|
Printable version |
From: | "Peter" <pmaiden@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Sun, 14 Oct 2001 07:25:20 +1300 |
Up until 1998
WAM was one of the star performers on the NZSE. It's 1998 performance was
typical of how it had performed over many years - EPS growth of 18% and ROE and
ROIC of about 14%. WAM deserved the P/E in the high 20's the market gave
it.
However this
organic growth was not enough - the market demanded more. Another comapny in the
same boat was Nuplex.
Growth was
needed by acquisition. This started in 1999 with the acquisition of Wastecare.
In addition WAM bought out the interests of it's US shareholder Waste Management
International.
The result -
a bigger comapny, $80M more share capital and new debt of $46M (as at Dec
2000).
In the period
between 1998 and 2000 sales increased from $78M to $137M. Operating margins have
inproved slightly but the $59M increase in sales has only resulted in profit
going from $10.8M to $13.9M - the reason being that depreciation/amortisation /
interest costs were $14M more in 2000 than they were in
1998.
WAM's ROE has
fallen to 9.0% and because of the higher level of debt ROIC has fallen to below
8%. WAM is no longer earing more than it's cost of
capital.
In addition earnings growth has
stopped and the market has re-rated WAM accordingly. At the current price of 250
still a P/E of about 18. At this price the market is also valuing the NPV of
future cash flows (based on earnings growth) at about a positive $40M. This
means that the market is expecting WAM to earn more than it's cost of capital in
the future - something that it has not managed over the last 2 yaers and won't
do this year.
On current performance this
suggests that WAM is still overvalued and the share price could drift down to
somewhere closer 200 (it's level of capital) - which would also better reflect
its current earnings performance.
Phaedrus says wait until a new up
trend has been confirmed. Paul says there are indicators that the trend is about
to change.
As others have said WAM
fundamentals are strong - it consistently makes good profits etc. However the
acquisition path that WAM has gone down means that it's financial performance is
now only solid - not of stellar proportions. To achieve that staus it needs to
get NOPAT up to over $20M.
At the
current time I feel that even though the WAM price has dropped a lot over recent
times it is still slightly overvalued. I would follow Phaedrus's advice and wait
for a confirmed uptrend to form before buying for a short to medium term
hold.
Cheers
Peter
|
Replies
|