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From: | "Steve Moxham" <stevemox@e3.net.nz> |
Date: | Fri, 13 Oct 2000 23:43:56 +1300 |
By looking at those figures you can evaluate that the business they're
in is difficult, or that the management is bad! Perhaps they're typical of
what you could expect to see in a commodity based business subject
to swings and cycles of supply and demand.
You're right - for share price appreciation, future earnings expectation is
what matters. That and any special circumstances. e.g. a
possible capital repayment or take over for example. However, looking
at past ROE figures can give you an indication of what you might
expect in the future (i.e. nothing special), barring any radical change of
business that saw CAH turn itself into a Baycorp overnight.
=)
I would suggest that this company wouldn't be a long term hold for
your portfolio, but rather a stock to pick up at the bottom of the
commodity cycle - or where market sentiment has excessively discounted it below
fair value - to hopefully sell somewhere near the top.
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