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From: | "Morgy 40" <morgy40@hotmail.com> |
Date: | Wed, 24 Sep 2003 21:11:21 +1200 |
Snoopy I believe that you have held this shareholding for quite some time if my memory serves me correctly, am I right ?. Regards Morgy >From: "tennyson@caverock.net.nz" <tennyson@caverock.net.nz> >Reply-To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz >To: sharechat@sharechat.co.nz >Subject: [sharechat] RBD Outlook for FY2004 >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/ > _________________________________________________________________ Instant message in style with MSN Messenger 6.0. Download it now FREE! http://msnmessenger-download.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To remove yourself from this list, please use the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/chat/forum/
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