Tag Archives: Imperial Tobacco

Looming Dangers Arise in Secret Underground Cigarette Trade

By Jacob Roche, The Motley Fool

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Between 2006 and 2012, illegal smuggling of this product grew by more than 15%. The trade is largely run by organized crime. Government policy can be blamed for at least part of the problem.

Am I talking about cocaine? Marijuana? No, just the humble cigarette.

A recent report from research group KPMG, and commissioned by Philip Morris , revealed that while total consumption of cigarettes in Europe has fallen in recent years, the illegal contraband and counterfeit trade has grown from 8.3% of total consumption to 11.1%. The report suggests that the high profitability and low risk of penalties attracts organized crime, which can use the trade as a cash cow to fund far more objectionable activities. An ad from British American Tobacco goes as far as to suggest that the trade could even be indirectly funding terrorism.

There’s a black market for everything
But why are people buying illegal cigarettes? Restrictions differ from country to country, but on the whole, cigarettes are legal and can easily be purchased. The trouble is that, because taxes and regulations vary so widely between countries, the price for consumers varies as well. A pack of Marlboros costs 6.69 euros in Sweden, and 13.18 euros in next-door Norway. In Ukraine, they sell for just 1.31 euros.

The differential makes it easy for smugglers to buy large quantities in cheap countries, bring them into more expensive countries, and sell them at some in-between price to profit. These large quantities are available in part because the large cigarette companies overproduce in cheaper countries. Ukrainian authorities estimate that the world’s four leading tobacco companies — Philip Morris, Japan Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco, and British American Tobacco — produced about 130 billion cigarettes in the country in 2008, 30% more than the local market consumed or legally exported. The rest simply disappeared into the black market, making Ukraine one of the top sources of non-counterfeit black market cigarettes.

What’s the impact?
Apart from the whole “funding organized crime” thing, the trade has a negative impact on both countries and cigarette manufacturers. It is estimated that governments around the world lost $40 billion to $50 billion in tax revenue in 2006, and that’s just from lost cigarette taxes — the losses are higher if you factor in things like unpaid income taxes from the money smugglers make.

As for manufacturers, there are two problems they face. The first should be obvious: If any of them are knowingly involved in undeclared overproduction, they may be criminally liable. Even if they aren’t knowingly involved, government authorities are likely to decide that manufactures are at least partially responsible for cleaning up the mess. The report by KPMG, for example, was only commissioned by Philip Morris as part of a 2004 legal settlement with European regulators.

The other problem is that not all illegal cigarettes are legitimate ones being smuggled. Many are simply counterfeits, dressed up to look like a real pack of Marlboros or

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

3 Neil Woodford High-Yield Shares

By G. A. Chester, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Ace City investor Neil Woodford has thrashed the FTSE 100 over the last five, 10, and 15 years. Hence, I always keep an eye on his holdings for promising investment ideas.

Woodford is very selective in picking shares for his 20-billion pound funds. Fewer than one in five of the U.K.’s top 100 companies earn a place in his market-beating portfolios.

The following three firms all offer prospective dividend yields of over 5%:

Company

Share price (pence)

Dividend yield

SSE 

1,484

6%

GlaxoSmithKline 

1,519

5.2%

Imperial Tobacco 

2,360

5.2%

SSE
Woodford holds two of the four FTSE 100 utilities. SSE — formerly Scottish & Southern Energy — is one of his two. Analyst forecasts put SSE on a juicy 12-month forward yield of 6%, which is the highest income on offer among the utilities.

The company told us within an update during January that it expects to pay out a dividend of around 84 pence for the year ending March 2013 — in line with its targeted payout of 2% above retail price inflation. Analysts are forecasting the dividend will grow by 4% to 5% a year for each of the next two years.

GlaxoSmithKline
Woodford has put a lot of faith in the pharmaceuticals sector. GlaxoSmithKline is one of his biggest bets, weighing in at a hefty 8% of his portfolios. According to analyst forecasts, the U.K.’s biggest drugs group is on a healthy forward yield of 5.2%.

