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The hanging gardens of Alumasc

Working hard for pensioners

Alumasc (ALU) might be a customer of Waterman, the engineering contractor I profiled last week.
It’s a a group of companies making building materials for large commercial and public sector property developments, and houses.
It also owns a precision engineering company, and a manufactures taps and other equipment for dispensing drinks in [...]

Backing bombed-out Waterman to rebuild again

Not the best company, but…

"The patterns of boom and recession in the British economy and the post war history of commercial property developers have shaped the Waterman Group to a considerable degree."
Our History – Waterman

Waterman’s history is pretty fascinating. Founded by Harold-Waterman in 1952, the engineering consultancy helped rebuild Britain after the Second [...]

Big name stocks for all seasons

Magic squared 
Things are looking up for the stockmarket according to Edmund Ng, an Analyst at Morgan Stanley. In a research note published the day before Halloween, he recommended investors buy shares in quality, stable, growth companies that typically perform well in bull markets.
During the panic culminating last March, investors abandoned companies with weak finances, and [...]

As I was going to (buy) St Ives

I wondered whether it would survive

It’s doubly ironic that St Ives (SIV) chooses to feature a direct mail campaign promoting Google Maps in its annual report.
Admittedly it also devotes pages to a giant carrier bag it made to promote Sainsbury’s Finance, brochures for the Brooklands Bentley car, a peelable front cover for Wallpaper* [...]

Plumbing the depths with Wolseley

I’ve caught a big fish in my net, and I’m not altogether happy about it. Wolseley (WOS) is the world’s largest distributor of plumbing, heating, and building supplies, Unless you’ve come across it as an investor you might never have heard of it.
The company owns an army of businesses that go by their own [...]

Casting around for value

In practice:
The contrarian’s sector
As contrarian ideas go, the auto industry is hard-core, yet, despite having added engineering consultancy Ricardo to the Thrifty 30 model portfolio last week I haven’t finished with the sector.
While some manufacturers have maintained their research and development efforts to design leaner, cleaner vehicles, shielding Ricardo from the worst of the [...]

Reward, without the risk

In theory:
The holy grail
Contrary to conventional notions of risk and reward, buying shares in safe companies really does improve returns. That’s the message from a research note published last year by Morgan Stanley.
It published an alluring chart, which depicts what goes on over a stockmarket cycle (click on it for a larger version):

The story [...]

Ricardo engineers value in awful auto sector

In practice:
Diversification: good, diworseification bad
I fell in love with Ricardo (RCDO) when I saw the artwork on the front cover of its annual report:

The bold, calm design oozes technology, quality and environmental concern, which represent a big danger for investors in the automotive engineering consultancy.
It’s easy to get carried away by the promise of fuel [...]

Guarding against ego risk

In practice:
Up fell, down dale
I’ll start today’s blog more or less where I finished Monday’s appraisal of Anite, a profitable software company, with strong finances that is maybe, kind of, but not certainly, cheap.
Like most value investors I think much more about safety, than I do about returns, taking the view, contrary to conventional thinking, [...]

Thrifty Anite tests resolve

In practice:
A little patience, a lot of profit

Anite (AIE) presents something of a dilemma. The figures are very enticing. For financial strength, the company scores a perfect nine. It’s cheap too, the share price is just eight times its average profits over the last ten years. Beneath lies a more complicated story, though.
The company [...]

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