CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Kingfisher break up talk calls for faster fix up 2

Article By: ,  Financial Analyst

Cracks showing

Kingfisher's heavily de-rated and increasingly shorted shares have spiked higher on a thin beat relative to expectations and its announcement of a share buyback programme.

We also suspect that the merest hint of corporate action has helped buoy the stock on Wednesday. With management comments dismissing the notion of a break-up out of hand, we would rather interpret the stock price reaction as reflecting increasing anxiety over ongoing self-help measures than indicative of medium-term probability.

As for Kingfisher’s slightly buffed outlook, whilst welcome, the improvement by a notch is less surprising to us than many, as we had already pencilled in a likely further increment of previously unguided savings from the group’s shorter-term goods not for re-sale (GNFR) drive, following promising outcomes reported in August. The disparity between Poland and weaker regions and outperformance of Screwfix are also not news. Still, it appears that the lack of further marked deterioration across the board—the group remains comfortable with full-year expectations—has encouraged the market to largely shrug-off signals that economic growth in the UK and France could yet weaken further.

ONE time

Obviously it is difficult to predict the extent of further benefits from marginal costs after £10m at the interim stage. However the group notes delivery of GNFR benefits has been “encouraging”, backing the view we stated in August that further moderate GNFR releases over the year to H1 2018/19 are plausible. We do however expect that the current performance of Poland and Screwfix will turn out to have been pretty well priced by year end. For Britain, we see greater risk to the downside, albeit moderate, for the remainder of H2, given the foggy horizon over economic growth into Q1 2018. Still, flat UK margins and continued focus on costs can certainly point to further operating expenditure ‘beats’ over the next few quarters, like the one that impressed (perhaps over-impressed) the market on Wednesday.

As to the more substantive ONE cost-unification programme, apart from management conviction, evidence that can corroborate reports of positive impact is scant for now. A 30% rise in bathroom furniture sales is encouraging, as is the first feed through of cost price reduction to ‘investment in price’. “Lower prices are starting to resonate with customers”, says Kingfisher. But these and more unequivocal progress on long-term costs will need to do so more clearly over the medium term to trigger the stock’s next best day for years.

Our technical view on Kingfisher shares has changed very little since our last assessment following the group’s mid-August trading update. In short, we still think it’s encouraging that the stock has managed to maintain a relatively defined range, albeit a declining one since late 2014 to date, and several false dawns to boot.  The stock has again bounced sharply off the bottom of the standard deviation channel we have scoped out. Whilst we are not prepared to become more optimistic on the stock over the visible horizon our confidence that its trajectory will remain an orderly one has been underpinned. We are curious about the leap above c.300p on Wednesday. Should the shares remain above there, even after having filled the gap (which we expect to happen within days) we think there could be room for guarded optimism about further gains. Even so, we expect any breaks above centrality (330p-335p) will continue to be short-lived for some time.

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