Stock Statistics

Friday, February 28, 2014

What should investors know about IPOs?

What is a prospectus?

It is a formal legal document, which provides details about an investment offered to the public. It is important to read the prospectus because it provides information regarding the terms of the securities being offered as well as disclosure regarding the company’s business, financial condition, management and other matters that are key to deciding whether it is a good investment.

The CSE goes through the prospectus before it is released to the public. The CSE takes reasonable care to ensure full and fair disclosure of information in a prospectus. However, it is important to bear in mind that the CSE does not take responsibility for the accuracy of the statements made, opinions expressed or reports included in the prospectus. Moreover, the CSE does not regulate the pricing of the shares.

As per the listing rules enforced by the CSE, a prospectus will entail the following details.

    • Declarations
      Underwriting/minimum subscription
      Corporate governance practices
      Takeover offers
      Financial information
      Information on stated capital
      Profile of the entity
      Basis of allotment of shares
      Particulars of shares for which application is being made.
      Corporate information which include the name of the company, auditors, manager to the issue, etc.
      Objectives of the issue
      A statement that the consideration for which the shares are to be used is for fair reasonable entities
      Cost of the issue
      Information on the current directors
      Management and management agreements
      Taxation
      Litigation, disputes and contingent liabilities
      Reports by experts
      Inspection of documents
      Other requirements

  • What should investors look for in a prospectus?
    General
    Locate the “proposed offering” size, which will describe the amount of money the company plans to raise. Even if you can’t learn the exact price per share right away, you should at least be able to get a sense of how big the overall deal will be. Look in to the dividend policy. Risks Read about the competitive landscape for the company and its risk. Infer if there had been an allotment of shares prior to the IPO and the terms and conditions pertaining to the sale of those shares. At times existing investors could use the IPO to exit the stock by selling it to the public with a capital gain (if the issued price is higher than the price the existing shareholders brought it at). In such an instance the supply side will out do the demand and thereby pushdown the price of the stock. However, the situation will be different if rules are imposed to lock the shares for a certain time period (the directive issued by the SEC on locking). Compare the competitive position of the new issue with the company’s rivals. It’s not unusual for companies to provide data about the size of the market in which they operate and to disclose their market position in a prospectus. Once you learn who the competitors are, research those companies to identify the market leaders. Look for any red flags about the business, including any legal trouble the company may be involved in, which should be listed under the “risk factors” section of a prospectus. The company should also provide a sense of the monetary toll that legal actions can have on the business. Financials View financial tables that disclose recent performance. At the very least, you should be able to see revenues produced over the past few years, expenditure, profits, etc. Categorize the various business channels from which the company generates its revenue. This information should be spelled out plainly in the document. You should be able to identify the source of the bulk of revenue in order to recognize the company’s core businesses. Find out if the company is profitable. This information should be available in the financial table and there should be details of net income. If the company has not yet achieved profitability, there should be some description of when the business is expected to begin earning profits. The prospectus will give out details on the net asset value per share (NAVPS). The NAVPS is calculated by dividing the total net asset value of the fund or company by the number of outstanding shares. It gives signals on the true value of the share. The NAVPS can be compared with the offered price and decided if the stock is overvalued/undervalued. Yet, bear in mind that it is one of the many methods that can be incorporated to calculate the intrinsic value of the stock. Dilution Dillustrates the disparity between the price that investors are paying for shares in the company’s IPO to both the book value of such shares and the average price paid by existing shareholders that include founders, officers and early investors. Management’s discussion and analysis Pay attention to information regarding the directors of the company. Investors should be critical when reading this section. It gives the management an opportunity to discuss the management’s perspective on the company’s financial condition, changes in financial condition and results of operations. This narrative section should provide investors with information to help them understand how and why the company’s financial results have changed over the time period and factors that management thinks might affect the company’s future financial condition or operating results. It is visible that the decision to purchase shares through an IPO is a decision based on precision and caution. All investors might not have the expertise to analyse a prospectus. It is advised that they take the assistance of independent bodies. Should you invest in every profitable IPO? As stated earlier, the post-war IPO boom witnessed investors eagerly investing in all the IPOs. It is not a sustainable strategy for normal investors. Ones investment in an IPO should be in line with the individual’s investment goals. Never forget that it is an ‘offer’ made by the company. It is your call to pick it or leave it. The regulator and the exchange have done their duty of enforcing rules in order to create a regulatory environment required to make informed decisions. It is up to investors to maximize their opportunities within this environment. “The individual investor should act consistently as an investor and not as a speculator” - Ben Graham www.dailymirror.lk

