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Q2 EBITDA was up by 3% yoy. BT is well on track to meet its £3bn savings target by FY25 and we await the next phase (plan to shed 40% of staff by the end of the decade). BT is a long-term buy and hold. However two elements are likely to prevent a sharp increase in the short term: a dividend yield at 6.95% and short-term selling pressure with the possible exit from the share capital of Drahi or DT.
Companies: BT Group plc
AlphaValue
There may be short-term selling pressure on the stock with the possible exit of the capital of Drahi or DT. Infrastructure funds are, however, certainly following BT closely. Several large private equity firms could launch a joint offer for the whole company if they can first find a price to buy Drahi’s and DT’s stakes.
A decent Q1 performance despite the expected headwinds from cost-of-living pressure and cost inflation. The group is clearly a fairly safe long-term buy and hold. BT plans to shed more than 40% of staff by the end of the decade. In parallel it is further accelerating its FTTP deployment with high capex. But at the end of this phase EBITDA-capex could be multiplied by 2.5. Speculation could also again reignite as Drahi’s empire (owning 24.5% of BT) is being shaken by corruption cases.
FY23 revenues and EBITDA were in line with expectations. The major news was that BT plans to shed more than 40% of staff. At the end of the decade the EBITDA could reach £11bn with the massive restructuring announced and capex could return to €3.5bn per year. EBITDA less capex could be multiplied by 2.5 and therefore also the dividend. This could value BT at 385 pence at that time. We maintain our opinion at Add on the stock.
BT’s Q2 operational performance was pretty decent and similar to that of the Q1 with revenues up by 1% yoy and EBITDA up by 3% yoy. But pay attention to BT’s pension assets. The group has decided to input a 5.35% discount rate to somehow hide its massive pension fund deficit and to shift in time the contributions it will have to make to balance its pension accounts when inflation returns to a more normal lower level.
In Q1, the group returned to growth in terms of revenue for the first time in a long time. However, this is the objective that the management had set for 2022/23 three months ago. Cost control remains ongoing but capex continues to grow. We are now at Add (with a limited 13% upside) on the stock which has declined by 11% in the last two weeks with the rotation toward quality growth stocks at the expense of telcos.
No surprise for the Q4 as revenues still did not stabilise while the EBITDA was up by 3% thanks to BT’s transformation programmes and tight cost management. Capex was however up by a whopping 25% in 2021/22 and will remain at its peak in 2022/23. So, the group is not yet out of the woods and we see no dividend increases in the coming years… We remain at Reduce (however, with now some modest upside).
Stock up by 5% following the Q2 release. The market welcomes indeed the return of dividends and the effective deployment of BT’s ultrafast fibre network. Moreover, the group has hit its £1bn cost savings target 18 months early and now brings forward its 2024/25 target for £2bn of savings to 2023/24 with further savings in 2024/25. Here is the rub: the sales recovery is still not there. We maintain therefore our opinion at Add on the stock.
5 FTSE equities to add to your portfolio in October.
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Clear Capital Markets
Disappointing Q1 in terms of revenue, however offset in part by a solid EBITDA. Be cautious however that BT, like Orange, does not despair investors by postponing the stabilization of its revenues quarter after quarter. We maintain our opinion at reduce on the stock, however now with… a slight upside.
Patrick Drahi announced yesterday the acquisition through Altice of a c.12% stake in BT. We believe that BT’s stock after its 6% increase yesterday is now at its price. We also don’t believe that Drahi will increase his stake in the short term… he will have more influence on the strategy as an activist fund. He will be the gadfly to push BT to divest Sports rights and to accelerate its fibre deployment (by bringing in Infrastructure funds).
As expected, Q3 revenues and EBITDA were down by 5%, a less pronounced fall than in H1 but lockdown restrictions in Q4 are expected to impact the trading performance further with almost the entire retail estate closed in addition to all pubs and clubs. BT’s stock probably reached its nadir in November. It has recovered by c.35% since November but is still down by 20% yoy. BT must now stabilise its revenues, which won’t be possible for 2020/21 given the context.
