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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Vianet Group Plc | LSE:VNET | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B13YVN56 | ORD 10P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 108.50 | 106.00 | 111.00 | 108.50 | 108.50 | 108.50 | 4,000 | 07:49:21 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Information Retrieval Svcs | 15.18M | 801k | 0.0272 | 39.89 | 31.94M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
28/3/2013 09:35 | Yes, I'm relaxed about it, Paul. I just thought post #281 was a bit misleading if people hadn't picked up that this was old information from February, prior to the profit warning. | jeffian | |
27/3/2013 23:43 | jeffian - that's right, the PER is now not as attractive in the short term, but still cheap. Although (c) has of course improved, and now enables buyers to lock in a dividend yield of well over 6%, well covered by cashflows from the core business. I firmly believe that the patient investor should be well rewarded here. Profit warnings are always annoying, but where 70% of turnover is on long term recurring contracts, it's not a disaster by any means. Meanwhile it just churns out great divis, whilst they focus on the new growth areas as the icing on the cake. Cheers, PP. | paulypilot | |
27/3/2013 22:56 | Errm.....that was before the company said "trading for the second half of the year to 31 March 2013 will be below the expectations of the Board." So a, b and d out the window. | jeffian | |
27/3/2013 21:11 | From February's 'Company Refs', when price was 118p:- a/ Prospective PE ratio of 6.99 (based on one broker forecast, recommending 'Buy'). b/ Forecast growth in eps of 21.3%. c/ Dividend yield of 4.97%. d/ Price to sales ratio of 1.45. e/ One director buying recently. f/ Turnover up from £17.1m to £23m in last five years. g/ Net asset value per share of 82.8p. h/ Positive cash flow per share of 3.24p. Techinvest also tipping | welsheagle | |
22/3/2013 20:09 | Hi, The share price is indeed disappointing in the short term, but it doesn't alter the fact that the core Brulines business is a strong cash cow that finances a well covered dividend here. The divis total 5.7p, and management are adamant that the dividend is safe (which I heard from the horses mouth when I phoned up the company). So at 88p mid-price that gives a superb divi yield of 6.5%, one of the best sustainable divi yields out there. As mentioned in my most recent note on the company (link below), management have blotted their copy book somewhat by over-promising & under-delivering on the growth plans. On the other hand, the growth prospects are thrown in for free, indeed arguably the market is putting a negative value on the growth parts of the business (vending, fuel, and USA expansion), because whilst they are loss-making, they reduce earnings. The losses are fairly small though, and there is a useful table showing the split of turnover & profits between Vianet's various activities here: Positives are continued, and significant Director buying, including 65k shares recently after the profit warning. I think we're all frustrated about this company, but a bit of positive newsflow could give them a nice boost back up again. It's more a long term holding for patient investors, but still a good cash generative business. Sorry it hasn't quite panned out as I had hoped, but it's still relatively early days yet. All my stuff is 1-2 year investing timescales. Value plays often have to fight negative sentiment to begin with, but the value should come through with patience. In the meantime we collect over 6% divis whilst we wait, not bad. Cheers, Paul. | paulypilot | |
22/3/2013 16:31 | harry the haddock, very true, 57% is a very bad day indeed!! | mida5 | |
22/3/2013 16:26 | not half as disappointing as the drop in cupid! bread and dripping for me this weekend! | harry the haddock | |
22/3/2013 16:01 | A disappointing drop today. | mida5 | |
05/3/2013 09:11 | Picked up a few below mid price, could have a SCSW write up this week | tech | |
04/3/2013 23:21 | Paul, mechanical trader is someone I filtered long ago. | gorse | |
04/3/2013 22:21 | re - 272 -"more than happy to discuss any of the fundamentals of the company which you may wish to discuss." PP - you're wasting your time casting pearls before swine. Such trolls are incapable of discussing fundamentals or providing any other form of intelligent insight either. | masurenguy | |
04/3/2013 18:33 | Well said Paul. Question. Do you have any idea how much having iDraught in 2000 American pubs is worth to VNET? Cheers | tadders2 | |
04/3/2013 17:09 | mechanical trader - I'm not interested in your snide personal attacks, which you have a history of I note. But more than happy to discuss any of the fundamentals of the company which you may wish to discuss. I have nothing whatsoever to be ashamed of - I gave my analysis of VNET based on the publicly available facts, was caught out unavoidably by a profits warning that none of us knew was coming, and promptly issued my analysis of the profits warning (which incidentally I spent the whole of last weekend working on, so it could be issued on Monday morning). I think the shares are great value, and was happy to buy more for the 5.8% dividend yield. Short term sentiment will soon change once contract wins are announced. For sound companies, short term issues provide good buying opportunities for long term investors. I bought most of my VNET shares at 103p, so am only 6 underwater AFTER a profits warning, and have collected a divi as well. So if that's a disaster, then it's not much to be worried about at all, is it? This is why I chose VNET in the first place - the recurring revenues from Brulines pay for a whacking great divi yield, and even if the growth parts of the business do disappoint short term, it doesn't really matter. Markets at the moment are full of people who want to get rich quick, and have the attention span of a fruit fly! Whereas the fundamentals of VNET suggest that we can lock away a safe dividend yield of 5.8% at today's price, and probably look forward to (say) 50% capital growth on top of that once the vending & USA expansion begin in earnest. For a serious, long-term investor, this is a nice low risk each-way bet. Downside protected by divi & annuity-like income from Brulines, whilst upside thrown in for free, which has been my analysis from the start, and remains a very valid investing argument. Cheers, Paul. | paulypilot | |
