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WTB Whitbread Plc

3,043.00
15.00 (0.50%)
26 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Whitbread Plc LSE:WTB London Ordinary Share GB00B1KJJ408 ORD 76 122/153P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  15.00 0.50% 3,043.00 3,039.00 3,042.00 3,060.00 3,021.00 3,046.00 799,215 16:35:23
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Hotels And Motels 2.64B 278.8M 1.4465 21.03 5.86B
Whitbread Plc is listed in the Hotels And Motels sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker WTB. The last closing price for Whitbread was 3,028p. Over the last year, Whitbread shares have traded in a share price range of 2,996.00p to 3,714.00p.

Whitbread currently has 192,736,972 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Whitbread is £5.86 billion. Whitbread has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 21.03.

Whitbread Share Discussion Threads

Showing 701 to 722 of 2450 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
23/4/2018
18:49
So, after splitting costa from whitbread would that mean AB packs her case and trots off ?
spacecake
23/4/2018
14:40
Article very critical (and very rightly critical) of Alison Brittain:
galatea99
23/4/2018
09:53
roll on Wednesday! ;-)
bountyhunter
16/4/2018
13:09
More comment:

"ShareCast News) - With 10% of Whitbread shares now in activist investor hands following the emergence of Elliott Advisers, analysts from Credit Suisse, Stifel and Numis offered varying opinions on how much value can come from breaking-up of the Costa Coffee and Premier Inns owner.

Elliott has confirmed that is has amassed a near-6% stake which together with Sachem Head, which revealed its 3%-plus sake in December, means roughly 10% of the shares are held by activists.

Sachem has reportedly been pushing for the separation of the property from the hotel assets, a re-leveraging of the balance sheet, and the separation or sale of Costa, while Elliottt is said to just be pursuing a spin-off of Costa rather than "any other financial engineering".

Whitbread shares were up 6% to 4,180p as midday approached on Monday.

Credit Suisse said it saw a 26% potential upside to 4,950p as the addition of Elliott as the group's largest shareholder "will increase the likelihood of break-up".

The Swiss bank believes there is "much wider shareholder support for change" and that a split of Premier Inn and Costa "makes sense", with the current price "inconsistent" with the long term competitive advantages of each business and a sum-of-the-parts valuation that implies 40% potential upside.

January's update showed that current trading isn't easy, while the combined corporate agenda is "very full", with Costa facing structural challenges from its high street focus and both business striving for material UK space growth, with international aspirations, cost inflation pressures and management's saving plan alongside Costa's wide range of operational initiatives to improve positioning.

If management want to fight the break-up, Credit Suisse said "other levers could be pulled", said CS, noting Whitbread's £5.4bn of freehold property, potential for restructuring the low-return pub restaurant business and for extending the efficiency mindset and the £150m cost saving target.

Morgan Stanley's take was that the while the reported push for a Costa demerger is "likely leading to further speculation" that "should support the shares", as Costa is only 25% of profit/EV, "investors need to believe in more for outsized returns".

A demerger of Costa "could remove the risk the business is sold too cheaply" amid the turnaround and "seems relatively lower risk" versus a disposal of hotel real estate that "risks taking on more expensive long-term leases, losing control of the asset/product, and reducing investment opportunities" or a disposal of the pub restaurants that "risks dis-synergies given nearly all are co-located adjacent to a Premier Inn".

Analysts at Numis noted that the £3bn of extra value perceived by Elliott would be equivalent to 1650p per share or a 3.5x EBITDA for the whole group.

"In our view it is entirely logical that the two businesses be split at some point, as the natural end game to the unpicking of the conglomerate," Numis said, seeing a demerger as easiest to execute although trade sale would clearly crystallise a control premium, with Krispy Kreme and Caribou Coffee owner JAB seen as most likely trade buyer or a range of global consumer companies. "An IPO is unlikely, unless WTB wishes to generate cash for reinvestment such as in Germany."

Broker Stifel noted that "many US investors" view Whitbread in a different light from mainstream UK investors, more as an investment in hotels, property and Costa together with a lightly geared financial structure.

"We consider it is very unlikely that the current management would separate the freehold assets from the hotel business, or move to a more leveraged financial structure. However, it is possible that Costa could be separated from the rest of the group, particularly if an attractive offer arose for that business."

With the current UK consumer outlook and Costa's difficult recent trading, Stifel was "not convinced" that a demerged Costa would attain a higher rating than Whitbread currently does.

"Such a step may, however, be a move towards exploiting value from both parts of the group and would certainly encourage corporate activity. Our sum-of-the-parts valuation is £48.50 per share."

