Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Long VS Short: Fletcher Building Ltd




In this tenth installment of the Long vs Short series I am once again going to take look at the chart comparisons for a stock from the Share Investor Portfolio and compare the 10 year return (above chart) to the turmoil of the last year with a 1 year return chart (large chart at bottom of post).

In this series I want to show the merits of investing, using charts, for the long-term vs short term gains or losses. I will use the longest available data to me for the long-term view (10 years )and will make a comparison against the NZX50.

In this installment of Long vs Short I will look at Fletcher Building Ltd [FBU.NZ].

I currently hold 1114 Fletcher Building shares in the Share Investor Portfolio, the bulk of which I have owned since November 2006. (see small chart below for detail)

The company has been a very good performer with great returns and is still going OK under current tough economic conditions.



Symbol
Price
Value
Earned
$7.290
$8087.64

$-615.69

You own 1114 [FBU.NZ] shares
purchased at $7.81 [$8703.33]

In my 2.5 years of owning this share my return has been a loss of just over 7 %. This includes dividends and tax credits.(see small chart above)

If I had bought this share just a year ago (see large chart at bottom) my return would have been a 34% loss, with a loss of 50% as recent as March 2009.

Now for the real point of this comparison, lets look at the return for Fletcher Building shareholders who have held the stock for 10 years. (see large chart above)

From a high of a 450% return at the end of 2007, the 10 year return as of writing is still around 200%. All those dividends plus tax credits and time has given the long termers another win.

This series has yet to return a positive for short term investors.



Disc I own a small FBU holding in the Share Investor Portfolio


Fletcher Building @ Share Investor

Fletcher Building's Commercial arm keeps their head above the tunnel
Sweetheart deal for Fletcher Building's Friends
Fletcher House built on hard times
Fletcher Building down tools in the short term
Why did you buy that stock? [Fletcher Building Ltd]
A solid foundation for the future
Fletcher Building raises profit through canny management
Fletcher's got game


Discuss this Stock @ Share Investor Forum


Long vs Short Series

Ryman Healthcare Ltd
Michael Hill International

Auckland International Airport
Freightways Ltd
Pumpkin Patch Ltd

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare
Mainfreight Ltd
The Warehouse Group
Sky City Entertainment




c Share Investor 2009




Friday, July 24, 2009

Beam me up Davy

I think Contact Energy directors have been watching too much moon landing coverage over the last week because its seems that a number of them may have disappeared up their own planet of Uranus.

Clearly some live in a parallel universe when they can cost their company nearly 40000 customers in just under a year by making a public exhibition of himself by raising electricity prices, granting directors big bonuses and having an expensive boozy lunch on the company in October last year and then expected to be rewarded for it.

David Baldwin, managing director and CEO of Contact Energy Ltd [CEN.NZ] yesterday applied for a waiver from the NZSX to get "financial assistance", an interest free loan from Contact Energy shareholders, so he can participate in the company's Long Term Incentive plan (LTI).

Boy those Contact shareholders sure are generous!

Fair enough, you deserve the free shares for doing a good job, but Baldwin has cost the company 10s of millions in lost revenue over the last year and since he has become the MD this year he becomes ineligible to participate but has decided in his infinite wisdom that he will apply to his mates at the NZX to waive this rule that allows him to participate.

And guess what, the waiver was granted just 24 hrs latter.

Beam me up Scotty, I wanna be where Dave lives, 'cause it don't work that way down here on earth.


Recent Share Investor Reading

Discuss Contact Energy @ Share Investor Forum


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c Share Investor 2009

Auckland Airport Sale: Ready to Fly

This blog was visited by a large number of Googlers yesterday. They were searching for Auckland International Airport [AIA] information.

Those searches were principally related to questions about the possibility of its sale, so I thought I would write something opinionated on just that subject.

This interest would have been sparked by the National Government's relaxing of rules and legislation surrounding the overseas ownership and purchase of New Zealand assets announced by them today.

I wrote back in February that we were likely to see just this very scenario occur:

With the new National Government in place and the current relaxing of the rules around the RMA, the major planning law that has stopped economic development of New Zealand, we could expect to see developments in other areas of business in regards to relaxing laws and legislation to allow business to flow quicker and therefore more efficiently and more profitably.

