|
Printable version |
From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 23 Jun 2001 00:40:54 +0000 |
Hi Peter, For every seller there is a buyer, as that's how a market works. So following Phaedrus's rather gloomy chart, and your own comments here is my more fundamentalist argument as to why you should hold or even buy Telstra. First the reason for the share price slump in the last fortnight. Telstra's profits are not increasing as fast as expected. Consider that statement carefully. This years profits are still going to be greater than last years. The rising EPS trend has not been broken. And profit margins are at record levels. Sitting here in NZ it is probably hard to get a handle on just how large and powerful Telstra is. There was an excellent article in the Australian BRW dated June 8th,, titled : "Dial T for tyrant'. The article opens: "After four years of full deregulation, Telstra is firmly in charge of the industry and accounts for more than 90% of its profits" Can you name any other company in any deregulated industry in any country that is as dominant as that? If we break down the telecommunications industry in Australia further into market shares for Telstra we get: Local Calls 95% (includes 15% wholesaled through other companies) , Toll Calls 70%, Pay Television 52% (through 50% ownership of Foxtel) Mobile Services 46%. ISPs 25%. Then if we look at one of the areas they are weakest, Mobile Services, (although they are still the industry leader on 46% market share) where is the competition coming from? Optus have been more focussed on finding a buyer for their company than being on the front foot for customer service. Vodaphone is considering pulling out of Australia so they can concentrate on their own problems in Europe, and AAPT is cash starved as regards future development due to our own Telecom's high debt problems. Also of note is that, unlike some of the European Telecos, Telstra did not overpay for 3G spectrum. I won't attempt to precis the whole article, but I will quote the closing paragraph: "The next 12 months will be a difficult period for the sector. Unless Telstra's dominance is countered things will get worse: Optus will wither as a competitive force, Telecom NZ will become effectively irrelevant, Vodaphone will probably sell its majority stake in Vodaphone pacific and Telstra will pour its money into Asia instead of Australia." This is not good news for Australia as regards competition. But it is very good for Telstra shareholders. > > - one would expect the price to > fall to at least 560 ( calculated as 740 = -(920 - 740)) > $NZ5.60 would be a P/E of 12, and a yield of around 5%, or if Telstra did a Telecom NZ and decided to pay out all of its profit, a yield of 10%. It is possible, but I can't see the price going that low. > > TLS floated at about 320 in Nov 1997 and rapidly went to the first > peak at 920 odd in Feb 1999. The only pauses on the way up are > where Phaedrus has highlighted some support levels. The rise was > dramatic and as such TLS did not form any real foundation. > > The reason why Telstra rose so steeply is that when it originally floated it was way too cheap. That was a political decision at float time. I can't see how you can say that decision casts a shadow over Telstra now. > > > The best short term prognosis (from the chart point of view) is that > TLS will form a long term bottoming pattern - one that will > probably last for some time. The only question is - what will be > the bottom? > > The chart shows TLS in a downward trend. The chart may form a long term bottoming pattern as you say Peter. It may pause and then continue to sink. It may pause and start to climb again. Reading anything more into the chart is just idle speculation IMHO. Still, like all situations where there are two opposing views, I guess time will tell who is right. I'm not saying the price won't go lower in the next few months. But 3 years down the track I would think potential shareholders would be very well rewarded if they bought at these levels. SNOOPY disclosure: ( Hold TLS ) --------------------------------- Message sent by Snoopy e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz on Pegasus Mail version 2.55 ---------------------------------- "Sometimes to see the wood from the trees, you have to cut down all the trees." ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.shtml.
References
|