Panmure Gordon noted that CEO Alison Brittain's tone "has become noticeably more conciliatory to shareholder demand, which will make next week's finals interesting" and estimated each turn of Costa EV/EBITDA is worth £235m/130p per share.

"The challenge is why sell now when LFLs are flatling and market is worried about the high st, having rebutted demands to sell over the last 8 years when LFL averaged mid-single digit growth? If CEO Alison Brittain can demonstrate self-help initiatives are working and Costs LFLs inflect in H2 then Costa would be primed for sale.

"The other angle, spinning off property, feels like a non-starter given than i) SLBs would increase operational gearing, ii) the Board consistently advocate benefits of freehold ownership, iii) WTB doesn't really need the cash proceeds."

Over at Canaccord Genuity they said Whitbread was "under-leveraged" with net debt/EBITDA of just 1.1x for FY18E and circa £4bn of freehold assets on the balance sheet but pointed out that the position of the Whitbread pension trustees "potentially adds a complication to any break-up" as the last year end deficit was circa £400m with Whitbread paying £95m per annum in contributions.

For Whitbread's management the opportunity to sell to investors if trying to avoid a break-up, "is to turn interesting international bridgeheads into material growth opportunities for both Premier Inn and Costa Coffee. For Premier Inn the focus is on Germany and for Costa Coffee the focus is China".

In a preview of the full year figures due next Wednesday, Deutsche Bank said Whitbread was "one of the cheapest stocks" in the sector on a rating of circa 14.5 times earnings, even before the emergence of Elliott."

Most seem to see potential uplift of 20%-40%.

galatea99
16/4/2018
12:34
Some broker comment referred to in FT Alphaville Markets Live:
galatea99
16/4/2018
08:24
Great Start !
chinese investor
16/4/2018
07:34
highlighted this morning
bountyhunter
15/4/2018
22:07
...could be a good day tomorrow for Whitbread shareholders following the weekend press :-)
bountyhunter
15/4/2018
20:46
That's quite a holding the two hedge funds have between them, someone somewhere will be hot under the collar.
spacecake
15/4/2018
20:08
This is from an Indian website but is from City AM originally:

"Costa spin-off could lead to £3bn Whitbread windfall – and cost just £20m"

galatea99
15/4/2018
16:10
UBS must be embarrassed - they cut WTB target to 3,875 last Tuesday.
bigbertie
15/4/2018
09:24
Yes. From that "Times" article:

"Most hotel businesses trade at a higher market rating than Whitbread, as do most standalone coffee operations. Allowing the two businesses to trade separately could produce a 40% rise in value for Whitbread investors, it is suggested."

galatea99
15/4/2018
09:10
quite likely imho & could be good for shareholder value...

Hedge fund Elliott Advisors demands Whitbread spins off Costa Coffee
Spin off Costa, urges activist Elliott after secret share raid

Sabah Meddings
April 15 2018, 12:01am, The Sunday Times

bountyhunter
03/4/2018
11:42
Local Costa pretty busy yesterday. Recent visits to other towns on south coast suggest business is ok.Don't know how hotel business is doing. Any ideas?Can't help thinking there is some upside at this price.
richj5000
23/3/2018
15:13
Anyone have consensus estiamtes of profit and EPS for the full year results due very soon?
mozy123
13/2/2018
10:58
Pathetic effort to make a story out of nothing.

Most customers would leave a room as they found it. So on a daily basis minimal cleaning would be required.

Like most jobs the more time you spend on it leads to more efficient practice for instance it was alleged one of the cleaning girls was finished by one.

Whitbread outsource this work so they have a vested interest it is carried out to their satisfaction.

churchill2
12/2/2018
20:26
CH4 Premier Inns undercover expose.
Doesn't look good - not paying for all time worked by cleaners.

yf23_1
20/1/2018
08:42
I've had another idea - give out Premier Inn breakfast discount vouchers in Costa coffee shops and Costa discount vouchers with Premier Inn room booking receipts!
bountyhunter
20/1/2018
08:38
You should be on the BoD scobak :)
bountyhunter
19/1/2018
21:18
Keep the Chinese coffee venture otherwise absolutely agree re dumping Costa. Then reinvest in developing its German hotel chain with the proceeds.

My reasoning is that coffee shops are in a saturated marketplace in UK. Budget hotels in UK is becoming a crowded market so Germany offers greatest chance to expand already having a foothold and a fragmented sector.

scobak
18/1/2018
11:36
Hotels are doing well, time to spin off Costa?
bountyhunter
18/1/2018
11:22
Overinvested in London hotels ?
Only time will tell if they have over egged the pudding.

spacecake
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