @ $0.075 = $5250
Rationale
PGA is a collection of media/marketing companies that has really fallen on hard times. A massively discounted capital raising in August saw the stock fall from $1 before suspension to 10c and below.
Yesterday PGA announced the sale of 5 of its businesses to SLM for $75.3m. These 5 business collectively earned revenue of $29.7m and EBITDA of $8.2m, pitching the EBITDA multiple of 9.2x (or ~2.5x revenue). SLM believes with synergy cost savings they are really paying ~6-7x.
The remaining PGA businesses can expect revenue ~$350m and EBITDA ~$55-60m. Applying same multiples as above give EV ~$330 to 400m. After the sale PGA has debt $122m, which means equity value of ~$200m. Or 13c for each of the 1.55B shares on issue if the market is willing to rate PGA fairly. It's currently trading on forward EBITDA multiple of ~4x.
Risks include revenue and EBITDA weaknesses. Potential upside include further sale of businesses at similar terms. Will put in a trailing stop if that 13c target is ever reached. Will cut the loss if there are any reported weaknesses in revenue or EBITDA.
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