News that Hallenstein Glasson [HLG.NZ] has had a good half year to 24 Jan 2010 in a profit guidance to the stockmarket, shows how good management at that company have been to weather the economic downturn but that must be put in the context of a particularity bad half for the corresponding 2008 period and of course this is only a six month period - lets not count our board shorts until they are sold sort of thing. With current sales and profitability it is very likely that the company will beat 2009 full year profit of nearly NZ$13 million and that was the worst year since the 2003 full year result.
The most important part of the update is that margins for the company have improved, not easy to achieve during the seemingly endless summer sales of its competitors, and that stock levels have been managed to levels that seem to have avoided the big prices cuts of competitors who have stock to burn. Management have seen fit to boost the dividend by 40% to 14c, so they seem confident that the good news is set to continue.
A good definite cold Winter season will bode well for the coming 6 months of operation and it is this traditional slower sales season that will define a good or excellent outcome come full year reporting in August.
Retail over the last 2 years has been hard going in New Zealand and is not likely to recover to pre-recession spending for many years to come in my opinion.
Over the last 6 months many retailers have fallen by the wayside, Stax, Hill & Stewart have been but a few and some independent retailers have gone to the wall as well and we are likely to see more over 2010, so the Hallenstein profit update is by no means an indicator of a wider retail recovery.
Meanwhile the stockmarket has overreacted in a big way to this positive news (see chart above), marking up the stock price by 35c on close of trading last Friday and 15c at time of writing this post. This is more than a 10% gain in 2 days and not a wise purchase at these prices considering the uncertain overall retail outlook, even though the dividend makes the annual return at the current share price of close to 10% net.
Long term investors in this company would well be advised to wait for another opportunity, while shorts termers could see some upside in dividend stripping as we come closer to the dividend payout date.
Proceed with caution.
Disclosure: I own HLG shares in the Share Investor Portfolio
Hallenstein Glasson @ Share Investor
Stock of the Week: Hallenstein Glasson
Hallenstein Glasson Australian expansion needs expert execution
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Friday, February 5, 2010
Hallenstein Guidance not indicative of wider retail recovery
Posted by Share Investor at 4:32 PM 0 comments
Labels: Hallenstein Glasson, NZ retailers
Sunday, January 31, 2010
VIDEO - Simon Moutter on Australian Airport Purchase
Source: ONE News, Thursday January 28, 2010.
Auckland International Airport [AIA.NZ] CEO Simon Moutter discusses the airport's strategy following its $166 million purchase of a stake in two Australian airports and its $126 million share offer announced on Wednesday.
Please keep in mind that Simon was the chief operating officer at Telecom New Zealand [TEL.NZ] for 12 years before becoming AIA CEO, so he and his cohorts at Telecom have a track record of a massive failure in Australia already with Telecom's ill fated purchase of AAPT, which continues to have negative financial ramifications for the Telco and its shareholders to this day.
He keeps talking about the Australian Airport as a "step out" from the ports main asset, their Auckland Airport asset.
As an AIA shareholder I don't feel as positive as Simon about our purchase and feel a little nervous considering all the business jargon he is using to explain his reasons for the buy.
Just a footnote, the new share issue at NZ $ 1.65 could provide the opportunity for new AIA investors to get in cheaper than the closing price last Tuesday of $1.92 as the share price finds a new level post capital raising.

Download the AIA offer prospectus and associated documents here.
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Posted by Share Investor at 11:18 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Auckland Airport Capital Raising a fair call
The announcement today that Auckland International Airport [AIA.NZ] is going to raise NZ$126.4 million from shareholders to pay for two hick town airports in the middle of nowhere in Australia should be no surprise to AIA shareholders.
AIA defends its Australian airport purchase
The airport borrowed heavily to fund the purchase and now shareholders must take the brunt of what I see as a poor decision and bail out AIA directors who apparently have money to burn or risk having their share holding diluted - boy I am going to have to eat dirt if this buy is a success.
Anyway, bad business decisions aside, the structure of the capital raising doesn't look half bad.
Allocations of new shares will be attributed on the basis of one new share for every 16 shares held and no extra shares will be given to institutions or any medium sized shareholder will be scaled down their allocation. Every shareholder big or small will be treated in the same manner and for that management should be handed a bunch of fresh pansies. This approach contrasts the many capital raisings of 2009 which favoured smaller and very large shareholders but largely ignored medium sized players like myself who had no choice but to have their shareholdings diluted because of an inability to get a proportional allocation of new shares.
Incidentally AIA is a small shareholding in the Share Investor Portfolio and at 5000 shares my entitlement will come to 312 shares, of which I will take up in full. At NZ$1.65 per share the cost to me will be just over 500 bucks.
The only gripe that I have (I am only happy when I am moaning) is at $1.65 it is a pretty hefty discount to Tuesday's closing price of $1.92.
The capital raising will be fully subscribed.
Related links
Download the AIA offer prospectus and associated documents here.
Auckland International Airport @ Share Investor
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The Intelligent Investor: The Definitive Book on Value Investing. A Book of Practical Counsel (Revised Edition) by Benjamin Graham
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Posted by Share Investor at 5:09 PM 1 comments
Labels: 2010 capital raising, auckland international airport
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
Economy 2010: Taking the long way
Further to a post I made yesterday about opportunities to buy cheaper stocks, I touched briefly on the state of the economy.
Let me expand on that if I may today and we will forget it again for another 6 months, because I know it is easy to bitch and moan about this stuff as I have done on a number of occasions.
In my opinion the current economic downturn is going to take years to recover from. We have seen a relaxing of the fervour that started in September 2008, following the collapse of big financial institutions the world over and since then we have had an apparent lift in confidence due to trillions of dollars of borrowed and the printing of currencies (cheers China!) and a subsequent lift in various financial indicators; slow down in jobless growth, small GDP growth, global trade improving, etc, etc.
As I said above though, this move towards the positive is based on borrowed money and it has to be paid for, eventually.
As many of you will know, including myself, a mortgage like that can be hard to pay back when your income might now be less than it once was and while you are paying that back other forms of spending will be cut back and clearly that impacts on the economy. This huge unprecedented debt is going to constrain the economy in New Zealand and in every other country deep in debt. Even China, who is the lender, will be impacted because we wont be buying as much of their quality produce - only a hint of sarcasm there.
Most of us, but not all, will need to be prudent to survive the next 5 years. Cut back where we can and pay down debt if and when we get the chance. More debt taken on during this time will merely postpone the inevitable hounds at the door. It aint hard, it just takes some discipline.
While we are not in a 1930s depression era economic downturn, we are going to suffer, I think, economically for as long as those folk in the 30s did, in our own way. Constraint, low or no growth and inconsistent and unsustainable upturns will be the order of the day, until that debt is discharged.
There are also other shocks to come from the heady days of economic growth during the 20 years pre 2008. Complex derivatives failures and commercial property shocks look set to come and spoil what confidence we may have gotten back.
This is all part of the economic cycle however and is nothing new and there will be opportunities to buy as others must sell cheaply to pay down debt levels.
On that last positive note, for me anyway, I will bring an end to my gloomy outlook - see you back in 6 months for an update.
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Posted by Share Investor at 7:11 AM 0 comments
Labels: economy 2010, global recession