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BBB Bigblu Broadband Plc

33.50
0.00 (0.00%)
25 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Bigblu Broadband Plc BBB London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 33.50 08:00:26
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
33.50 33.50 33.50 33.50 33.50
more quote information »
Industry Sector
SOFTWARE & COMPUTER SERVICES

Bigblu Broadband BBB Dividends History

No dividends issued between 26 Apr 2014 and 26 Apr 2024

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 20/12/2023 21:44 by weatherman
hxxps://simplywall.st/stocks/gb/telecom/aim-bbb/bigblu-broadband-shares/news/bigblu-broadband-plc-lonbbb-doing-what-it-can-to-lift-shares
Posted at 13/6/2023 15:27 by value hound
Encouraging move up today. Obviously, it could be worth a lot more if and when it spins out its Skymesh subsidiary operation in Australia. Chris Mills topped up at 48.5p in March to go to over 25% and he's infinitely smarter (and richer...) than me so I was happy to buy at 42p.

According to Simon Thompson, when he tipped it on 1st March at 54pps, they're forecast by FinnCap to make £5.6m on revenue of £31.9m this year. He thinks a realistic valuation for Skymesh is something around 95p a share. I'd be a lot more pessimistic - but still..! In addition, there's BBB's Nordic business which is said to be recovering - so as and when the listing does happen, BBB should comfortably double and will still be undervalued and Chris Mills has a great track record of making sure this kind of thing does come to pass. He did a Vox markets podcast earlier this week in which BBB wasn't mentioned at all - so it made me wonder if he couldn't say anything about it as he's on the BoD and there's imminent news? That said, I don't think he mentioned them on the last Vox Markets interview either.
Posted at 06/3/2023 11:29 by hjs
Bbb is trading at a huge discount when you take into account Skymesh valuation which once floated will give a moderate valuation of 96p. Imo when skymesh gets floated in Ausiland, I expect the valuation to be over £1.15 to 1.30.
Do your own DD.
Posted at 04/3/2023 15:36 by weatherman
Read article now. ST in IC suggests skymesh alone worth 96p of bbb if floated in Oz
Posted at 05/12/2022 08:15 by weatherman
Another acquisition - and this statement. "In addition, the Board also continues to explore all options to realise value for BBB shareholders from SkyMesh, which could include a potential ASX listing of SkyMesh."
Posted at 23/9/2021 01:39 by plasybryn
Can you expand on your thoughts?Do you think it is still good value at this price? I guess we will drop to circa 80p on ex dividend day. Not many buying in pre the dividend which is perhaps strange. Perhaps more will buy post the ex dividend date at the lower price. I wonder what the directors expected to happen with the share price on the announcement of such a massive return of cash. The residual business looks set fair but the number of customers seems small which I don't understand.
Posted at 13/9/2021 16:30 by mathewawood
Can somebody help me. Regarding the companies return of capital of 45p per share. Will this be treated as a Capital Gain or Dividend Income?

I'm only asking because I've already maxed my CGT allowance for this year and my shares are sitting in my Trading account not my ISA unfortunately.
Posted at 06/9/2021 11:05 by sherifff3
when do we need to have the shares held by?? when is the announcement come on BBB update us!
Posted at 31/8/2021 18:17 by cravencottage
Targeting sky high returns

A provider of alternative superfast satellite, fixed wireless and 4G/5G broadband products, is returning cash to shareholders and is delivering eye-catching growth from operations Down Under
August 31, 2021
By Simon Thompson
Cash return of £25.9m in October from £33m net cash pile
52.7 per cent-owned Quickline subsidiary sold for maximum consideration of £48.6m, or 5.8 times cost of investment
Deferred consideration of £10.1m cash and £1.8m loan notes subject to Quickline’s performance in 12 months to 31 March 2022
8 per cent equity stake worth £5.6m retained in Quickline
Australian SkyMesh business delivers 50 per cent cash profit growth in first half
Aim-traded BigBlu Broadband (BBB:116p), a provider of alternative superfast satellite, fixed wireless and 4G/5G broadband products, is returning 45p a share to shareholders following the disposal of the group’s 52.7 per cent stake in Quickline to private equity group Northleaf Capital Partners.

Funded by government grants, Quickline is building its own fixed wireless access (FWA) networks, supported by increasing amounts of fibre infrastructure, to address the ‘digital divide’ in the UK. It’s a fast-growing business which is why BigBlu achieved an exit price of 23 times forecast cash profits. Sensibly, BigBlu has retained an 8 per cent equity stake worth £5.8m to benefit from further capital upside.

The focus now is on the group’s two international businesses: SkyMesh, an Australian satellite broadband provider that targets customers in rural areas outside of the fibre footprint; and a Nordic satellite and FWA broadband business that has been restructured and is now planning expansion into Sweden and Finland.

In the first half, SkyMesh’s cash profits surged by 50 per cent to £1.8m on 42 per cent higher revenue of £10.5m, buoyed by 5,700 new customer additions (to 48,700). They are more profitable, too, as 70 per cent of new take-ups are opting for A$100-per-month unlimited data tarrifs, says chief executive Andrew Walwyn. Skymesh had a 36 per cent share of the market and the aim is to increase the user base to 80,000 over the next three years through organic growth – it has delivered double-digit growth for the past three years – and regional expansion. For instance, SkyMesh will launch a service next month in New Zealand with Asia Pacific broadband satellite operator Kacific. Bolt-on acquisitions are also being considered. SkyMesh delivered free cash flow of £1.4m in the six-month period and house broker finnCap expects both free cash flow and cash profit to exceed £3m in the full year.

