Forum Archive Index - November 2002
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[sharechat] Good Report for SCT
Why would an income investor buy shares in Scott Technology, a share
which has one of the lowest dividend yields on the market (2.4%) ?
A big boost in final dividend announced recently brings dividends for
the year up to 11cps, up from only 5.5cps last year. Using
today's share price of $2.33, this brings the dividend yield up to
4.72%, equivalent to 7.2% before tax (based on a 33% tax rate).
But wait, it gets even better! Scotts expect to maintain their
dividend rate per share next year based on a looming 1:8 bonus issue.
This gives a prospective yield of 5.31%, equivalent to over 8%
before tax! Try getting that from a term deposit, and you will see
why SCT should be on the watch list of the income investor.
Scott Technology makes machines that make other machines (like
washing machines and fridges). Unusually for an NZ company,they are
almost entirely overseas focussed. Investors had a tough 2001, when
the key export market of North America ground to a standstill. These
were dark days with the share price plunging to a low of $1.10 as the
dividend was slashed. But while profits plunged, the key asset of
Scotts, its people, remained.
Talk about job stability, the current CEO, Kevin Kilpatrick, has been
with the company for 34 years. Yet he is still a short termer
compared to former CEO Graham Batts who retired in year 2000 after 44
years of service. Retired is perhaps the wrong word as Batts is
still now an independent director! I think there is something deeply
impressive about any company that can keep able men like this with a
single company for their entire careers.
The fickle investors may have given Scotts a caning on the market,
but the deeply committed work-force never let their eyes off the ball.
Selling their expertise in other markets, particularly Europe, was
stepped up. Even the home market in NZ, by way of PPCS and the meat
trade, came into focus with the development of what is in effect a
robotic freezing worker. Scotts heads into FY2003 more diversified
in a market sense, but still heavily focussed on their core
competence of production lines. This is a competance which Scotts
have built up in New Zealand that is truly world class competitive.
All this folks and you can buy into a projected yield of 8% for only
$2.33 per share. Even better would have been to buy into it a year
or so ago when the cloud of then current events obscured the big
picture. Back then, pieces of the company (the shares) were for sale
in the mid one dollar bracket and lower. Hey, just a minute! That's
what I did!
SNOOPY
discl: Long term holder of SCT who used the 2001 share price dip to
increase position in the company.
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Message sent by Snoopy
e-mail tennyson@caverock.net.nz
on Pegasus Mail version 2.55
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"Stay on the upside of the downside,
Anticipate the anticipation!"
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