Small parts of overseas investment criteria have been relaxed immediately but there will be a review of the Overseas Investment Act with a view to relax current complications and confusion.

The 3 main points of the act that will be looked at latter in the year that are pertinent to any possible bid for Auckland Airport are:

1. the thresholds determining which land and business investments are screened are set at the right level -- so only genuinely sensitive assets are captured.

2. Providing greater certainty for investors, by removing the ability to substantially change overseas investment rules during applications.

3. Simplifying the screening of investments in sensitive land, while ensuring that overseas investors are subject to a higher standard than domestic investors.

The airport sale was stymied by the previous Labour Administration by a law that was expressly passed for the AIA bid by DAE and the Canadian Teacher's Pension fund as well as confusion brought by the 3 parts of the act noted above.

With an overhaul of this act, relaxation of other overseas investment rules and a business friendly shake-up of Auckland Council's that hold airport shares, Auckland Airport will soon be in play.

Disclosure I own AIA shares in the Share Investor Portfolio


Auckland International Airport @ Share Investor Blog

Stock of the Week: Auckland International Airport

Is another Auckland Airport Bid likely?
Long VS Short: Auckland International Airport
Auckland Airport needs main focus on its core business
Marketwatch - Auckland International Airport
Why did you buy that stock: Auckland International Airport
Cullen's move on Auckland Airport has far reaching effects
Cullen's move on AIA tax plan Anti-Business
AIA profit stays grounded
Softening opposition to CPPIB bid for AIA
Directors of AIA bribe brokers not to sell
What is Auckland Airport worth to you?
Second bite at AIA by CPPIB might just fly
AIA new directors must focus on shareholders
Auckland Airport merger deal nosedives
The Canadians have landed
AIA incentive scheme must fly out the window
Government market manipulation over AIA/DAE deal
DAE move on AIA: Will it fly?

Discuss this stock @ Share Investor Forum

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c Share Investor 2009

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Aren't those banks just utter Bastards

After getting some shtick recently from my bank, the ASB Albany branch, who have decided, after much arguing by my good self, that they will waive early repayment fees for a loan I made a few years back but didn't agree to any fee charged when initially taking out that loan, I came across a story today in the Nelson Mail that just made my day:



Defiant Mapua artist Roger Griffiths today made a stand against Westpac by withdrawing his $190,000 savings in $20 notes.

The bank provided a red-and-black carry bag to take away the cash after meticulously counting it in front of Mr Griffiths at its Nelson branch.

Mr Griffiths, a loyal Westpac customer for 25 years, decided to withdraw his money after the bank rejected his application for an $80,000 mortgage. "It's about time normal people took a stand."

He said the bank turned down his application because he did not have a regular income as an artist. However, he was a successful artist, exhibiting his paintings at the World of Wearable Art complex, in Christchurch and New York, he said. (Go here for rest of story)

Roger has got it right, you have to fight these bastards because they will walk all over you if you don't.

Incidentally, most good lenders would have lent him the money, and so would I, based on the record with his bank alone. After all, we all remember that Westpac is the bank that will give away millions without any double checking your ability to pay your debts.

My loan payment dispute with ASB has not been rectified to my satisfaction because they have time limited their offer to July 31 and they were not the terms of my original loan.

The fact that they have offered to waive the fees though means I can use that offer against them when I take them to the disputes tribunal.

Fight your bank if you think they are wrong, if you don't get what you want, at least you tried and you might have some fun, like I have had, giving them a hard time.

More Banking Madness @ Share Investor

Bryce the Banker: The Final Insult
Banks not participating in Recession
Bank Guarantees: Time for banks to return the favour
The Return of Bryce
Banking Madness!

Discuss this topic @ Share Investor Forum


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c Share Investor 2009


I'm Buying: Mainfreight Management delivers the goods



I must have had some kind of brain explosion yesterday, something in my personal life made me drop my risk/reward guard and I ended up spending just over $35,000.00.

I have wanted to have a medium sized splurge on a few stocks for the last year or so and the life changing event yesterday allowed me to finally release the financial and mental rubber band and take that risk.

