Mountview Estates: Bumper H2 Rescues 2017 Performance And Pushes Potential NAV To £206 Per Share

20 June 2017
By Maynard Paton

Quick update on Mountview Estates (MTVW).

Event: Preliminary results for the twelve months to 31 March 2017 published 15 June 2017

Summary: These figures were somewhat better than I had expected. The regulated-tenancy property trader produced a record level of revenue during the second half to counterbalance a rather disappointing first half, and the end result was not far off the very strong numbers delivered for the previous year. I was also pleased net asset value advanced further to a new high while borrowings were reduced to a fresh low. My updated sums now point to a possible NAV of £206 per share based on the firm’s previous gains on sold properties. I continue to hold.

Price: £110
Shares in issue: 3,899,014
Market capitalisation: £429m
Click here for all my previous MTVW posts

Results:

My thoughts:

* Record H2 revenue rescues full-year performance

MTVW described these results as “very sound” and they were better than I had expected.

As you might recall, MTVW’s interims issued last November were somewhat disappointing following increases to the rate of stamp duty.

Back then, MTVW reported first half-revenue and operating profit down 21% and 16% respectively.

However, the group clearly enjoyed a strong second half to be able to declare both full-year revenue and profit down only 2%. These annual figures were in fact MTVW’s second-best ever:

Year to 31 March20132014201520162017
Net asset value (£k)243,972265,591287,661311,752336,279
Net asset value per share (p)6,2736,8127,3787,9968,625
Revenue (£k)56,64666,15071,33179,76578,232
Gross profit (£k)33,74038,59546,71053,01452,056
Operating profit (£k)30,06534,55341,65547,86646,825
Net valuation gain (£k)2,6023,185571,504(1,020)
Finance income (£k)(4,302)(2,344)(1,736)(1,179)(819)
Other items (£k)563--197-
Pre-tax profit (£k)28,92835,39439,97648,38844,986
Earnings per share (p)568730816993929
Dividend per share (p)175200275300300

MTVW’s RNS results narrative was not as terse as usual — this year the chief exec’s statement ran to four paragraphs.

This was probably the most interesting part of the text:

“With continuing uncertainties in the macro-economic situation we must rely upon our own sound strategies to ensure further prosperity for the Company.  We keep our gearing low and are thus able to take advantage of good purchasing opportunities when they occur.  We have made more purchases in the financial year ended 31 March 2017 compared with the previous year and with strong sales revenue since 1 October 2016 we have come close to matching the outstanding results of year ended 31 March 2016.”

There should be much more detail about MTVW’s 2017 progress within the forthcoming annual report.

Here is the first-half/second-half split:

H1 2016H2 2016FY 2016H1 2017H2 2017FY 2017
Revenue (£k)42,76936,99679,75534,04744,18578,232
Gross profit (£k)28,32124,69353,01424,13927,91752,056

H2 revenue of £44m is a new six-month record while the accompanying H2 £28m gross profit almost equals the freak result of H1 2016.

True, the gross margin during H2 was 63% and lower than the extraordinary 71% reported during H1. Nevertheless, the full-year rate was 66.5% and equal to the record set during the previous year:

Year to 31 March20132014201520162017
Gross margin (%)59.658.365.566.566.5

A 66.5% gross margin is equivalent to MTVW selling a property for a 199% gain. For some perspective, the group has enjoyed an average 166% gain during the prior ten years.

* Gearing remains at its lowest level for at least 20 years

Although MTVW’s full-year profit was not the highest the firm has ever recorded, it did add £24m to the balance sheet to help take net asset value (NAV) to a fresh £336m/£86 per share peak.

Something worth noting is that MTVW’s total borrowings decreased by £10m to £32m during the year — and they now stand at their lowest level since 2007.

Looking back, 2007 was a good time for property companies to be light on debt.

In fact, I speculated in November that MTVW’s low debts could be due to its veteran chief exec — who has been in charge since 1990 — sensing that now may not be the best time to be going all out buying stock.

That being said… my rough sums indicate MTVW pumped a significant £22m into fresh stock during H2 versus about £12m for H1 and £13m for H2 of 2016.

So perhaps we aren’t due a major housing downturn after all.

Indeed, I wonder if MTVW is now able to pick up some bargains as other landlords shy away from property because of the higher levels of stamp duty.

This next table compares the value of MTVW’s trading properties to the group’s net debt:

Year to 31 March20132014201520162017
Trading properties (£k)316,626321,323323,020334,108347,380
Net debt (£k)(92,477)(76,751)(59,538)(41,619)(31,217)

You can see net debt falling considerably and, representing the equivalent of 9% of the firm’s trading properties, is at its lowest relative level for at least 20 years.

In the past, this ratio has often topped 30% and suggests MTVW could have the current capacity to borrow another £60m.

* Niggly maintained dividend and unusual investment-property loss

Two minor points from these results surprised me.

First the dividend — it was held at 300p per share.

Given profit for the full year was down only 2% and borrowings are historically low, I did think a small lift to the payout could have been justified.

Second, MTVW’s standard investment properties — a group of homes located in Belsize Park, London — lost £1m of their collective fair value during the year.

It’s unusual for this particular collection of properties to lose any value. Their aggregate valuation has declined only once before — during 2009 — since MTVW acquired them in 1999.

The Belsize Park portfolio is now in the books at £29m.

Valuation

These results revealed trading properties with a £337m book value, which could yield £924m if they were all sold at the average margin enjoyed during the last ten years.

