Tag Archives: CRH

Is Now the Time to Buy This Building Materials Supplier?

By Rupert Hargreaves, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — I’m always searching for shares that can help ordinary investors like you make money from the stock market.

So right now I am trawling through the FTSE 100 and giving my verdict on every member of the blue-chip index. Simply put, I’m hoping to pinpoint the very best buying opportunities in today’s uncertain market.

Today I am looking at CRH  to determine whether you should consider buying the shares at 1,514 pence.

I am assessing each company on several ratios:

  • Price/earnings (P/E): Does the share look good value when compared against its competitors?
  • Price/earnings-to-growth (PEG): Does the share look good value factoring in predicted growth?
  • Yield: Does the share provide a solid income for investors?
  • Dividend cover: Is the dividend sustainable?

Let’s look at the numbers

Stock Price 3-Year EPS Growth Projected P/E PEG Yield 3-Year Dividend Growth Dividend Cover
CRH 1,514 pence 6% 21.6 1.2 3.6% 0% 1.3

The consensus analyst estimate for this year’s earnings per share is 0.88 euros (up 18%), and dividend per share is 0.65 euros (unchanged).

Trading on a projected P/E of 21.6, CRH appears to be valued at about half the level of its peers in the Construction and Materials sector, which are currently trading on an average P/E of around 41.

CRH‘s P/E and high double-digit growth rate give a PEG ratio of around 1.2, which implies that the share is fairly priced for the near-term earnings growth the company is expected to produce.

Offering a 3.6% yield, CRH‘s dividend income is about the same as the sector average. However, CRH‘s dividend payout has not grown over the past three years, implying that the yield could soon start to fall behind that of its competitors.

In addition, the dividend is just under one and a half times covered by earnings and therefore does not suggest there will be much room for further payout growth.

CRH is trading at a discount to its peers, but is the company too expensive?
As I say, CRH‘s shares are trading at a discount to the company’s peers. However, I believe that CRH is currently too expensive.

CRH is an international supplier of building materials and therefore is more exposed than most to the fragile economic environment. Indeed, within CRH‘s full-year results released in February, the company announced profits for 2012 had fallen 5%. In particular, CRH reported that its European division had suffered a 40% profit fall.

That said, CRH also reported that profits at its North American division grew by 45%, which offset the majority of the European decline.

Furthermore, CRH is focused on streamlining its business and, during 2012, sold assets for 900 million euros, which helped the company reduce its net debt by 500 million euros. CRH‘s net debt now stands at 3 billion euros.

Nonetheless, I still believe CRH is overvalued. You see, CRH‘s projected P/E of 21 is the type of rating more often assigned to high-growth technology companies than to suppliers of building materials. Indeed, on a historic basis, CRH‘s projected P/E ratio is significantly above the P/E ratio of 15 that the company was trading at back in 2007, at the height of …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Should You Buy These 5 FTSE 100 Shares?

By Royston Wild, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — I have recently been evaluating the investment cases for a multitude of FTSE 100 companies.

Although Britain‘s foremost share index has risen 9.1% so far in 2013, I believe many London-listed stocks still have much further to run, while conversely others look overdue for a correction. So how do the following five stocks weigh up?

Wood Group
I believe that oil equipment services firm Wood Group  represents great growth potential at a reasonable price.

The firm’s 2012 results released yesterday showed pre-tax profits leap 43% to $363 million, driven by underlying revenues increasing 20% to $6.8 billion.

Wood Group expects all of its divisions to make headway in 2013, adding that conditions in the global energy markets are likely to remain favorable. Exploration and development spend rose 9% last year, and the company reckons that its prospects should remain solid over the long term.

City analysts forecast earnings per share to rise 31% this year. Earnings are then forecast to jump an additional 16% in 2014. This stellar profit growth is set to deliver ever-improving investor value, with a P/E ratio of 12.1 in 2013 projected to fall to 10.5 next year.

Wood Group‘s relative cheapness is underlined by a lowly price/earnings to growth (PEG) multiple, which is expected to come in at 0.4 and 0.7 in this year and next. A reading below 1 often represents excellent value.

CRH
I reckon that CRH  is chronically overvalued at current levels. The construction specialist’s shares have rallied to fresh highs above 1,500 pence in recent days, despite the precarious state of the European and North American building markets.

The group’s 2012 results released last month showed pre-tax profit dip 5% to 674 million euros due to enduring difficulties within the firm’s core Western markets. Revenues crawled just 3% higher to 18.7 billion euros.

City analysts predict a 60% earnings per share slide in 2013, before a 35% bounceback in 2014. This leaves CRH on P/E ratios of 20.5 and 15.2 for this year and next, which I consider nosebleed territory given the downside risks, particularly as the bombed-out markets of Europe continue to struggle.

The company is expected to offer a dividend yield of 3.8% and 3.9% for 2013 and 2014, respectively, above the FTSE 100 average of 3.5%. However, the potential for formidable earnings pressure could jeopardize any shareholder payouts, particularly with miserly coverage of 1.3 and 1.7 predicted for this year and next.

Randgold Resources
I expect shares in Randgold Resources  to head north as a combination of surging production levels over the medium term and ascending precious metals prices pushes earnings higher.

The company churned out 794,844 ounces of gold last year, up 14% from 2011 levels. This helped deliver record profits of $511 million, a 16% increase.

And Randgold is aiming to significantly increase output at its other assets to build future growth, particularly at its Kibali project in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is due to start production in the fourth quarter. The miner hopes to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

CRH expects U.S. to boost growth amid flat euro zone

DUBLIN (Reuters) – Ireland’s CRH said an upswing in the United States will drive growth this year and offset the slump in euro zone markets that pushed pretax profit down five percent in 2012. Profit before tax at CRH, one of the world’s largest building materials providers, fell to 674 million euros we weak consumer and investor confidence continued to hurt its European businesses. But in the United States, where it is the main producer of asphalt for highway construction and like-for-like sales rose 3 percent last year, CRH said the outlook was promising and should trump euro zone woes. … …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business