Thursday, 31 May 2012

Nestle


Nestle
Announcement Qtr EPS ttm-EPS Price
Date No (Cents) (Cent) (RM) PE DY P/NTA








25/04/2012 1 67.41 196.89 55.86 28.4 3.2% 15.65
23/02/2012 4 37.13 194.59 55.80 28.7 3.2% 20.44
11/04/2011 3 46.91 174.20 50.00 28.7 3.3% 17.06
18/08/2011 2 45.44 175.56 47.90 27.3 3.4% 18.57
20/04/2011 1 65.11 172.83 48.00 27.8 3.4% 14.63
24/02/2011 4 16.74 166.91 45.30 27.1 6.1% 17.29
28/10/2010 3 48.27 186.94 43.40 23.2 3.5% 14.76
26/08/2010 2 42.71 172.68 42.00 24.3 3.6% 17.00
21/04/2010 1 59.19 166.41 34.30 20.6 4.4% 11.32
25/02/2010 4 36.77 150.01 34.14 22.8 6.6% 14.11
29/10/2009 3 34.01 146.19 33.18 22.7 5.8% 13.01
27/08/2009 2 36.44 149.51 34.50 23.1 5.5% 15.75
15/04/2009 1 42.79 147.92 30.00 20.3 6.4% 11.41
26/02/2009 4 32.95 145.36 29.50 20.3 9.4% 13.41
30/10/2008 3 37.33 126.84 27.50 21.7 4.1% 14.40
08/07/2008 2 34.85 138.96 27.25 19.6 4.2% 13.16
23/04/2008 1 40.23 134.99 29.50 21.9 3.9% 9.49





Nestle
Announcement Revenue PBT Net Profit EPS Dividend NTA Qtr
Date (RM,000) (RM,000) (RM,000) (Cent) (Cent) (RM) No








25/04/2012 1164128 206827 158080 67.41 0 3.57 1
23/02/2012 1188961 101847 87066 37.13 125 2.73 4
11/04/2011 1171468 138080 110000 46.91 0 2.93 3
18/08/2011 1155567 127775 106549 45.44 55 2.58 2
20/04/2011 1184998 191107 152686 65.11 0 3.28 1
24/02/2011 963893 45004 39259 16.74 115 2.62 4
28/10/2010 991076 132652 113187 48.27 0 2.94 3
26/08/2010 1050863 117470 100153 42.71 50 2.47 2
21/04/2010 1020487 170617 138798 59.19 0 3.03 1
25/02/2010 950632 99175 86224 36.77 100 2.42 4
29/10/2009 886812 106411 79760 34.01 0 2.55 3
27/08/2009 922857 104271 85455 36.44 50 2.19 2
15/04/2009 983932 130404 100354 42.79 0 2.63 1
26/02/2009 972648 104798 77279 32.95 80 2.2 4
30/10/2008 961822 113063 87542 37.33 0 1.91 3
08/07/2008 1014910 98733 81720 34.85 50 2.07 2
23/04/2008 927688 124758 94345 40.23 61.19 3.11 1




Dividend Decision


Dividend Policy - What is it?

Dividend Policy - Don't Piss Off your Shareholders



View more PowerPoint from Amit Dodwani

Dividend Policy

Exploring Financial Education

LPI


LPI
Announcement Revenue PBT Net Profit EPS Dividend NTA Qtr
Date (RM,000) (RM,000) (RM,000) (Cent) (Cent) (RM) No








04/09/2012 246061 37821 31477 14.29 0 5.07 1
01/09/2012 239323 51999 39334 17.85 50 5.36 4
10/06/2011 236385 55948 45116 20.48 0 4.88 3
07/07/2011 213889 41971 31418 14.26 25 5.21 2
04/07/2011 213412 50135 38626 17.54 0 5.015 1
01/11/2011 190745 49135 36937 16.77 45 5.267 4
10/07/2010 216952 47445 36205 16.85 0 4.978 3
07/08/2010 188439 35896 26444 19.21 10 6.831 2
04/08/2010 235071 48831 38322 27.84 0 6.54 1
01/07/2010 154421 46520 34971 25.4 41.25 6.542 4
10/08/2009 206625 42584 32897 23.9 0 5.84 3
07/06/2009 166346 29994 22742 16.52 26.25 5.384 2
04/08/2009 210907 42237 35478 25.77 0 4.701 1
01/08/2009 117130 44517 32690 23.75 55 2.642 4
10/09/2008 191728 35379 26236 19.06 0 2.404 3
07/09/2008 144308 24308 17906 13.01 30 2.434 2
04/09/2008 185562 37360 27415 19.91 0 2.292 1



