Archives for February 2016

JSE Main market up on Monday

Pressure on the Jamaica main market stocks eased on Monday with the indices gaining moderately but declining stocks just beating advancing ones by a margin of 16 securities declining 15 securities gaining as 40 changed hands in all market segments. JSE Sum 22-02-16Trading resulted in 2 stocks closing at 52 weeks’ highs.
A total of 7,670,934 units valued at $79,145,756 changed hands in all markets. The junior market accounted for 1,035,881 units changing hands, valued at $5,711,682.98.
The JSE Market Index rose 559.11 points to 157,946.13 the all Jamaica Composite Index gained 624.85 points to end at 175,470.01 and the JSE combined index dumped by 164.96 points to close at 167,952.51.
IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading, in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator reading was 14 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 5 with lower offers.
JSE fn qts 22-02-16

Juniors down sharply – Monday

The junior market faltered again on Monday with 9 declining stocks and 6 advancing leading to another fall of 3.5 percent in the index of 76.60 points to end at JM sum 22-2-162,106.03 with 18 securities trading, 1 of which ended at 52 weeks’ highs. The market ended with 3,118,773 units changing hands, valued at $20,407,860.
The junior market has declined 12 percent since peaking at 2,357.20 points, on January 12, this year.
At the close, 1 security ended with no bid to buy and 7 securities had no stocks being offered for sale. There were 8 stocks closing with bids that were higher than their last selling prices and 2 ended with lower offers.

4 stocks declined on TTSE – Monday

First Caribbean Traded at a 52 weeks' high on Monday

First Caribbean Traded at a 52 weeks’ high on Monday

Trading activity ended with 11 stocks active securities on the Trinidad & Tobago Stock Exchange on Monday of which, 3 rose, 5 fell and 3 remained unchanged with 2 ending at 5 weeks’ highs and 1 closing at 52 weeks’ highs low. A total of 1,151,701 shares valued at $7,401,744 traded.
The Composite Index rose 0.54 points to close at 1,159.62, the All T&T Index fell 0.64 points to close at 1,902.84 and the Cross Listed Index gained 0.24 points to close at 55.07.
IC bid-offer Indicator| The Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator has turned negative with 7 stocks with bids higher than the last selling price and 9 with offers that were lower.
Gains| FirstCaribbean International Bank traded 873,824 shares to end at a 52 weeks’ high of $5.56 with a 5 cents rise, Republic Financial Holdings gained 3 cents to close at $112.15 with 1,112 shares changing hands and Sagicor Financial traded 894 shares to end at a 52 weeks’ high of $6.66 after gaining 1 cent.
TTSE sum 22-02-16rv Losses| Guardian Holdings fell by 7 cents to close at $14.10 with 67 shares changing hands, National Enterprises closed with 20,000 shares trading and lost 1 cent to end at a 52 weeks’ low of $14.78, National Flour traded 13,472 shares and fell 10 cents to close at $1.85 and Point Lisas fell by 1 cent to end at $4 as 1,830 units were traded.
Firm Trades| Berger Paints traded 5,000 units at $3.67, Clico Investments traded 45,520 shares to close at $22.56, JMMB Group traded 285,832 shares at 59 cents, Trinidad and Tobago NGL closed at $19 with 24,100 units trading and Trinidad Cement traded 165,882 shares at $3.51.

Carreras dividend yielded 20% in 2015

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Carreras nme Carreras will be paying an interim dividend of $1.80 per share to shareholders on March 17 and brings the total dividend in the last twelve months to $8.94 for a yield of 20.2 percent based on the stock price of $44.10 at the beginning of March 2015.
In 2015, the company paid an ordinary dividend of $1.40 per share in December, a special capital cash distribution of $1.94 per on December 17, one dollar and twenty cents ($1.20) per share in September 3, two dollars ($2.00) per share unit in June a special capital cash distribution of sixty cents ($0.60) per share in September. March 12, last year an interim dividend of one dollar and sixty ($1.60) per share was paid.
The stock is now trading at $66.50 on the Jamaica Stock Exchange. Dividends to come are not likely to be as high as in 2015. The special dividends that were paid, should be at an end, leaving only ordinary dividends to be paid, as such the yield is likely to fall to just over 10 percent based on the current price.

