AIM movers: Clontarf Energy lithium extraction JV and lower production at Jubilee Metals

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Clontarf Energy (LON: CLON) is forming a joint venture with US-based NEXT-ChemX Corporation, which covers the deployment and marketing of the latter’s direct lithium ion extraction technology in Bolivia. There is limited water and energy consumption. Pilot testing and extraction starts in March. Clontarf Energy will contribute $500,000 towards the pilot plant for exclusive use of the technology and when that is made it will also issue 385 million shares to the partner. NEXT-ChemX will issue $500,000 of shares to Clontarf Energy in its next fundraising. A further 500 million Clontarf Energy shares will be issued to NEXT-ChemX on achievement of certain milestones. NEXT-ChemX has the right to invest £250,000 at 0.065p/Clontarf Energy share. The share price soared by 60% to 01.2p.

Having successfully raised €1.4m at 9.25p a share Glantus (LON: GLAN) shares recovered 17.7% to 8p. Chief executive Maurice Healy subscribed €350,000 in the fundraising. The cash will pay deferred consideration on past acquisitions and restructuring costs. This fundraising is a condition of the agreement to extend repayment of a €5m loan until August 2024.

Mercantile Ports & Logistics (LON: MPL) has handled the first container freight at its Karanja port facility in India. An agreement with another local port and a logistics company could prove significant in the longer-term. The share price rose 14.3% to 7p.

LPA Group (LON: LPA) has received a £5.3m order for electro-mechanical products to the UK rail sector, which takes the value of the group order book to £34m. The share price increased 11.1% to 85p.

Jubilee Metals (LON: JLP) says copper production in Zambia fell 10% to 1,149t, which is well below the 3,000t target for the latest six months period. Power problems have hampered progress and back-up sources are being sought. South African platinum group metals production was 18,200 ounces and chrome production was 634,000 tonnes. The share price slumped 17% to 9.5p.

After a period of share price recovery, the Gattaca (LON: GATC) share price fell back % to p despite a good first half. However, permanent recruitment business has weakened since the beginning of 2023. Liberum has trimmed its full year pre-tax profit forecast for the specialist staff provider from £2.5m to £1.8m, which means that the dividend expectation has been lowered from 2.9p a share to 2.1p a share. Net cash is likely to be better than previously expected at £20.6m. The share price declined by 15.5% to 76.5p.

Brighton Pier Group (LON: PIER) says revenues for the 18 months to December 2022 were £58.9m. Like-for-like growth was 9%. Borrowings are falling and this offsets higher interest rates. However, reduced margins due to higher inflation mean that Cenkos has cut its 2023 earnings forecast from 4.6p a share to 3.7p a share. The shares are 11% lower at 61p.

Semiconductors designer Sondrel Holdings (LON: SND) says the project design for a customer in the automotive sector has been delayed because project design will not be completed until the first quarter of this year. The payment for the first milestone was in January and the second will not be until May. The 2022 loss is higher than forecast and there will still be a small loss in 2023. The share price slipped by 7% to 56.25p. Sondrel was one of the better performers of last year’s new admissions, but the share price is nearly back at the 55p placing price.

M&C Saatchi – broker says 40% upside in advertising group’s share price

After having fought off takeover bids over the last year, the £228m advertising and marketing group M&C Saatchi (LON:SAA) has defined its ‘Moving Forward’ strategy to deliver growth in its profits over the next couple of years.

Analyst Ciaran Donnelly, at the company’s brokers Liberum Capital, has upped his Target Price on the group’s shares to 260p. 

They closed last night at 186p after trebled dealing volume in the shares following a Capital Markets Day event for investors.

Established in 1995, the London-based M&C Saatchi group provides advertising and marketing services in the UK, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Australia, and the Americas. 

It offers its services in the areas of media and performance, advertising and CRM, sponsorship, branding, and global and social issues. 

Last year it defeated takeover bids from NextFifteen and Advanced Advt.

Ahead of the group announcing its 2022 results on Thursday 23rd March, Donnelly is estimating that the year will have seen revenues rise from £249m to £271m, with pre-tax profits having risen from £27.3m to £31.8m, generating earnings of 15.2p (10.0p) and enabling a return to dividend payments of 2.5p per share.

For the current year he is already going for £284m sales, £38.0m profits, 20.2p earnings and a 3.8p dividend.

The year to end December 2024 he forecasts could see £298m takings, creating £42.8m profits, with 24.7p of earnings and a 4.1p dividend.

Liberum Capital sees a 40% upside in the group’s share price as the new strategy shows through.

Barclays shares smashed on weak earnings and impairment charges

Barclays shares were reeling on Wednesday after the UK bank revealed a disappointing set of results for the 2022 full year. Fears of lower net interest margin and litigation costs were the source of investors discontent and shares in the bank fell over 8% in early trade.

Although Barclays top line income was 14% than last year at £25bn, increased costs due to litigation and impairment charges meant Barclays profit before tax fell 14% to £7bn.

Profit before impairment charges was £8.2bn but macroeconomic deterioration meant the bank set aside £1.2bn for credit impairments.

Barclays also incurred a £1.6bn charge due to the over-issuance of US securities.

“Barclays has bitterly disappointed the market with its full year numbers. Profits have been stunted partly because of a big increase in litigation costs relating to the over-issuance of US securities,” said Sophie Lund-Yates, Lead Equity Analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“This costly mistake has been known about for some time, but these are now the hard consequences biting the bottom line. Barclays is more than able to stomach this financially, the wider-reaching difficulties come from reputational damage. The tolerance margin for a similar mistake is now very thin.”

Net interest margins grew to 3.54% to 2022 but Barclays cast a doubt over the coming year’s earning potential as they said they expected Net Interest Margins would be above 3.20% – a target that could see Barclay’s NIM fall in the year ahead.

Barclays have increased their distributions to shareholders but the £500m buyback is below expectations.

Glencore shares slip despite share buyback and bumper earnings

Glencore shares were slightly weaker on Wednesday morning despite reporting a 60% increase in adjusted EBITDA for 2022, and an additional $1.5bn share buyback programme.

Glencore shares were off by 1.8% at the time of writing on Wednesday.

Unlike the other FTSE 100 diversified miners, Glencore operates a significant energy business and enjoyed the benefits of the elevated prices across hydrocarbons and coal last year.

Glencore’s decision to shrug of the pressure to become more environmentally friendly and push on with their coal business has provided a much needed source of revenue and earnings growth.

Indeed, it was the energy segment of Glencore’s business driving earnings growth in 2022. Their Industrial Assets unit saw EBITDA grow 59% to $27.3bn with energy products including coal adding $13bn to earnings.

Metals earnings were weaker across the board due to the impact of Covid-19 restrictions in China curtailing demand and trading activity.

“The top line may have missed market expectations, but Glencore’s taking full advantage of a messy energy market to line its coffers and there’s good news for shareholders as they get to share in the spoils, with a topped-up dividend and fresh $1.5bn buyback,” said Matt Britzman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Glencore’s marketing business is perfectly poised for a scenario like this, fragmented energy markets due to the war in Ukraine meant there’s been an abundance of price discrepancies across multiple world markets – that’s exactly the scenario that makes this business unit tick.”

Glencore will distribute a total of $7.1bn to shareholders for 2022. This includes already announced distributions and a fresh $1.5bn buyback.

New AIM admission: Fulcrum Metals Canadian prospects

Fulcrum Metals has a portfolio of exploration assets in Ontario and Saskatchewan in Canada. This is a stable mining area with mining positive regulations. Even though the areas already have many mines, there is still potential for significant discoveries. Ontario is the largest gold producing area in Canada, while Saskatchewan supplies one-fifth of the world’s uranium.
Gold remains an attractive metal for mining companies, while uranium demand is likely to increase as nuclear power becomes a more commercial alternative to oil and gas. There has been a lack of uranium exploration and mine devel...

GoviEx Uranium: a multi-asset, permitted uranium explorer with a well-connected management team.

