As an ongoing business, ETI’s valuation as an equity will need to take into account the lack of organic growth, notwithstanding the high cash costs of maintaining and upgrading the portfolio and the approx. £300m pa of EBITA, but nearer £250m pa on a cash basis (post capital expenditure rather than depreciation). With an EV of approx. £2.85bn, ETI is therefore currently priced at approx. 11x cash EBITA and a normalised Op FCF yield of around 6%; the latter implying an annual discounted growth rate of around +4.5% pa. Against organic growth struggling to get to even half this level and no dividend support, this would seem ambitious. In summary a potential asset play on presently undefined alternative residential use as long as financial repression can sustain absurdly low current buy-to-let yields in the South of England, otherwise a ‘value’ trap.
In the meantime, the enthusiasm of the NAV is obscuring the growth rating being afforded the business. After several years of heavy investment in sprucing up the portfolio, organic revenues are beginning to stabilise, but still to well under the implied growth rating of the overall group.
Perhaps, markets are missing the future growth potential and scope for over-delivery? While always possible, this however is not reflected by consensus expectations where earnings moment remains broadly flat to down across 2014 (see below chart).
So, what we have is a business that may or may not have a potential asset backing which may or may not ever get distributed to shareholders, which is carrying a heavy financial leverage that is being serviced from flat to falling cash flow from an ex-growth business model but has still managed to command a premium growth discount. Given the financial leverage, small reductions in growth discount have an amplified effect on the equity, so take the growth rating down by even 20% from the current +4.5% to even +3.6% and the equity component would face wipe-out!
No comments:
Post a Comment