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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Picton Property Income Ld | LSE:PCTN | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B0LCW208 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.70 | 1.07% | 66.20 | 66.00 | 66.30 | 67.00 | 65.40 | 67.00 | 1,729,844 | 16:35:26 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Real Estate Investment Trust | 51.82M | -89.53M | -0.1642 | -4.02 | 359.85M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
25/10/2011 16:39 | Cracking value though, concur HE. | envirovision | |
25/10/2011 14:17 | An update of the IFD deal/rational would not have gone amiss. | envirovision | |
25/10/2011 12:28 | PCTN NAV out today. NAV up to 64p. Underlying portfolio performance was pretty solid. They seem to be making good progress on the void side. Dividend cover can't be far off being 100%. Small non-core disposals continuing at small premium to NAV. Hopefully they should be able to re-finance on attractive terms next year. 250bp above libor shouldn't be out of the question. With 5 year swaps around 1.5% that should bring borrowing costs in around 4%. With that dividend should definitely be covered. I think recent weakness is IFD bid related. Once cleared up one way or the other it should rally. A 10% yield in the meantime provides comfort. | horndean eagle | |
05/10/2011 19:11 | Offered @ 39.5p - yield now @ 10.1%... | skyship | |
22/9/2011 08:47 | Skyship, Interesting note. I suppose that shareholders have to be worrying that the percentage of voids and rent arrears will build up in the current environment and thus put pressure on the dividend . In any event such times as the present always provide an excuse for a dividend reduction. I have gone from a confident holder to a concerned ditherer of and about this share in the last few weeks. Certainly the discount to nav will start to support the share price but then a dicount of 31% in property shares is about the norm in hard times. In the 90s recession property majors had a discount of this level and more. Land Securities looked to be beyond hope at that time. In other words I think we are stuck for a good while ! | bolador | |
21/9/2011 13:03 | One month since the approach to IFD and the PCTN share price has slumped from 48p to 43.5p. Personally I expect the approach to come to naught as PCTN presumably can't fund a cash offer; and a straight merger offers nothing to IFD shareholders; and crucially nothing to the the Board and the investment managers. With no major IFD shareholder existing to call the shots, the end result will be what is best for the Board, not what is best for shareholders! So, when PCTN admit there to be no way forward, they will grumble at the lack of IFD co-operation, then get on with life. So, at 43.5p, is PCTN a BUY, HOLD or SELL? Well, I still believe there to be some doubt as to the dividend cover as I haven't heard an adequate response to the not insubstantial £4m non-recurring lease surrender payment we received last year! Nevertheless, if the quarterly 1p dividend is to be retained then @ 43.5p the yield is once again a very attractive 9.2% and the EPRA NAV discount = 30.9%. Surely suggests value once again...almost as much value as IFD!!! | skyship | |
19/8/2011 07:57 | PCTN approaching IFD: | skyship | |
30/7/2011 18:19 | Seems as though things are on the mend. Hope it continues that way. Best wishes. | skyship | |
30/7/2011 18:17 | hi sky..thnx for asking..nt too sure if u knew...but had a op on one finger week ago last wednesday...the othr thy think the padding on the tip wil grow bak in time (how long?)..but ring finger needed surgery...i started doing som work on monday ...ironically lawn mowing! ...som work i hav delayed..but my contract stuff is harder to put off...daughter helped all day yesterday which was nice....but everything is taking much longer and i'm having to do a lot on my right side (uninjured)....had dressings changed this week..back again this coming week and to c the doctor ..the nurse i saw this week sed it all looked ''nice and pink''..which is good! i think i might need some physio on my hand as well as movemnt is restricted...the staff at the Queen Victoria at East Grinstead hav been excellant | badtime | |
30/7/2011 17:55 | How is the hand - are you able to work? | skyship | |
30/7/2011 17:53 | Yes i saw yur post re GHE i did put in a limit buy yesterday but hooked nothing | badtime | |
