A Morningstar stock screener reveals a cross-section of companies with competitive advantages that are trading at material discounts.
Takeover target Link Administration, funeral home operator InvoCare and Australian Pharmaceutical Industries head a list of stocks trading at discounts of up to 30 per cent and in most cases a competitive edge of a decade.
Eighteen companies under Morningstar coverage are trading at discounts of between 10 and 30 per cent, with mostly “medium” uncertainty ratings, a Morningstar Premium stock screener reveals.
More than half the names on the list have narrow moats, which implies a ten-year competitive advantage. Two names have wide moats—or 20-year competitive advantage: InvoCare and pallet maker Brambles.
Following is a snapshot of some of the companies mentioned. As always, we invite you to click on the links to get a fuller picture of Morningstar analysts' take on the pros and cons of each.
Source: Morningstar Premium. Data as at 3pm, 14 October 2020.
Most discounted
Link Administration is one of the three Technology names on the list. It has created a narrow economic moat in the Australian and UK financial services administration sectors via its leading positions in fund administration and share registry services. Client retention rates exceed 90 per cent in both markets.
Link surged 25 per cent last week on news that it had received a conditional, non-binding indicative proposal from a consortium comprising Pacific Equity Partners, Carlyle Group and their affiliates to acquire all of Link. Morningstar equity analyst Gareth James, who foresaw the takeover, says the $5.20 offer undervalues the company. “The offer is well below our $7.70 fair value estimate, meaning we’re unlikely to recommend shareholders accept,” James says. “Although the offer is at a 30 per cent premium to the last closing price before the offer was announced, the shares are still 13 per cent below where they were at the start of 2020.”
Wide moat
InvoCare is the largest funeral, cemetery, and crematorium operator in Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore. InvoCare owns a portfolio of 60 brands, including three national Australian brands: White Lady, Simplicity Funerals, and Value Cremations. 2020 has been a challenging year for InvoCare. Social distancing and an increased focus on sanitation amid the covid-19 pandemic has led to a benign flu season and a lower death rate. However, Morningstar analyst Mark Taylor expects InvoCare to gradually increase its market share and sales to grow at a mid-single-digit pace for the next five years. “Over the longer term, we expect the ageing and growing population to boost case volumes,” says Taylor. ABS data suggests this is likely to accelerate after fiscal 2024, peaking at between 2 and 3 per cent by 2032. “In our opinion, InvoCare is well positioned to capitalise on this growth, given its dominant position in the domestic market and its wide economic moat,” Taylor says.
Australian Pharmaceutical Industries is the franchisor of the Priceline Pharmacy network and directly owns and operates stand-alone Priceline stores which sell personal care and beauty products. In an effort to diversify away from the highly regulated low growth and low margin pharma distribution business which contributes 75 per cent of revenue, API is growing a consumer brands portfolio and also recently acquired Clear Skincare, a skin treatment chain. API carries a low uncertainty as Morningstar expects no anticipate any regulatory changes in the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme or pharmacy ownership legislation.
Cross-section of sectors
Telstra, Australia’s leading telco provider,rose almost 4 per cent during the compilation of this survey, butitremains materially discounted, according to the valuation of Morningstar equity analyst Brian Han.The nbn’s $3.5 billion upgrade last month will affect Telstra and its rivals but it’s too early to quantify, Han says. Telstra gained 3.96 per cent to $2.89 on Monday after chair John Mullen told its annual general meeting the board wants to ensure investors' payout is not cut. The board is prepared to waiver some rules to maintain the full-year 16 cents per share payout.
Telstra generates around 40 per cent of group operating earnings from the mobile telephony division. Its mobile subscriber base has ballooned from 12.2 million in fiscal 2011 (40 per cent market share) to 18.8 million in fiscal 2020 (44 per cent share). “The growth has been driven by the superior quality, speed and coverage of its mobile network,” Han says, “one that is capable of offering triple plays (mobile, data, audio-visual media), further enhancing its competitive positioning compared with peers.”
