gnk. results better than expected? added here yesterday, doing same today as well as accumulating the non voting, I can sit and wait, tick tock, dyor. |
tick tock, time limited, as an inde company? going to try and add to my holding. |
 Young's tipped in the Midas column of the Mail on Sunday.
Young's old values pay off
Young's, the brewer, is another company with a long history that stretches back centuries. The group has built its reputation around well-managed pubs serving quality beer.
For many years, Young's was considered unfashionably conservative. It has never gone in for wild expansion, it has not transformed its pubs into restaurants and it has not borrowed huge sums of money to pursue trends. This cautious approach now looks extremely sensible.
Young's has 221 pubs, most of which are within the M25. Most are freehold and the company works hard to make sure they look good and sell good beer.
About 25% of sales come from food, but chief executive Stephen Goodyear is determined to make sure its pubs retain their character as tried and tested establishments. He does not deny the economic climate is tough and other pub chains have recently published downbeat trading statements.
Young's strong balance sheet and focused approach differentiates from rivals, however, and may even mean that it can snap up new pubs cheaply over the next year or so. It is also true that pub-goers tend to carry on drinking in recessions, even if they stop spending on other items. Young's London focus means it should benefit from the influx of tourists this year as well while the pound is so weak.
Analysts forecast a marginal increase in pre-tax profits to £18.8m for the year to end of March and a dividend of 12.8p, rising to £19.3m and 13p in 2010.
Midas verdict: Young's shares are 426p so the yield is about 3%. This is a stock to buy and hold. It has weathered recessions before and should emerge from this one in better shape than many of its peers. |
I keep coming back to these, I like them if you can take a longer term view, |
very very happy, as usual value will always out................ (:- |
hmmmmmmmmm? happy to be here. |
wakey wakey chaps, hope they don't take us out at to low a price????????????????????.........! |
article in mail on sunday, good write up, not a tip though. |
to those that wait? |
 Sunday Telegraph Questor column.
Young & Co 597½p -3½p Questor says: Avoid
Walk into a well-managed pub in London and you cannot help but question where talk of a looming recession and consumers cutting back on their spending is coming from.
While panic grows around tumbling house prices, soaring bills or empty pubs in the rest of the country, the capital seems to be powering on regardless.
Young's, the family-controlled pub group and brewer which operates 219 food and drinking dens in London, reported a 55pc rise in underlying pre-tax profits yesterday in the latest sign that the capital is outperforming other regions of the UK.
The good locations of the pubs have stood the company in good stead up until now - certainly when compared to its rivals - but there were worrying signs yesterday that growth is finally slowing. Like-for-like sales since April are up just 1.6pc, a figure that persuaded some City commentators to question whether London was being pulled into the slowdown along with the provinces.
For now, however, those fears appear to have been overblown.
Young's sales were up a staggering 9.5pc in the same period last year following the sunny April weather of 2007. Against that background, to increase sales at all following that performance - and in spite of the generally poor weather so far this year - suggests that Young's is continuing to perform relatively well.
Like its peers, Young's will also benefit from weaker comparable trading figures in the coming months after the smoking ban hit sales from July 1 last year.
Meanwhile, it is admittedly dangerous to rely on a sunny summer in the UK to fill pub gardens and boost profitability, but it would be unlucky in the extreme if the country was once again hit by downpours similar to last year. That should again boost trading compared to 2007.
Despite the good news, Young's remains a pub company and there are few who expect the sector to enjoy the going over the next six months or more. It may be among the most recession-resilient of pub companies, but it is not recession-proof and after a good run of late, the shares look fully priced.
If you want a truly diversified portfolio and have to be in the pub sector, this is probably the stock for you. But if not, it's probably best to hold off for now. |
Divi 6.50p per share. They mention the timely sale of the brewery, also. |
RNS Number : 4646V Young & Co's Brewery PLC 29 May 2008
29 May 2008
PRELIMINARY RESULTS For the 52 weeks ended 29 March 2008
Financial highlights
Revenue £122.1M +6.6% EBITDA* £32.3M +40.9% Operating profit before exceptional items £20.9M +35.5% Profit before tax £10.8M +23.8% Adjusted profit before tax* £18.6M +54.7% Basic earnings per share 13.67p +32.1% Adjusted basic earnings per share* 26.28p +50.3% Dividend per share (interim + recommended final) 12.50p +33.8%
All of the results above are on continuing operations. |
I believe the results are expected next Thursday, 29th May. |
That would be nice, but results due before end of next week. Special divi would be good. |
bid coming? |
good to see it, looks like they sold brewery at right time? lots of cash ...... must look very tempting. |
Nice rise for the share price today. Results in the next couple of weeks. |
Acknowledged. (What was inappropriate?) |
lundhousegreen & ivancampo
z |
The last dividend was 24 pence per share. That was before the recent split, so the equivalent divi should now show 6 pence per share. |
lundhousegreen am i reading that right interim divdend £24.00p per share |
I undersatnd we will still be an AIM stock,having read through the details on the web site? |
Could stick it in an ISA then , I suppose? |
Yes and all that lovely cash from sale last year due this month, Correct me if I am wrong about that, I think we are moving to main market which is not something I want. |
Talking to my broker he stated that he thinks the split is good news,making the shares more liquid, and estimates that NAV is currently about £40 a share . |