I have been chugging along buying small parcels of shares over the last year April 2009 | July 2009 | July 2008 | June 2008 | June 2008 | but yesterday ended up buying 7000 more The Warehouse Group [WHS.NZ] shares and 1875 Mainfreight Ltd [MFT.NZ] shares at $4.20 per share, to take my holding to a nice round 5000 in the old Share Investor Portfolio.

I was tossing up between Mainfreight and Ryman Healthcare [RYM.NZ] and superior Mainfreight management, which I often obsess about, won me over.

I bought my original Mainfreight holding just over 2 years ago for just under 8 bucks, yes you read it right, 8 bucks. Over that holding period the stock has now cost me around $6.85 per share after dividends and tax credits are added, so that makes yesterday's purchase a bargain.

I am happy to hold at both prices.

** Photo & share purchase dedicated to my dear old Dad, who must be still driving a truck, wherever he is now, for the last 15 years!


Mainfreight @ Share Investor

Mainfreight Ltd: Fully Year 2010 Profit Analysis
Long Term View: Mainfreight Ltd
Share Investor Interview: Mainfreight's MD Don Braid
Stock of the Week: Mainfreight Ltd
Questions to Mainfreight's MD Don Braid
I'm Buying: Mainfreight Management delivers the goods
Mainfreight Annual Report Packs a Punch
Analysis - Mainfreight Ltd: FY Profit to 31/03/09
Mainfreight VS KiwiRail: The Sequel
Long VS Short: Mainfreight Ltd
Why did you buy that stock? [Mainfreight Ltd]
Mainfreight 2008 Annual report worth reading
KiwiRail will cost Mainfreight
Mainfreight keeps on truckin
A rare breed
Share Investor's 2008 stock picks

Discuss MFT @ Share Investor Forum



Amazon 

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c Share Investor 2009

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Commonsense VS Politics

The dumping of the introduction of folate into our daily bread by National just shows us how politically motivated our politicians are rather than acting on facts (well duh Darren).

The Nazi style move by Labour and its continued support to introduce folate into our bread shows us that the left still want to control us, but the fact that this wasn't rejected quickly by National is a worry.

The use of folate of any kind is a personal choice, to say otherwise is to go down a track that would ultimately have citizens eating what politicians want from State owned markets (with long lines and shortages no doubt) and we rejected that at the 2008 election.

To have National making the move based on political motivation rather than a question of personal choice or the fact that there are questions about synthetic folate and the danger of it, is just more of the same crap that we put up with over the last 9 years of the heavy handed socialist/nazi style regime that Labour presided over.

This political rather than fact based governance is really just a lie, all it does is keep the ignorant and stupid happy and keeps the incumbent Government's poll ratings up.

The same can be said of the global warming nonsense that National are continuing with.

It is a a clear myth acknowledged by most yet the bullshit rolls on simply because it buys votes from the rabid left vocal sector of our country, never mind that the facts are that the whole GW frenzy is a lie.

This way of governing is the rule of the vocal moronity and it is a sign of weakness from the Government.

For god sake, have your own ideas, act on commonsense and fact and forget about the politics.

If John Key doesn't stand firm on something for the right reasons, his Government is going to fall due to the line adhered to and moved by the dropkicks and looney lefties in Government departments and interest groups that he is currently listening to.

Lets see the commonsense that we were promised before the election.




Bookmark and Share

I'm buying: Time to re-visit an old Red Friend

I love good stocks when the market is ignoring them. One stock that has been put in the bottom draw by many investors, including myself, is The Warehouse Group [WHS.NZ].

But just because a stock is out of favour by the market or not in the news doesn't mean you should forget about it. In fact if you are canny you should probably be more than a little contrary as others are looking at other more "newsworthy" companies.

I have kinda forgotten the red shed myself, I have had WHS shares in the Share Investor Portfolio for a number of years and have done a little bit of reading lately on the company and I like what I have to read.

Profit has been steady during the this recession (so far) and the cash continues to roll in as shoppers look for bargains.