FINANCIAL SERVICES
Financial Services companies account for almost a third of the names on the list. And within that sector, three asset managers appear. In order of biggest discount to Morningstar fair value estimate, they are:
Perpetual,
Pendal Group and
Platinum Asset Management.
Perpetual recorded a sluggish fiscal 2020, but Morningstar director of equity research Adam Fleck says investors should look past that as the future holds the prospect of stronger earnings growth. Key to this will be a couple of acquisitions it made this year: the 75 per cent acquisition of US asset manager Barrow Hanley will help ward off index funds, while the acquisition of Trillium boosts its ESG credentials. It’s also worth noting that Perpetual is the biggest shareholder in Link Administration.
Insurers
NIB Holdings and
Medibank Private round out the names within Financial Services.
TECHNOLOGY
Alongside Link Administration, two other narrow-moat-rated Technology sector names appear:
Computershare and
IRESS. Computershare has grown via global acquisition to become the world's leading provider of share registry services, which constitutes about 60 per cent of earnings.
Morningstar’s James says cost-cutting measures will help Computershare increase its pre-tax earnings from 22 per cent in fiscal 2020 to 33 per cent by fiscal 2030.
“The capital-light business model should enable regular dividends, the elimination of net debt within the decade, and a return on invested capital that exceeds the weighted average cost of capital for the foreseeable future,” James says. “The recurring and defensive nature of earnings influences our medium fair value uncertainty rating.”
HEALTHCARE
In Healthcare, the other name alongside API is pharmaceutical distributor, wholesaler and pharmacy franchisor
Sigma Healthcare. It is also the only name on the list that carries a Poor stewardship rating. The company has been slower than peers to diversify itself away from the low margin, low growth pharmaceutical distribution business, says Morningstar’s Han. On a brighter note, however, covid-19 has had little impact, highlighting the inelasticity of demand for health products. “The firm expects a recovering EBITDA to better fiscal 2019 levels by fiscal 2023 and we share similar optimism,” Han says. He retains his long-term estimates and forecasts a five-year EBITDA compound annual growth rate of 15 per cent.
REAL ESTATE
Two real estate investment trusts make the cut. One is
Charter Hall Social Infrastructure REIT, which is trading at a 21 per cent discount to fair value. The other is
GPT Group, which is Australia’s oldest listed property trust (1971). GPT remains dominated by retail malls that generate about a third of its revenue, and another quarter from office.
However, the group’s office portfolio is not as exposed to the immediate threat from the coronavirus, says Morningstar analyst Alex Prineas. “There has been very little new office supply in the Sydney or Melbourne central business district in the past five years so 2020 began with very tight supply, which we anticipate will loosen.”
UTILITIES
Among the Utilities sector, two names feature:
AGL Energy and
Spark Infrastructure Group.
Morningstar equity analyst Adrian Atkins recently trimmed his valuation for AGL on lower expected wholesale electricity prices. However, he still considers the low-cost energy producer and retailer to be attractively priced with a solid balance sheet and dividend potential.
“Based on the current share price, we forecast an average dividend yield of 5.5 per cent over the next five years,” Atkins says, “with solid longer-term dividend growth as earnings recover. Dividends should be mostly franked except for during the next two years as historical tax losses reduce tax payments.”
Spark Infrastructure owns 49 per cent interests in three electricity distribution companies: Powercor, servicing western suburbs of Melbourne; CitiPower, servicing Melbourne's inner suburbs and central business district; and SA Power Networks, servicing South Australia. Powercor and CitiPower are collectively known as Victoria Power Networks. It also owns 15 per cent of TransGrid, the main electricity transmission network in NSW. Atkins says that while Spark pays healthy distributions it is heavily regulated and faces a tough outlook as the Australian Energy Regulator seeks ways to reduce utility bills.