My back of envelope calculations give this share at least 25% SP re rate.
Simply Wall St give it @ 23% on outdated info, no PSA payout or OPAC amalgamation factored in.
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My back of envelope calculations give this share at least 25% SP re rate.
Simply Wall St give it @ 23% on outdated info, no PSA payout or OPAC amalgamation factored in.
yes seems cheap
I bought some more... way overloaded now as a percentage of my diminishing portfolio but look at that revenue projection and look at that NTA and look at that PE and the yield too !!
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I was going to say like a smooth Swiss watch, but they are pretty quiet.
paywalled article in Nz herald today
"NZ kiwifruit season off to cracking start with record crop likely, the biggest shipment ever sent to Europe......"
Positive news in that article.
Good to have over a third of the crop already dispatched to international destinations, so soon after picking.
Well done to Zespri, on behalf of Seeka, especially in light of other companies facing shipping issues.
Seems like Zespri have the other 2 thirds well catered for as well, and for a record crop.
19% revenue increase forecast for Seeka.
In spite of this, a large volume of shares has traded today, easing the SP back.
An opportunity for bargain Seeka's?
Fruit this year is extremely soft, lots of growers not meeting dry matter requirements for Zespri and a large repack season ahead of us.
This is going to be a pretty tough year for kiwifruit packhouses. 10-15% increases in wages across the board too
I’m hanging out for a less than favourable result for March 2022 financials at this stage
Thanks for sharing that info.
I would assume the wage increases are being passed on in the sales.
SEK packs 2.5 times more than it produces, for other growers, so if repacking is due to poorer quality, wouldn't that be passed onto those growers, leading to more profit opportunity for SEK?
Thanks in anticipation of a reply.
My understanding with regard to contract packing is that the moment the packhouse forklifts the fruitbins off the back of the truck, they are making money.
Even if say 20% more was rejected in the sorting process to juice, than previous seasons, the packhouse has still done a chargeable job.
That may mean that less full tray stacking/ packing can be charged for compared to previous seasons, but with a record crop coming in, one would offset the other.
The offset would also work for any grower who is sending in more fruit than normal.
While the "packout" is lower, the volume compensates.