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From: | Jerry&sam <samjer@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 08 May 2003 05:19:39 +1200 |
Hi Snoopy I guess what our discussion boils down to is a matter of personal taste .... I really enjoy the thrill of the chase ( I realise this will make you shudder) in picking a biotech stock, finding out all about it, and then hitching a ride on it when it goes up, monitoring the trend, checking the market depth and deciding if and when to sell, and even when I've sold, still following it like a fond parent to see what's happening with the company to see if there's more upside to it. While I like your idea of going over old company reports to check out whether management stick to their predictions and courses of action, I find that usually them so vague, like with the usual assurances to increase margins, cut costs, spin out non-core businesses etc, that it means very little to me. It's taken me years of following the NZ market to gain any idea at all of what companies have good managment, and I'm still not all that clear. And yet that is one of Warren Buffet's basic tenet of investing: only invest in a company with good management. But thank you, Snoopy, for yet again taking the time to post your sector picks. The problem for me, is that I can see potential problems with all of them. Lyttelton Port Company has had a track record of poor managment (blame the unions if you will, but modern idustrial relations mean being able to work with unions), is terribly unpopular with Lytellton residents and seems to have a knack for making relations worse, like this latest cement dust fiasco. Also, money that should have been spent on increasing port infrastructure and cargo handling facilities, has been bled off by its major shareholder, the Christchurch City Council in continued payments of too high a dividend ratio. >With Restaurant Brands, there is the competition of every Mum and Dad takeway, > other better pizza-makers such as Mad Dog, Starbucks same store sales seem >to be dropping with every earnings announcement, and KFC likewise. Plus the >expensive and risky foray into the usual graveyard of NZ companies, ie >Autralia. > Wrightson only recently has come to be regarded as having good managment (in fact, I was warned off this one for that reason by my "financial advisor" at Ord Minnet just before it started going up ...). And it's already given one earnings downgrade warning. As the Sage of O often says" There's usually more than one cockroach in the kitchen." Plus the farming sector is so vulnerable to everything from droughts to Sars to foot-and-mouth scares and commodity cycles and currency fluctuations. Sky City: with all the Sars fears, reduced tourism numbers, proposed anti-smoking legislation, losses on Canbet, threat of increased gaming taxes, SKC doesn't look at all defensive to me, at the moment. The only thing propping up its price at the moment, as far as I can see, is its rather inexplicable share buy back. (And I still can't figure out why, when they are so heavily leveredged, they aren't using surplus funds to reduce debt. Suspicious old cow that I am, I'm wondering if there are a lot of executive options which need a high share price to be worth exercising.) Which is not to say, that I haven't done extremely well out of SKC in the past, and hope to do so again, but not in these risky times. >Contact Energy ... is this overpriced at the moment, with high electricity >spot prices already factored in? Plus with the Otahu outage lasting longer >than anticipated, how can one predict earnings for this year? which they have >already warned about .... Plus what happens to the share price if the >government decides on some heavy-handed regulation of the electricity >industry...? But again, I did very well out of CEN with the last power >crisis. > Ports? Again, dependant on import / export cycles. I made a 20% paper loss on POA for two years, and if it weren't for the dividends, would have taken a loss when I sold it when it looked like they might have problems with resource consent for dredging to accomodate the new supercontainer ships (when, of course, it prompty went up). Though I did do well out of North Port and South Port, it was more beginner's luck than through any understanding of how much cargo they were handling. Auckland Airport? Very volatile at the moment, and again. so vulnerable to tourism & terrorism. So, there it is. Sure, biotechs are risky, but to my paranoid mind, so is everything else in the market. At least biotechs are extremely interesting, and able to be monitored, and one's risks able to be managed. But it's been a great discussion, Snoopy. Thanks. Jerry > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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