Q2 EBITDA was slightly better than expected, down by only 3% yoy despite an expected 7% revenue decline. As a result the EBITDA outlook for 2020/21 has been slightly raised. We have a Buy on the stock which offers significant upside potential to our target price as it has not recovered since mid-March and is still down by 50% ytd. Now that the dividend has been cut, we continue to believe that BT merits a much higher share price.
Companies: BTQ BTAN BTGOF BT/A BTQ
Both Q1 revenues and EBITDA were down by 7% yoy with a COVID-19 impact a little bit more significant than the average for telcos. The group is currently investing heavily in its networks and one day this will pay off, although for the moment we are still waiting for a…revenue stabilisation and COVID-19 won’t help matters in 2020/21. We maintain, however, our Buy opinion: now the dividend has been cut, BT does not deserve such a low price.
Research Tree provides access to ongoing research coverage, media content and regulatory news on BT Group plc. We currently have 1 research reports from 6 professional analysts.
CyanConnode exceeded FY24 revenue expectations and has high visibility into FY25, supported by strong deliveries and a growing backlog respectively.
Companies: CyanConnode Holdings plc
Zeus Capital
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Shore Capital
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Hybridan
CyanConnode provides end-to-end communications platforms that connect Internet of Things (IoT) devices such as smart meters to a utility's billing system. The company is a global player and a market leader in India, where a new government scheme, as set out below, has mandated the procurement of 250m meters by March 2025, a significant market opportunity for CyanConnode.
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Cavendish
Gamma’s results for the year ended 31 December are in line with the expectations confirmed in the January trading update. Revenue of £521.7m is 8% ahead of FY22, with gross profit at £267.2m showing the same progress. Adjusted EBITDA grew by 9% and PBT by 10%, although the impact of higher tax rates was seen in the 5% increase in adjusted EPS. Cash generation was strong once again, with 108% adjusted cash conversion. Year-end cash of £134.8m is £42.3m above the year before, even after the £30.5m
Companies: Gamma Communications PLC
Progressive Equity Research
CyanConnode has steadily been making progress in India, where the national smart meter programme has been gathering pace. In July 2022, the company crossed the one million mark for meters connected to its RF network across nine Indian states. This is the aggregate RF device number in India connected since 2014 and represents market share of 22%. The latest update from the company states an order book of 2.6m RF nodes for India. Performance of smart meters is a critical aspect of the Indian progr
Hardman & Co
CyanConnode has received a large Letter of Award (LOA) for Omnimesh Cellular Modules (CNICs) from a Thai customer.
CyanConnode’s H1 results position the company to meet our full year forecasts. The company does not need to grow revenue yoy in H2 in order to meet full year estimates. The Indian smart metering programme appears on track, with 98m smart meters already awarded to prime bidders and these orders should soon filter down to competitively well positioned subcontractors such as CyanConnode. These market drivers position the company well to grow revenue 39% in FY24 and 111% in FY25 and for a £1.9m of o
Filtronic has reported results in-line with management expectations for H1/24, and now expects to perform ahead of our forecasts for FY24E and FY25E in terms of revenue and profit. We are raising our revenue forecasts for FY24E and FY25E by 14.6% and 6.2% respectively, and our EBITDA forecasts by 85.2% and 28.0% respectively. The increase in expectation is driven by a strong recent acceleration in order flow, including a £7.8m order announced today. In this report we present a detailed review of
Companies: Filtronic plc
Revenue grew 23% in FY23 with limited contribution from Indian RDSS contracts
CyanConnode has announced a million Ominmesh module order with Montecarlo for deployment for a new end utility in the state of Maharashtra, India. Installation is due to commence in Q4 FY24 and spread over 27 months before moving into a 93 month support and maintenance contract. With more than 220m meters out of 250m now sanctioned for tender, the number of subcontractor awards is expected to pick up pace. We have upgraded the number of module deliveries in FY25 and using an assumed market share
Longspur Clean Energy
As revealed in last week’s interim update, strong demand continued through 1H23 and into 2H23, fuelled by demand for backhaul modules in the ongoing 5G rollout, newly won defence contracts and a post-COVID recovery in critical coms. This led to solid +5% yoy growth in 1H revenue and a current record order book of £17m – a full year’s worth of business for the group. The update also revealed that shortages and the resulting price hikes on specific components led to FTC delaying some 2H23 producti
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