RE: Yeah13 Feb 2020 19:51
Never heard a truer word spoken in chat rooms.
Advfn, Market analyst1
'Private investors would be wise to note the following; • Richland Resources is an AIM cash shell with circa £280,000 cash and is valued at £1m; 3.6x cash value. • Nu-Oil and Gas is an AIM cash shell with circa £380,000 cash and is valued at £2m; 5.2x cash value. • Bould Opportunities was an AIM cash shell with circa £800,000 cash and was valued at £2.8m; 3.5x cash value. • Bagir Group is a well-established (59-year old) innovative clothing manufacturer with circa £1.54m cash, £45m annual revenues, and gross margins of 11.9%, is currently valued at £1.6m; 1.05x cash value, and zero consideration given to its considerable design, development and manufacturing business that boasts net assets of £10.98m ($14.2m). So, based on the above, let’s have a look at three, hypothetical, valuation scenarios: 1. As an ‘AIM cash shell’, Bagir would be valued at £5.39m (3.5x cash value) or 1.70p per share. 2. As a company looking to put itself up for sale, and return cash to the shareholders, Bagir’s BOD would assign a base ‘sale price’ of £10.98m (net asset value) or 3.53p per share. 3. As a company within the textiles, apparel and luxury goods industry (sporting an average PE ratio of 21.1x), Bagir’s current PE ratio sits at 0.5x. However, were it to be valued in line with its peers, Bagir would command a market cap in excess of £65m or 20.93p per share. Thus, on all three scenarios, Bagir is profoundly mispriced. And yes, the stock market is not always the perfect arbiter of value. However, for as sure as night follows day, the market will soon move to correct the mispricing. In the meantime, head honcho Micha Ronen, a seasoned turnaround expert, is rapidly restoring value to Bagir and attracting new, high net worth investors.'