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From: | "Peter Maiden" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 3 Mar 2001 21:21:23 +1300 |
A rather subdued Advantage interim report this week. None of the old hype and
a bit of a disappointing read. Revenues up nearly $14M but operating margin fell from 15% of revenues to 5% of revenues. Of concern has to be the 2.5% operating margin for the last quarter. This means that operating expenses increased from $24.5M to $40.5M - in other
words while revenues increased by $14M operating expenses increased by
$16M. To put it bluntly Advantage spent $16M more to generate $14M revenues. What
was all this extra cost? Taking the goodwill expense into account Advantage traded at a loss of $0.9M before tax - down from a profit of $2.2M last year. The goodwill expense needs to be included in assessing tradng profits. Without the acquisitions that create the goodwill expense there would not have any increase in revenues. The acquisitions that have driven the revenue growth were funded by the issue
of nearly 5 million shares. This has avoided an ongoing higher goodwill expense
but diluted shareholders equity. In crude terms the benefits of these
acquisitions come with no goodwill showing in the P&L.. The impact of this
will show up in earnings per share. Nothing wrong with funding acquisitions this
way as long as investors are aware of the outcomes when assessing ongoing
performance. It seems ironic that Advantage's current strength is what they have tried to
move away from - electronic terminals on shop counters - even though the
software that drives them now does a lot more than previously. Oh no! - not a re-organisation with a new Group Managing Director. Four stand
alone businesses with their own Chief Executive Officers sounds expensive to
me. Comments like 'maximising organic growth and improving profitability' and
What is the real impact of Greg Cross's move?. He has been a
charismatic I'll remain on the sideline Cheers
Peter
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