Cape Times

Tiso Blackstar shares lose more than 47% of value in five months

- Sandile Mchunu

TISO BLACKSTAR share price has shed more than 47 percent in the past five months, despite the group reporting 57.7 percent increase in profits after tax in the six months to end December.

The share price has declined from R8.55 a share at the end of December to the current levels of R4.50 a share, as of last Friday.

The fall in share price has led to the group’s decline in market capitalisa­tion to R1.23 billion on Friday, down from R2.3bn at the end of December, representi­ng a 46.5 percent decline during the past five months.

Its record high was achieved three years ago, when it traded at R14.85 a share in April 2015, after having listed in 2011.

Dr Adrian Saville, the chief executive of Cannon Asset Managers, said the business traded at a material discount to its reported net asset value (NAV) of 1 274 cents a share and the stock price had essentiall­y been in structural decline since mid2015, which was just more than 1 400c per share in May 2015 to 450c a share now.

“The discount to NAV and poor rating reflect Tiso Blackstar’s extremely variable operating and financial performanc­e and very difficult operating environmen­t, especially for the media component of the group,” Saville said

However, Saville added that although interim results pointed to improved prospects for the group, the sale of its interest in Kagiso Tiso Holdings (KTH), was not realised.

“As a result, a proposed special dividend has been reconsider­ed. The cancellati­on of the sale agreement also points to the value of KTH being lower than the carried price of R1.5bn.

Saville also noted that negative commentary had been circulatin­g relating to the cancellati­on of the KTH sale, including some going as far as to refer to business rescue.

Refuted “TBH has refuted these suggestion­s and points to improved performanc­e, improving financial health and decent cash flow. Delisting from AIM has led to negative perception­s and hints at business stress. This is notwithsta­nding the fact that the AIM listing accounted for just 9 percent of the equity float and was illiquid and expensive to carry,” he said.

The interims results presented for the six months to end December showed a better performanc­e in its core businesses, which the group said performed exceptiona­lly well under such circumstan­ces, delivering a mix of sustainabl­e new revenue streams and tight cost management.

In the period Tiso Blackstar reported a profit after tax of R62.78 million, up from last year’s R39.81m. The performanc­e was a huge improvemen­t from a loss of R15.45m made at year-end in June last year.

The group has tried unsuccessf­ully to sell its 22.9 percent stake in KTH, a non-core business, with little success in the last few months.

“As previously mentioned, the initial sale transactio­n has been cancelled subsequent to December 31 and a new transactio­n entered into for the disposal of 3.61 percent of KTH’s issued ordinary share capital (excluding treasury shares) for a cash purchase price of R197.9m. Progress is also being made to dispose of the group’s remaining interest in KTH,” the group said.

“The core businesses delivered combined growth in earnings and revenue and are well placed to benefit from the improving economic climate. Unfortunat­ely, the results from the group’s noncore steel interests, namely Robor Proprietar­y Limited (Robor) and Consolidat­ed Steel Industries Proprietar­y Limited (CSI), as well as KTH dragged down a good performanc­e from the core results, but plans are in place to resolve and reduce exposure to these assets,” the group said.

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