Cape Times

Fatigued market batters JSE Limited

- Amelia Morgenrood is a PSG Wealth financial adviser based in Pretoria. Views are of the author and not necessaril­y the general view of the entire PSG entity. JSE shares are held on behalf of clients. AMELIA MORGENROOD

THE 12-MONTH share price graph of the JSE Limited is to cry for, down 32 percent, making it one of the worst-performing stocks on the JSE. It is not only the prospect of lower earnings, but also low trading volumes emanating from subdued investor risk appetite.

There is an absence of interest in South African stocks.

The JSE released a trading statement on December 20, 2019, where it noted that headline earnings per share would be down between 20 and 26 percent for the year to December 31.

They have experience­d subdued market and trading activity. The total value of trades in the equity market was down 63 percent from October to December, the total volume of transactio­ns was down 58 percent, and the number of trades declined 61 percent.

These are significan­tly more substantia­l declines than what was seen over the same period in 2018, where the declines were 31 percent for value, 4 percent for volume and 30 percent for the number of trades.

Revenues of the group are variable and primarily driven by activity on the various markets they operate.

The JSE generates 47 percent of revenues from services classified as capital markets; this includes equity market fees (almost 50 percent of total capital market earnings), primary market fees, and commodity derivative fees to name a few.

The JSE will be upgrading Millennium in 2020, which will provide enhanced functional­ity for clients. Further, there are plans to advance noncash collateral functional­ity, which is estimated to save clearing members and their clients approximat­ely R1.2 billion per annum in cash handling, therefore freeing up capital to enable further trade activity.

The JSE is trading at a healthy dividend yield of 5.6 percent, which is expected to rise to 6.4 percent by the end of 2021.

Earnings expectatio­n for the year to December 31, 2019, and for 2020, have declined by 31 percent to 835 cents per share, and 905c per share respective­ly during 2019.

The pessimisti­c earnings assumption doesn’t incorporat­e the possibilit­y of a potential recovery in trading conditions. Despite the additional competitio­n from new entrants, the feeling is that the current earnings weakness is cyclical and that the JSE continues to offer attractive value at current levels.

The JSE is now trading on a forward earnings multiple of 12.9 times compared with its historical average of 13.9 times. Additional­ly, margins currently seem low compared with internatio­nal peers.

Cost-saving initiative­s should support earnings while trading volumes remain depressed. These initiative­s are mainly focussed on reducing the variable and fixed cost base, which should better support performanc­e during periods of low trading volumes. The JSE offers an attractive forward dividend yield of 5.7 percent.

While the dividend growth has come under pressure in the weak economic environmen­t, it is estimated that it can be sustained given its strong cash generative ability and balance sheet. The JSE boasted sequential dividend growth over the past five years at a compound annual rate of over 13 percent. Consequent­ly, if you are interested in dividends, this is a share to consider.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa