A
Portfolio of AIM Shares (4); Alternative Networks and F W Thorpe
Note:
For the preliminary filters used to select AIM stocks, see http://thejoyfulinvestor.blogspot.co.uk/2013_09_08_archive.html
Alternative
Networks PLC
Avaya
voice over IP phone, courtesy Wikipedia
London-based Alternative Networks (AN) has
developed a successful business as an intermediary between telephone providers
and small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). AN helps SMEs configure
their fixed line phone, mobile phone and data streaming requirements. The
company provides a complete service for its customers, from the provision and
installation of telephone equipment through to billing, security and
after-sales service. As an added inducement, AN, which receives
discounts as a wholesale telephone user, offers SMEs savings on their telephone
bills.
AN relies on its relations and fixed-term contracts with the large
mobile phone operators (Vodafone and O2) and fixed phone suppliers (BT, Cable
& Wireless and Verizon) to obtain wholesale discounts.
AN derives 37% of its revenue from mobile phones, 32% from fixed line
and 31% from what it calls 'Advanced Solutions' - computer-based voice, data
and billing services. Advanced Solutions are the intellectual property of AN.
AN was listed on the AIM market in
2005. Its shares are currently free of inheritance tax; the 'free float' is 52%
of its outstanding shares and the bid to offer spread is a reasonable 1%. The
company is capitalised at 171 million pounds.
James Murray, Executive Chairman and founder of AN,
holds 30% of AN's shares. He is 43 years old.
AN (in blue) has been an excellent investment for its shareholders,
outperforming by a wide margin the FTSE All Share Index (in green) since
floatation:
Graph courtesy Yahoo, click to enlarge
This reflects AN's success in its niche market:
1. Earnings per share have increased at a compound rate of
15% per annum, well ahead of the 10% p.a. compound growth rate in revenue since
2006. Dividend payments have increased correspondingly.
2. The return on retained earnings these last six years, at
22%, is close to the historic ROE of 23%. And net margins are a healthy 11%.
3. Equity per share has compounded at 11% per annum since
2006.
4. The company has always held a net cash balance since
floatation. This stood at 15 million pounds at March 2013.
5. AN's net operating cash flow in the past five years
covered the dividend 2.7 times, leaving 31 million pounds for acquisitions, a
special dividend and share buybacks.
6. AN presents a clean balance sheet. It offers its employees
a defined contribution pension scheme and does not carry the risks associated
with a defined benefit pension scheme.
In the 2013 Interim Report, revenues
declined by 4% and EPS improved by 4% compared to the first half of 2012. Murray
assures us that the decline in revenues belies an improving trend in revenues
and he has promised a 10% increase in the dividend for both 2013 and 2014
fiscal years.
Growth, Murray writes, " will be
achieved in three key ways:-
We will step up our
efforts to target larger customers . . . with an emphasis on selling managed
data services. We will also focus on cross selling IP and data services into
our legacy Enterprise customer base taking predominantly mobile and fixed
voice.
We will use our Synapse
portal product, a vital service differentiator, to make further inroads into
the Business markets segment of our customer base (80 - 500 employees).
We will make more use of
our wholesale and partner channels, leveraging our billing products and channel
clients." (Chairman's statement in the Interim report)
And AN will continue
to acquire smaller competitors.
At the current offer
price of 352p, AN's shares are on an historic PER of 18 and yield 3.4%. My
valuation model gives a valuation of 300p for the shares.* The shares traded at a 12-month high of 355p (3 October 2013) and a
low of 198p (October 2012).
*Assumptions: EPS growth of 10% p.a., equity per share growth
of 11% p.a., ROE of 22%, average PER of 15, dividend payout 60%; discount rate
of 11.8% (3.8% SLXX + 3% operating risk + 5% margin of safety), all for the
years 2013-17.
The main risks for
the company are:
1. That the
regulators depress retail telephone prices without the providers lowering
wholesale prices. This would squeeze AN's margins. This has already had
an impact in the first half of 2013.
2. Telephony's rapidly changing technology
means that unpredictable changes in demand could affect AN's business model.
3. AN depends on its good relations with
mobile and fixed line operators, which are very large businesses, quite capable
of entering AN's market if they so wish.
4. Revenues have
stalled in the past year and a half. Despite Murray's protestations, does
this suggest that the company has exhausted its potential market? While
owner-managers are wonderfully committed to their business, they are often the
last person to acknowledge that the good times have come to an end.
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F W Thorpe PLC
LED
flute light, courtesy F W Thorpe website
From telephones to
lighting.
Founded in 1936, F W
Thorpe, the Midlands-based lighting specialist, floated on AIM in
2006. The current Chairman, A B Thorpe, is a grandson of the founder, and the
Thorpe family controls 51% of outstanding shares.
The shares in Thorpe
are currently free of inheritance tax, the 'free float' is 44% of outstanding
shares and the shares trade on a bid to offer spread of 7%. Thorpe has a
stock market valuation of 135 million pounds.
