Showing posts with label Metlifecare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Metlifecare. Show all posts

Friday, July 31, 2009

Stock of the Week: Metlifecare Ltd



Metlifecare Ltd [MET.NZ] has been on my watchlist for yonks. I already own Ryman Healthcare Ltd [RYM.NZ] I love this sector and it is because of its very high historical revenue and profit growth and its similar future protects as the number of older people (especially those greedy economy sucking baby boomers) increases in very large numbers

Metlifecare has been somewhat of a poor cousin to Ryman over the last few years when it comes to its profit. It has had a couple of big asset writedowns over the last 2 years and that has lead to a punishing in its stock price.

A great opportunity.

That is why it makes my Stock of the Week this week (better late than never, I know it is the end of the week) that, and it will bounce back into profit when property prices recover.

The stock has hit a 52 week low of NZ$1.38 and a high of $4.60 but that is well off its all time high of nearly 9 bucks reached not that long ago (see chart above) so you can see the potential for a good long term and medium term gain even if today's closing share price is $2.06.

Buy on weakness, there should be some more for this stock come its profit reporting in November.

Good luck!


Related Share Investor reading

Stocks on My Watchlist: Metlifecare Ltd
Why did you buy that stock? [Ryman Healthcare]
Time for retirement?

Discuss Metlifecare @ Share Investor Forum

Stock of the Week Series

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Ltd

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c Share Investor 2009

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Share Investor's 2009 Stock Picks


It is that time of the year to pick stocks for 2009.

In the face of a global recession, an uncertain economic future and dwindling values, even for good assets, it is going to be hard to pick winners.

Please keep in mind dear readers that the picks are my own and they reflect my investment philosophy and not necessarily anyone else's.

My picks are based on a long-term view, regardless of the current short to medium term market turmoil and economic uncertainty.



Fisher & Paykel Healthcare
[FPH:NZ]



With that in mind I will kick off my picks with a company that I consider will be one of the big successes of the next 5-10 years, Fisher and Paykel Healthcare, the health care products provider.

I had it as a pick for 2008 and it has been one of the better performers this year, even though it is still well off its highs share price wise.

Company profit forecasts to March 31 2009 have been estimated at NZ$84 million and revenue is also set to grow as it has done for the past.

Fisher profits are largely immune from the current market turmoil as buyers simply have to have the products that the health care company makes regardless of a global recession.

This invincibility from outside economic influences makes the pick for my next stock a relative no-brainer.


Fisher & Paykel Healthcare @ Share Investor

Stock of the Week: Fisher & Paykel Healthcare
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Drinking and Trading
Share Investor's 2008 stock picks
Share Investor's 2009 stock picks
Fisher & Paykel: A tale of two companies
FPH downgrade masks good performance

Discuss Fisher & Paykel Healthcare @ Share Investor Forum - Register free 




Ryman Healthcare 

[RYM:NZ]



Ryman Healthcare, the retirement home operator, carer and developer, has been increasing revenue and profit for many years and the most current profit result shows that there has been no let up in this trend with a rise of 10% to NZ$25.9 million.

Development of new villages has increased apace over the last year and there are at least half a dozen new ones ready to go at beginning 2009, including two massive villages at Orewa and Whangerei.

The long-term prospects for this company are excellent as New Zealands elderly are set to grow markedly in the future.

Metlifecare [MET:NZ], Rymans major listed competitor is also worth a look at for the same reasons as Ryman.

I have Metlifecare on my watchlist.


Ryman Healthcare @ Share Investor

Share Price Alert: Ryman Healthcare Ltd 2
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Gordon Macleod on Ryman Healthcare's Australian Expansion
Share Investor Q & A: Ryman Healthcare's CFO Gordon MacLeod
Ryman Healthcare: Interview sneak peak
Ryman Healthcare Ltd: Australian Expansion Needs Care
Share Investor Q & A: Reader Questions to Ryman CFO Gordon Macleod
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Stock of the Week: Ryman Healthcare Ltd
Why did you buy that stock? [Ryman Healthcare]
Long VS Short: Ryman Healthcare Ltd
Time for retirement?