30/7/2011 17:34 | Badtime - yes, add both IFD & MERE to that list! Have also bought GHE after Meadows post on the SL thread. | skyship | |
28/7/2011 10:56 | Dividend 1p and generally positive report - price still at discount to asset value which remains steady. | flying pig | |
21/7/2011 19:05 | Here's the main points as I dont want to copy and past the lot suggest people buy this Friday copy. The assets command a rental yield of 6.9 per cent, which is high by industry standards. The dividend yield is even higher than the rental yield for two reasons. First, the portfolio is geared with £172m of debt (net of cash); at 4.7 per cent, the average cost of that debt is lower than the rental yield, allowing for a profitable arbitrage. Second, the investment trust is trading on a 20 per cent discount to the value of its net assets on 31 Mar, so investors can pick the income stream up cheaply by owning the shares, rather than the properties. | envirovision | |
21/7/2011 18:57 | Sky u still in MERE? | badtime | |
21/7/2011 18:24 | Hmm - as we discussed above - dividend not covered & the perhaps poorly researched IC article didn't mention that £4m of non-recurring income. The price is headed back into buying territory. These were a sell in the 50s; and to my mind a buy when back to the 45p/47p level. Will watch and wait awhile - perhaps because already so committed to others in the sector - CIC, IERE, INRE, MCKS & TEIF. | skyship | |
21/7/2011 17:59 | Covered yield? That does change things. I thought that the yield here was uncovered. Good discount to NAV here as well. | lord gnome | |
21/7/2011 16:23 | I have bought back in today. Tipped in IC this week regarding covered 8.2% yield. Will go ex divi in 3 weeks so good timing for that as well. | envirovision | |
22/6/2011 10:27 | Very naughty not adding a reference to the figure in the p&l imo. Maybe they can produce additional rentals to make it up? Rugby Estates makes the estimated income too difficult to estimate (for me anyway). Interim results will be interesting to see. | alanji | |
21/6/2011 22:07 | Thanks, AlanJI, for that additional piece of information. I didn't notice as the P&L other income is not referenced to a note. Seems a bit cheeky of the company treating that as underlying income unless they envisage more leases being surrendered for £4m+. Perhaps once Rugby has been fully integrated and the management fees come down further, PCTN will be a better bet. | jimbo3352 | |
21/6/2011 16:18 | Hi jimbo, I must admit to not having done a full analysis as I no longer hold the shares - and I did say "my guess". Main concern is the "other operating income" of 5.174m - see post 21 on old IRET thread. This was the reply I received from the co re the interim accounts: "The £4m+ 'other operating income' refers to the surrender of the lease at Farringdon. This is mentioned on page 7 of the accounts under offices. I have copied and pasted below for your information. Other notable transactions include the surrender of Merrill Lynch's lease of 50 Farringdon Road, London, EC1 with the tenant paying the Company a surrender premium in excess of £4 million. The building is now to be refurbished to provide Grade A office accommodation. The refurbishment is expected to be completed by the end of 2010, which we believe will be good timing in terms of attracting a tenant in an improving central London occupier market." | alanji | |
21/6/2011 15:04 | Per PCTN's annual accounts, an investment restriction operates to prevent the company paying a dividend unless covered by underlying income. Also EPRA income was 4pps, same as divi, so I'm not sure why AlanJI believes divi not covered. (The investment restrictions also prevent the distribution by dividend of realised property surpluses) I would however agree IFD and MCKS look more attractive. | jimbo3352 | |
16/6/2011 15:57 | An extract from AlanJI's Post No.795 on the "CP+" thread: ==================== Picton Property (PCTN, formerly IRET) 52-52.75 16% discount to March nav (2p swap cost added back). Yield is 7.6% but almost certainly not covered my guess is less than 75% but difficult to calculate. 43% London & SE; 34% offices, 34% industrial, 27% retail My view SELL better value elsewhere ==================== I do have to agree with him, better value elsewhere, especially IFD, MCKS & TEIF. Top pick today has to be IFD which @ 38p yield 9.26% for a 34% NAV discount. | skyship | |
09/6/2011 13:43 | Charts amended - thnx ADVFN.... | skyship | |
08/6/2011 23:10 | SKYSHIP - thank you | sleepy |
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