LPI
AnnouncementQtrEPSttm-EPSPrice
DateNo(Cents)(Cent)(RM)PEDYP/NTA








04/09/2012114.2966.8813.9820.95.4%2.76
01/09/2012417.8570.1313.8419.75.4%2.58
10/06/2011320.4869.0511.7817.14.4%2.41
07/07/2011214.2665.4213.8021.13.7%2.65
04/07/2011117.5463.1713.7621.83.7%2.74
01/11/2011416.7763.0313.8021.92.3%2.62
10/07/2010316.8562.1311.2818.23.7%2.27
07/08/2010212.0160.224.567.69.2%1.07
04/08/2010117.4058.545.749.87.4%1.40
01/07/2010415.8857.245.018.74.8%1.22
10/08/2009314.9456.214.878.710.9%1.33
07/06/2009210.3353.194.388.212.1%1.30
04/08/2009116.1150.993.877.613.7%1.32
01/08/2009414.8447.333.497.47.2%2.12
10/09/2008311.9143.933.367.720.4%2.24
07/09/200828.1341.794.2210.116.3%2.77
04/09/2008112.4440.564.6111.414.9%3.22







Genting Malaysia Q1 earnings down 35% to RM270.6m


GENM
Announcement Qtr EPS ttm-EPS Price
Date No (Cents) (Cent) (RM) PE DY P/NTA








30/05/2012 1 4.78 22.62 3.84 17.0 2.2% 1.72
28/02/2012 4 6.17 25.21 3.80 15.1 2.3% 1.80
24/11/2011 3 6.13 25.43 3.86 15.2 2.1% 1.87
25/08/2011 2 5.54 25.22 3.32 13.2 2.4% 1.61
26/05/2011 1 7.37 25.04 3.63 14.5 2.2% 1.76
23/02/2011 4 6.39 22.45 3.42 15.2 0.5% 1.67
25/11/2010 3 5.92 22.35 3.39 15.2 2.2% 1.73
26/08/2010 2 5.36 22.73 2.96 13.0 2.5% 1.67
27/05/2010 1 4.78 23.15 2.70 11.7 2.7% 1.53
25/02/2010 4 6.29 23.18 2.69 11.6 0.6% 1.51
25/11/2009   3 6.30 10.14 2.77 27.3 2.5% 1.61
26/08/2009   2 5.78 9.78 2.71 27.7 2.5% 1.70
27/05/2009   1 4.81 9.52 2.49 26.2 2.8% 1.64
25/02/2009 4 -6.75 9.80 1.84 18.8 0.4% 1.27
26/11/2008 3 5.94 17.81 2.14 12.0 0.6% 1.53
23/08/2007 2 5.52 14.31 2.45 17.1 0.5% 1.93
28/05/2008 1 5.09 9.90 2.59 26.2 0.5% 1.89

























GENM
Announcement Revenue PBT Net Profit EPS Dividend NTA Qtr
Date (RM,000) (RM,000) (RM,000) (Cent) (Cent) (RM) No








30/05/2012 1903801 378541 270664 4.78 0 2.23 1
28/02/2012 2331245 453734 349281 6.17 4.8 2.11 4
24/11/2011 2315836 463084 347145 6.13 0 2.06 3
25/08/2011 1896025 430342 313753 5.54 3.8 2.06 2
26/05/2011 1950580 553488 417698 7.37 0 2.06 1
23/02/2011 1558525 503218 362125 6.39 4.4 2.05 4
25/11/2010 1202916 416262 336417 5.92 0 1.96 3
26/08/2010 1226492 414130 305690 5.36 3.6 1.77 2
27/05/2010 1345170 397842 272364 4.78 0 1.77 1
25/02/2010 1275555 469385 358320 6.29 4.3 1.78 4
25/11/2009   1335901 470667 359456 6.3 0 1.72 3
26/08/2009   1202256 438859 330481 5.78 3 1.59 2
27/05/2009   1175383 385682 275444 4.81 0 1.52 1
25/02/2009 1329102 -244496 -387843 -6.75 4 1.45 4