Taxing the resultant gain at 19% and then adding on the Belsize Park investments of £29m and then subtracting net debt of £31m and other liabilities of £9m, I arrive at a possible net asset value (NAV) of £803m or £206 a share.

That compares to the £86 per share NAV reported by MTVW on its usual historical-cost basis.

With the share price at £110, clearly there remains some upside potential here.

But as always, the great unknown is how long it will take MTVW to sell all of its properties to realise that potential £206 per share NAV guess.

For a more immediate valuation, there is the £666m figure assigned to MTVW’s trading stock by an independent assessment as at September 2014.

This £666m valuation is becoming a little stale now, but for what it is worth, adjusting this valuation for tax, the investment properties and debt gives an NAV of £151 a share.

As a reminder, this £151 estimate is based on MTVW’s properties being in their current ‘regulated tenancy’ state — so does not include any upside potential for when the property is vacated and can be sold at market value.

And as before, this £151 estimate does not include any house-price gains experienced since the September 2014 assessment, and nor does it adjust for any properties bought or sold thereafter.

Meanwhile, the maintained 300p per share dividend provides a yield of 2.7% at £110.

Maynard Paton

Disclosure: Maynard owns shares in Mountview Estates.

2 thoughts on “Mountview Estates: Bumper H2 Rescues 2017 Performance And Pushes Potential NAV To £206 Per Share”

  1. Mountview Estates (MTVW)

    Publication of 2017 annual report

    Here are the points of interest:

    1) Additional board commentary

    The terse chief exec’s narrative within the results RNS was expanded upon slightly within the annual report by the chairman.

    He seems to be cautious about the wider economy:


    2) Properties bought and sold

    MTVW sold 27 fewer properties during 2017 than 2016, but the average sale price agreed was up 12%:

    For context, the average sale price agreed during 2009 — the first year MTVW disclosed the figure — was £161k. It has advanced every year since.

    This is what MTVW purchased during 2017:

    Average price paid was £255k.

    3) Director pay

    Pay consultants were called in last year to assess the board’s wages:

    Not surprisingly, the consultants determined their clients were underpaid. The chief exec received a nice 32% wage hike, to £500k.

    To be fair, the chief exec’s pay has compounded at the same c13% rate as the dividend during the last 5 years. I would not say the chief exec is underpaid with a £1m take-home pot last year, but it’s hard to argue with the group’s track record since he took charge during 1990.

    4) Staff pay

    It appears the pay consultants’ remit did not extend to the rest of the workforce:

    The average cost of the 27 employees (including directors) stayed at (a lofty) £139k.

    5) Forthcoming accounting changes

    This is an interesting snippet:

    It seems to me some properties currently carried as stock and valued at cost could in time be designated investment properties by IAS40 and therefore carried at market value.

    The change could provide extra evidence of how undervalued some of MTVW’s properties are — although the numbers of properties potentially involved is not known.

    6) Expected stock disposals for 2018

    MTVW’s annual report gives this useful snippet:

    Last year the prediction was £20.5m and in the event stock of £20.3m was sold. So the note suggests the financial performance during 2018 could be similar to that of 2017, which I can accept.

    7) Estate valuation exercise unlikely to be repeated very soon

    MTVW repeated its stance about revaluing its property estate (the properties are held at cost on the balance sheet):

    I would like to think another Allsop valuation could occur during 2019, five years after the initial 2014 exercise.

    8) Indication of ‘hidden’ property value

    This is another useful snippet. It shows properties given a £38.5m valuation by the Allsop exercise in 2014 were sold during 2017 for £57.2m — a 48% premium:

    Note that the Allsop valuations of 2014 were 2.1x greater than the then book value of the properties. Based on the small sample of properties sold during 2017, it appears today’s market values are 2.1 x 1.48 = 3.1x the value stated in the books.

    My very rough sums suggest MTVW’s book value could be £212 per share based on this 3.1x multiplier (the sums are complicated and adjust for properties sold and bought since September 2014, the group’s investment properties, debt and tax).

    9) Trade receivables

    I love this. MTVW records revenue of £78m for the year and outstanding trade receivables are only £296k. Clearly everyone pays on time:

    10) Interest rates

    I see MTVW’s debt costs were trimmed during the year:

    The facilities are due to be rolled over during the next few years and I hope the cost of borrowing can remain low.

    Maynard

  2. Mountview Estates (MTVW)

    Result of Annual General Meeting

    It appears the appointment of pay consultants and the subsequent advances to the executives’ pay (see point 3 in my Comment above) has not gone down well with certain shareholders.

    Shareholders owning an aggregate c828k shares — representing 33% of the total votes cast and 21% of the total share count — voted against the approval of the Remuneration Report and Remuneration Policy (resolutions 4 and 5).

    A similar proportion voted against the re-appointment of the current auditors (resolution 6).

    Plus, resolution 8 — the reappointment of one of the non-execs — was not passed by shareholders. Voting for this resolution was limited to shareholders outside of the Sinclair concert party.

    The 2017 annual report disclosed the following holdings that I believe are outside of the Sinclair concert party:

    Mr C Murphy 117,143 shares (3.0%)
    Mrs MA Murphy 596,745 shares (15.3%)
    Talisman Dynamic Master Fund 161,536 (4.1%)

    Those three holdings come to 875k shares, so about 48k more than the 828k that voted against the resolutions.

    I would guess that the Murphys plus certain others are behind the dissident voting. When I attended MTVW’s AGM back in 2014, Mr G Murphy (husband of 15% shareholder Mrs MA Murphy, who in turn is the sister of MTVW’s chief exec) was a vocal critic of the board.

    Maynard

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