In the 2012 Annual
Report, Thorpe describes its business most succinctly:
"We specialise in designing and manufacturing professional
lighting equipment. We currently employ approximately 470 people and although
each company works autonomously, our skills and markets are complementary. Our
focus is for long-term growth and stability achieved by developing market
leading products backed by excellent customer service."
By far the largest
component of the lighting business is Thorlux, specialising in
commercial and industrial lighting systems. Thorlux contributed 82% of Thorpe's
sales in 2013 and virtually all its profit.
Thorpe shares (in
red) have more than doubled in the last 5 years, a superior
performance to the FTSE All Share Index (in pale orange):
Courtesy
the Investors Chronicle, click to enlarge
The company has
consistently maintained healthy margins and it has increased
revenues over the past 10 years, even during the financial crisis. Its net cash
position and freedom from debt has been another feature of the business.
Consider:
1. Earnings per share
have grown at a compound 13% per annum since 2004 on revenues that have
increased by 6% p.a. The net margin in 2013 was 21%.
2. Equity per share
has grown by a compound 14% per annum since 2004. This was achieved by
retaining a very high proportion of its profits until this year.
3. The historic return on
equity of 13% is similar to the return on retained earnings of 14%. Thorpe
is a business that requires regular capital spending on plant and facilities. It
has also launched new businesses and acquired others.
4. Thorpe has no debt, but has 34 million
pounds cash on its balance sheet, or one-quarter of its market capitalisation.
20 millions of the 34 millions are customer deposits.
5. In the past five
years net operating cash flow after capital expenditure amounted to 26
million pounds, which covered the dividend 2.2 times.
6. The defined
benefit pension scheme was closed to new entrants in 1995. Consequently,
the actuarial estimates of pension liabilities are relatively stable and fully
provided for.
Thorpe's main
business is driven by the refurbishing and building
of premises for commercial and industrial use. The development of Light Emitting
Diode (LED) lights, which promise lower consumption, longer life and more
flexibility than fluorescent and incandescent lighting, has also significantly
improved demand. 25% of Thorpe's sales are now LED and the company has
invested in new plant to increase its manufacturing capacity.
Sales and profits
were slightly lower in 2013 than 2012. The Chairman
explains that this is the result of:
1. Not being able to
produce as many LED lights as customers required. Hence the new plant.
2. A lower order book
than 2012 at the beginning of the year.
3. Continued start-up
costs at its new venture, TRT Lighting, which specialises in
lighting for tunnels, streets and open spaces. This unit lost 0.5 million
pounds and will continue to lose money "for some while" (the
Chairman).
Management seems to
be distracted by its small units. TRT is loss
making and its main customer the public sector, to the evident frustration of
the Chairman, is accustomed to buying imported lighting. Compact Lighting
(retail and display) made a loss and it has a new sales director. Sugg
Lighting, which specialises in refurbishing heritage lighting is also loss
making and it has a new management team. Here there is cheaper competition from
'family businesses'. Solite Europe, the largest supplier of lighting to
hospitals and laboratories in the UK, has a new sales director. And in 2012, Thorpe
purchased Portland Lighting, the largest UK manufacturer of sign
lighting. Both Portland Lighting and another subsidiary, Philip Payne,
which specialises in exit signs, are said to be doing well. All together, these
six units billed just 11 million pounds in sales and made 0.3 million pounds
profit in 2013.
86% of Thorpe's
sales go to the UK, but Thorlux also has offices in Ireland, Germany and
Australia. The export market is not growing as well as the company hoped. The
Chairman wags the proverbial finger at the Munich office and reckons both it
and Australia must do better.
With Thorpe's shares
trading on a PER of 14 and yielding 2%, are they worth buying at 115p? My
valuation model values Thorpe shares at about 100p.* But this assumes that, with the new LED production capacity and
actions taken in three of the units, Thorpe will recover its stride and past earnings
growth, though at a more sedate 8% p.a.
*EPS growth of 8%, equity per share growth 12%, ROE 13%, average
PER of 12, dividend payout 36% of earnings, discount rate of 9.8% for 2014-18.
Thorpe is a
conservatively run business. Nevertheless, there are risks:
1. The overall
lighting market for UK producers is shrinking, according to The Electric Lighting Equipment
Manufacturing market research 2013. And "It is
clear from this study [Plimsoll report 2013] the lighting market is going
through a period of great change and the market is highly competitive." This will not be news to Thorpe.
2. LED lighting is
becoming the standard for many of Thorpe's customers. And the
Chairman notes that there are many new companies - start-ups - in the LED market.
Also, many LED lights are imported. This could lead to more competitive pricing
and loss of business.
3. New lighting
technology could move demand from LEDs. But, given the conservative nature
of the lighting business, Thorpe should have plenty of time to respond
to such a change.
4. Investors are
confronted with a bid to offer spread of 7% for Thorpe shares. This is an
all too common feature of AIM and discourages investors.
Hey...Great information thanks for sharing such a valuable information
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12-month EPS
total traded volume