Add to this a couple of stories, one from a month or so back from Bloomberg and one out today covering the Woolworth's Australia profit and things start to look a little more interesting for The Warehouse.

The Bloomberg piece covers off Woolworth's capital management and alludes to either a stock buyback for its own scrip or a "major" purchase in the offing, suggesting The Warehouse as a target.

Another article by Reuters confirms a bumper profit for Woolies, so they are free flowing with lovely green stuff.

The purchase/buyback scenario will probably be confirmed by the company when it reports its profit in August.

I bought 7000 shares today at a combined value of approx NZ$26,000.00 @ an average share price of $3.72.

My incumbent shareholding in this company, 8000 shares, was bought originally at $6.05 but I hold at a cost of $5.05 after dividends and tax credits are added after holding for 1.75 years.

I am happy to buy Warehouse shares and forget about them again but there is a distinct likelihood that either Woolworths or Foodstuffs, Woollies competing bidder, will make a play for the company in the medium term.

The bid for The Warehouse has been held up in litigation between the 3 parties involved and as I wrote back in January in When will the Warehouse bidders make their move? the process has now ground to a halt after the Commerce Commission won their case in the Appeal Court almost a year ago and Woolworth's sought leave in the Supreme Court to have that decision quashed a few weeks later.

Many things have changed since then, the major stumbling block to the takeover, the Extra format stores, has been dropped and economic conditions have made the retail environment even more competitive.

Watch this space.


The Warehouse Group @ Share Investor

Warehouse 2009 interim profit a key economic indicator
Stock of the Week: The Warehouse Group
When will The Warehouse bidders make their move?
Long vs Short: The Warehouse Group
Warehouse bidders ready to lay money down
The Warehouse set to cut lose "extra" impediment
The Warehouse sale could hinge on "Extra" decision
The case for The Warehouse without a buyer
Foodstuffs take their foot off the gas
Woolworths seek leave to appeal to Supreme Court
Warehouse appeal decision imminent
Warehouse decision a loser for all
Warehouse Court of appeal decision in Commerce Commission's favour
MARKETWATCH: The Warehouse
The Warehouse takeover saga continues
Why did you buy that stock? [The Warehouse]
History of Warehouse takeover players suggest a long winding road
Court of Appeal delays Warehouse bid
The Warehouse set for turbulent 2008
The Warehouse Court of Appeal case lay in "Extras" hands
WHS Court of Appeal case could be dismissed next week
Commerce Commission impacts on the Warehouse bottom line
The Warehouse in play
Outcomes of Commerce Commission decision
The fight for control begins soon

Discuss this stock @ Share Investor Forum

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c Share Investor 2009

Share Investor Portfolio: 22 July 2009

The Share Investor Portfolio now contains 17 stocks listed on the NZSX. The bulk of the portfolio started back in 2002 and I have added to the bulk of it by using dividends and cash.

Since the 10 July 22 update approx NZ $35000 was added due to two stock purchases made today, 1875 shares in Mainfreight Ltd [MFT.NZ] and 7000 shares in The Warehouse Group [WHS.NZ].



The Share Investor Portfolio as at 22 July 2009
  • Auckland International Airport [AIA] 5000
  • ASB Capital NO. 2 Ltd [ASBPB] 10000
  • Briscoe Group Ltd [BGR] 3000
  • Fletcher Building Ltd [FBU] 1114
  • Fisher & Paykel Healthcare Corp Ltd [FPH] 5000
  • Freightways Ltd [FRE] 8631
  • Goodman Fielder Ltd [GFF] 2000
  • Halleinstein Glasson Ltd [HLG] 1000
  • Kiwi Income Property Trust [KIP] 1000
  • Mainfreight Ltd [MFT] 5000
  • Michael Hill International Ltd [MHI] 10000
  • Postie Plus Ltd [PPG] 2535
  • Pumpkin Patch Ltd [PPL] 5000
  • Ryman Healthcare Ltd [RYM] 5000
  • Sky City Entertainment [SKC] 36915
  • Steel & Tube Holdings Ltd [STU] 400
  • The Warehouse Group Ltd [WHS] 15000
Previous Portfolio Updates

Share Investor Portfolio: July 10 2009
Share Investor Portfolio: June 15 2009
Share Investor Portfolio: May 22 2009

Related Share Investor Reading: Why did you buy that stock?