Churn was high in the Nordic business after BigBlu took the decision to dismount lossmaking masts, which cut the user base by 3,300 customers. However, finance director Frank Waters says that the customer base has stabilised around 9,500 and with a network upgrade programme due to complete shortly and new satellite offerings to be launched in November, then the streamlined infrastructure-light business is poised to return to growth. In addition, next year’s copper switch-off across Norway will add 200,000 addressable households to BigBlu’s 5G FWA target market.

The investment opportunity here is being seriously undervalued. Deduct the £33m cash pile, £5.6m equity stake in Quickline and £11.9m deferred consideration from BigBlu’s £66.8m market capitalisation and the Nordic and Australian businesses are being valued at £16.3m (28p a share), or 5.5 times finnCap’s full-year operating profit estimate. SkyMesh has to be worth £36m (62p), and considerably more to a bidder, given its robust growth prospects. My target price is 175p. Buy.
Posted at 02/7/2021 13:24 by sev22
I thought I would re-circulate Simon Thompson's article dated 26th April 2021 highlighting what an under priced opportunity BBB was then and even more so today.


I always carry out sum-of-the-parts valuations during my research on a company to ascertain whether there is a pricing anomaly to exploit. I also try and identify share price catalysts to narrow the valuation gap, and assess when they are likely to materialise.

BigBlu Broadband, a provider of alternative superfast broadband products, is a prime example. Last autumn, Christopher Mills, founder of Harwood Capital and non-executive director of BigBlu, splashed out £2.26m buying shares in the company, almost all of which was on behalf of North Atlantic Smaller Companies Investment Trust, the fund he runs. Harwood owns a 27.7 per cent interest in BigBlu’s shares.

At the time, I suggested that the growth in BigBlu’s Quickline subsidiary was being seriously underpriced and the stake had potential to be worth as much as the company’s own market capitalisation (‘Exploiting valuation anomalies’, 15 October 2020). That prediction was not far off the mark following BigBlu’s disposal this week. Moreover, it follows last summer’s sale of BigBlu’s UK and European satellite broadband businesses for £37.8m – a 50 per cent premium to the prices paid the company. Even though BigBlu’s share price has risen 30 per cent in the past six months, investors have yet to fully factor in the financial implications of both transactions.

BigBlu Broadband’s eye-catching disposal:

Disposal of Quickline stake for up to £48.6m.
Ongoing interest in Quickline through convertible loan notes.
Expansion in Australasia and Nordics.

Aim-traded BigBlu Broadband (BBB:122p), a provider of alternative superfast satellite, fixed wireless and 4G/5G broadband products, has announced the disposal of its 52.7 per cent-owned Quickline subsidiary for a maximum consideration of £48.6m. That sum equates to 5.8 times the company’s investment, a return that has been produced in less than four years.

Quickline is building its own fixed wireless access networks, supported by increasing amounts of fibre infrastructure, to address the ‘digital divide’ in the UK. The fast-growing business targets poorly served parts of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire and its investment prospects are attractive enough for private equity group Northleaf Capital Partners to pay a multiple of 23 times forecast cash profit to enterprise valuation.

On completion BigBlu will receive £31.1m cash and £5.6m convertible loan notes (CLNs) yielding 4.5 per cent in the acquisition vehicle. In addition, the company is expected to receive a cash earn-out of £10.1m and a further £1.8m in CLN’s based on Quickline’s financial performance in the 12 months to 31 March 2022. Post completion, BigBlu’s cash and cash equivalents of £32.8m will equate to 48 per cent of its own market capitalisation. The combined £7.4m CLNs can convert into 8 per cent equity in the acquirer’s holding company, thus offering potential for further value accretion to BigBlu’s shareholders.

BigBlu focus is now on its two overseas businesses: SkyMesh, a leading Australian satellite broadband provider with 45,000 customers; and a Nordic satellite and fixed wireless broadband business that aims to expand its geographic footprint into Sweden and Finland.

In Australia, SkyMesh targets customers in rural areas outside of the fibre footprint, who only receive a low-speed and low-quality service from traditional fixed telecom broadband suppliers. The aim is to grow the customer base by 10,000 per year through organic channels, and expand the offering into New Zealand. The operation is forecast to report both cash profit and operating free cash flow over £3m this year and has potential for an IPO or disposal, too.

In the Nordics, BigBlu is investing £2m upgrading its fixed wireless network (8,900 subscribers), and should benefit from greater satellite capacity (currently 2,300 subscribers) from the world's leading satellite operators Eutelsat (NYSE /Euronext: ETL) and ViaSat (NSQ: VSAT) to support expansion into Sweden and Finland over the next two years. The Nordics operation is forecast to report a cash profit of £2.2m in the 2021 financial year.

BigBlu’s share price is up 11 per cent since my last buy call (‘Three high growth small-cap plays’, 11 January 2021), and there is still compelling value on offer. Adjusting for cash on the balance sheet and the deferred cash and VLN earn-outs, BigBlu’s enterprise valuation equates to only eight times finnCap’s operating profit estimate of £3.1m for the 2021 financial year. I am raising my target price from 165p to 175p. STRONG BUY.

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