Thanks Squirrel for pointing out my oversight - revenue has indeed been increasing for the past 5 years except for a drop in 2019.
As a shareholder, I am hoping for a multi-bagger in this stock.
Taking a simplistic view by focussing on purely the automation segment's revenue as the main driver(i.e. putting aside improved margins, cost efficiency initiatives, hydro plants, better valuation, etc), I wld think the revenue needs to massively increase to see a corresponding increase in share price : For the period of $200m+/- yearly revenue, the share price had been languishing at around $0.2x for the past few years. To get to a sustainable > $1.0 share price, we may need to see its core bizness revenue(and corresponding profit) at least doubling. How long will it take is anybody's guess. But as an investor, I think this can provide a good case study on how a company can massively increase its revenue/profit(albeit via the help of a private equity firm).
I am actually keen to know how does ISDN actually fare agst the other top 3 players in the China mkt. I agree there will be good mkt opportunities given the industrial trends but how effectively will ISDN be able to capitalize on these to increase their core bizness order book ? Or for that matter, what makes companies choose ISDN instead of other providers, is ISDN/Servo a "top of mind" / "go-to" brand ?
It cld be a bias opinion due to personal work experience but I always had the impression that product manufacturers are generally the ones who are able to command better margins compared to solution providers, and that it is not easy for solution/service providers to improve their margins.
I am of the same view on the Novo collecting cheap theory. If they wanted to collect cheap, they had many chances to do so in the past, before the share price run up. I wld think as professional private equity, before even investing, they wld have drawn up concrete plans to improve the business(e.g. streamlining/cost efficiencies, business contacts), run various simulations and perhaps even expect at least some short term improvements in the financial results from potential initiatives to be undertaken. Nonetheless, I will be monitoring if Novo sells more shares whenever the share price hit $0.4x and beyond.
There are various reasons why insiders buy their own company's shares or conduct company share buybacks. But if ISDN is really on the brink of a "breakthough", logically at the upper $0.3x price range, there shd be instances of :
- insider buying and not to mention selling(of crse, there cld be various reasons for Novo as pointed out). In fact, I think the last time Boss Teo bought back was 315,000 shares on 16 Mar 2020, and that was only at a really low price(and low valuation) of $0.15.
- notable share buybacks. The company has ample cash resources and the motion control segment, though the highest margin, does not seem to require high capex. So is the company conserving cash for more initiatives like ERST / power generation or the shares are not deemed to be significantly undervalued enuff ? (Sidenote : Query 21 of AGM Q&A addresses the qn of focussing on core bizness)
Other than the recent good results, I do wonder at times whether the recent share price run up is partly due to it being viewed as a "covid play"(disinfectant initiative).
Looking at the EPS history, as well as the
CIMB report on projected EPS : Year/EPS(cents) : 2015/2.46 , 2016/1.45, 2017/2.41 , 2018/2.77, 2019/1.68 , 2020/4.4 (CIMB Est), 2021/5.0 (CIMB Est), 2022/5.4(CIMB Est)
If I subscribe to a 15x P/E valuation, it wld take beyond 2022 to reach $1 in share price.
While I am optimistic abt the company's prospects, my point is it could be a long wait before shareholders are significantly rewarded, in terms of share price appreciation(of crse, I hope to be proven wrong).