Premier African Minerals shares fall with further work needed at the Zulu lithium plant

Premier African Minerals shares dipped on Wednesday after the company revealed recent progress at its Zulu lithium plant in Zimbabwe.

The company has been dogged by delays and is subject to a punishing offtake agreement with Chinese partners Canmax which sets out a 1,000 tonne per month minimum production – a target Premier African Minerals is yet to meet.

Today’s update focused on optimising the floatation circuit that processes lithium into a saleable product. While today’s announcement had some bright spots, it also had several sources of disappointment.

The plant is expected to begin production at 50 tonnes per day, which will satisfy the minimum production targets. However, further work is needed to ramp production up, and there is no guarantee this will be easy.

There are legacy issues with the mill and ore sorter which still need to be overcome. Many investors would have hoped these setbacks would have ben rectified by now.

Premier African Minerals shares were down 8% at the time of writing.

The PREM CEO provided a comprehensive overview of the current situation:

“Thanks to the support the Company receives from ENPROTEC, the supplier of the float plant components and innovation and dedication from our team at Zulu, we are now able to run the floatation circuit continuously and produce saleable spodumene concentrate,” said George Roach, CEO, Premier African Minerals.

“There is much to be encouraged by, notably, the use of an activator in the spodumene floatation plant that has seen recoveries in internal laboratory work approaching 90% and the indications that the ore body in situ grade is higher than was estimated in our Resource model.

“The overall plant is currently running at a feed rate to spodumene floatation that is approximately 50% of original floatation design capacity and will need a further conditioning tank and minor pump upgrades to operate at the full design capacity. This is over and above the recently completed flow changes. The required pumps are already at site and the additional civils for the conditioning tank should complete in May 2024.

“Target production for the coming week is expected to start at 50 tonnes spodumene concentrate per day with increasing production. Target full projected capacity remains at 4,000 tonne per month. Grade is consistently improving with continuous running and latest internal chemical analysis of spodumene concentrate produced by the floatation circuit indicates grades have now improved to between 4.5% and 6.3% Li2O.”

Grades may also be a concern for investors. At the top end of the stated range, Premier African Minerals will satisfy the grade requirements stipulated in its offtake. However, at the bottom end, it will not. Investors will be closely watching for any signs of further improvements in the grade.

AIM Movers: Mobile Tornado wins Middle East contract and further delay for Alliance Pharma results

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Push-to-talk and workplace management technology developer Mobile Tornado (LON: MBT) has won a contract through its regional partner to supply technology for a mobile network in the Middle East and Africa, which has more than 50 million customers. Management believes that there should be increasing sales momentum following the deal. The share price jumped 152.6% to 2.4p. That is the highest level since the end of 2022.

Plant Health Care (LON: PHC) generated a 72% increase in revenues to $4.3m in the first four months of 2024. There is cash of $2.3m. The loss could be reduced from $3m to less than $1m this year. A profit is possible in 2025. The share price has been in the doldrums this year and it recovered 31.4% to 4.56p, which is a 2024 high.

Shares in Light Science Technologies (LON: LST) rebounded 18.4% to 2.9p after reporting a 14% increase in revenues in 2024 and the loss was more than halved to £1.14m thanks to lower costs. Nearly all the revenues come from contract electronics, although the controlled environment agriculture division did increase its contribution albeit from a low base. A debt refinancing should be completed this month.

Cell engineering technology developer MaxCyte (LON: MXCT) has maintained its expectations of flat to 5% growth in core revenues for 2024, but Strategic Platform Licence-programme related guidance has been increased from $3m to $5m. There should be at least $175m in cash and investments at the end of the year, down from $202.5m at the end of March. First quarter revenues were one-third higher at $11.3m, including $3.15m from SPL – a further licence was signed in April. The share price rose 9.31% to 317p.

FALLERS

Alliance Pharma (LON: APH) has delayed its 2023 results for the third time because the auditor still has not completed its work. That knocked 20.3% off the share price to 25.5p, which is the lowest it has been for more than one decade. Chief executive Peter Butterfield has left the healthcare company and, following a search process, Nick Sedgwick will take over having recently worked for Reckitt.  