Many commodities may be battling inflation or weak demand, but the uranium market continues to go from strength to strength, with January spot prices increasing 19% yoy. Despite a strong spot market helped by the introduction of more financial players such as SPUT, the long term fundamentals are strong drivers and point to a market with a significant structural deficit. 

Over the next few years, the world’s uranium demand is forecast to far outweigh its supply. Although the current energy crisis is partly to blame, this imbalance between supply/demand is more structural, with new uranium mines not being incentivized enough to start production. Permitting can take years if not decades, and local opposition to mining can be solid obstacles to new entrants. 

In that respect, an interesting Canadian Junior is getting closer to production than many of its competitors. GoviEx Uranium is an African based explorer with an ambition to become a significant uranium producer through the continued exploration and development of its two mine-permitted projects: the Madaouela Project in Niger and the Muntanga Project in Zambia.

GoviEx also has a third project that is more of an exploration play, however this is now being sold to African Energy Metals – more below. 

GoviEx’s main project, Madaouela, has one of the largest uranium resources in the world, with 100 million pounds of U3O8 in measured and indicated mineral resources, plus inferred resources of 20 million pounds of U3O8. After a successful feasibility study was published last year, Madaouela is targeting to be in production by 2025/2026, subject to project financing. If the uranium forecasts are correct, they will be in production around the same time where utilities will be struggling to find material. 

GoviEx’s second project is the Muntanga Project in Zambia, a heap leach, open pit operation with low acid consumption. Last year Muntanga has seen an ambitious field program which included 15,500 meters of infill drilling, with an aim to upgrade the Project’s Dibbwi East resource from Inferred to Indicated category. The company is forecast to update the environmental impact assessment to an IFC standard and complete the feasibility study by the start of 2024.  

GoviEx’s third project, Falea, is a highly compelling and prospective polymetallic uranium, copper and silver deposit with surrounding gold. Earlier this year, GoviEx has entered into an agreement with African Energy Metals Inc. for its sale as part of a US$5.5 million deal (plus an NSR), which will them to maintain a significant interest in the Falea project whilst allowing the Company to concentrate its efforts and funding on the continued exploration and development of their other two projects. 

The company’s management team is well known in the industry, with Daniel Major, CEO, being a respected individual with over 35 years of experience in the mining sector. The GoviEx board is extremely well connected, not least Govind Friedland as Chairman and Benoit La Salle (Aya Gold’s CEO) and David Cates (Denison Mines’ CEO) as board members. 

So the future looks bright for GoviEx – they own two mine permitted assets in an advanced stage of development in mining friendly jurisdictions, the demand for nuclear energy continues to grow globally, and they have a well-connected, experienced management team, which are either likely to build a mine or take advantage of M&A opportunities in the sector. 

FTSE 100 makes new all-time high, Vodafone and Coca Cola HBC surge

Strong corporates earnings and a buzz around potential M&A helped the FTSE 100 to a fresh all-time intraday high on Tuesday with Coca Cola HBC and Vodafone leading the gains.

The FTSE 100 hit 7,996 on Tuesday – an all-time record high for the FTSE 100.

However, the index eased off as the session progressed and we received the latest instalment of US CPI data.

The highly anticipated January US CPI came in slightly above expectations at 6.4%, versus economist expectations of 6.2%. The release will strengthen the argument for slower interest rate hikes as inflation rates are clearly falling, but the timing and pace of future hikes will be a source of uncertainty due to the inflation rate being higher than expected.

Markets will receive an insight into Federal Reserve thinking with a number of speakers lined up for the coming days.

A fractionally hotter inflation rate induced choppy trade global equities with US equity futures swinging from gains to losses. The FTSE 100 was trading at 7,968 at the time of writing.

In a week billed to be dominated by inflation data, it was individual names driving the FTSE 100 higher on Tuesday. Vodafone shot up 4% after Liberty Global took a 5% stake in the beleaguered telecoms group and Coca Cola HBC cheered strong results.

