The New Zealand Herald

Cards on the table

Investors punish SkyCity shares as reporting season gets under way

- Mark Lister comment Mark Lister is head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners. This column is general in nature and should not be regarded as specific investment advice.

The August reporting season is upon us, and it will need to be a good one to justify current prices. The S&P/NZX 50 Index had its strongest first six months in history this year, and is up more than 12 per cent in 2017. This has set the bar high, which means results will need to be impressive to vindicate the excellent performanc­e.

The price/earnings (PE) ratio for New Zealand shares for the next 12 months is currently 20.3, which is some 30 per cent above the 20-year average.

Don’t panic. While this sounds lofty, it’s not quite an apples-for-apples comparison. Our market has changed significan­tly in recent years and because it’s relatively small, when new companies enter the fray they can have a disproport­ionately large impact on these measures.

Take some of the technology stocks like Xero and Vista Group, for example. Growth companies like these trade at very different valuations to our traditiona­l market stalwarts. The electricit­y companies have also made a difference in recent years, because of higher PE ratios due to the treatment of depreciati­on charges.

That’s not to say NZ shares aren’t expensive. They are, just like residentia­l property, farms, bonds, art and classic cars. Just about every investment is trading at above average levels because of abnormally low interest rates, and our sharemarke­t is no different. On this basis NZ shares are still the most expensive they have been since the July-September period last year, when the PE ratio rose to 22. That was just before the market corrected 12.7 per cent between September and December.

We haven’t yet regained that level. Share prices are still half a per cent below that all-time high of 11 months ago.

Anyway, back to the reporting season. Overall expectatio­ns are for median 2017 earnings growth of 6.4 per cent for the NZX 50, with approximat­ely two-thirds of companies expected to see earnings rise compared to a year earlier. Not bad, but will it be good enough?

SkyCity Entertainm­ent Group is the only major company to have reported so far, and it was fairly uninspirin­g so that’s not a great start. Tourism Holdings and Kathmandu pre-announced some upbeat numbers, while the less said about Fletcher Building the better. I will be watching a few sectors closely in the coming weeks.

Companies exposed to the domestic economy should be in good heart, and their outlook statements will give us a read on the economy.

Those with operations in Australia will be interestin­g, given the mixed messages from over there. Companies exporting to the rest of the world should also go reasonably well, despite currency headwinds.

Tourism is very strong, so companies exposed to that sector should look solid. That’s in stark contrast to those in the constructi­on industry, which haven’t been able to leverage the strong backdrop. One positive is that we should’ve heard about any significan­t train wrecks by now.

The so-called ‘confession season’ has been and gone, so any companies set to seriously miss forecasts are obliged to have already given us the heads up.

We should expect a bit of share price volatility though. When prices are high there’s less room for disappoint­ment, so even modest misses can lead to a sell-off.

One positive is that we should’ve heard about any significan­t train wrecks by now.

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 ?? Picture / 123RF ?? Tourism is very strong, so companies exposed to that sector should look solid.
Picture / 123RF Tourism is very strong, so companies exposed to that sector should look solid.
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