Juniors suffer big early drop

for the second consecutive trading day the juniors stocks got hit hard in early trading on the Jamaica Stock Exchange with the index falling 3 percent, almost the same as on Friday. Trading was moderate after 75 minutes of trading with less than 50 percent of the listed securities being active.
JSE Int Cht 22-02-16A total of 11 stocks fell and 7 rose as 25 securities have been active with just 3,115,541 units changing hands.
Jamaican Teas fell 38 cents to $6.75 with 2,030,000 as a director sold 2 million units, for cash flow purposes. Lasco Manufacturing traded 87,494 units but fell 20 cents to $4 and helped in a major way to sink the market index but that would have been partially offset by Lasco Distributors with a gain of 13 cents to $7.43 and Caribbean Producers drop of 49 cents to $5 would have also been a big contributor to the fall of the index as well.
The all Jamaica Composite Index gained 83.07 points to 174,928.23, the JSE Market Index rose 74.32 points to 157,461.34, the JSE combined index fell 494.37 points to 167,623.10 and the junior market index dropped 62.47 points to 2,120.16. On Friday the junior index was down 64.27 in early trading to 2,176.36 points.

Carreras profit up but report wrong

CarrerasTobaccoFree280x150Carreras recorded moderate growth of 6 percent in the December quarter last year with profit after tax of $851 million from $800 million in the similar period in 2014, but the report issued by the company on the Stock Exchange has the September 2014 quarterly as the comparative December figures.
For the nine months to December, profits rose 16 percent to $2.27 billion from $1.97 billion.
Revenues grew for the nine months by 8 percent to $9.3 billion, up from $8.67 billion, while revenues grew 7 percent for the quarter from $3.3 billion to $3.55 billion.
Apart from the improvement in revenues which helped to improve profits, administrative cost were lower in the quarter, falling to $332 million from $512 million and for the nine months to $1 billion from $1.08 billion while Distribution and marketing cost rose moderately in the nine months to $512 million but the quarterly figure jumped from only $76 million to $245 million in 2015.
Cash funds stood at $3 billion but $1.1 billion is due to be paid for corporation taxes but shareholders’ capital $1.98 billion which is down from $3.1 billion at March 2015.
Earnings per share came in at $4.68 for the nine months and $1.86 for the quarter with full year’s earnings heading for $6.70 per share net asset value turns out at $4.05. The stock last traded at $66 on the Jamaica Stock Exchange on Friday for a PE of 10.
The company will be paying an interim dividend of $1.80 per share to shareholders on March 17 and brings the total dividend in the last twelve months to $8.94.

PNP needs over 50% turnout to win

PortiaAn analysis of poll numbers since 2014 and the number of eligible voters suggest that Thursday’s general elections in Jamaica could result in a shocker and a major shift in parliament. For the People National Party to win the 2016 elections will require voter turn out to be more than 50 percent.
Polls done from late 2014 puts the Labour Party support consistently at 25 percent except for the temporary decline shown in the Don Anderson polls in January to 23.2 percent when political activity was low keyed. Based on error factors in past polls, the base for the JLP is around 28 percent which is consistent with polls done in 2015 that would give them 510,835 votes. This would be an increase of 105,677 over the 405,000 votes they received in 2011 and well over the 464,280 the PNP got then.
The increase for the Labour Party works out at an average of 1,682 votes per constituency and is likely to create a major change in the seat count. It is more difficult to say what the PNP numbers will work out at in the end but it should be at least close to their numbers for the last election. It is difficult to see voter turnout of 53 percent in the 2011 being exceeded by much if at all, which would put the PNP support at 25 percent of the electorate or a few thousand votes less than in 2011.
If the PNP does not increase their support by much, they will be relegated to the back benches of Parliament after Thursday’s polls.

Pollsters terribly wrong on turnout

PNP The conventional wisdom, according to political pundits, is that a high turnout for elections favours the challengers and a low one, the government, but they don’t really say what is a low turnout? The latest polls show Anderson projecting 58 percent turnout and Johnson 62 percent.
The big question is that high or low? The answer, it is very high but we are unlikely to see anything that high, but even at 50 percent, it will be the highest number of voters ever with 912,205 or 42,767 more than in 2011, that would mean only 24 percent of the increased numbers on the voters list since 2011 would be voting.
The 2011 election saw the PNP picking up 464,280 votes to the JLP’s 405,158, for the PNP is was 59,000 more than in 2007 while the JLP got 5,000 less than in 2007.
JLP man -2-16Jamaican pollsters have consistently failed to accurately predict the out turn in Jamaican general elections going back for many elections. No one has done a study as to the reasons. In August 2007 Anderson showed an improbable 82% of the voters saying they would vote. Bill Johnson had it at 80 percent. It turned out that 61 percent voted, that is a huge difference. In 2002 Anderson had it at 78 percent, the actual was 59 percent and in 1997 the forecast was 79 percent versus actual of 65 percent. In 2011 the forecast was 78 percent by Anderson and Johnson 74 percent massively off from the actual.
Jamaican pollsters are not the only ones in the Caribbean to get the turnout wrong but those in Trinidad don’t seem as badly off as in Jamaica.
Trinidadians went to the polls in general elections late 2015 and two set of pollster got the outcome wrong. It appears that the main reason is an over estimation of voter turnout. IC Insider projected that the PNM would have won based on the results of one poll finding and plotting the data against the results of the previous election.
UNC crwdThat poll result released on the Sunday ahead of the polls showed a voter turnout of 74 percent, a level that Trinidad and Tobago has not seen since 1961. In the 2010 elections, the turnout was 69.45 percent, 66.03 percent in 2007 and 69.64 percent in 2002, next closet was 1991 with 65.76 percent. IC Insider stated that based on the pattern of recent years it would be surprising if the turnout exceeded 70 percent and that could make a huge difference to the final election results. In the end the turnout fell well below 70 percent, at 66.84.
Turnout at the last elections in Jamaica, was just over 53 percent, based on history that was low compared with previous elections but was it really that low? A look at the number of persons voting tells a different story. Political pundits say that the 2011 election had a low turnout, and if so favoured the government party but they lost. The fact is that the adage the pundits constantly quote is not based on all the facts. They focus on the level of turnout rather than what the overall numbers are saying. As it the 2011 elections had the highest turnout in the history of the country with 869,438 voters going to the polls, 52,878 more than in 2007 while 2007 had 47,802 more voters than 2002. If the election this week has the same level of turnout as in 2011 it would result in a massive 962,486 voters going to the polls or a massive 93,048 more voters.
If Johnson is right, his poll estimate of 62% would result in 1,131,134 voters or 261,696 more voters exercising their rights to determine the government for the next 5 years, a figure that is more than the increase of the voters list. In the case of Anderson it would result in 1,058,158 votes or 188,720 more votes than in 2011 and would in fact be a huge turnout of voters even as the figures on the surface suggest a relatively low turnout. Even the Johnson polls that showed 55 percent of voters indicating that they will definitely vote would result in a massive voter turnout of nearly 1 million votes.

4 stocks declined on TTSE – Friday

Grace Kennedy closed at a 52 weeks' high Friday

Grace Kennedy closed at a 52 weeks’ high Friday

Trading activity ended with 11 stocks active securities on the Trinidad & Tobago Stock Exchange on Friday of which, 2 stocks rose, 4 fell and 5 remained unchanged with 2 ending at 5 weeks’ highs and 1 closing at 52 weeks’ highs low. A total of 383,531 shares valued at $1,249,010 traded.
The Composite Index rose 0.01 points to close at 1,159.08, the All T&T Index fell 0.31 points to close at 1,903.48 and the Cross Listed Index gained by 0.04 points to close at 54.83.
IC bid-offer Indicator| The Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator has turned negative with 5 stocks with bids higher than the last selling price and 10 stocks with offers that were lower.
Gains| Grace Kennedy closed with a rise of 3 cents at a 52 weeks’ high of $4.68 while trading 13,000 shares and Sagicor Financial traded 4,526 shares to end at a 52 weeks’ high of $6.65 after gaining 5 cents.
Losses|First Citizens lost 1 cent with 242 shares changing hands to end at $34.99, TTSE sum 19-02-16Guardian Holdings fell 2 cents as 1,032 shares changed hands to close at $14.17, Massy Holdings closed with 40 shares trading and lost 2 cents to end at a 52 weeks’ low of $59.47 and National Flour traded 26,775 shares and fell 5 cents to $1.95.
Firm Trades| Calypso Macro Index Fund traded 2,000 units at $25, Clico Investments traded 26,383 shares to close at $22.56, JMMB Group traded 285,832 shares at 59 cents, Trinidad and Tobago NGL closed at $19 with 14,696 units trading and Trinidad Cement traded 9,005 shares at $3.51.

More retreating for JSE on Friday

Seprod traded at 52 weeks' intraday high on Friday at $22.10.

Seprod traded at 52 weeks’ intraday high on Friday at $22.10.

Pressure on the Jamaica main market stocks eased slightly on Friday with the indices gaining moderately but declining stocks still beat out advancing ones by a good margin with 19 securities declining and the prices of 10 securities gaining as 45 changed hands in all market segments. Trading resulted in 3 stocks closing at 52 weeks’ highs and one at intraday high.
A total of 7,670,934 units valued at $79,145,756 changed hands in all markets. The junior market accounted for 1,035,881 units changing hands, valued at $5,711,682.98.
The JSE Market Index rose 64.41 points to 157,387.02 the all Jamaica Composite Index gained 71.98 points to end at 174,845.16 and the JSE combined index dumped by 463.27 points to close at 168,117.47.
IC bid-offer Indicator| At the end of trading, in the main and junior markets, the Investor’s Choice bid-offer indicator reading was 9 stocks with bids higher than their last selling prices and 5 with lower offers.
JSE Sum 19-02-16At the end of the market activities, Barita Investments retreated after the company posted lower earnings in the December quarter of $27.7 million versus $45.6 million as 10,000 units traded to close with a loss of 40 cents at $4.20. Berger Paints lost 49 cents to end at $4.21, with 5,070 units traded, Cable and Wireless closed with a loss of 1 cent as 619,883 units changed hands at $1.58. Caribbean Cement fell 50 cents to close at $30 with 31,123 shares changing hands, Carreras dropped $1 to close at $66, while trading 6,072 units, Ciboney declined by 6 cents to 15 cents with 2,955,517 shares trading, Gleaner traded 113,790 shares but fell 4 cents to $2.46. Grace Kennedy ended with 8,369 shares trading to close at $82.25 after gaining 70 cents. Jamaica Broilers jumped $1.15 with 647,438 units to close at $14.90, Jamaica Stock Exchange ended with 46,000 shares trading but rose 40 cents to close at $22.35, JMMB Group had 22,851 units changing hands at $11. JSE fn qts 19-02-16Kingston Wharves had 7,260 shares trading with a gain of 5 cents at $11.40, Mayberry Investments traded 35,970 units to close at $4.5 for a decline of 5 cents, National Commercial Bank traded 109,827 shares to close at $41 after gaining 70 cents, while Pan Jamaican traded 14,727 shares with a fall of $1.30 to end at $94.70. Radio Jamaica traded 1,414 units but fell 30 cents to $4.30, Sagicor Group fell 1 cent with 469,568 shares changing hands at $22.10, Scotia Group had 1,242,641 shares changing hands to close with a gain of 50 cents to end at $33.50. Scotia Investments had 5,174 units changing hands at $28 after rising $1. Seprod closed at $22, with 26,364 shares trading, Supreme Ventures fell 5 cents to close at $5.85 with 170,772 units changing hands, JMMB Group 5.75% preference share traded 35,000 at $1.06 and Proven Investments preference share traded 40,000 units at $5.