Brighton Pier (LON: PIER) reported a slump from a pre-tax profit of £7.2m in the 15 months to December 2022 to a loss of £600,000 in 2023, as like-for-like revenues were 4% lower. The bars and leisure company could not offset the higher costs. Brighton Pier could return to profit this year, but it will take an upturn in consumer confidence for a more significant rebound. The share price dipped 10.3% to 39p.

Premier African Minerals (LON: PREM) says the Zulu lithium plant flotation circuit is up and running. However, optimisation of the circuit is still ongoing. The plant is operating at 50% of capacity. Further equipment needs to be installed for this circuit and improvements are required in other parts of the plant. Lithium grades are proving to be higher than expected. The share price fell 8.97% 0.1775p.

Anglo Asian Mining (LON: AAZ) subsidiary Azerbaijan International Mining Company has signed a financing facility with Caterpillar, and it has received a fleet of underground mining equipment for the Gilar mine. The facility covers $3.7m of the $4.6m cost. This is repayable in 12 equal quarterly instalments. The share price declined 4.73% to 70.5p.

Cornerstone FS announces its maiden full-year profit as customer numbers grow

Cornerstone FS announced landmark 2023 full-year results on Wednesday in which the company produced record revenue and its first year of profitability.

Revenues during the period grew 100% to £9.6m, leading to £1.3m in profit before tax.

Growing customer numbers and increased transaction sizes helped Cornerstone’s revenue higher. The group’s active customer numbers grew to 906, and average transaction sizes jumped 33%.

The foreign exchange and payments company generated £2m cash from operations during the year and ended the period with £2.3m in cash on the balance sheet. 

Cornerstone FS shares had staged a spectacular rally going into the results, gaining around 400% from 2023 lows so the minor bout of profit-taking on Wednesday will do nothing to upset long term holders.

Cornerstone FS announced that it will change its name to Finseta to reflect changes in its business and the launch of new services for complex clients.

“This has been an excellent year for our business, resulting in 100% revenue growth and our maiden full year of profitability and positive cashflow,” said James Hickman, CEO of newly named Finseta.

“This has been driven by the expansion of our sales team, which achieved an increase in client numbers as well as average transaction value. At the same time, we advanced key strategic initiatives that will be drivers of our future growth in the near term. We continued to expand our global payments network, and are now able to pay out to over 150 countries in 58 currencies, and we were thrilled to receive, post year end, regulatory approval to operate a payments business in Canada.

“Since the year-end, we also signed an agreement with Mastercard to launch a commercial card scheme, which will enable us to offer an additional payment method to corporate clients. In reflection of this progress, we were delighted to select ‘Finseta’ as our new company name to better align our brand identity with our mission, values and the comprehensive range of services we provide.  

“Looking ahead, the strong trading momentum that was experienced during 2023 has been sustained into the current year and we are on track to report significant growth for full year 2024, in line with the Board’s expectations. With the excellent progress made during the year and to date in executing on our strategic priorities, we have strengthened our operations and established the foundations to deliver long-term, sustainable growth. As a result, the Board continues to look to the future with great confidence.”

Boohoo shares fall out of fashion as sales disappoint

Fast fashion online retailers have experienced well-documented struggles with sales since the pandemic, and Boohoo is no exception.

Revenue for the 2024 full year plummeted 17%. The company has blamed macroeconomic conditions, but the problems may run much deeper than external economic factors. 

“Boohoo’s full-year results were a painful read for investors. Revenue declined at high double-digit rates across all regions, including an 18% in the US, which is seen as the group’s pathway to major growth,” said Guy Lawson-Johns, equity analyst, Hargreaves Lansdown.

Boohoo shares were down 3.9% at 33.8p at the time of writing. Shares in the group traded above 400p in the midst of the pandemic when online shopping boomed.