Published: Wednesday May 30, 2012 MYT 7:26:00 PM

Genting Malaysia Q1 earnings down 35% to RM270.6m

It reported on Wednesday profit before taxation fell 32% to RM378.5mil. Revenue fell 2.4% to RM1.903bil from RM1.950bil. Earnings per share were 4.78 sen compared with 7.37 sen.
"This decrease (in pre-tax profit) arose principally due to the lower adjusted EBITDA, higher depreciation and amortisation charges by RM50mil mostly from the group's operations in the US and pre-operating expenses of RM17.7mil incurred in relation to the masterplan development of a destination resort in the City of Miami, Florida, US," it said.
Elaborating on the revenue, it said the Malaysia and UK leisure and hospitality businesses reported RM1.654bil in revenue, or 1% lower on-year due to weaker hold percentage in the premium players business despite an overall higher volume of business.
The revenue from the leisure and hospitality business in the US was RM218.4mil, mainly from the operations of Resorts World Casino New York City (RWNYC) which started in in the fourth quarter of 2011.
Genting Malaysia pointed out there was no construction revenue compared with RM264.6mil a year ago as development of RWNYC was completed.
The group's adjusted EBITDA for Q1, 2012 fell 18% to RM513.1mil from RM625.4mil a year ago.
In Malaysia, the lower adjusted EBITDA was mainly due to higher payroll costs and promotional expenses whilst bad debts written off gave rise to lower contributions from the UK. "Included in adjusted EBITDA for the leisure and hospitality business in US for Q2, 2012 was the construction loss of RM48.2mil (construction profit of RM13.4mil in Q1, 2011). This was incurred due to cost overrun from the development of RWNYC," it said.
Genting Malaysia said if the construction loss of RM48.2mil was excluded, the adjusted EBITDA for leisure and hospitality in US would have been RM49.5mil, mainly from the operations of RWNYC.

Padini


Padini
Announcement Qtr EPS ttm-EPS Price
Date No (Cents) (Cent) (RM) PE DY P/NTA








30/05/2012 3 3.69 14.88 1.80 12.1 2.2% 3.53
28/02/2012 2 4.34 14.90 1.33 8.9 3.0% 2.66
29/11/2011 1 4.10 12.76 1.05 8.2 3.8% 2.23
26/08/2011 4 2.75 11.45 0.89 7.8 4.5% 2.07
30/05/2011 3 3.71 10.50 1.08 10.3 4.2% 2.57
25/02/2011 2 2.20 9.41 1.16 12.3 3.9% 2.87
29/11/2010 1 2.79 8.96 1.10 12.3 4.1% 2.86
26/08/2010 4 1.79 9.23 0.91 9.9 0.5% 2.46
27/05/2010 3 2.62 8.29 0.76 9.2 3.7% 2.07
25/02/2010 2 1.75 7.34 0.76 10.4 3.7% 2.22
25/11/2009 1 3.06 7.84 0.75 9.6 3.7% 2.21
27/08/2009 4 0.85 7.53 0.60 8.0 0.4% 1.94
28/05/2009 3 1.68 7.07 0.48 6.8 6.3% 1.53
26/02/2009 2 2.24 7.50 0.47 6.3 6.4% 1.59
26/11/2008 1 2.75 7.48 0.49 6.6 6.1% 1.72

Tongher

Tongher
AnnouncementQtrEPSttm-EPSPrice
DateNo(Cents)(Cent)(RM)PEDYP/NTA








30/05/201215.2624.062.5110.43.2%0.98
27/02/201246.6129.032.338.03.4%0.92
29/11/201133.1927.852.027.32.5%0.82
22/08/201129.0031.231.936.22.6%0.80
30/05/2011110.2327.212.649.71.9%1.11
28/02/201145.4319.922.4612.30.4%1.06
28/02/201136.5719.181.799.32.8%0.78
17/08/201024.9815.391.7411.32.9%0.78
31/05/201012.949.731.7017.52.9%0.76
25/02/201044.696.881.7024.70.2%0.77
25/11/200932.780.251.65660.09.7%0.76
28/08/20092-0.682.351.7574.59.1%0.82
15/05/200910.0910.971.8516.98.6%0.84
27/02/20094-1.9414.371.6211.31.4%0.74
26/11/200834.8821.201.557.34.3%0.70
03/09/200827.9424.292.148.83.1%1.00
26/05/200813.4935.742.486.92.7%1.12


Wednesday, 30 May 2012

Better Investing Philosophy




Fundamentals of Investing

 

Explaining the BetterInvesting Philosophy

 


Our February issue traditionally includes an invitation for you to bring a visitor to your investment club meeting so that they can discover how clubs can help them build wealth and can learn about BetterInvesting’s philosophy. Two years ago we published an article explaining our approach to investing that proved popular with readers. This month we’ll tackle the subject again. If you’re bringing a guest to a meeting or want to introduce someone to the BetterInvesting approach, you might consider giving them this issue.

