Tag Archives: Intertek Group

Are These the 5 Best Retirement Shares in the FTSE?

By Roland Head, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — The last five years have been tough for those in retirement. Portfolio valuations have been hammered and annuity rates have plunged. There’s no sign of things improving anytime soon, either, as the eurozone and the U.K. economy look set to muddle through at best for some years to come.

A great way of protecting yourself from the downturn, however, is by building your retirement fund with shares of large, well-run companies that should grow their earnings steadily over the coming decades. Over time, such investments ought to result in rising dividends and inflation-beating capital growth.

In this series, I’m tracking down the U.K. large caps that have the potential to beat the FTSE 100 over the long term and support a lower-risk income-generating retirement fund (you can see all of the companies I’ve covered so far on this page).

Over the last few weeks, I’ve looked at 15 shares, and in this article I’m going to examine the five top-scoring shares so fa:, Intertek Group , IMI , Whitbread , Aberdeen Asset Management  and Bunzl .

First, let’s take a look at how each of them scored against my five key retirement share criteria:

Criteria

IMI

Intertek Group

Bunzl

Aberdeen Asset Management

Whitbread

Longevity

5/5

3/5

4/5

2/5

5/5

Performance vs. FTSE

5/5

5/5

4/5

5/5

5/5

Financial strength

3/5

4/5

4/5

5/5

4/5

EPS growth

4/5

5/5

4/5

5/5

4/5

Dividend growth

4/5

4/5

5/5

5/5

4/5

Total

21/25

21/25

21/25

22/25

22/25

IMI
British engineering company IMI, which specializes in fluid control, has delivered an average total return of 20% per year over the last decade. Forecasts suggest further strong earnings growth this year, giving a forward price to earnings ratio (P/E) of 14.4 and a forecast dividend yield of 2.8%. Although these are only forecasts, it’s worth noting that IMI has not cut its dividend in more than 20 years — a sterling record that is a real asset for a retirement share and gives me confidence that this year’s expected 8% increase is realistic.

Intertek Group
Industrial testing and certification specialist Intertek Group has delivered total returns 2.7 times those of the FTSE 100 over the last 10 years. As a retirement share, it offers a number of advantages, including strong dividend growth, attractive profit margins, and good cash generation. The only problem is that the markets have already got wise to these attractions, and Intertek’s shares currently trade on a rather lofty P/E of 29 times last year’s adjusted earnings. Although strong earnings growth is expected this year, for me, Intertek’s 1.5% forecast dividend yield for 2013 is simply not enough to warrant inclusion in a retirement portfolio.

Bunzl
Bunzl is the kind of company I would really like to own. Its business, supplying goods such as cleaning and packaging supplies to other businesses, is cash-generative, growing, and should benefit from the increasing economies of scale that its continuing expansion can provide. What’s more, it has already been in business for 150 years and has increased its dividend every year for at least the last 20. All of this means that although Bunzl’s current 2.4% forecast dividend yield is below average, this company has gone onto my personal watchlist for …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Should I Buy Intertek Group

By Harvey Jones, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — I’m shopping for shares again, but there are plenty of good companies to choose from right now. Should I pop Intertek Group  into my basket?

Tek boom
It’s the quiet ones you have to keep your eye on. I’ve never paid much attention to quality and safety services specialist Intertek Group before, and now I’m kicking myself. This £5.6 billion company, which listed on the FTSE 100 in 2002, has delivered remarkably steady growth for the past five years. Is now the time to buy it?

Safety in numbers
Everybody moans about health and safety these days, but long-term investors in Intertek aren’t complaining. They have seen a whopping 230% share price rise in the past five years, and 40% over the past 12 months to £34.36. Recent results show little sign of a slowdown. Full-year results were strong, with management hailing strong earnings and organic revenue growth, and good margin progression. Revenue was up 17% to £2 billion, which means it has now doubled in the past five years. Profits before tax were up 19% to £308 million. Adjusted cash generated from operations rose 10% to £345 million. Earnings per share (EPS) were up 22%, as was the dividend, taking it to 41 pence.

Intertek has posted one of the most solid EPS growth figures I have seen for some time. It is double digit all the way for the past five years (38%, 22%, 10%, 20%, 22%), and the forecasts suggest this consistency will continue, if at a slightly slower pace, with a 14% rise this year and next. Both revenues and adjusted operating profits have shown similar steady upwards progression over the past five years. By the end of 2014, revenue should hit £2.49 billion. Continuing sterling weakness against the dollar will boost the value of its overseas profits once repatriated to the UK.

Your good health
The trend is your friend, they say, and Intertek — which carries out technical inspection services for the oil and gas, nuclear, renewable energy and agricultural industries — expects to benefit from the continuing rise in global energy demand. Its testing, inspection and certification services also operate across a host of retailing and manufacturing industries, giving it plenty of diversification. With 1,000 laboratories in more than 100 countries around the world, it has everything in place to take advantage of global growth opportunities.

Intertek is growing partly through acquisitions, completing six bolt-on purchases in 2012 for £40 million, cash down. Although when you exclude acquisitions, its organic revenue and profit growth rates aren’t quite as impressive, at 8.6% and 11.2% respectively (against 17.4% and 19.2%).

Interregnum
Despite strong recent numbers, and almost limitless growth potential, stock analysts have been wary of Intertek. Recent success has left it trading on a mighty 26 times earnings, and sunk the yield to 1.2%. That didn’t worry broker Credit Suisse, which recently lifted its target from £35.50 to £38.50, and stuck to its outperform rating, because …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

3 FTSE Dividends Lifted This Week

By Alan Oscroft, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — The FTSE 100 has been having a good week so far, gaining 53 points by the close of play on Tuesday to set a new 52-week record of 6,432. As of 8:30 a.m. EST today, the index was continuing its climb to reach 6,458. Despite miners dragging the index down on Monday, economic indicators are generally sounding good, and we’ve had a number of strong company results.

But how do those companies’ dividends compare to the FTSE‘s average of about 3%? Here are three that have lifted them this week.

Intertek
Intertek Group boosted its full-year dividend by 22% to 41 pence per share on Monday when the safety expert and operator of product-testing labs released full-year results. The dividend has almost doubled in four years since 2008’s 20.8 pence per share, while earnings have also almost doubled from 67.8 pence per share in 2008 to 133.1 pence this time. And we have more of the same forecast for 2013, with a further 16% hike to the dividend expected.

The 2012 dividend only amounts to a yield of 1.2% based on the current share price of 3,434 pence, but that’s because the share price has appreciated so much in the past few years. From December 2008, when that year’s yield was 2.7%, the share price has more than quadrupled.

Amlin
Specialist insurer Amlin also lifted its 2012 full-year dividend on Monday, by 4.3% to 24 pence per share. That’s not a massive annual increase, but it represents a yield of 5.7% on a share price of 424 pence — and it was more than twice covered by earnings.

As with many insurers, Amlin’s earnings have been erratic, but the dividend has been steady right through the economic crisis — and steady is what most income investors want. With earnings expected to be down a bit in 2013 and back up again in 2014, analysts are forecasting rises in the dividend of around 5% per year for the next two years.

John Wood
Tuesday brought us results from oil services engineer John Wood Group, and with them came a 26% rise in the firm’s full-year dividend to $0.17 per share. On a price of 824 pence per share, that’s a yield of only about 1.4%, but it was more than four times covered, and it adds a little extra to an almost quadrupling of the share price from the dark days of 2009.

Current forecasts suggest a 30% rise in earnings for 2013 and a 14% boost to the dividend, with a further rise for 2014 taking the dividend yield up to 2%.

Dividend rises like these three are always welcome, and companies that manage steady payouts form the cornerstones of many a portfolio. Whether you’re investing for income or growth, good old cash is always welcome. And that’s why I recommend the brand-new Fool report “The Motley Fool’s Top Income Share For 2013,” in …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Are These the Ultimate Retirement Shares?

By Roland Head, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

LONDON — The last five years have been tough for those in retirement. Portfolio valuations have been hammered and annuity rates have plunged. There’s no sign of things improving anytime soon, either, as the eurozone and the U.K. economy look set to muddle through at best for some years to come.

A great way of protecting yourself from the downturn, however, is by building your retirement fund with shares of large, well-run companies that should grow their earnings steadily over the coming decades. Over time, such investments ought to result in rising dividends and inflation-beating capital growth.

In this series, I’m tracking down the U.K. large caps that have the potential to beat the FTSE 100 over the long term and support a lower-risk income-generating retirement fund (you can see all of the companies I’ve covered so far on this page).

Over the last few weeks, I’ve looked at United Utilities , Eurasian Natural Resources , Intertek Group , InterContinental Hotels Group  and Aberdeen Asset Management .

Let’s take a look at how each of them scored against my five key retirement share criteria:

Criteria

Eurasian Natural
Resources

United Utilities

InterContinental
Hotels Group

Intertek Group

Aberdeen Asset
Management

Longevity

2/5

2/5

3/5

3/5

2/5

Performance vs. FTSE

2/5

3/5

5/5

5/5

5/5

Financial strength

3/5

3/5

4/5

4/5

5/5

EPS growth

3/5

3/5

4/5

5/5

5/5

Dividend growth

1/5

3/5

4/5

4/5

5/5

Total

11/25

14/25

20/25

21/25

22/25

Eurasian Natural Resources
A history of dodgy corporate governance, problematic debt levels, and a looming dividend cut all take the shine off miner ENRC‘s recently improved production figures. To be fair, ENRC does have some decent assets, but its debt-fueled expansion drive has left it looking short of cash and vulnerable to an opportunistic takeover.

The company is expected to cut its dividend by 50% this year, leaving ENRC shares with a likely forward yield of just 1.8%, well below the solid 3% or more offered by mega-cap miners BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto. The investment case for ENRC is far more speculative and while investors may end up with a good result, this company simply isn’t suitable for an income-focused, low-maintenance retirement portfolio.

United Utilities
It may be surprising to see a high-yielding utility stock score so badly in this review, but at present, I don’t think United Utilities is a very good example of this type of company. It has lagged the FTSE 100 over the last 10 years, during which it has carried out a confusing mixture of acquisitions and divestments and been forced to raise 1 billion pounds from shareholders in a rights issue.

United’s identity as a regional water and sewage company is now more clearly defined, but like its water peer Severn Trent, United currently trades on a forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 17, making it look quite expensive. For retirement investors, I believe electricity utilities currently offer much better value — National Grid currently has a forward P/E of just 13.4 and offers a forecast dividend yield of 5.7%, considerably higher than the prospective 4.8% on offer from United.

InterContinental Hotels Group
InterContinental Hotels’ brand-focused business model means that it owns very few hotels, preferring instead to license its brands to third-party hotel operators. The strength of InterContinental’s’ …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance