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Buy Close High Income Properties at 18.5p Argues Tom Winnifrith of t1ps.com Top tipster Tom Winnifrith recommended shares in Close High Income Properties to t1ps.com members only two weeks ago at 13.5p. Investors who followed his advice on this penny share tip are now standing on gains of 37%! To get access to 20 share tips per year ( based purely on fundamentals, no technical analysis cobblers), including Tom's newest tip posted yesterday, click here.
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High Income Properties PLC is such a complex beast
most folks don't understand it Or they just ignore
it Via a structure which is too complicated to go into - involving a number of separate vehicles but at least since Christmas only involving one class of share - Close High Income Properties (CHI) but lets call it CHIP owns a portfolio of industrial and secondary office properties across the UK. The portfolio is actively managed by a team at Close Asset Management who do know what they are doing. Having said that the team came a bit unstuck during the credit crunch and on found its borrowings of GBP80 million had left it ( as a result of asset writedowns) in breach of its banking covenants. The shares hit 3p as the City bet that the company was bust. But you know that old saying that if you owe the bank a quid you are in trouble, if you owe the bank a million quid the bank is in trouble? The point is that the properties are mainly let so CHIP can not only cover its interest bills but can actually hope to pay down its debt. So what does CHIP own?
It is a
mix of office space and industrial units outside the
capital but usually close to main roads. The ten
largest investments are:
ValuationMy guess is that property inflation will be 3-5% over the next three years. Right now the discount to NAV is more than 50% which tells you that the market is still discounting the possibility that the banks might pull the plug. That might happen and be aware you could lose everything here. But - as I explained above - I do not think it will. If I am right, as that becomes clearer the shares will instantly be re-rated and as property does start to increase in value (it is already doing so as it happens) then the discount to NAV will narrow sharply. But as the table above shows, the NAV will also start to increase sharply. I am not setting a target price here but a range which is based on a discount to each of my possible three year estimated NAVs. My own belief is that the NAV in three years will be 60p plus in which case the shares are likely to be at least 50p. In a worst case scenario (I do not see yields on CHIP's portfolio heading much above the current low teens so worst case is no AV growth) a NAV of 47.6p should see a share price in the high thirties. In a best case (8%) scenario you could plausibly see a 75p share price and you have a multibagger. You know the risk is with the banks in which case you lose everything. So do not bet the ranch on this one but as a risk reward play I think it very attractive. CHIP is a BUY at 18.5p with a three year target of 40-75p. Key Data
EPIC: CHI
So what are the financials?
Well it
is pretty simple. My numbers are very approximate as
the company is in its closed period so cannot be
specific and rough so assume a margin of error either
way but here goes.. Assume a yield of just over 10%
so income is cGBP12 million. Interest is fixed at
just under 6% so EBTDA is GBP7 million. Staff and
other costs (including hiring letting agents to
"work" empty space) are around GBP3 million which
leaves the company with about GBP3 million a year
going free post tax of GBP1 million.
Now the 8% scenario is not impossible and if it happens my guess is that the banks will relax the covenants and allow CHIP to do as it once did - and pay a dividend. On a 1/3 payout policy you would (if you bought the shares today) be looking at a high single digit yield. That would be a bonus. |
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