Brad Perry, in his classic book Winning the Investment Marathon, wrote that investing “is pursued most successfully in a simple, straightforward way.” This is the Golden Rule for most investors who employ fundamental analysis and have a long-term perspective. Buy stocks of high-quality companies at good prices and continue holding them as long as the companies’ performance merits doing so.


Sales drives earnings; earnings drives the stock price. That’s what it comes down to for fundamental investors. You might hear of different ways to buy and sell stocks, and countless books have touted systems that promise great returns. But over the long term fundamental analysis is what works in building wealth.
   
Fundamental analysis comes down to studying a company’s financial performance. Broadly, there are those who look for growth stocks and those who look for value equities, but the line between value and growth investing is gray: As Warren Buffett says, value and growth “are joined at the hip.”
   
Value investing, as practiced by Buffett and his mentor Benjamin Graham, is a time-tested method involving fundamental analysis that has served many investors well. But for the typical person who has a job and family and who is managing his own portfolio while following Perry’s admonition to keep it simple, fundamental analysis focused on growth stocks might be more appropriate.
   
This is because individual investors can spot a good growth company quickly. BetterInvesting’s Stock Selection Guide arranges the fundamental data in a way that allows users to see a company’s growth and management performance as well as the stock’s investment possibilities in just a few minutes; see the Stock to Study SSG on pages 29 and 30 for an example. Meanwhile, the work required to spot a good value stock is a little more complex. But as we’ll discuss later, value should be a vital consideration as well.

The Three Most Important Ideas:
Management, Management, Management
The individual investors who belong to BetterInvesting ask two questions when studying a stock:

  Is this a well-managed company?
•  Is its stock reasonably priced?

   
We seek great management because talented, capable executives know how to ensure their company thrives over the long term amid competitive battles and periodic downturns. These are the people, in other words, who are responsible for driving the sales and growth increases that fuel stock prices.
   
In assessing management, we don’t know everything about a company’s day-to-day operations and boardroom discussions. But as laid out in a methodology promoted by association co-founder George Nicholson, we do have a lot of the information we need. A first step in finding a well-managed company is to look at the history of sales and earnings growth. An important indicator of strong management is its ability to grow the business in good times and bad.
   
We also seek companies that are growing sales and earnings over the long term at a rate that’s high relative to their size. Smaller companies generally should be growing earnings by at least 15 percent a year; mid-size companies, by 10 percent to 15 percent a year; and large companies, by at least 7 percent annually.
   
We want smaller companies to have higher growth rates partly because they generally are riskier investments than large companies. The higher growth rate compensates us for this additional risk, and if we do a good job of assessing these companies, we’ll see handsome returns. As you’ll see in this issue in “Repair Shop” and “Watch List,” finding small companies can be challenging but also quite rewarding.
   
Finally, we favor consistent growth over the long term. In the graph on this page, for example, note the railroad-track-like growth of the company’s sales and earnings. Consistent performance reassures us about the capability of management. And although the past is no guarantee of future performance (as they say in the mutual fund world), history informs our decisions regarding future growth.
   
Two other tests help us assess the company’s management. First, we check the company’s profitability before taxes and other charges outside of management’s control. We like to see stable or growing profit margins. The other ratio is return on equity — how well management is using the equity invested in the company. Again, stable or growing ROE is preferred. Comparing the company’s growth rates, profitability and ROE with those of its peers helps determine whether this is a company built for a long voyage or is simply benefiting from the rising tide for its industry.



Evaluating the Investment Potential

Once we’ve determined the company in question is likely a high-quality one worth studying further, we next project sales and earnings growth. As fundamental investors, we know that in the short term, the market may not reward the company for its excellence. But over the long term, we trust that it will. So it’s the long-term projections — five years, very roughly enough for the company to go through a business cycle — we care about.
   
We start by forecasting sales growth because we need this for building our earnings projection. With the caveat that making long-term predictions can be a humbling experience, we have a number of data points at our disposal, including:

•  The company’s historical growth rate.
•  Company statements regarding growth goals.
•  Wall Street estimates of both short- and long-term growth. Long-term sales growth estimates can be difficult to find but are sometimes buried in analyst reports.
•  The industry’s historical growth rate and estimates of future expansion.

   
More experienced investors might consider such factors as the percentage of recurring revenues, the value of projects under contract but not yet completed and historical organic growth and growth by acquisition. For retailers, they might look at projections for store and square footage expansion as well as same-store sales growth. But history is a powerful teacher for beginning and experienced investors alike.
   
We then estimate earnings growth in light of the sales projection. We’ll consider the company’s history of earnings growth and any goals it has stated. We can also access analyst reports and analysts’ consensus estimates, but these forecasts are usually overly optimistic.
   
