Doubts that US rally will continue (page 2 of 2)
- Tuesday, August 19 - 2003 at 14:10
European equities
The DJ EUR Stoxx 50 closed the week 3.6% higher at 2548.86 breaking out of the trading range which supports further upside in the short-term.
,,h Most of the indices reached their highest levels since the beginning of the year.
,,h We added two new stocks for investors with a higher risk profile: MAN and Siemens
Most of the European indices managed to reach their best levels since the beginning of the year. The DJ Stoxx 50 closed on Friday at 2548.86, which on a technical basis supports further upside in the short-term.
However, the economic data released this week shows that the Euro zone is on the verge of recession with Germany joining Italy, Switzerland and the Netherlands in reporting 2Q GDP figures reflecting that these countries slipped into a technical recession.
Euroland 2Q GDP was unchanged resulting in a 0.4% increase yoy. But with equity markets having turned more upbeat in the 2Q and confidence indicators improving in July, it could indicate that the economies have their worst months behind them, which could be reflected in the recent positive market movements.
Germany remains one of the European economies with the biggest reform potential. Besides the anticipation of tax cuts worth EUR 15.6bn into 2004, labour market and corporate reforms will be part of the plan. We added last week two stocks to our recommendation list as a play on such an anticipated recovery.
Siemens (SIE GY; EUR 52.50) ˇV a diversified manufacturing company with interests in Information & Communication technology, Medical Appliances, Automation and Power generation - and Man (MAN GY; EUR 19.77) ˇV an engineering group with exposure to commercial vehicles such as trucks and buses, printing machines and diesel engines have around a 35% sales exposure to Germany.
In addition we see the two as a restructuring play with some of their business already showing successful restructuring and some of their divisions having still further cost cutting potential. Both of them are also a play on capex recovery in Europe in 04/05.
Siemens shows good earnings momentum and with a cash flow yield of 11.5% for 03 and 10.4% for 04 looking the most promising of the European tech hardware. Despite the run-up in the shares, valuation is still reasonable with the shares trading on 15x and 12x 04 and 05 PE respectively, which is in line with their median of the last 10 years.
Man trades at a substantial discount to the European machinery sector with EV/EBITDA 7.8 vs 9.5 and PE of 8.3x vs 10.9x. In addition, Man comes with an indicative dividend yield of 3%. Man reported 2Q figures last week and they were in line with expectations.
Net income was even stronger than expected due to restructuring benefits in the truck and bus units. Printing machinery was still weak with a loss of EUR 10m. The positive effect on the share price came on the back of the good news on the truck business turnaround and better full-year guidance. The management expects to achieve ˇ§an overall improvement in pre-tax earnings for the 2003 financial yearˇ¨ compared with EUR 219m in 2002.
We would recommend these two stocks only for investors with a higher risk appetite and with a long-term horizon.
Axa (CS FP; EUR 15.53), ING (INGA NA; EUR 18.63), Allianz (ALV GY; EUR 85.35) and UBS (UBSN VX; CHF 79.05) all surprised the market on the positive side when reporting 2Q results last week. Especially in the case of UBS we would like to point out that the second quarter was nearly perfect for fixed income as well as the increase in equity trading.
However, going forward the pattern has changed and although a potential recovery in M&A and equity revenue could make up part of it, markets should not expect the same boost from the fixed income side in the upcoming quarters for investment banks.
The European reporting season slowly comes to an end. There are some further big caps to report such as Nestle (NESN VX: CHF 289) this Wednesday, but overall the results make a pretty positive reading. On balance, there have been more positive than negative reporting surprises since May, which using as simple breadth of measure, equates to roughly 35% net positive surprises.
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