Boohoo has structural problems to address. Consumers of the fast-fashion brands housed within Boohoo are constantly chasing the latest trends. What was popular during Boohoo’s meteoric rise may not be as popular now.

Those who had an affinity with a brand in their 20s may not have the same affinity in their 30s. If these loyal customers diminish and aren’t replaced, it will act as a major headwind for sales.

There is also the impact of new entrants, such as Shein, stealing away market share, explains Yanmei Tang, Analyst at Third Bridge.

“Shein has been a clear threat, capturing market share from Boohoo. Our experts note that Shein’s affordability and successful TikTok campaigns make them more appealing to young customers.”

In addition, Boohoo has been embroiled in a series of scandals and investigations revealing unethical manufacturing practices. This will have done nothing to boost their appeal to young fashion consumers. 

The company said it had seen ’positive’ trends developing in its core brands from H12024 to H22024 when sales declines slowed from 9% to 4%. It is an improvement but only in the respect that sales performance has improved from being disastrous to worrying. 

The big concern for investors will be the widening loss. Loss before tax expanded to £159.9m in 2024FY from £90.7m in 2023FY. 

In the year ahead, Boohoo promises £125m in costs savings and wants to see general merchandise value sales grow. 

If Boohoo doesn’t stop the rot in 2025FY and produce top-line growth after a series of dismal years, one will really worry about shareholder value creation over the long term.

“Investors want Boohoo to make profit, but raising prices due to inflation while customers face financial strain puts them in a tough spot. Offering affordable basics is good, but they risk losing out on successful fashion products,” Yanmei Tang said.

“Consumers have shifted away from Boohoo’s core going out and bodycon styles. Fashion trends have moved towards more casual and basics, which will continue to drive negative sales growth for Boohoo near term.

“Boohoo’s limited product range lacks diversity in brands and adjacencies, such as sportswear, which typically drive incremental sales for multi-brand retailers.”

FTSE 100 hits fresh intraday high as housebuilders rally

And there goes 8,300. Another technical milestone for the equity bulls was easily overcome as the FTSE 100 continued to march higher.

The FTSE 100 set another all-time intraday high of 8,311 in early trade on Tuesday before dipping to trade at 8,299 at the time of writing.

“The FTSE 100 has scaled fresh heights as buds of May hope unfurl about interest rate cuts on the horizon. The blue-chip index smashed through the 8300 mark in early trade as the feel-good factor around London-listed stocks continued,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves Lansdown.

The index has consistently broken to record highs in recent weeks, reminiscent of how the S&P 500 made fresh highs throughout last year’s AI boom.

Of course, the factors at play are very different, but this will be of little concern in the short term, with London’s markets playing catch-up with overseas peers. 

Indeed, the economic influences on stocks this morning may have longer-term ramifications for equities. Yet, a big miss in the US Non-Farm Payrolls last week, and slower UK retail sales and patchy house price data all feed the narrative the Bank of England and Federal Reserve will have to cut interest rates to support the economy before long. 

Concerns were creeping in that both major central banks would push their first rate cuts into 2025. Data over the last week has dispelled this notion, and stocks have reacted accordingly.

“Rising another 1.1% as post-Bank Holiday trading gets underway, the FTSE 100 is now up 2% so far in May and 7.4% year-to-date. That’s quite a performance given we’re not even at the halfway point in the year. Add in returns from dividends on top and it’s easy to see why more investors might finally have rekindled their interest in the UK stock market,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.

The FTSE 100 gains were broad on Tuesday, with 89 of the 100 constituents trading positively at the time of writing.

Although the Halifax House Price Index released on Tuesday shows big disparities across different regions, the trend for UK property prices is definitely going in the right direction, which helped spark a rally in the housebuilders.

“Housebuilders were among the stocks in demand after British house prices returned to growth, albeit only by a fraction. Halifax data gave hope that the property market was getting up on its feet after a soggy patch, enticing investors to look at names such as Persimmon and Barratt,” Russ Mould said.