Studying past and potential future profit margins and tax rates can help us understand the path revenues will take to earnings. We also want to think about what will happen to the firm’s number of common shares outstanding. For example, if a company regularly buys back shares to reduce the number of shares outstanding and is expected to continue this practice, we would expect future earnings to be spread among fewer shares.
   
When we’re finished, we use the earnings growth rate to arrive at an estimate of earnings per share five years from now. If we have forecast growth of 15 percent a year, and the EPS at our starting point is $1, five years from now EPS will be $2. Two things to keep in mind regarding projections:

•  It’s prudent to be conservative.
A firm might have increased earnings 25 percent annually over the past 10 years, but such performance is extremely difficult to maintain. Gravity will eventually take hold as a company moves from small to mid-size to large.
•  Earnings advances can outpace sales growth for only so long. Over the long term, they usually settle in at the rate of revenue growth. If you’re going to project EPS increases that are higher than sales growth, understand where the additional percentage points are coming from: Increased margins? Lower taxes? Fewer shares outstanding?

Checking Valuation

Once we’ve predicted the EPS five years from now, we’re ready to answer our second question: whether the stock is reasonably priced. Investors are good at discovering high-quality stocks but experience more challenges in determining the proper price to pay for the stock. Our first step is to study the stock’s price-earnings ratios over the past several years and forecast the likely high and low P/Es over the next five years. The P/E, the stock’s current price divided by a company’s EPS, is how much the market is willing to pay for $1 of a firm’s earnings; it’s the most common way to measure how expensive a company’s stock is.
   
Historical valuations can help us in this process, but P/Es often go through unpredictable periods of expansion and contraction as industries go in and out of favor on Wall Street. Another idea to keep in mind is that a stock can trade at extremely high P/Es for a while but eventually will drop — severely so when a high-growth company stumbles. P/Es also tend to contract in times of inflation.
   
After we have predicted what the high P/E for a stock will be, we’re ready to estimate a potential high price for our stock. It’s a matter of simple math: The high point of EPS — what we forecast the EPS to be five years from now — is multiplied by the high P/E to come up with a potential high price. For example, if we predict EPS will be $2 in five years and the high P/E will be 30, our predicted high price will be $60.
   
After projecting the low P/E, we can multiply it by the expected low EPS to come up with a potential low price. Since we’ve determined this is a growth company, we usually can use the most recent 12 months’ EPS as the low point for earnings. I can use other criteria for projecting a low, but this is a common method for determining this figure.

Return Expectations

Now that we have the stock’s potential range from low to high, we’re ready to see whether this stock will provide a suitable return. Our SSG divides the range into three zones: Buy, Maybe (or Hold) and Sell. The lowest 25 percent of the range is the Buy zone, and the upper-most 25 percent is the Sell zone.
   
We include the stock’s dividends — the cash payments of earnings to shareholders — in our return calculations. This gives us three ways to achieve a return on a stock


  • through dividends,
  • through the market increasing the stock’s price in concert with the earnings growth and 
  • through the stock’s price rising because the market believes the P/E should be higher.
   
We aim for our stock holdings to return 15 percent annually on average over the next five years, or a doubling of return. That’s an aggressive target, but the idea isn’t to be disappointed if we fail to meet it. It’s to maintain our focus on seeking high-quality growth stocks. Achieving returns of, say, 10 percent yearly is pretty commendable.
Managing Risk

Investors can manage their risk in picking individual stocks by following some simple rules:

•  Require that the company have at least five years of financial history. Younger firms haven’t developed enough of a track record for assessing management performance.
•  Study only companies that have proven they can make money. Someone who invests in a company that has never reported earnings is speculating, not investing.
•  Understand the possible risk and reward of owning a stock.
•  Diversify your portfolio. Even if you’ve done your homework on every holding using all the information you need to make an informed decision, you’ll still make mistakes. If you have a good-size basket of stocks, however, you’ll also have some stocks that perform much better than expected.
   
Besides investing in high-quality growth stocks and diversifying your portfolio, two other simple principles can help you build wealth over the long term. 


  • First, reinvest all your dividends and earnings. 
  • Second, invest regularly in both good markets and bad; this is often called dollar-cost averaging.
   
The type of analysis I’ve outlined provides a lot of the information fundamental investors need to determine whether a stock is a suitable investment. But not everything. Reading annual reports, listening to conference calls and viewing company presentations will help you form a fuller picture of the company.
   
In today’s unpredictable, volatile market, fundamental analysis is even more important than usual. But for an investor using a simple, straightforward methodology that focuses on the long term, these are also times of great opportunity.