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From: | "hugh webber" <hugh.webber@clear.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 5 May 2001 15:48:55 +1200 |
I took the trouble to attend the recent AGM in Chch and can report (a) I was unimpressed with the Chairman's complete naivete in the area of media relations (b) I was impressed with NZR's new sizable value investor Emerald Holdings (they bought out Fletcher Petroleum) and their director Geoff Cumming. There was a comment from the floor that investors were somewhat perplexed by NZR's previous extreme volatility in share price (from a high of $44 to a low of under $10), profits and dividends. Geoff Cumming spoke saying that his group were very interested in shareholder returns and he would be pushing on this front. Geoff is a recently naturalised NZer (from Canada) and he was very knowledgable on the industry. NZR's profitability relates to the refining margin in Singapore, the RM is the difference between output prices for petrol etc and crude oil input prices. From what I can gather the RM is holding up (their year ends 31/12) but it probably won't be quite as good as last year. The chairman's speech unfortunately centred on the possibility (which he seemed to assume was a certainty) that NZR would be in for some significant capital expenditure to ensure it could produce less polluting fuels. However he didn't have a date (somewhere in the distant future), did not refer to the US and Australian withdrawals from Kyoto, seemed unable to quantify the cost or the extent of government or oil company participation and said vaguely that NZR is subject to a host of market related factors and implied that the chips would fall where they will and didn't seem to particularly care. After all he still gets paid I spose and NZR is only one of his major jobs. I was hoping for an intelligent dissertation on world refinery capacity shortage, the difficulties of building new ones, the implications of the Kyoto breakdown, the implications of the renewed OPEC activism, a new commitment to shareholder return stability, whether NZR would hit its target of reducing costs to $75 million which it missed last year but I think he was on a different planet. He typified what Ron Brierley used to refer to as the old sleepy NZ directors old boy club. Anyway here's hoping someone takes him aside for some coaching for next year or NZR spends a bit on getting some PR ideas. Naturally the news media leapt upon the concept of vast new previously unthought of capital expenditure to meet Kyoto imperilling NZR's future viability and plastered it around and NZR's share price was hit the next day and since then. However it seems a pretty good bet that even with some reduction NZR's gross yield for calendar 2001 will be streets ahead of the next highest listed NZ company which I believe is Newmarket Property. However I think Newmarket has been unnaturally elevated by a shareholder gurantee of profitability for the first few years which has now run out so I'm steering clear of Newmarket myself. Last year he made somewhat the same speech and said NZR was in for a disastrous year after which it then proceeded to have its best year ever so I wouldn't actually rely on anything the chairman said. He put it down to the impossibility of predicting anything in the refinery game, like the weather. Probably that's a bit passe with the factors above and its time for some intelligent analysis of the factors involved. It is said that NZ investors are allergic to high value per share figures as they get less shares for their money. That seems to be an incredibly simple minded approach to me but maybe it takes all sorts to make a world. Disclosure: Hold NZR shares - I bought in in time for the $2 per share fully imputed dividend in March 2001. I note the NZR balance sheet is very strong cash wise and in terms of imputation credits there and coming on stream. Now, don't go making pigs of yourselves guys, I may want to buy some more. (why do I do this? why don't I just let them stick to AQL etc....). ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors http://www.netbroker.co.nz/ Trade on Credit, Low Brokerage. Join now. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
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