Forum Archive Index - April 2000
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[sharechat] ITC fundamentally floored
The recent weakness in the ITC has prompted be to actually read the
Merrill Lynch report drawn up on February 4th from a value investor
perspective. I wanted to answer the question, when the mist and
smoke of hype clears, what is ITC worth? Is there some sort of
floor through which the share price is unlikely to drop when the
fundamentals catch up with it?
The main value of ITC seems to be in the ability to exploit the gap
between the actual cost of setting up an running an infotech venture
verses the public perception of its worth (or share price). ITC has
net assets of 17c per share of which 9c per share are actually
invested in IT. So at a share price of 45c the market is telling us
that this 9c on the books would actually be worth 36c if those same
investments were publicly floated.
We are told that existing investments (basically that means
Terabyte) have been purchased at up to 2 times revenues. We are
also told that such companies might expect to list at 10 times
revenues which implies a floated worth of 5 times the book value.
This gives an expected value of ITC shares of (5x9)+9 =54c based on
their current investment portfolio. Some of the businesses that
ITC invests in may be stars, while others may be clangers. If they
are properly diversified they will be in both. Just as the market
has rewarded them for their perceived star investments (virtual
spectator) I expect the market to punish them for their clangers,
perhaps even marking them to around 70% of 'fair value' (after all it
happened to BIL while they still had good stuff left). That would
give an entry price to ITC of around 39c if you were a bargain
hunter.
Furthermore to achieve the ITC business plan the NASDAQ must
remain buoyant and ITC must retain their key staff. Given that
the NASDAQ is volatile and it is public knowledge that ITC
staff are on below average retainers, both these are key risks which
cannot be discounted. Or more correctly may have to be discounted
into the ITC share price.
The rest of the numerical information in that Merrill Lynch report
seems to me a waste of time. ML draw up a growth curve for the
overall tech business market but you can't really say whether ITC
businesses will follow that curve. Unless they are lucky enough to
be managing a future market leader I would suggest the actual growth
path for ITC won't be anything like that. ML go on about the B2B
Australasian market. I would suggest to them there is no such
thing, as such businesses are becoming global. Then they suggest
that ITC will somehow get 4% of this 'market'? I would ignore that
figure (even 1% will be hard work)- I think they just made it up.
Furthermore the ML projected cash flows assume no new investments by
ITC, which as ML themselves say, isn't going to happen.
Disclosure: Do not hold ITC. May get some when they get below 40c-
barring any new deals I see that as the fundamental floor. If I did
own some ITC I would be a seller at around 70c. SNOOPY
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