Why did you buy that stock? [Fletcher Building Ltd]
Why did you buy that stock? [Freightways Ltd]
Why did you buy that stock? [Kiwi Income Property Trust]
Why did you buy that stock? [Hallenstein Glasson]
Why did you buy that stock? [Briscoe Group]
Why did you buy that stock? [Fisher & Paykel Healthcare]
Why did you buy that stock? [Pumpkin Patch Ltd]
Why did you buy that stock? [Ryman Healthcare]
Why did you buy that stock? [Michael Hill International]
Why did you buy that stock? [Mainfreight Ltd]
Why did you buy that stock? [The Warehouse Group]
Why did you buy that stock? [Goodman Fielder]
Why did you buy that stock? [Auckland Airport]
Why did you buy that stock? [Sky City Entertainment]


Discuss this topic @ Share Investor Forum

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c Share Investor 2002-2009

Insider Trading on Sky City shares




Most people who watch the New Zealand Stockmarket closely know that there is frequent trading of shares based on insider information, the New Zealand Stockmarket is just like a small town, everyone knows everybody else's business.

I am not a share price follower, more of a company watcher but I have been looking at movements in Sky City Entertainment Group [SKC.NZ] share price pretty closely over the last 9 years or so.

I have come to the conclusion that Sky City is one of the biggest insider traded stocks.

Every reporting period you can always get a good idea about the profit result before it comes out, based on whether the insiders have traded on good or bad company news.

Yesterday's announcement of an upgrade in Sky City profit is a case in point in insider plays.

A very large volume of almost 8 million shares valued at nearly NZ$ 24 million was traded and the share price ended up 19c or just over 6.5%.

Over the last few days Sky City share price has taken a marked rise (see chart above and data below) and big volumes have gone through over the last 3 trading days.

Date
Open
High
Low
Close
Value
Volume
21 Jul 2009
2.880
3.100
2.880
3.050
23923490.3
7798468
20 Jul 2009
2.790
2.860
2.780
2.860
6702303.15
2373190
17 Jul 2009
2.660
2.780
2.660
2.780
18663101.84
6845077
16 Jul 2009
2.730
2.730
2.670
2.680
5240196.25
1942297
15 Jul 2009
2.660
2.690
2.630
2.690
2766984.42
1041257
14 Jul 2009
2.630
2.650
2.620
2.650
3258738.82
1240619
13 Jul 2009
2.660
2.660
2.620
2.620
1262989.85
480511
10 Jul 2009
2.680
2.690
2.650
2.650
1367532.26
514690
09 Jul 2009
2.640
2.680
2.640
2.680
1810909.48
676984
08 Jul 2009
2.630
2.650
2.620
2.650
5499837.7
2087514

Data From NZX

As I mentioned in a column on Monday there was big volume going through on Friday the 17 July when over $18 million of stock was traded and the stock was up 10c. Insiders have known for a while about the profit upgrade because the stock price has risen from a recent low of $2.58 to finish nearly 30c higher at close of market Monday 20 July, before the profit upgrade was made public yesterday morning.

The bulk of insider trading was done on Friday the 17 July, bought by institutions/brokers for a quick buck and a large part of that was sold back to the mum and dad investor today.

It isn't necessarily wrong for insiders to know about profit upgrades like this one because they get briefed and updated by company management before the great unwashed, but it is illegal for them to trade shares in the company based on that knowledge.

Unfortunately nothing will be done by Mr Mark Weldon, CEO of the NZX , because it is his colleagues (the brokers) that are making money, and his NZX is clipping the ticket along the way as large volumes of shares are traded.

Who needs a monkey with a dart when you can trade on insider info?

Disclosure I own SKC shares in the Share Investor Portfolio

Recent Share Investor Reading

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c Share Investor 2009

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Sky City Profit Upgrade: Always on the Cards

If you have been reading this blog for the last two years you will know that I have a large shareholding in Sky City Entertainment Group [SKC.NZ]. You will also know that I have banged on about owning this stock until my fingers have bled, and you will then know the reasons why I like owning shares in this company.

