Monday, December 01st, 2008

Hot Topics : $8 Trillion in Bailouts | Biotech Stock Bargains | The Greater Depression | Thanksgiving Turkeys

Burberry, a Passport to Profits

May 28th, 2008 | By Theo Casey | Category: International Investing

OK, this is very much a “work-in-progress”, but here’s a selection of some of the stocks we’ve been looking at lately. All three are UK based and UK listed. But each of them has an ‘international flavour’ — just what you need in your portfolio right now!

Earnings season is, for the most part, developing into a credit crunch autopsy. It will take a heavy flow of good news and high trading volumes to breathe some life into the FTSE 350. Sadly this hasn’t materialised yet. In retail it’s particularly gloomy.

OK, this is very much a “work-in-progress”, but here’s a selection of some of the stocks we’ve been looking at lately. All three are UK based and UK listed. But each of them has an ‘international flavour’ — just what you need in your portfolio right now!

Earnings season is, for the most part, developing into a credit crunch autopsy. It will take a heavy flow of good news and high trading volumes to breathe some life into the FTSE 350. Sadly this hasn’t materialised yet. In retail it’s particularly gloomy.

Window on the world

We investors tend to get bogged down with stock stories closer to home. But zoom out and you will see opportunities all-over-the-shop, not just in retail.

Savvy stock pickers need to think global. By most estimates, real growth in trade this year will come from emerging markets. China, Russia, India… Our stock market is a window on the world, and this is where we will be focusing its energies as developed nations look a little tired.

Here are two other firms whose earnings results show good international exposure:

AVEVA (LSE: AVV)

Computer design firm AVEVA doubled its full year profits to beat analysts’ forecasts. Profits were £45m for the year ended 31st March, up from £24.7m the year before. Sales rose 34% for the period to £127.6m.

The group, which designs IT systems to help build oil rigs, ships and energy plants, said demand from these industries remains strong and is set to grow.

“Looking ahead, the board believes the outlook for the current year remains very positive for the business. The Oil and Gas, Power and Marine industries remain buoyant, driven by high commodity prices and strong underlying end-user demand,” said a spokesman.

Broker Cazenove reiterated its confidence in material upgrades for later in the year. “Today’s results demonstrate management’s ability to deliver profitable growth and demand levels that show no current signs of moderation,” it said.

Electrocomponents (LSE: ECM)

Distributor Electrocomponents reported a jump in profits and strong international performance and internet presence driving sales growth. Profits for the year to 31st March rose 9% to £95.4m from £87.2m in 2007. China led the way, with revenues up 35%.

North American and Asia Pacific revenues grew at 10% and 15% respectively. The Chinese market was the star performer, with revenues up 35%. UK revenues by comparison crawled 1% higher.

“This has been a successful year for the business with double digit headline profit growth, strong cash flow delivery, completion of the EBS implementation in Europe and the £10m cost reduction target being met,” said Ian Mason, group chief executive officer.

In the first eight weeks of the new financial year sales are up by about 2% year-on-year. This, however, masks a 2% decline in UK revenues; the international business has grown revenue by around 5%.

Just because the UK economy is struggling, doesn’t mean all UK businesses are. For superior returns, you want to identify companies with established profit streams deriving from growing, foreign markets.

Theo CaseySource: Burberry, a Passport to Profits


AdvertisementWall Street Lies EXPOSED!

They've led you to believe that investors who want outsized gains must take on ridiculous risks.

Click here to learn how a Small One-Time Investment Could Grow Until It's Larger Than All of Your Other Investments Combined.



More on this topic (What's this?)
Insider Report on the Credit Crunch
Credit Crunch Hitting the Oil Patch
Read more on 2007 Credit Crunch at Wikinvest
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

By Theo Casey

Related Articles



About the Author

Theo Casey is a contributing author to Fleet Street Daily.

See All Posts by This Author

Fleet Street Daily

The financial markets are currently going through their most turbulent period in years. The credit crunch continues to bite… the dollar is collapsing (and taking the pound down with it)… and a UK recession seems an inevitability. Commodities prices are going haywire… Asia's on the rise... there's a lot for investors to keep on top of! And it's changing every day! That's where the Fleet Street Daily comes in. A brand new, 100% FREE service that keeps you plugged into the financial stories that really matter.

See All Posts from This Publication