Vodafone

The acquisition of a 5% stake ignited speculation of a full takeover approach from Liberty Global, or indeed another telecoms group.

“Consolidation is the name of the game in the telecoms sector and Liberty Global is taking a £1.2 billion bet that Vodafone is going to be an important cog in the system,” said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

“By acquiring nearly a 5% stake Liberty Global is essentially getting its foot in the door should any new deals start to emerge. The company says the stake is only for investment purposes, but it’s got form in seeking optionality for potential deals.

“Liberty Global has been quietly sitting on a 9.9% stake in ITV for some time, while it also has positions in various telecoms and media groups including Virgin Media O2 and All3Media.”

Vodafone shares have suffered dearly over the past five years and some investors may be hoping they are put out of their misery by a takeover.

Coca Cola HBC

Far from the most glamorous FTSE 100 constituent, Coca Cola HBC was the top riser on Tuesday after the bottling company revealed another strong period of growth.

In the 2022 full year, organic revenue excluding Russia and Ukraine was up 22.7% and comparable EBIT jumped 11.9% to €929.7m.

Coca Cola HBC shares were 6.6% higher to 2,067p at the time of writing.

UP Global Sourcing – as supply chain disruption eases overstocking is now reducing

Leading homewares group UP Global Sourcing (LON:UPGS) put on a good trading performance in its first half-year to end January 2023. Demand remained buoyant for its energy efficient and money saving products.

Encouragingly, the level of general retailer overstocking experienced during 2022 which, along with the challenging macroeconomic environment, caused retailer customers to be cautious in the size of their forward orders, is now reducing in the UK and more normal patterns of order placing have recommenced.

The 2% increase in the period to £87.6m sales was also driven by the group’s online channels.

Ultimate Products sells to over 300 retailers across 38 countries and specialises in five product categories: Small Domestic Appliances; Housewares; Laundry; Audio; and Heating and Cooling. 

Its brands include Salter, Beldray, Progress, Kleeneze, Petra and Intempo, while it also has the cookware licence for Russell Hobbs.

The £136m capitalised company’s products are sold to a broad cross-section of both large national and international multi-channel retailers as well as smaller national retail chains, incorporating discount retailers, supermarkets, general retailers and online retailers.

Group CEO Simon Showman stated that:

“Amidst a tough economic climate, we are delighted that our products, especially those that are energy efficient and money saving, continue to resonate strongly with consumers. Global supply chain disruption has now eased, which has improved stock availability and supported the growing demand from our online customers. 

Looking ahead, we expect that the current softness in global shipping pricing, as well as the partial recovery in Sterling, will provide additional relief against the ongoing inflationary backdrop.

We are increasingly excited by the positive impact that our robotics process automation programme is having on our business. Our bottom-up, demand-led approach to automation enables us to concentrate efforts on the items that can most improve productivity, and this will ultimately enhance operating margins and drive an even better customer experience.”

Analysts Opinions – 250p ‘fair value’ per share

Clive Black and Darren Shirley, sector analysts at Shore Capital, have estimates for the current year to end July for £169.1m (£154.2m) sales, with adjusted pre-tax profits of £17.0m (£15.8m), worth 14.6p (14.3p) in earnings and a dividend per share of 7.3p (7.1p).

For the coming year they go for £179.2m revenues, £18.4m profits. 15.5p earnings and a 7.8p per share dividend.

Over at Equity Development Chris Wickham and Hannah Crowe are looking for £163.4m sales for this year and £173.3m next year and give a ‘fair value’ rating of 250p on the shares.

They are looking for £16.9m profits, 15.1p earnings and a 7.5p dividend for 2023, then for £173.2m sales, £18.5m profits, 15.6p earnings and a 7.8p dividend for the 2024 trading year.

Conclusion – 200p soon

The continued resilience of group sales was actually quite impressive and displays the wide spread of customers taking its products.

The group’s shares eased 8% to 153p on the news, but have performed very well since we featured the group in late October last year, when its shares were defined as ‘looking too cheap’ at just 95p.

