The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksDrax Share News (DRX)

Share Price Information for Drax (DRX)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 507.50
Bid: 507.50
Ask: 508.50
Change: 8.30 (1.66%)
Spread: 1.00 (0.197%)
Open: 505.00
High: 514.50
Low: 504.00
Prev. Close: 499.20
DRX Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Broker tips: Drax, Croda, Babcock

Thu, 28th Sep 2023 11:03

(Sharecast News) - JPMorgan Cazenove cut its price target on Drax on Thursday to 740p from 830p as it lowered its valuation for the stock.

JPM noted that since the middle of August, the shares are down 27% as investors have become more concerned about the company's use of working capital management tools, including receivables factoring. "We believe that this reaction is overdone," it said.

"We acknowledge that we previously underestimated the company's use of these tools, which has increased, particularly in 2022, and we agree that the cost of using these tools has increased (as has the cost of financing in virtually all markets).

"Still, we believe that the market is being too harsh in the way it values the use of these facilities, particularly as it relates to factoring receivables. We have lowered our Drax valuation, incorporating what we see as a conservative valuation adjustment for Drax's use of working capital management, as well as our view of conservative assumptions around profitability and value creation."

The bank now includes a £171m (44p) adjustment in its valuation for Drax's use of receivables factoring, which it said is conservative yet still below the £400m+ it believes bearish investors view as the right figure.

JPM maintained its 'overweight' rating on the shares.

Deutsche Bank slashed its target price for Croda from 5,600p to 5,200p and maintained a 'hold' recommendation, saying it expects disappointing guidance from the speciality chemicals company at its next update.

"We have updated our model prior to the Q3 trading update which we expect to be announced within the next two weeks," Deutsche Bank said.

Analysts expect management to "narrow down if not slightly lower" the guidance range for full-year underlying pre-tax profit, previously forecast at between £370m and £400m.

Deutsche Bank had already sat below guidance with a £365m estimate and so have left it unchanged. However, forecasts for the next two years have been cut by 7-8% "mainly due to lower expected earnings in Life Sciences (due to lower lipid sales/earnings)", the bank said.

The stock trades at 23 times forward earnings after derating materially - shares are down nearly 30% since the start of 2023 - but Deutsche Bank still doesn't see any upside.

"With ongoing volume volatility in Consumer Care and a lack of visibility, we struggle to see value even at the current multiple. Hold."

Defence and civil specialist equipment manufacturer Babcock reported an "encouraging" start to the financial year, though that wasn't enough for analysts at Liberum to change their neutral stance on the stock.

The broker reiterated its 'hold' rating and 400p target price, slightly under Thursday morning's level of 405.76p, up 4.5% on the day.

Liberum said the price-to-earnings ratio of 9.8 might look cheap compared to historic multiples but it regards the valuation as "fair value given limited revenue growth hand better opportunities elsewhere".

In an update for the first five months of the year ahead of its annual general meeting, the company hailed good organic revenue growth, an improved operational performance and higher cash flow compared to the same period a year earlier.

Liberum said the statement, which didn't include any financial details, suggests trading was in line with forecasts, with the broker predicting first-half organic revenue growth of around 10% and fully diluted earnings per share (FD EPS) of 19.5p, compared with 6.7p the year before.

"We maintain our FY24 and FY25 FD EPS estimates, noting potential upside if Nuclear Infrastructure continues to track ahead."

More News
17 Nov 2022 15:08

UK power companies up after budget keeps energy cap to 2024

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - London-listed power generators shares rose on Thursday after British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said the average household energy bill would rise and kept a price cap until 2024.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 13:49

Britain targets energy efficiency with consumption cut goal

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Finance minister Jeremy Hunt said he wanted Britain to cut its energy usage by 15% by 2030 to help reduce bills, catching up with European neighbours which are already prioritising measures to counter spiralling prices.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 13:01

UK's Hunt says average household energy bill to rise, keeps cap

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said the cost of an average household energy bill would rise to 3,000 pounds ($3,555) a year from April after he reined in the scale of support for gas and electricity, but kept a price cap until 2024.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 12:52

Sterling, UK bond prices edge lower as Hunt outlines tough budget

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - Sterling and government bond prices fell on Thursday after British finance minister Jeremy Hunt announced a string of tax increases and tighter public spending in a tough budget plan.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 12:42

Energy firms resilient as Hunt announces new windfall taxes

(Sharecast News) - Shares in energy firms initially slumped on Thursday after Chancellor Jeremy Hunt outlined new windfall taxes in his Autumn Statement, but prices quickly recovered.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 12:28

UK's Hunt says average household energy bill to rise, keeps cap

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said the cost of an average household energy bill would rise to 3,000 pounds ($3,554.70) a year from April after he reined in his predecessor's vast support package for gas and electricity bills.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 12:17

Britain's Hunt sets out plans to reduce energy consumption by 15% by 2030

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt on Thursday said he wanted the country to become more energy efficient, outlining a new goal to reduce energy consumption by 15% over the next eight years to save money.

Read more
17 Nov 2022 11:48

UK's Hunt increases energy windfall tax

LONDON, Nov 17 (Reuters) - British finance minister Jeremy Hunt said on Thursday the government would increase a windfall tax on oil and gas firms and extend it to power generation firms as he seeks to raise money to plug a hole in the public finances.

Read more
15 Nov 2022 21:08

U.S. stocks bob and weave, end higher

Main U.S. indexes end higher: Nasdaq leads

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 19:26

Walmart gives bright start to retail results this week

Main U.S. indexes advance: Nasdaq up ~1.6%

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 17:58

JPM warns recession risks persist despite market euphoria

Main U.S. indexes advance: Nasdaq up ~2.1%

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 17:24

Watch out what the VIX says after CPI, PPI data

Main U.S. indexes advance: Nasdaq up ~2.3%

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 16:48

First the downshift, then the pause, then the pivot, then the party

Main U.S. indexes advance: Nasdaq up ~2.5%

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 16:00

UK power generators: sell the news after budget?

Main U.S. indexes advance, but off best levels: Nasdaq up ~2.1%

*

Read more
15 Nov 2022 10:59

Hunt mulling fresh windfall tax on power generators - report

(Sharecast News) - The chancellor Jeremy Hunt is considering introducing a 40% windfall tax on the "excess returns" of electricity generators as part of this week's Autumn Statement, it was reported on Tuesday.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.