    පෙබරවාරියේ ලංකාවේ උද්ධමනය සියයට 4.4යි

    ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ පාරිභෝගික භාණ්ඩ මිළ ගණන් 2014 පෙබරවාරි මාසය දක්වා මාස 12 ට සියයට 4.4 කින් වර්ධනය වී තිබෙන බව රජයේ සංඛ්‍යා ලේඛණ දෙපාර්තමේන්තුව පවසයි. කොළඹ පාරිභෝගික මිළ දර්ශකය මාසය තුළ සියයට 0.2 කින් ඉහළ ගොස් ඇත. වසරේ සාමාන්‍ය උද්ධමනය 2014 පෙබරවාරියේ දී සියයට 6.0ක් වූ අතර ඊට පෙර මාසයේ දී එය සියයට 6.5ක් ලෙස වාර්තා විය. vimasuma.com

    Thursday, February 27, 2014

    Tokyo Cement in US$ 1m new expansion project

    Leading cement manufacturer, Tokyo Cement rolled out a major expansion project with an investment of US$ one million. The project consists of one million capacity power plant at Trincomalee, a 10 megawatt power biomass plant and purchasing a vessel as well. The project will take place in stages and the manufacturing plant will be commissioned initially as the BOI has instructed them to construct the manufacturing plant first.The manufacturing plant accounts for around 25 percent of the investment and will be commissioned in Financial Year 15 and the biomass power plant component will be five percent of the total investment, Softlogic Equities Research said. At present the company's two existing plants, one Colombo and other in Trincomalee, has a capacity of two million tonnes, and with the addition of a new plant adjacent to the Trincomalee plant its total capacity will go upto three million tonnes per year. The margins to rebound to historical levels of 20 percent from FY 15 onwards on a conservative note and the cost of saving from investing its own vessel is US 4 to 8 per metric tonne. The company is also planning to build a private jetty in Trincomalee as well. The company's gross margin to improve during the Financial Year 14 E with the dip in clinker prices over the year, which was Year on Year 23 percent growth for FY 14 E due to stable clicker prices, currency fluctuations. The reason for their expansion is due to the increase in the cement demand. Adouble digit growth from 2009 to 2013 has been recorded, which is a 10 percent overall growth in the business, research indicated. With these new developments the company has registered a profit of Rs 1.7 billion for nine months and with this 128 percent growth the company will record a Rs 2 billion profit. Tokyo Cement enjoys a market share of 34 percent and with its new business strategies the company is able to reach the North, East and the Central areas in the country. The company being a listed company in the Colombo Stock Exchange has 334 million voting and non voting shares. http://www.dailynews.lk

    Nestle දෙසැම්බර් කාර්තුවේ ලාභ 22% කින් වැටේ

    දේශීය කිරි එකතු කිරීම් ඉහල ගොස් ඇතත්, කිරිපිටි භාවිතය සම්බන්ධ පාරිභෝගික විශ්වාසය තරමක් බිඳ වැටී තිබීම හේතුවෙන් Nestle Lanka සමාගමේ දෙසැම්බර් මාසයෙන් අවසන් වන කාර්තුවේ ලාභය රු.මි. 697ක් දක්වා සියයට 22කින් පහළ වැටී ඇත. සමාගමේ නවතම අතුරු ගිණුම් වාර්තාවන්ට අනුව 2013 දෙසැම්බර් කාර්තුව සඳහා කොටසක ඉපැයුම රුපියල් 12.99ක අගයක පවතින අතර දෙසැම්බර් මාසයෙන් අවසන් වන මාස 9 සඳහා කොටසක ඉපැයුම රුපියල් 61.51ක අගයක පවතී. කෙසේ වෙතත් 2012 දෙසැම්බර් මාසයෙන් අවසන් වන කාර්තුව සඳහා කොටසක ඉපැයුම රුපියල් 16.65ක අගයක පැවති අතර දෙසැම්බර් මාසයෙන් අවසන් වන මාස 9 සඳහා කොටසක ඉපැයුම රුපියල් 54.70ක අගයක පැවතිණි. සමාගමේ 2013 දෙසැම්බර් කාර්තුවේ ආදායම පෙර වසරට සාපේක්ෂව රු.බි. 7.8ක් දක්වා සියයට 8.2 කින් ඉහළ ගොස් ඇති අතර විකුණුම් වියදම රු.බි. 5.2ක් දක්වා සියයට 9.1 කින් ඉහළ ගොස් ඇති බව ද සමාගමේ අතුරු ගිණුම්වලින් හෙළි වේ. මීට අමතරව Nestle Lanka සමාගමේ දෙසැම්බර් කාර්තුවේ දළ ලාභය පෙර වසරට සාපේක්ෂව රු.බි. 2.5ක් දක්වා සියයට 6.3 කින් ඉහල ගොස් ඇති බව ද සමාගමේ ගිණුම් වාර්තා කරයි. www.vimasuma.com