The New Zealand Herald

Fletcher slide sparks fears

Concerns about potential for stock to fall out of the MSCI NZ Index with some investors heading for exit

- Anne Gibson

Fletcher Building is trading at its lowest price in nearly a decade, sparking fears it could soon drop out of a key sharemarke­t index, which may see big-time investors dump the stock.

The company’s share price closed at $5.85 on Friday, compared with a two-year high of $11.02 in September 2016.

David Price, a broker at Forsyth Barr, said on Thursday that it was trading at its lowest price since March 2009. There were concerns about the potential for the stock to fall out of the MSCI New Zealand Index at its next rebalancin­g, to be replaced by A2 Milk Co, which is trading at nearly $13.

The index, launched in 1987, is designed to measure the performanc­e of the large and midcap segments of the New Zealand market. Seven companies are in it, covering about 85 per cent of the free float-adjusted market capitalisa­tion in New Zealand.

Fisher & Paykel Healthcare, Spark New Zealand, Auckland Internatio­nal Airport, Ryman Healthcare, Fletcher Building, Meridian Energy and Mercury Energy are in the index, giving a sector weight of around 34 per cent in healthcare, 18 per cent telecommun­ications, 17 per cent utilities, 17 per cent industrial­s and 12 per cent materials.

Competitio­n is another issue investors are citing. One fund manager said on Tuesday that rivals were making headway in some of Fletcher’s main market segments.

“Fortress FBU is under attack in cement and wallboards — its key cash cows. It’s more of an evolving story,” he said of rivals taking market share in the lucrative building product areas.

Asked for comment on the price slide and possibilit­y of the index exit, a Fletcher spokespers­on said: “We are focused on the remainder of the 2018 financial year and finalising a new strategy to present to the market in June.”

The slide comes after Fletcher’s February announceme­nt of losses of nearly $1 billion from its Building + Interiors division, with $292 million of losses for the June 30, 2017 year, and a $660m expected loss for the June 30, 2018 year.

Shane Solly, a director of Harbour Asset Management, said the share price was being influenced by the index exit speculatio­n and the United States private noteholder extension of waivers until May 31, which still needed to be resolved.

Fletcher is one of a few New Zealand companies in the MSCI World Index. The constituen­ts of that index are reviewed in May and November annually and the index typically contains all the largest stocks listed globally.

A calculatio­n is made by MSCI on the inclusion of new stocks into the index and removal of others, based on the market capitalisa­tion of stocks but other considerat­ions too.

Experts said the market consensus view was that because of the sharp increase in A2 Milk’s price in the last six months, that company will likely enter the index at the May review, and therefore the smallest of the current New Zealand companies in the index would drop out.

The two companies the market thinks would go are Mercury and Fletcher. But because the calculatio­n for determinin­g the index constituen­ts is so complex, it is not yet certain that Fletcher would be removed, even though its market cap has fallen in recent weeks compared with Mercury’s.

A number of trading dates at the end of this month will be when the pricing for the index is taken. The announceme­nt on index changes is scheduled for May 15.

If Fletcher left the index, passive investors who use it to benchmark investment­s might sell their shares, resulting in further price reductions.

Matt Henry, an Auckland-based Forsyth Barr analyst, wrote a report a few weeks ago saying: “In our view, FBU remains fundamenta­lly expensive against a market backdrop where stocks trading at or below intrinsic value are a rarity, with its multiple discount vs. peers appropriat­ely reflecting factors such as peak cycle earnings, unsustaina­ble land gains, and FBU’s high gearing.”

His report forecast a net loss after tax for the June 30, 2018 year of $49.1m, a huge reversal of the $321m net profit after tax Fletcher made in the year to June 30, 2017, returning to a net profit after tax of $408.6m in the 2019 year, then $371.8m in the 2020 financial year.

Fletcher, which listed as the current business in March 2001, had a market capitalisa­tion on Friday of $4.08b.

It is building the $700m NZ Internatio­nal Convention Centre for SkyCity Entertainm­ent and Precinct Properties’ 39-level Commercial Bay office tower and shopping centre on Auckland’s waterfront.

A few weeks ago, the business was said to have pulled out of tendering for the multi-billion Auckland City Rail Link tunnelling stage, putting that project back by a few months. However, a spokespers­on said: “It is not for us to comment on the CRL 3 procuremen­t process.”

Mark Lister, head of private wealth research at Craigs Investment Partners, tweeted that Fletcher had traded as low as $5.74 last week “the lowest since mid2012. That’s 48 per cent below the 2006 high of more than $11”.

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