Persimmon was 3.4% higher at the time of writing, and Barratt Developments gained 2.4%.

Ocado had a good showing as the lower interest rate narrative helped boost the stock due to its technology credentials. DCC was the FTSE 100’s best performer with a 4.5% gain after Deutsche Bank rated the stock a ‘buy’.

The headline corporate update came from BP and a massive fall in profits in Q1 2024 compared to Q1 2023. Lower oil prices have ravaged the bottom line, but there was a bright spot for investors in a share buyback, preventing any significant share price declines.

“Consistency quarter to quarter seems to be tough to achieve for BP at the moment with a missed forecast in Q1 following on from a very strong update last time out to round off 2023,” said Adam Vettese, analyst at investment platform eToro.

“Lower energy prices and weaker fuels margin are to blame for the slump. Investors will be pleased to see this miss will not affect the buyback programme and the dividend is being held steady.”

S&P 500 technical outlook 7th May 2024

Last week we stayed positive overall on the S&P 500 seeing a move back towards the 5200 area as the most likely outlook, so the past few days trading has been largely in line.

The issue now is that the RSI has managed to recover to such an extent that it is now back to the previous break levels, black line on chart. Price also may start to struggle as it approaches the 5150, as this was the break area just a fortnight ago.

So how price behaves around the 5150 area could prove to be quite instructive for the rest of the month. A confident push higher will allow many of these concerns to be quickly allayed and confidence will build for a push back to fresh all-time highs. Whereas failure to push the 5150 at the first attempt will lift concerns amongst the bears that all of the recent price action has been nothing but a minor leg higher within a more meaningful correction.

Despite the coincidence of a number of technical resistances we still are skewed to the positive, and expect the broad 100 period trend, red region on graph, to continue to contain much of the price action in the days ahead Keeping a positive skew for next week, on the caveat that traders may need to be cautious as a rapid move back towards the 5000 area is quite possible on any minor scares, which could be more rapid than usual. But we would not expect the tone to turn bearish overall until/unless the recent lows around 4955 were to be broken.

AIM movers: Totally reassures and Bushveld Minerals disposal should ease financial worries

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Healthcare services provider Totally (LON: TLY) reassured the market with its latest trading statement. Full year EBITDA was £2.3m, down from £6.9m, and net debt was £800,000 at the end of March 2024. Revenues fell 22% to £106m because of the loss of a contract. Cost reductions and efficiency improvements have offset the tough market. Annualised cost savings of £3.5m are expected. The share price recovered 19.1% to 6.25p.

Peter Lobbenberg and family have increased their stake in Pipehawk (LON: PIP) from 8.37% to 9.06%. This appears to be the first share purchase since 2015. The share price improved 15.4% to 7.5p.

Third quarter driver management systems units produced by Seeing Machines (LON: SEE) have gone into 313,662 vehicles, which is 51% higher than the previous quarter. This is more than treble the number in the same period two years and 80% higher than one year previously with more contracts set to contribute. Monitored connections of the Guardian fleet units were 5% higher on the quarter at 59,706. The share price increased 13.4% to 5.39p.

Dr Graham Cooley has increased his stake in supercapacitors developer Cap-XX (LON: CPX) from 8.25% to 10.3%. The company says that trading is strong, and billings are 56% higher than in the same period last year. The current book to bill ratio is 1:2. The share price recovered 12.2% to 0.0875p.

FALLERS

Bushveld Minerals (LON: BMN) has agreed the conditional disposal of Vanchem to Southern Point Resources Fund 1 for up to $40.6m. The initial consideration is $20.6m. This requires shareholder approval. Southern Point Resources is increasing the interim working capital facility it is providing that is secured on production at Vanchem. This, and a $9m working capital facility, will be offset against the initial consideration and be used to pay creditors. This will leave a cash payment to Bushveld Minerals of $3.5m when the disposal happens. The deferred consideration is based on 25% of distributable free cash flow with a minimum of $1.25m paid for each quarter of the three year period. The share price slumped 10.7% to 0.625p.