Discuss Ryman Healthcare @ Share Investor Forum - Register free 



Mainfreight Ltd
[MFT:NZ]



Mainfreight Ltd, the New Zealand global logistics operator, have a goal of NZ$1 billion in revenue before 2010 and are only a gnats whisker short of that figure.

It is on my pick list again for 2009 as it is New Zealands best managed company and if management is good then results generally follow-this has been the history of the company thus far.

Currently business is experiencing a slow down, although profit was up nearly 10% in the last reporting period.

Management are going to approach the global market downturn with a "prudent, cautious approach to costs"-the status quo for the business since its inception.


Mainfreight @ Share Investor


Long vs Short: Mainfreight Ltd
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Mainfreight 2008 Annual report worth reading
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A rare breed



Pumpkin Patch Ltd 

[PPL.NZ]

N/A

One of the worst performing stocks of 2008 if you consider a 60% odd drop in share price this year and a drop of nearly 30% in full-year after tax profit to July 31 2008.

All is not lost though!

The company has great long-term potential, with excellent product a strong brand and very loyal customers and with the share price at just over a buck it is a relative bargain when one considers it was trading at nearly 5 dollars just over a year ago.

One to stock up on during price dips and it probably will when pre-Christmas sales figures come through during the beginning of 2009.




Pumpkin Patch @ Share Investor


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I'm buying

Why Did you but that Stock? [Pumpkin Patch]
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Pumpkin Patch VS Burger Fuel
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Other quotable notables.

Telecom NZ [TEL:NZ] for its dividend. Buy around $2.

Contact Energy [CEN:NZ], Trustpower [TPW:NZ] and Vector[VCT:NZ] Any infrastructure company, especially these electricity companies are a good buy at any time but battered share prices are a good opportunity to stock up on more or make a first buy.

Auckland International Airport[AIA:NZ] A near monopoly with a beaten down stock price, buy on further weakness.

Westpac [WBC:NZ] and ANZ Bank [ANZ:NZ]. Good opportunities exist to buy at low stock prices.

If you have the nerve, any good company is going cheap in 2009 so there are plenty of companies worth buying.

Pick wisely!


Disclosure: I own RYM, FPH, PPL, AIA, and MFT shares


Share Investor's Annual Stock Picks


Share Investor's 2017 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2014 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2013 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2012 Stock Picks 
Share Investor's 2011 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2010 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2009 Stock Picks
Share Investor's 2008 Stock picks

Broker Picks

Brokers 2014 Stock Picks
Brokers 2013 Stock Picks
Brokers 2012 Stock Picks
Brokers 2011 Stock Picks





c Share Investor 2008







Sunday, July 20, 2008

Stocks on my Watchlist: Metlifecare Ltd

Once a darling of the NZX stockmarket, Metlifecare Ltd[MET.NZ], one of two listed retirement and elderly care village companies, the other being Ryman Healthcare [RYM.NZ], its share price now languishes at a NZ$ 4.36 close this last Friday 18 July and they announced a loss for the half year to December 31 2007 of $12.3 million.

The loss has been explained by management as a result of changes from the application of International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS). Ryman on the other hand reported a significant increase in profit for the same period.

However, this must put in context with a market that is trying to do its best impression of a lead balloon being tossed from the Empire State Building.

So what would be so attractive to a prospective purchaser?

The fact that the sector of the economy that the MET participates in has had a history of good results and its long term future looks excellent because as we all know the elderly amongst us, save you and I, are living longer and will increasingly need and want the safety, care and security that a well managed retirement village will give them.

Of course long term success is no guarantee, but Metlifecare is a well managed company with a history of good planning, focused property development, for their individual villages and good returns for shareholders and as I have said operates in a growth industry.

Now there have been a couple of attempts over the last few years for a takeover of this company but bidders have been unsuccessful as there are several large shareholders and a couple of them declined to let the bidder have their way, Fisher Funds, the New Zealand fund manager but one of them.

