guru267 wrote:Jamani wrote: With mining prospects set this high, I am thinking/asking why sell KK at a price less than KES 25?
I think KK has the lowest net profit margin on the NSE of about 1.5%
This means that it can so easily make a Huge loss if anything small went wrong their costs or revenues.. (check 2009)
Basically investors are less interested in companies with very low profit margins!
I think if the H1 results come in before the takeover announcement KK share price will be HAMMERED! Hence the reason for their delay.
Not quite.
1) KK has indicated the 'loss' for 1H 2012. It's in the annual report. In B&W. In the Chairman's statement. In the Comprehensive Income. In the Financial Statements under Derivatives. Did Puma know? Yes. The Puma announcement came AFTER the AGM.
2) The NPM in the oil industry are low. They have always been low. Why? Oil firms deal in a commodity that is (very) high volume. KK in particular deals in 'wholesale' trading which has low margins but HUGE volumes. This is a cash (or short-term) business (for the bulk of the sales) so very low level of write-offs. KK's losses in 1H 2012 were from forwards on USD for 4 months [as explained during the AGM].
KK (& other OMCs) constantly turnover (inventory turns/cycles) their inventory. The greater the cycles, the higher the profits without using additional financing/cash/funds. More firms need to do so. Lower margins, higher turnover of stocks = greater profits.
KK is a major importer whose crude/fuel is already pre-sold based on the MoE allocation. KK ships it in, gets paid then releases it. There are penalties for not buying your allocation from KK. A few small OMCs failing to buy from KK doesn't matter since KK can re-sell it to other OMCs, export to EAC or sell through its stations. Think how much (extra) volume Deal Poa pushes.
A firm that sells a low volume item e.g. turbines may sell 2 a year thus the NPM is 'higher' to account for no sales in a particular year, financing costs, storage costs, obsolescence, etc.
Greedy when others are fearful. Very fearful when others are greedy - to paraphrase Warren Buffett