Date/Time
Author
Subject
Share Price†
Opinion
28 Apr '13
novicepunter
New investor in this one
208.50
No Opinion
London property guy told me about this share - ( and London metric) . Good div. and when recovery comes big growth
19 Dec '12
jange
nrr
205.00
No Opinion
NewRiver Retail has entered into a joint venture with LVS Luxembourg to purchase a portfolio of five UK shopping centres, the company announced Wednesday. The real estate retail investor has acquired a 10% interest in the project, with the remaining 90% held by LVS. The companies have exchanged contracts to procure the portfolio from Zurich Assurance Limited for a total consideration of £85 million. The shopping centres are comprise by three freehold and two long-leasehold shopping centres located in Leamington Spa, Cowley, Kilmarnock, Bridlington and Hull at a net initial yield of 9.7%. The total letting area covers 1 million square feet and 205 tenancies which include HS, Boots, Sainsbury's, Poundland and Wilkinson. NewRiver stated: "In line with the Company's core strategy of active asset management, NewRiver has also identified a significant level of value-enhancing opportunities across the portfolio. Subject to completion, NewRiver will receive a projected annual fee of approximately £0.4m for management of the assets being acquired by the Joint Venture."
3 Aug '12
jange
NRR
176.50
No Opinion
Value investing is risky when dealing with small companies such as NewRiver. But that risk is lower with property companies, which can be fairly accurately valued on the basis of net asset value (NAV). NewRiver's shares currently trade 31 per cent below forecast NAV. Such a gap can't last for ever and, meanwhile, there is the yield. For the ultra patient,...........BUT AS ALWAYS DYOR GL
3 Aug '12
jange
NRR
176.50
No Opinion
Of course, such isolated deals are the low-hanging fruit. Most of NewRiver's investments are whole malls, which take longer to turn around, often involving costly refurbishments. For example, the company bought an ugly shopping precinct in Witham, Essex, last November, which it hopes to spruce up and reconfigure to accommodate a supermarket. It has similar plans for four larger centres it bought last August in a transformational £68m deal from Zurich Insurance. Such projects are more complex and riskier. Moreover, left to themselves, valuations for such assets are falling. Bank finance is thin, and equity-rich institutions won't touch assets that need hard management work. NewRiver will have to run just to stand still. Yet the company has a commonsense approach. It only buys centres where rents are already low – that, Mr Lockhart thinks, is the secret to keeping old tenants and attracting new ones. He also sticks as closely as he can to four sectors in which consumer demand is reasonably robust: supermarkets, cheap fashion, health and beauty, and discounters. Three-fifths of income in the Zurich portfolio comes from these sectors. Meanwhile, NewRiver generates lots of cash. Its acquisitions last year had an average rental yield of 8.5 per cent - far higher than the cost of debt. That funds the dividends that currently generate a fat yield (see table). NewRiver is a real-estate investment trust, so it is obliged to distribute 90 per cent of its rental profits.
3 Aug '12
jange
NRR
176.50
No Opinion
This is one for the contrarians. Shares in NewRiver Retail have dropped continually since they were floated in 2009, and the company's field of investment - high-street mini-malls in the UK - could hardly be less fashionable. Yet the plan makes sense and, so far, it has been executed with consistency. We don't know when the share price erosion will stop - but we are confident the shares are already a bargain. NewRiver was set up by property old-timer David Lockhart, whom seasoned investors may remember as the founder of Aim-quoted Halladale. He bailed out at the right time, selling Halladale in early 2007. He then launched NewRiver just as the real estate market was recovering in mid-2009. The idea was to buy down-market shopping arcades, ideally from distressed sellers, turn them around and sell them. That's easier said than done, particularly in a recession that is hitting consumer spending the hardest. But there is evidence that the plan is working. NewRiver's first disposal was of a retail unit in Canterbury, which it acquired in 2010. The company conducted a rent review with a discount department store, Wilkinson, then sold the unit to an institutional investor for a geared profit on cost of 16 per cent. Last October, it sold a unit in Great Yarmouth for £3.38m, having bought it for £2.5m and re-let it almost immediately to Poundland.
29 May '12
jange
nrr
189.00
No Opinion
Acquisitions made during the year totalled £93m at an average initial yield of 8.5%, while assets under management increased to £275m. The firm doubled its final dividend from 4.5p to 9.0p, taking the total dividend for the year to 15p, compared to 5.5p the previous year.
†Share prices shown are taken at time of message posting.
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