Directors have been splashing the cash at Vodafone (LSE: VOD) and Rolls-Royce (LSE: RR). Should follow their lead, and load up on shares?
Vodafone
This FTSE 100 giant has become hard to value since selling its 45% stake in Verizon Wireless for 84bn last year. Vodafone returned a big chunk of the windfall to shareholders, and is currently busy investing heavily to replace the substantial contribution to earnings and cash flow that Verizon had been making.
As a result of this situation, Vodafone currently trades on sky-high multiples of 37.7x trailing earnings of 5.55p, and 50.9x trailing free cash flow of 4.11p. Will Vodafones current share price prove to be expensive, cheap or fair when its investments come to fruition and earnings and free cash flow normalise?
Its hard to say, particularly because the share price since the Verizon sale hasnt simply reflected the markets view of Vodafones future earnings, but also an ebb and flow of speculation about a takeover bid for the company.
Vodafones shares have traded between 185p and 255p since the Verizon sale, reaching the high-water mark in May this year when it looked like a bid from US group Liberty Global could be in the offing. However, there was no bid, but an announcement that the two companies were in early discussions about a possible exchange of selected assets. Last week it was announced that the discussions have terminated.
So, at what price are Vodafones shares worth buying? Well, chief executive Vittorio Colao and finance director Nick Read have strongly signalled the price at which they see value. As soon as the discussions with Liberty Global were terminated, Mr Colao bought 260,000 shares and Mr Read 180,000. Both directors paid 209.05p a share, for a combined outlay of 919,820.
Personally, I find valuing Vodafone too problematic and uncertain at the present time, but, if you have faith in the management, around 209p is the price you might want to look for.
Rolls-Royce
Rolls-Royce is facing challenges of a rather different kind to Vodafone. After a series of profit warnings, the shares of the aerospace giant are down somewhere in the region of 40% since early 2014. The company is facing a number of headwinds, including the low oil price, which is adversely impacting its Marine business, and a transition from older to newer engines, which is temporarily depressing profits in its Civil Aerospace business.
At the price of recent director buys, which Ill come to in a moment, Rolls-Royce trades on 12.7x trailing 12-month earnings of 58p a share. On the face of it, this looks good value, but with lower profits to come in 2016, the forward multiple rises to 16.8x forecast earnings of 44p a share.
Nevertheless, directors have been buying shares recently on a scale not seen at the company in I dont know how long. The recent big purchases are summarised in the table below
Director | Date of purchase | No. of shares | Price per share | Total investment |
Ian Davis (chairman) | 7 October | 15,000 | 739.5p | 110,925 |
David Smith (finance director) | 7 October | 2,684 | 739.5p | 19,848 |
Lewis Booth (senior non-exec) | 7 October | 10,000 | 734.0p | 73,400 |
Irene Dorner (non-exec) | 8 October | 5,000 | 740.1p | 37,005 |
Despite the near-term headwinds, Rolls-Royces order book at the half-year end was up 2.8bn to 76.5bn, which represents 5.5x current annual revenue. Like the directors, I see good long-term value in the shares of this high-quality business, and would view the recent weakness as a buying opportunity.
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G A Chester has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. We Fools don’t all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.