I see the shares now basing before a rise to 200p gets underway.

AIM movers: Altitude increases and Gfinity share price slips towards placing level

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Promotional goods supplier software platform provider Altitude (LON: ALT) says results for the year to March 2023 will be much better than expected. Zeus has upgraded its pre-tax profit forecast from £500,000 to £800,000 and that is the second upgrade in three months. The US promotional products market is strong and favourable exchange rates helped. The share price jumped 25.4% to 42p. That is the highest the share price has been since June 2021.

Fertiliser producer Harvest Minerals (LON: HMI) had cash of A$2.72m at the end of 2022. Sales of KPFertil are growing and that has enabled the repayment of A$1.2m of debt. A court ruling requires Agrocerrado to pay $463,000, because it failed to acquire the minimum tonnes of KPFertil required by the agreement between the companies. The share price improved by 16.9% to 9.35p.

Second half trading at Facilities by ADF (LON: ADF) was much better than the first half as expected. The film and TV facilities provider has a strong order book that underpins expectations for this financial year. Pre-tax profit is forecast to rise from £4.3m to £6.6m on a 50% increase in revenues to £47.6m in 2023. Capital investment and the acquisition of Location One will help this growth to be achieved. The share price grew 7.34% to 58.5p.

Moroccan potash project developer Emmerson (LON: EML) has appointed a syndicate of banks to secure debt facilities for the development of the Khemisset potash project. Funding of $310m is being sought. The share price is 9.37% higher at 5.25p.

Esports company Gfinity (LON: GFIN) shares continue to decline following a fundraising of £2m at 0.15p a share. They have fallen a further 28.4% to 0.1575p. The cash should last for 12 months, although Gfinity plans to find a strategic partner for technology platform Athlos in the next four months.

Bluejay Mining (LON: JAY) has reviewed its portfolio of interests and decided to focus on key projects in Greenland and Finland. A demerger of Disko Exploration is no longer being considered. Towards Net Zero is subscribing $6m in three tranches – the first in the next week. The initial subscription price is 10p a share. The cash will fund a maiden drilling programme at the Kangerluarsuk lead zinc silver project in Greenland, which has become higher priority. The Hammaslathi nickel cobalt platinum group metals project in Finland is also being given higher priority. Both projects are 100% owned. Management believes that the Dundas ilmenite project can be reconfigured to reduce costs. A revised mineral resource estimate should be published in the middle of 2023. The share price slipped 18.5% to 3.9125p.

Accounts software services provider Glantus (LON: GLAN) will report a €2.1m EBITDA loss for 2022, which is much worse than expectations last year. Management has made a mess of its restructuring and revenues expected from two clients could not be recognised in 2022. A loan may be extended from August 2023 to August 2024, but €1.2m needs to be raised through a share issue. The share price fell 18.2% to 6.75p.

Singer has downgraded its forecasts for Strip Tinning (LON: STG) following its trading statement revealing a significant loss. This is because margins are under pressure. Flexible automotive connectors supplier Strip Tinning lost an important contract soon after its flotation. That had already led to downgrades. A £1.4m loss is forecast for 2023. The share price declined by 15.4%.

A Top Pick and UK Equity Tactics with Frederick & Oliver

The UK Investor Magazine Podcast is once more joined by Marc Kimsey, Head of Equities at Frederick & Oliver, for deep dive into his tactical approach to FTSE 100 and global stocks.

We start with a review of Frederick & Oliver’s top picks for 2023 and the factors driving returns. The conversation moves on to some individual names and sectors that have rallied sharply in the first months of 2023.

Having seen value in 2022, we discuss whether Marc’s approach has become more cautious as the FTSE 100 knocks on the door of 8,000.

Marc outlines the importance of the Chinese economic reopening on the FTSE 100’s performance and the key stocks to watch should we see a wobble in their current plans.

We discuss whether the influences on the FTSE 100 warrants a stock picking approach, or is it more appropriate to focus on broader sectors.

We look at one of Marc’s favourite picks and run through the key fundamentals.