I see so many small-time tyre shops around carrying all kinds of brands. Clearly this is a competitive business. Margins are not high. It\'s a volume game ..... What countries present high growth opportunities for Stamford? What could be more interesting is the real-estate assets of Stamford. They are recognised at book value - what they were bought for many years ago. If we know their RNAV, the truer value of the business would be apparent. Certainly much more than the current stock price of 25.5 cents
After the disposal of stake in SRITP, the nta goes up to 50.4 cents a share, according to its press release. The stock is not heading up, so trades at a big discount. I was just thinking about its ownership of warehouses, tyre centres, service centres, etc. These are recognised at book value -- historical cost -- on its books, and surely the NTA would be much higher if based on the current market values of those real estate assets. The challenge for Stamford is to unlock the value . There seems to be only 1 way -- divest some of the assets. Irony is, that would shrink the business volume.
Stamford Tyres shares are now priced at 33.5 cents by the market. Trading cum dividend of 1.5 cent a share.
It is still a substantial discount to the NTA which I reckon is in the 60s. The NTA will creep up in the years to come from the profitable tyre business. The real NTA will get boosted by jumps in the value of the industrial properties Stamford owns. All in, an undervalued gem