The last bid for the MET was in excess of the closing price last Friday 18 July, which was well short of a stock price high of above 9 bucks Kiwi in 2007. This brings me to another reason why this company is on my radar.

In my humble opinion the current share price represents good value and aren't there heaps of them around at the moment! Net asset backing per share is $6.93, you do the math. Market conditions as they are today have cut the company's capital value by more than half, just like its listed competitor, Ryman Healthcare, which I already own.

So what, the property market, which by definition Metlifecare has exposure to, is in the doldrums. That simply ain't going to last and I wouldn't be surprised if the company isn't getting its tyres kicked by larger investors looking for good companies.

OK, I know Mr Market has got a bad case of the Wiggles right now and it is hard to "pick the market bottom", but if you are one of those guys who do the Rorschach chart predictions, do yourself a favour and stick this one on your slide rule.

I'm putting on my watchlist and looking for a weak day(yes another one) to buy.


Related Share Investor Reading

Why did you buy that stock? [Ryman Healthcare]
Time for retirement?





c Share Investor 2008



Friday, August 3, 2007

Time for Retirement?

Two new Retirement Home Village operators are going to list on the NZX in the next few months. Last week AMP announced the floating of their Retirement unit and today ING have announced that their two village's are on the block for a float to the public.

When these two operators are listed it will bring the number of listed retirement home operators to four.

These IPOs' are part of a wave of activity sweeping the retirement village sector.

CVC Partners said last month that it was looking at selling Guardian Healthcare and Goldman Sachs JBWere's private equity unit is rumoured to be looking to float, sell or raise new capital for its Vision Senior Living group.

The two IPO's also have a connection of sorts. NZ First Capital, who are floating Summerset and Forsyth Barr, who is floating ING's retirement unit, got together to float the abysmal IPO failure, Feltex, a few years ago. Reminders of overvaluations , high debt and creative accounting still resound in the investment community from that fiasco.

The ING groups' village's are by far the smallest by number of units at around 150 with only two properties, while AMPs' Summerset has 11 village's and over 1500 occupants.

ING are asking for $NZ100m while AMP are looking at 300m.

Ryman Healthcare [RYM.NZ], the biggest listed Retirement operator, has a market cap of over 1B and Metlifecare[MET.NZ]around 700m.

Ryman Healthcare has today just reiterated its profit growth for the current year at around 20%. It has been growing at this rate for many years and seems confident that it will grow at this rate for years to come.

At first glance AMP's Summerset looks like a great opportunity to get into this industry, which is growing rapidly as the population gets older. How good the offer really is will only become fully apparent as we get a look at the prospectus in a few weeks time. Until then we can reserve judgement.

On the other hand the ING offer I have some problems with. While ING is a highly reputable company, the track record of some of the participants may give cause for some restraint before plunking down your moola. Colin Reynolds was the head of the pyramid "property development" company Chase Corp which went bust in the 1980s, while Robin Congreve was involved with Fay Richwhite during the Winebox tax fiasco. Beware.

One of their villages is also 20 years old so may need some capital to fix up the paintwork and spruce up the surroundings and decor for the 21st century.

The retirement sector looks set for good growth for some years to come. With good margins and rapidly increasing and also affluent population. The baby boomers, when they do decide to relinquish their hold on the rest of us, will provide a mini-boom in this industry in 10-15 years.

The added bonus of consolidation as the players in this sector get more numerous is an added attraction. Currently the majority of retirement home living is being done by individual owners of villages, that is, operators owning just one village. Good assets are always up for sale.

Of course no investment is without risk and the retirement sector, like every other one, cannot continue to grow unabated the way it has. It will have its ups and downs.

Post prospectus of AMPs' Summerset, if the figures and management look good, I am going to buy as much as I can. If it is the golden egg that I think it is then demand is going to far outstrip supply.

Burger Fuel eat your heart out.

DISCLOSURE I own Ryman Healthcare shares

Related Share Investor Reading

Stocks on my Watchlist: Metlifecare Ltd
Why did you buy that stock? Ryman Healthcare

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c Share Investor 2007