Vox Markets Logo

ShoreCap upgrades rating for Discoverie but sees better value elsewhere

14:20, 3rd December 2024

Shares in discoverIE Group Plc   Follow | DSCV jumped on Tuesday after interim results from the electrical components group impressed, with the stock given an additional boost from Shore Capital which lifted its recommendation from 'sell' to 'hold'.
The broker said that, with shares having fallen 13% (prior to Tuesday) since it downgraded the stock in July, its valuation is up with events.

First-half results from DiscoverIE were in line with market expectations expectations following a detailed trading update in October, with revenues down 5% at £211m and adjusted operating profits down just 2% at 29.1m, as the bottom-line decline was tempered by a 1.4 percentage-point increase in the organic gross margin.

"We lower our revenue forecast for FY25F by 2% with Q3 sales still down organically YoY but maintain our profit forecasts. We see less risk of a profit downgrade for FY25F following a strong margin improvement in H1 and guidance of a further uplift for the full year," Shore Capital said.

As of Monday's closing price of 633p, DiscoverIE's shares trade at 16.8 times Shore Capital's earnings forecasts.

The broker said the companies is "well placed to benefit from a range of long-term trends", with the business exposed to attractive end markets, "including increased electrification in industrial applications (driven by increased automation and carbon emission reduction targets) and rail transportation, increased investment in renewable energy and an increase in AI and sensing in the medical sector".

"However, we believe these exposures are captured in the equity rating and see more upside elsewhere, and view Renew and Spectris as attractive alternatives."

By 1110 GMT, the stock was up 16.8% at 739.5p.

Stock Chart | DSCV
TwitterFacebookLinkedIn

Disclaimer & Declaration of Interest

The information, investment views and recommendations in this article are provided for general information purposes only. Nothing in this article should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any financial product relating to any companies under discussion or to engage in or refrain from doing so or engaging in any other transaction. Any opinions or comments are made to the best of the knowledge and belief of the writer but no responsibility is accepted for actions based on such opinions or comments. Vox Markets may receive payment from companies mentioned for enhanced profiling or publication presence. The writer may or may not hold investments in the companies under discussion.

Watchlist