Integrated services and construction company Kier Group (LSE: KIE) delivered full-year results this morning that the market seems to like, with the shares up almost 7% as I write. But if youād held them since the beginning of 2014, youād still be nursing a 38% capital loss on your investment.
Good figures, but…
The underlying figures look good with revenue ticking up 5% and earnings per share moving 7% higher. The directors pushed up the full-year dividend by 5% āreflecting the board’s confidence in the group’s prospectsā.
However, Iām wary of construction companies as a breed. Ā Weāve seen in other firms with construction operations, such as Galliford Try recently, that it can be hard for them to stay consistently profitable. Thereās always theĀ potential for a firm like Kier to mess up in the tendering process or during the execution of a project. So Iām inclined to ask why take the risk by investing in the sector at all?
Kier says that its two-year simplification programme is āsubstantially completeā. The weakness in the price of the stock over the past three years or so was not without reason. The company needed to reshape operations to stand any chance of growth and thereās a Ā£75m charge against reported profits relating to the closure of operations in Hong Kong and the Caribbean, and following the sale of Mouchel Consulting.
Big revenues, small profits
A little under 50% of revenue came from the construction division and 40% from services such as strategic asset management, housing maintenance, facilities management, environmental services, refuse collection, recycling, highways maintenance, street lighting, fleet services, waterways management, and energy solutions provision. The Construction and Services order books stand at around Ā£9.5bn providing āgood long-term visibility of future workloadā.
The directors say they are āConfident of achieving double-digit profit growth in FY18,ā but I reckon the big revenue numbers involved in the construction and services operations, and the relatively small numbers for profit in those two divisions, donāt leave much room for error. So, Iām avoiding the shares.
Sudden downturn
Meanwhile, Safestyle UK (LSE: SFE) also appears to have delighted the market today with its interim results. The shares are up around 8% as I write. But I reckon the marketās reaction could be one of relief that trading for the double-glazing and door installer is not as bad as feared, rather than joy that the business is growing. After all, even at todayās 200p, the shares are down around 37% since May.
In the face of a sudden downturn in the market, which the company reckons is the severest since 2008/09, the firm managed to grow revenue by 1.4% compared to a year ago. But the progress came at the expense of margins with underlying profit, before tax, plunging a little over 15%. The directors held tight by declaring a flat interim dividend. At least thereās no cut in the payout ā yet.
Safestyle has just demonstrated its reliance on buoyant economic conditions to thrive. If the economy plunges, Safestyle could have much further to fall and doesnāt square up as the kind of secure dividend investment Iām looking for.