Well, news out today that Sky City management have upgraded Fully Year profit in the 12 months to June 30 2009 from a $99-106 million range to a range of $113 - $116 million, reinforce my obsession. Just two weeks ago I gave a nod and a wink and picked the company as my Stock of the Week. That was when the stock price was at $2.58.

At the time of writing the stock is up 21 cents to $3.07 on exceptional volume.

Just yesterday I wrote that trading in Sky City shares last Friday were quite large (around NZ $18 million) and the movement in share price by 10c that same day was an indicator that insiders knew about material information, Thursday night at the latest -the share price had steadily moved upwards last week after being in the doldrums for weeks.

More insider trading? Yes but lets leave that to another day.

I have also indicated many times in the last year that this company will do well during a recession and one simply shouldn't sell because the share price is tanking, in fact you should really have been buying if this stock suits your investment profile.

The signs have been there of a turnaround in the company, Nigel Morrison has been savage at cutting costs, including paying down debt with a slightly dodgy capital raising a few months ago and his experience and history at casino turnarounds has provided a renewed revenue bounce at the company's Adelaide casino.

The Auckland casino has finally been freed of construction and revamps, with more revenue coming from gaming machines and food and beverage sales and even the lackluster cinema business is providing more income, even though I am dubious of the sustainability of that.

As I have also mentioned before the Darwin Casino continues to be a star in the Sky City crown, with good revenue increases likely to be revealed in the profit announcement to be made Wednesday August 26 and future development there will pull in more gaming income.

In recessions, casinos that Sky City operate do well. They differ from their big flashy and unprofitable Las Vegas brothers who rely much more on overseas customers for gaming income, where the vast bulk of profit for Sky City's money spinners comes from the local population, well over 70% I believe.

With more Kiwis staying home, especially at its Auckland complex, where a large number of its customers are recent immigrants from Asia, revenue there is bound to be well up.

I look forward to congradulations from my readers for indicating to them how much I have liked this stock over the years with a wink and a nod as subtle as a sledgehammer in the head.

Tell me you bought while the stock was low.


Sky City Entertainment Group @ Share Investor

Sky City's Current Cinema "Boom" a Horror Story in Disguise
Stock of the Week: Sky City Entertainment Group
Sky City share offer confusing and unfair for smaller shareholders
Sky City CEO doubles down
Sky City Entertainment 2009 Interim Profit Review
Sky City Entertainment 2009 Interim Result Preamble
2008 Sky City profit analysis
Sky City Entertainment 2008 Full Year profit results , NZX release, 2008 full year presentation, result briefing webcast, financial statements
Sky City 2008 profit preamble
Sky City outlines a clear future plan
As recession bites Sky City bites back
Sky City Assets: Buy, sell and hold
Why did you buy that stock? [Sky City Entertainment]
Sky City Share Volumes set tongues wagging
Sky City half year exceptional on cost cutting
NZX Press release: Sky City profit to HY end Dec 2007
Sky City Cinemas no Blockbuster
Sky City Entertainment share price drop
New Broom set to sweep
Sky City Management: Blind, deaf and numb
Sky City sale could be off
Opposition to takeover
Premium for control
Sky City receives takeover bid
Sky City Casino Full Year Profit to June 30 2007
Setting the record straight
Sky City CEO resigns
Sky City Casino: Under performing
Sky City Casino 2007 HY Profit(analysis)
Sky City Casino 2007 HY Profit

Discuss this stock @ Share Investor Forum

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Monday, July 20, 2009

Transpacific Industrie's Capital Raising is Trash

I feel for Transpacific Industries [TPI] NZ | AU shareholders. I say this because shareholders like myself benefited from their Executive Director and Chairman, Terry Peabody's generosity when he shelled out over NZ $800 million to buy Waste Management NZ in 2006.

Some say he overpaid, I say the asset was a stunner and I got shafted long-term but nevertheless I got a 50% return on my investment for a year and the money came from debt Peabody was able to raise from idiotic investment bankers who took a percentage cut for arranging such loans for Peabody to go mad with.