Glaxo reported strong cash generation for 2012 when it released its annual results last month. The board said it remains committed to using free cash flow to support increasing dividends. Analysts are forecasting slightly stronger dividend growth for Glaxo than for SSE over the next two years: 5% to 6% annually for Glaxo versus SSE‘s 4% to 5%.

Imperial Tobacco
Tobacco is another sector that Woodford has backed heavily, and Imperial Tobacco is a top-10 holding in his funds, with a weighting of close to 5%. Analyst forecasts put Imperial on a smoking 5.2% forward yield.

The company told us during January that the first quarter had seen worsening trends in some of its markets, including the EU and Russia. However, the group’s four key brands and emerging markets continued to show good growth momentum. Analysts have pencilled in strong dividend growth of 10% for the current year to September, and the same again for 2014.

Woodford excels at finding big dividend-paying winners for his market-beating funds, and two of the three shares I’ve highlighted are featured within this newly updated Motley Fool report.

You can download this report for free right now — and enjoy reading an exclusive analysis of eight of Woodford’s favorite blue chips. Simply click here.

link

The article 3 Neil Woodford High-Yield Shares originally appeared on Fool.com.


G.A. Chester does not own shares in any of the companies mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool recommends GlaxoSmithKline. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Should You Buy Imperial Tobacco Group?

By Royston Wild, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — I believe Imperial Tobacco  is an excellent pick for the savvy income investor, as the company carries an enviable track record of hiking dividends.

Imperial Tobacco has experienced weakness in crucial markets in recent times, but I reckon the strength of its key brands and recently announced cost-cutting measures should help safeguard earnings.

Strategic cost-cutting to defend the bottom line
Imperial Tobacco — whose flagship brands include Gauloises BlondesDavidoff, West, and John Player Special — announced earlier this month plans to become much leaner and efficient.

The company aims to generate 300 million pounds of cost savings per year until Sept. 2018, starting in October. Also, the new strategy will see it “shutter” 150 local brands that make up around 60% of volumes, yet are dropping at an alarming rate of 6% per year.

January’s interims showed net revenues crawl just 2% higher in the third quarter, while stick volumes dropped 1% as conditions in key regions such as Europe and Russia continued to deteriorate.

But Imperial Tobacco‘s ambitious plans to boost efficiency, coupled with ongoing strength among its bellwether products — net revenue and volumes across its key brands rose 12% and 10%, respectively, in the first quarter — should continue to deliver dependable earnings growth over the medium term.

Earnings growth to maintain steady momentum
City analysts forecast earnings per share could creep 5% higher to 212 pence in the year ending Sept. 2013, before rising a further 8% to 228 pence in the following 12-month period.

Imperial Tobacco currently trades on a P/E rating of 11.4 for the current year, which is projected to drop to 10.6 in 2014. These ratings compare favorably with a forward multiple of 13.5 for the broader tobacco sector.

Gear up for solid dividend growth
Imperial Tobacco operates a very solid, progressive dividend policy that outstrips that of its rivals. A dividend yield of 4.8% is forecast for 2013, which is expected to leap to 5.3% next year. These yields compare with rival British American Tobacco’s 4.2% and 4.6% yields forecast for the next two years.

Imperial Tobacco upped its dividend per share 11% last year to 105.6 pence, and further chunky payout increases are expected this year and next, according to broker estimates, to 115.7 pence and 127.8 pence, respectively.

Shareholder payouts do not enjoy supreme coverage, though, with predicted dividends covered 1.8 times this year and next. But Imperial Tobacco‘s position in the ultra-defensive tobacco industry should dispel fears over future dividend cuts, in my opinion.

Smoke out other sterling stocks
If you already hold shares in Imperial Tobacco, I’d now urge you to check out this special report, which highlights other FTSE winners identified by ace fund manager Neil Woodford.

Woodford — head of U.K. Equities at Invesco Perpetual — has more than 30 years’ experience in the industry, and has identified two other fantastic cigarette manufacturers in the report set to deliver spectacular investor returns. The report, compiled by The Motley Fool’s crack team of …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance