Tag Archives: Ryanair Holdings

Should You Buy easyJet Today?

By Royston Wild, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Shares in budget airline easyJet  have steadily strode higher since the middle of 2011, and in the past six months alone have leapt more than 66%, striking all-time highs of 1,128 pence in the process.

And I believe that the stock still has much further to run owing to bursting growth prospects and an improving ability to grab custom from rival operators. Indeed, just today Morgan Stanley hiked its target price for the carrier’s shares by almost a third, to 1,375 pence, affirming easyJet’s chunky upside potential.

Airline ready to boost market share
easyJet announced in last week’s trading statement that it expects revenues per seat to have risen 8.5% in the September-March period, beating a projected rise of between 6% and 8%, and propelled by stronger-than-forecast late bookings in the run up to the Easter break.

Although overall capacity rose 3.3% from the corresponding 2012 period, falling short of a projected 3.5% increase, this was caused by weather-related cancellations. And passenger numbers rose 5.3% in March, it added.

The company halved first-half losses year-on-year, which is now predicted to come in between £60 million and £65 million. Indeed, cost per seat (excluding fuel) rose 3.5%, at the lowest point of estimates due to the firm’s effective cost-management plan during the winter.

I fully expect easyJet to sustain future growth by grabbing market share from other major industry players. Higher-cost rivals such as Iberia and Air France are reducing the number of routes served, as well as flight frequency on the remaining routes, giving rivals such as easyJet room to muscle in.

Furthermore, I believe airlines with the capacity to offer cheaper services are likely to remain in vogue while the beleaguered economic backdrop in Europe continues to strike travellers’ wallets.

Earnings growth expected to soar
Broker Investec expects earnings per share to explode 35% in the year ending September 2013, to 83.4 pence, before galloping 12% higher the following year to 93.1 pence.

The airline currently changes hands on a P/E rating of 12.4 and 11.1 for 2013 and 2014 respectively. This represents a healthy discount to a forward earnings multiple of 13.1 for budget airline rival Ryanair Holdings, and 17.6 for the wider travel and leisure sector.

As well, easyJet’s status as a value stock is exemplified by a price/earnings to growth readout of 0.4 and 0.9 for this year and next. Any value below one is considered excellent value for money.

The canny guide for clever investors
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Ryanair Places Big Boeing Order

By 24/7 Wall St.

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London-traded Ryanair Holdings, a low-cost European airline, has ordered 175 new Next Generation 737-800 aircraft from Boeing Co. (NYSE: BA). At current list prices, the order is worth $15.6 billion to Boeing.

The Next Generation 737-800 planes entered service in 2007, so the name might be a bit misleading. One of the planes costs about $89.1 million. The comparable 737 MAX 8, Boeing’s newest, most fuel-efficient model in the venerable 737 family, is not scheduled for delivery until the end of 2017 and costs about $100.5 million.

Had Boeing been able to make up its mind in a more timely way on whether to add a new member to its 737 family or to build a completely new airplane, Ryanair may have spent an additional $11 million or so per plane to buy the more fuel-efficient 737 MAX, which might have been available at least two years earlier. Just another instance of how valuable CEO Jim McNerney is to Boeing.

Boeing shares are up about 0.6% in premarket trading this morning, at $85.66 in a 52-week range of $66.82 to $86.49.

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Aerospace, Airlines Tagged: BA

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Can Anything Hold Down the Dow?

By Matt Thalman, The Motley Fool

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Though the Dow Jones Industrial Average remained in the red for the majority of the trading session, it still managed to fight its way into the black just prior to the closing bell. The Dow closed at 14,450, marking another record-breaking close, after it gained 2.77 points. After just barely closing up, this index of blue-chip stocks managed to continue its now eight-day winning streak.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq, unfortunately, did not manage to follow the Dow, closing lower by 0.24% and 0.32%, respectively. But the S&P 500 remains within striking distance of its all-time high of 1,565, after closing at 1,552 this afternoon.

A few Dow winners
The blue-chip index’s top performer today was Merck , whose shares rose 3.16%. The move higher came after an advisory board approved the continuation of a trial for Merck’s Vytorin. Some analysts believe the cholesterol-fighting compound could become a major blockbuster drug for the company.

Vytorin hit a bump in the road in 2008, when one smaller trial’s evidence suggested that the drug increased patients’ likelihood of cancer. During the same year, another study found Vytorin to be no more effective than a generic cholesterol-reducing drug. This latest nine-year trial of 18,000 participants, scheduled to conclude late in 2014, will have serious implications for Merck’s future.  

Although Boeing continues to have issues with it 787 Dreamliner, shares keep on heading higher, rising 1.47% today. Bloomberg reported today that the aircraft manufacturer received an order from Ryanair Holdings worth $15.1 billion. Boeing will provide Ryanair with 170 of its 737 jets. Insiders familiar with the deal said that it should be formally announced sometime next week.  

Shares of Hewlett-Packard rose by 1.76% today, after Britain’s Serious Fraud Office confirmed that it was investigating HP‘s allegations that Autonomy misrepresented its value before HP purchased the British company in 2011. In Nov. 2012, HP wrote down $8.8 billion related to its $10 billion purchase of Autonomy and claimed that the previous management team altered sales figures in an attempt to increase Autonomy’s total enterprise value.

The U.S. Justice Department opened an investigation into the matter shortly after HP made the writedown announcement. Today was the first official statement that British authorities also were looking into the matter.  

The massive wave of mobile computing has done much to unseat the major players in the PC market, including venerable technology names such as Hewlett-Packard. However, HP‘s rapidly shifting its strategy under the new leadership of CEO Meg Whitman. But does this make HP one of the least-appreciated turnaround stories on the market or is this a minor blip on its road to irrelevance? The Motley Fool’s technology analyst details exactly what investors need to know about HP in our new premium research report. Just click here now to get your copy today.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance