Wednesday, 3 March 2021

February 2021 portfolio update

February felt tough, cold weather, lockdown, home schooling... However, light at the end of the COVID-19 tunnel was shining a little more brightly as the UK vaccine programme continued to deliver. On the back of this Boris announced his re-opening plans.

The UK markets, being stuffed full of economically sensitive businesses - banks, construction, oil, mining - all enjoyed themselves for most of the month. Then the bond market started getting lively and equities threw a tantrum. Many US tech stocks got smacked down in the ensuing selling, which seemed to ripple over to these shores. A few of my tech companies had their shares sold off without any accompanying news, so I assume they were caught up in the rush for the exits.

This month the portfolio was beaten up for various reasons: a few updates weren't approved by Mr Market and investors moved out of some defensive bond proxies into equities benefiting from economies reopening and into actual bonds. I sold off one of my smaller holdings, Fulcrum Utilities, after some thought and reinvested that cash in an alternative, a small software company, Blackbird. I've also topped up an old timer, Unilever, whilst it's shares were being sold off.

Portfolio performance
The portfolio was  down -4.3% in February, behind my chosen benchmark (Vanguard FTSE All Share Accumulation) which was up +1.5% over the same period.

Best performers this month:
SAGA +53%
Compass +11%
Tate & Lyle +6%

Worst performers this month:
GlaxoSmithKline -12%
Unilever -12%
Hargreaves Lansdown -12%

February sale: FCRM
I bought a small slice of Fulcrum Utilities back in March 2019, it operates in an area likely to see plenty of growth, in that it installs smart meters and electric vehicle charging points as well as providing other pipes and wires related services. It paid a decent dividend and seemed to be a well run business that stood a good chance of growing. Maybe it still does. 

However, earlier in the year there was an attempt to take the business private. This attempt failed, and resulted in two new appointments to the board, one of which was from the firm trying to delist FCRM. In January the CEO left "with immediate effect", and the new CEO and chairman seem to be reluctant to buy into the firm - they each own less than £10k of shares. Since dividends have been stopped and a loss was reported at the interim results, I don't get a warm fuzzy feeling about holding these any longer. The business is in the sort of sector that should have a strong tailwind, but I'll look for opportunities elsewhere. I sold at a loss of -16%.

February purchase 1: BIRD
I recycled cash from the above sale into Blackbird (BIRD). Not an obvious choice perhaps, since they are just about the opposite of what I usually opt for. Small, £80m market cap, pre-profit business, jam tomorrow? Maybe, but they seem to have some unique technology for production of video content. Of course developing interesting tech, doesn't make it a good business, certainly not a good investment. But it does seem to have got the attention of a few sizeable customers and partners, including TATA, the huge Indian conglomerate. So I thought I would pick up a few shares and see where it leads.

BIRD listed on AIM in 2000, so have been around a while. They were previously known as "Forbidden Technologies" but rebranded in 2019. They have been focussing on News and Sports broadcasting as the speed of their technology suite enables the production and distribution of content really quickly. Many of their recent client wins over the past year or so reflect this, and includes the NHL, Sky News Arabia, Liverpool & Arsenal, and eSports wins with Riot Games, Venn (and a renewal with Gfinity). There are plenty more, the biggest fish landed being TATA. They also had a couple of industry awards thrown in for good measure during the year.

As with many businesses that facilitate remote working and digitisation, Blackbird seem to have been given a boost from social distancing enforced through the pandemic, video production teams have been forced to move away from having a room full of people to edit and produce their content, and this seems to have been beneficial to Blackbird. Interims published in September showed a 49% increase in revenues, and whilst they don't yet make a profit, their cost base is improving, so it is hopefully not far away. Cash in the bank in June was £7.1m, and cash burn £846k, down 31% on the previous year. From their 2019 cash flows, they used £1.9m last year, so they have around 3.8 years of financing if they repeat last years figures - but the initial numbers look more promising with revenues up and costs down...

February purchase 2: ULVR
I topped up Unilever in February. I've owned shares in them for a while now, they have some great brands that sit on the shelf in the supermarket, and in my home: Ben & Jerry's, Dove, Persil to name a few. They are one of the big beasts of the FTSE, the sort of financially strong, dependable companies in which I'm quite happy to invest.

They've had net margins and return on capital both averaging in double digits over the past 10 years, and have been slowly churning their portfolio into higher margin products. During the COVID-19 chaos of last year their business remained pretty robust, with dividends maintained throughout, and even increased following their latest set of results.

The markets were unimpressed with their recent numbers, leading to a drop in the share price. Margins were reported a little lower, but volumes were up - I always like to see a company increasing the amount of product being sold rather then just hiking prices. Cash flow increased over last year, and came in ahead of net profit, net debt was reduced from €23.1bn to €20.9bn...all good stuff in my view. Mr Market didn't like it though, possibly due to concerns over pricing power - price growth was pretty flat, and in their home care ranges it went backwards...are they losing out to cheap home labels? Across geographies, the US was up, Europe was down. So a mixed bag to which the markets gave a thumbs down. So I added a few more shares while the price was lower.

No comments:

Post a Comment