Today I am looking at whether Royal Mail Group’s (LSE: RMG) earnings prospects for 2014 are too good to pass up.
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Make no mistake: Royal Mail’s letters business is on borrowed time, as the effect of evolving technologies on the way people communicate makes the centuries-old form of communication more and more redundant. Revenues from letters fell 4% during March-September as volumes dropped 6%, and the writing is on the wall for what once was the cornerstone of the mail service.
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However, investors should be buoyed by changes to the way we use Royal Mail and the growth opportunities therein, particularly from surging growth in online retailing. Indeed, latest IMRG Capgemini e-Retail Sales Index numbers showed online sales rise 16% in the year to October. Royal Mail is on the frontline to enjoy fantastic growth here, and the carrier saw parcel revenues increase 9% in the six month period.
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Further afield, the firm is also witnessing strong revenues expansion in Europe, and its Global Logistics Systems (GLS) division punched a 6% turnover improvement during March-September. GLS operates in almost 40 countries across the continent, and planned expansion here should facilitate further growth.
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Elsewhere, news of an agreement with the Communication Workers Union over pay and conditions yesterday has all-but removed the threat of industrial action in the near future, a critical development for the new year. Although the new deal — which includes a 9% pay rise over three years, safeguarded working conditions and extra pension payments — does not include a no-strike agreement, the benefits and protections on offer greatly reduce the chances of a mass walkout.
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This development helps to undergird earnings projections for the short-to-medium term, and City brokers expect earnings to advance 6% during the year ending March 2014, to 35.4p per share, before rocketing 30% in the following 12-month period to 45.9p.
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These projections leave the mail carrier dealing on P/E ratings of 16.9 and 13 for 2014 and 2015 correspondingly, comfortably below a prospective reading of 18.2 for the entire industrial transportation sector. With the prospect of industrial action now behind it, and heavy restructuring under way to latch onto strong long-term growth opportunities, I reckon Royal Mail is a great growth pick for 2014 and beyond.
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Boosted by an excellent earnings outlook, Royal Mail is also predicted to provide increasingly-lucrative returns to income investors. Indeed, the firm is expected to hike a potential dividend of 16.3p this year to 24p in 2015, payments which would create yields of 2.7% and 4%. By comparison the FTSE 100 currently carries an average yield of 3.3%.