03/3/2013 22:17 | I expect everyone knows - but I couldn't immediately see any reference to it above - that according to the TDW site, Cenkos's latest estimates are 10p (from 14p) for 2013 and 14.3p (from 17.5p) for 2014. | westcountryboy | |
03/3/2013 21:51 | I don't know about "too many unknowns" but the jury is certainly out. They have a core business which is at best static and at worst declining and some exciting possibilities in US and in payment solutions, but they need to show that the new businesses and acquisitions will perform. So far, that has been the problem; they haven't. | jeffian | |
03/3/2013 21:35 | Profit warnings come in 3s. Not harsh on pauly at all just his subsequent behaviour which wasnt required. We all stand by our own decisions. Anyone who cant do that shouldnt be in this business. No doubt it will move up 10% or more tomorrow after the tip but I wouldnt touch it with a barge pole. Too many unknowns. | mechanical trader | |
03/3/2013 20:43 | Bit harsh on Pauly. I like his column on Stockopedia and think his analysis is very good. At the end of the day VNET is only floating just below the price it was at the start of 2013, even with the 'profit warning'. For me, all the hallmarks of a share that is undervalued. | d40eq6 | |
03/3/2013 12:11 | Thats a shame. Used to be a good tip source. Probably like pauly going to have to eat humble pie and protect their inflated ego. ps, by that I meant pauly. Never ever seen some one run about so quick online when the P/Warning came out. Poor lad, all talk. Just accept we all have 1 or 2 per year. In your case it was unfortunate it came after just 48 hours of your tipping debut. | mechanical trader | |
03/3/2013 11:25 | A new buy in Techinvest. Shares yield over 6% and are on a modest p/e of 6.8 on 2014 forecast. | aishah | |
26/2/2013 08:53 | Where's everyone gone, was it something I said?!!! Good to see Director buying in size, 65,000 shares, announced this morning. Here is my take on it, for anyone interested: Regards, Paul. | paulypilot | |
25/2/2013 14:55 | Hi Jeffian, Interesting points thanks. From what you suggest, it sounds like the worst that could happen is that the breweries might have to change the way they fine tenants. But that doesn't alter the fact that they will still use Brulines to monitor compliance with the tie. It's difficult to see any situation arising whereby the breweries would stop using Brulines to reconcile the number of pints dispensed with the amount of barrels supplied. Also worth bearing in mind that Brulines is installed on long-term contracts, of around 5 years I believe, of which some large customers have renewed relatively recently. Vianet also said that their installed base in the UK has fallen from 18,500 to 18,000, but they specifically said that no further erosion of that installed base is expected now. With 15% now being higher margin iDraught too, the core business looks pretty stable to me. Longer term the USA growth could be pretty exciting. I understand they are doing a mixture of pilots, and full roll-outs in the USA now. It is likely to run at a loss initially, but should build into a very significant market over the next few years. Mgt are most excited about the potential from the USA from what I can gather. Regards, Paul. | paulypilot | |
25/2/2013 13:03 | Paul, Where have you been? The Government have been meddling in the structure of the pubs business since the ill-conceived Beer Orders in 1989! You are right that it is unlikely that the 'tie' itself will be outlawed - it has been tested in the European Courts on several occasions and approved - but there are current and active steps to undermine it, with 'Business' (Hah!) Secretary Vince Cable recently moving towards placing a statutory code of practice on the pubco's. So far as Brulines is concerned, the regulatory threat stems from the way in which the system is operated. Pubco's start from the premise that the system is both foolproof and 100% correct. In the event that the Brulines stats do not tie up with purchase orders, they charge the tenant's rent account with an immediate 'fine' calculated on the amount of beer they believe has been bought out from another supplier. Some tenants argue that the system can, in fact, make mistakes and make the point that as it is outside the Weights & Measures regulations, there is nobody other than Brulines itself to check that it is properly calibrated. On the 'fine' aspect, I'm a bit out of touch now but I would be interested to see how the Tenancy Agreements cover this. I doubt it could be recovered as 'rent due' and I don't know whether the concept of a landlord both calculating and charging a tenant without recourse to challenge or appeal has yet been challenged and tested in Court. I agree with you about the tie. It is two business people entering freely into an agreement (and a not uncommon one, which can also be found in petrol filling stations - when did you last buy Shell in a BP station? - and many franchise operations), but the politicians have got their teeth into the pubco's (and Brulines by association) so I repeat that regulatory risks remain. | jeffian | |
25/2/2013 11:50 | Hi Jeffian, You mention legislative threats, but what are they specifically? I've not seen anything credible to suggest that the brewery Tie system is under threat, and that's what mainly supports the Brulines product. Remember that pub tenants enter into those tenancies of their own free will, and on arms length terms. So it's difficult to see how the Govt can interfere in such arrangements. Pub cos get a payback from the mark-up on drinks, in order to recoup the capital they deploy in buying & refitting their pubs. In any case, the pubcos have such strong lobbying power, can you really see the Govt interfering & ending up with a huge legal battle on their hands? It's not the job of Govt to meddle in contractual business arrangements between arms length parties. Regards, Paul. | paulypilot | |
25/2/2013 11:46 | Hi, We've just published an update note on Vianet at Equity Active. I hope you find the note interesting, and I've taken into account the comments & reactions from shareholders here. We're not paid by anyone to write these notes, so we can tell it like it is! (or as we see it anyway). Let me know what you think: Cheers, Paul. | paulypilot |
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