greggles
I'll be back!
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Long term, I'd say yes. There are some big players entering the supermarket business over the next few years and the Coles / Woolies warfare has taken its toll on profits for both sides.Wesfarmers to spin-off the Coles supermarket business.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-16/wesfamers-to-demerge-its-coles-supermarket-chain/9554658
Wesfarmers has done a lot to turn around the Coles business and successfully re-position it in the market. That being said, is demerging Coles into a separate listed entity in the best interests of WES shareholders?
WES certainly needed to do something to generate some excitement. Its share price has been mostly range trading between $39 and $45 for the last five years. Not the most compelling stock on the ASX but with a market cap of almost $50 billion it's certainly one of the largest.Long term, I'd say yes. There are some big players entering the supermarket business over the next few years and the Coles / Woolies warfare has taken its toll on profits for both sides.
I reckon it is, though I don't own. From a duopoly to strong competition, it needs to be run by a single minded team and can't afford to be part of a conglomerate anymore. Also I can't see great levels of growth in the future so why not free up the balance sheet.Wesfarmers to spin-off the Coles supermarket business.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-03-16/wesfamers-to-demerge-its-coles-supermarket-chain/9554658
Wesfarmers has done a lot to turn around the Coles business and successfully re-position it in the market. That being said, is demerging Coles into a separate listed entity in the best interests of WES shareholders?
WES certainly needed to do something to generate some excitement. Its share price has been mostly range trading between $39 and $45 for the last five years. Not the most compelling stock on the ASX but with a market cap of almost $50 billion it's certainly one of the largest.
It's up around 6% this morning to $43.67, so perhaps the Coles news will see it break through $45 convincingly in the near term.
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Bunnings and Lithium conglomerate, with a dash of data analytics/ IoT tech?The sell down comes as Wesfarmers managing director Rob Scott is continuing to reshape Wesfarmers, which has seen him in the past few years generate billions of dollars in revenue from the sale of its Bengalla coal mine, the sale of Kmary Tyre and Auto as well as the sale of Quadrant Energy.
Based on the first six months of the 2020 financial year figures, the potential cash outflow related to creditors and employee entitlements is more than $5bn.“Under a scenario of reduced retail demand... creditors still need to be paid and new season’s stock needs to be bought,” analysts said. "If employees are stood down, leave balances need to be paid.”
I cant see QAN being on the wish list myself.The wishlist of who others think WES will buy and the likely outcome are probably far apart.
Bunnings, data and lithium - I doubt there is another conglomerate like it. Hope their discipline holds in the coming buyfest.
The problem is what is worth buying in Australia, even if it is cheap.The wishlist of who others think WES will buy and the likely outcome are probably far apart.
Bunnings, data and lithium - I doubt there is another conglomerate like it. Hope their discipline holds in the coming buyfest.
I cant see QAN being on the wish list myself.
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