I really have TPI shareholder money in my back pocket, thanks for that, but the borrowing of the last few years had its wrap up of sorts today where the company is trying to ironically raise about $AU800 million to fend off bankers (ahh there they are again to collect) and eventual liquidation.

They have managed to raise around AU $620 million so far from institutions and a cornerstone shareholder, Warburg Pincus (another investment banker/private equity player) and will ask for the remaining balance from those poor old suffering shareholders at the princely sum of AU$1.20 per share.

If the institutional capital raising is anything to go by the interest in pouring more money into this company is low. It only just reached its minimum target.

My message to those shareholders is, don't do it!

The architect of the company failure is still there at the head of the business, it is unbelievable that he hasnt been pushed out or had the decency to walk the plank, but Terry Peabody is an arrogant man and he will not admit that he has done much wrong. He has destroyed around AU$ 3 billion in capital in the business that he manages and an arrogant man doesn't change his ways easily.

The cornerstone shareholder should reign him in though.

It seems to me though that the cornerstone shareholder,Warburg Pinkus, who will hold 20% of the company or more once the capital restructure is finalised, and that should be in early September, might want to extract as much value from their investment at the expense of minority shareholders and Peabody, who will also have a large stake, will want to continue with the staus quo.

Cut your losses TPI Holders, it ain't worth it chasing good money after bad.

There is of course short money to be made here.

Just a heads up for New Zealand investors. It seems to me that Transpacific's best assets still lay in its New Zealand operations. Waste Management and parts of Envirowaste and other companies that TPI run here are virtual monopolies, making good money and the fact that an investment banking organisation/private equity company has a large stake in TPI could mean a sell off of some of those assets in the future.

Slightly more than a stab in the dark from me, but nevertheless we could get it back on our NZX one day.

Just though a good rumour was warranted.

Recent Share Investor Reading

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c Share Investor 2009

Stock of the Week: Fisher & Paykel Healthcare




In this Stock of the Week I am going to look at Fisher & Paykel Healthcare [FPH.NZ] a long term favourite of mine.

While the stock has been cheaper over the last year (see chart above) and it has been close to a high of 5 bucks over the last 2, it is still more than 10% off its recent highs and that is my overriding reason for including it in this series.

That and the following important positive points:

1. The company has an enviable history of good revenue growth and profit

2. Looking into the future, its cutting edge technology and high R & D spending make for continuation of point number one.

3. Profit and sales have been recession-proof in the past and that is evidenced in their last profit result.

Even though the stock price is just over 10% off a 6 month high of NZ$3.46, it has found a comfortable niche in share price between $2.80 and $3.20 for the last year, so there is room in that 40c range for short termers to trade and long termers to pick up more shares if the stock moves to the bottom of that range.

I managed to add 3000 more FPH to the Share Investor Portfolio on June 16 2008 for $2.35.

Please be aware though that the stock price is particularly sensitive to currency fluctuations, with any upwards pressure on the Kiwi dollar having a negative impact on share price and vice versa. If the NZ dollar trades out of the 60c range in either direction then you are likely to find opportunities from either side of the share price equation.

It is a quality stock with something for everyone.

Good luck!


Disclosure I have FPH shares in the Share Investor Portfolio


Stock of the Week Series

Xero Ltd
Auckland International Airport
Sky City Entertainment Group
Burger Fuel Worldwide
Michael Hill International
Contact Energy Ltd
The Warehouse Group
Fisher & Paykel Appliances


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August - October reporting season should sort out fact from market fiction

The looming New Zealand reporting season that rolls out at the beginning of August is going to be a very good differentiator of fact from fiction.

Has our stockmarket got it right with its wild mood swings and huge markdowns in stock prices for most of our listed companies or has it gone way off track as usual and over reacted to the incessant bad news about the economy and some companies that have had particularly bad recent results and a large number that have had profit warnings?

I tend to err on the side of over reaction.

One stock in the Share Investor Portfolio that has been particularly hard hit over the last few months in terms of share price, Sky City Entertainment Group [SKC.NZ], didn't really participate in the recent upswing in stock prices across the board but its profit is going to be inline with last years result and its market update earlier this year - as it has been for the last 2-3 years when its share price was more than double its current levels. Go figure. Its share price was up 10c this last Friday at market close, on very large turnover, indicating that the result coming out late in August might be even better than indicated.