Baron Oil (LON: BOIL) was unsuccessful in its licence bid in the UK offshore 33rd round of licensing. Baron Oil has no UK assets and is focusing on South East Asia. The share price slipped 8.96% to 0.065p.

Digital advertising services provider Electric Guitar (LON: ELEG) shares continue to fall on the second day of trading after the move from the standard list. There was a fundraising at 2.1p/share when 3radical was acquired. The share price has declined 8.33% to 1.65p.

ECR Minerals (LON: ECR) says drilling at Creswick has found upgraded gold grades. Bailieston has positive results from stream sampling and cores are being reanalysed for antimony. The share price fell 3.77% to 0.255p.

UK house prices rose 1.1% in year to April – Halifax House Price Index 

The average UK house price rose 1.1% in the year to April but was only 0.1% higher than the previous month.

After a series of disappointing house price movements in early 2024, the UK property market has found its feet and has arguably bottomed out.

“UK house prices held steady in April, rising on a monthly basis by just +0.1% (less than £200 in cash terms). Annual growth rose to +1.1%, from +0.4% in March, though this can be attributed to the base effect of weaker price growth around this time last year,” said Amanda Bryden, Head of Mortgages, Halifax.

“The average property now costs £288,949, compared to £287,244 at the start of the year. While there is always much scrutiny of monthly price changes – and a degree of volatility is to be expected given current market conditions – the reality is that average house prices have largely plateaued in the early part of 2024.”

While the headline figures provide a very broad average for the entire UK, regional price movements highlight massive disparities in house price performance across the UK.

The North West is doing a lot of the heavy lifting in terms of the national average, with house prices rising 3.3% in April while the east of England saw prices 1.1%.

The higher prices in the South are impacting activity, and it’s in this region that higher mortgage rates are felt most. 

“It might look like house prices have stabilised, staying relatively flat over the first four months of 2024, but look a little closer at the annual figures and the market is wonky – with the north/south divide seeing prices climb in the north and drop steadily in the south,” said Sarah Coles, head of personal finance, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“This is a function of the fact that mortgage rates remain so stubbornly high. Banks are pricing in the fact that the Bank of England’s cuts are expected later than they had hoped for earlier in 2024. At the end of April, the average 2-year fixed rate mortgage had crept up to 5.87% – from 5.8% at the end of March. It’s not a dramatic move, but it’s in the wrong direction, and it’s coming at a time when homeowners expected mortgage rates to be dropping.”

Today’s data is the latest in a series of releases that underscore house prices are recovering from the worst levels, but momentum is very weak. 

BP shares stumble despite share buyback as profits fall

BP shares were marginally weaker on Tuesday after the oil majors announced Q1 profits materially below the same period a year ago.

Oil and gas majors operate in a highly cyclical industry, which was demonstrated today in the BP earnings update. The company experienced a huge increase in earnings after Russia invaded Ukraine as oil prices soared. With the war now in its third year, oil prices have adjusted to the downside, and BP’s earnings have followed suit.

The big highlight for investors was the fresh buyback, which offset some of the disappointment around lower earnings.  

“BP’s proving it can splash the cash to shareholders even in a lower pricing environment. Underlying profit is down across all divisions but the first half buy back target of $3.5bn remains, with a $1.75bn tranche announced today,” said Derren Nathan, head of equity research, Hargreaves Lansdown.

The replacement cost profit of $1.6bn in Q1 2024 was higher than in Q4 2023 but a major downgrade from the $8.7bn generated in Q1 2023.

In the past, share buybacks have been enough to inspire a rally in companies amid lacklustre earnings. This was not the case for BP on Tuesday, and shares were down 0.4% at the time of writing.

Investors will note the company’s defensive undertones with a plan to save $2bn annually by the end of 2026. This clearly isn’t a company expecting a huge level of top-line growth over that period. 

