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From: | "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> |
Date: | Wed, 24 Sep 2003 19:36:02 +1200 |
The story so far.... Captain Jim Collier has deserted, and has set off in his row-boat across the Tasman. First mate and KFC manager Chris O'Reilly has skipped the ship in another direction. The Domino pirates are threatening an all out attack with Pizzas..... Meanwhile, back on board, interim skipper Vicki Salmon oversees a ship 'taking on water' in the form of sharply higher utility prices and pre-emptive price promotional strikes. Salmon is down in the hull desperately bailing with a bucket so that the full year results will be able to be spun with minimum shabbiness, come announcement date. Yet when she returns up on deck to keep the watch and drink coffee, gold sovereigns start trickling out from below. The hold has been holed! Disturbing stuff. The market does not like turbulence, so it comes as no great surprise that the good ship RBD has been sailing south this year. However, as investors we cannot profit by re-running old pirate films in our heads. The only question that matters to us is where the good ship RBD will go from here. ''Skipper Salmon'' has told us not to expect too much. Rising utility prices will take their toll she says. I presume she is principally talking about power prices here, given the way all our power bills have gone up. How much power would an RBD restaurant use? Is 6kWh over 12 hours a good daily estimate? That makes 48kWh per day or 365x48kWh=17,520kWh per restaurant per year If RBD are paying an extra 2c per unit that means the power bill blows out by 0.02x 17,520kWh = $350 per year. Increase that effect over the 262 stores that RBD owns and we are talking $90,000 per year. That boosts costs over the 94.815million shares on issue by 0.1c per share (one tenth of a cent). Compare that to the $5m RBD will *save* per year from July 2004 (which equates to just over 5c per share) and the power price rises are put into perspective. A 5c chicken cost saving per share will go straight to the bottom line as a 3.3c per share increase in profit. That won't help RBD in FY2004 but it must be confidence inspiring as they go into FY2005. So what does this mean for the shareholders? Whatever the RBD profit decrease is for FY2004, I don't think you can blame it on utility costs. Competitive pressures and a wrong menu mix seem more realistic whipping boys. I suspect we may see some skeletons of sailors that should have been buried long ago brought out of the closet (for example: the goodwill issue I have highlighted), and tossed over the side. I am sure the new full time captain, whoever that may be, won't take kindly to sailing a boat with old bones on board. As shareholders we should be prepared for some dirty laundry. Dividend for FY2003 was 10c per share, earnings were 11.8c and cash flows a boggling 30c per share. There is more than enough money in that cash flow to maintain the dividend no matter how bad the FY2004 financial report appears on paper. And there is more than enough flexibility in company debt levels to make such a payout. If management can get PH Australia to not lose quite so much and Starbucks is able to break even, then the chicken contract savings coming up should mean that there is enough leeway to maintain the annual dividend at 10c. With a share price of $1.25 that gives an imputed yield of 12%, which I believe since the rise of WRI is the highest on the market. Furthermore I believe it to be sustainable for all the reasons I have given. RBD has consistently found support at $1.25. On a 12% yield, which is more than twice the yield you could expect by putting your money in the bank, it is not hard to understand why. There is a dividend payment of 4.5c coming up in a couple of months, so that should support the share price in the short term. Has RBD reached the bottom? I don't make predictions like that. I don't think we will see $2 again in the foreseeable future though. But at $1.25 on a yield of 12% with room for some share price movement upward when the fog starts to clear, I'm prepared to throw out a challenge. Can anyone construct an argument to show why I *shouldn't* be investing in RBD at this price? I couldn't, which is why I topped up on RBD at $1.25 just the other day. SNOOPY discl: hold RBD. Just added another slice. -- Message sent by Snoopy on Pegasus Mail version 4.02 ---------------------------------- "Stay on the upside of the downside, Anticipate the anticipation!" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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