As investors and market watchers, we already know which companies are likely to underwhelm. The retail market sucks a kumera ; The Warehouse Group [WHS.NZ] , Pumpkin Patch Ltd [PPL.NZ] and Hallenstein Glasson [HLG.NZ] are going to disappoint the market, and that is clear if you just walk around the malls and ask your friends what they have been buying lately, but their respective stock prices have either been steady or up slightly in the last few months. Companies such as Contact Energy Ltd [CEN.NZ] and Goodman Fielder[GFF.NZ] have forecast lower profit this reporting season but their share prices have maintained relative value. Most export related businesses are suffering except for a notable one of two which are doing better than ever -like my own Fisher & Paykel Healthcare [FPH.NZ]. In comparison to Sky City's good February results, this shows little good judgment when it comes to picking companies with good medium term future profits when you look at what value Mr Market puts on them.

A stock that has simply rocketed in share price over the last few months is Restaurant Brands Ltd [RBD.NZ]. That has been an over reaction to a claw back to profit for the fast food operator where its share price has almost doubled from its early 2009 lows in the 50 - 60c range. Clearly this sort of stock movement is a major departure of fact from reality - its profit is no higher than it was 10 years ago and forecasts show only a small rise in profit from current levels, but the market has forgotten the poor financial history of this company and given the stock price a Viagra like status when it comes to valuing what the company is worth.

Telecom New Zealand's [TEL.NZ] stock price seems to have accelerated in share price of late but all indications are that profit is going to be well down on last year and a sense of uncertainly has enveloped company operations because of regulatory and economic restraints and the expense of rolling out their new XT mobile service. Will the market react in a realistic way when the bad bottom line figures finally surface in their accounts in August?

Ahh but you forget about Telecom's big dividend Darren! Attractive to international market watchers and Kiwis alike. Yeah OK, but how long can that last.

Reporting season is always a good way to sort the wheat from the chaff- if you can understand most of the gobbledygook in company reports - and this coming reporting season will be more relevant to that mantra than any other year in recent memory simply because of the economic uncertainty that currently prevails but the time for some caution should come now, when deciding to buy stocks. It looks to me that some are piling into stocks simply because they see stock prices rising and that isn't a clever way to buy, especially in a beaten down market.

I have been buying recently but not all stocks should be bought because they appear to be "on sale". I bought for my own reasons because I consider them cheap and good companies.

I bought more Michael Hill International [MHI.NZ] and Auckland International Airport [AIA.NZ] recently because I like the good management of the former and the monopoly status of the latter.

The stock prices of these two are interesting. Michael Hill's is probably trading at fair value given the dire nature of the retail industry, especially for discretionary stuff like jewelery (I saw nobody in my Albany MH on an otherwise busy retail day last week and they were offering free coffee) but Airport shares are trading at a heavy discount to value given that looming profit will only be slightly down from last year. The yang to that particular ying is that less than two years ago the Canadians and the Arabs offered over NZ$3.65 per share to buy the company, probably then overvaluing the company based on similar profits to this years one.

In my not so humble opinion Auckland International Airport is worth way more than $3.65 per share in the long term, (5 years plus) see monopoly status again for an explanation of that exuberant statement.

Yes, it is a good time to buy stocks because company share prices are on sale but fundamentals still do apply and it is worth looking even closer today than usual because of the x factor of the economic downturn. The reporting season will tell us if we have been right over the last 6 months, at least in the short to medium term, rather than betting on market whims.

I have only a short market experience (around 12 years) but now more than ever the disconnect between the current profit, future prospects and health of our NZX listed companies and its sharemarket value is more pronounced - and that occurred when the market over accelerated in the earlier part of this century as well. Some companies are being way under valued and vice versa.

I guess that is what makes this game interesting, but the rules will change as the profit season reveals its hidden cards.

Disclosure I own SKC, FPH, HLG, AIA, MHI, WHS, PPL, & GFF shares.

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c Share Investor 2009