The underlying price of oil and gas is undoubtedly the biggest driver of BP’s earnings. That said, investors may be encouraged to see that despite BP being an established operator, new assets coming online can help increase production and can have an impact on earnings. The world’s view of fossil fuel exploration is softening with the realisation oil and gas will play an important part in the energy transition and investors will look forward to updates on BP exploration programme and possible additions to BP’s production in the years to come.

“Commodity prices are out of BP’s control but where it can make a difference it is,” Nathan said.

“There’s a new plan to deliver cost savings of at least $2bn by the end of 2026 and some of the effects of lower prices have been offset by increased production. Theres new production on stream in the Caspian Sea as well as onshore United States in the Permian basin. There’s also development activity in the North Sea and exploration in Africa.”

Many investors will invest in BP for its dividend. Despite lower earnings, there’s nothing to suggest this dividend is under threat. 

Ebiquity – 70 out of the world’s top 100 advertisers can’t be wrong 

To get ‘the best bang for your buck’ must be the most important need for companies marketing themselves across the globe. 

And that is just where Ebiquity (LON:EBQ) comes in. 

Over 70 of the world’s top 100 advertisers select the group as their trusted independent media adviser. 

This morning the £56m capitalised company reported its final results for the year to the end of December 2023, showing a 23.4% profit increase on the back of a just 6.8% better turnover. 

The figures and current year outlook should be good enough for investors to realise how under-rated its shares are at the current 41p. 

The Business 

The group provides media consultancy and investment analysis services in the UK, Ireland, North America, Continental Europe, and the Asia Pacific.  

It offers analysis and advisory services in the areas of media management, media performance, marketing effectiveness, technology advisory, and contract compliance services. 

Its set of technologies harness the power of data to provide independent, fact-based advice, enabling brand owners to perfect media investment decisions and improve business outcomes.  

The company is a data-driven solutions company helping brand owners drive efficiency and effectiveness from their media spend, eliminating wastage and creating value. 

Final Results 

For the 2023-year group revenue is reported to have grown by 6.8% to £80.2m (£75.1m), while adjusted EBIT improved by an impressive 31% to £12.0m (£9.2m). 

The group’s adjusted pre-tax profit was 23.4% better at £9.7m (£7.9m), while earnings were up 21.1% at 9.7p (7.9p) per share. 

CEO Nick Waters stated that: 

“We delivered a solid performance in 2023, expanding relationships with clients, progressing our business transformation programme and continuing to build scale in the US, the world’s largest advertising market. 

Despite the more challenging market conditions the business has shown great resilience, increasing revenue and delivering a strong operating margin performance at 15.0%, an improvement of 2.8 percentage points from 12.2% in 2022.  

This reflects the operating efficiencies we have achieved so far as part of our transformation programme and cost management, as well as continuing growth in our higher margin Digital Media Solutions business.” 

Current Year Outlook 

2024 will be an important year for the group’s transformation, as it continues to enhance its use of technology, while changing its operating model and improving its ways of working.   

These measures will help to further improve the group’s client service, to ensure greater efficiency and increase its medium and long-term profitability, giving its management confidence to expect further profitable progress in 2024. 

Broker’s View – 71p Price Objective 

Analyst Caspar Erskine at Liberum Capital has rated the group’s shares as a Buy, having set a Price Objective of 71p per share. 

His estimates for the 2024 results could see £85m revenues, £11.5m profits and 6.2p earnings. 

For 2025 he has already pencilled in £89m turnover, £14.0m profits and 7.6p earnings per share. 

A consensus of three brokers following the company suggests that the average Price Objective is 92p per share. 

My View – At Least 50% Upside 

It was only two years ago that this group’s shares were trading at 71.50p. 

By early February this year they had eased back to 31p, since when they have recovered to the current 41p level. 

Considering the profits being predicted by brokers over the next couple of years as the group adheres to its strategic growth, its equity is massively undervalued at just £56m, especially when one realises that it could be producing profits of £14.0m by the end of next year. 

I would estimate that the shares of Ebiquity could well rise 50% in due course and still look attractively priced.