(07-02-2011, 11:01 PM)taka666 Wrote: Just curious, how do you determine if the blue chips are overvalued or undervalued? What made you buy these particular blue chips during the crisis?
I generally do a DCF valuation along with fundamental evaluations.
Most of the blue chip stocks were trading at 3 or 4 year lows during the crisis even though the company itself didn't change (and theoretically the intrinsic value didn't change either) and the business environment would not be significantly altered. SIA Engineering was trading for less than $2, Capitaland (!) was trading for less than $2 which was significantly below NAV. SMRT and Singpost were pretty low as well but I can't remember the cost.
These blue chips are not only critical to the country, but they are backed by the government. In additional to all that, the fundamentals were still solid and I was fairly confident that they wouldn't fail but rather revert to mean once the business environment recovered. Once the P/E hit < 10, I bought. My only regret is not buying enough, but we all have that now and then.
(08-02-2011, 01:51 AM)corydorus Wrote: I would view SMRT as Fairly Valued considering the yield.
I think Singtel is seriously mispriced. A Stock with ROE 15%, Good EPS and DPS...at S$3.11...to me is a min. S$4 stock...
So alot of estimation ...in my view when coming to valuation.
I don't own Singtel, but I do know some good people who work in the Telco business. I'm slightly hesitant to own any Singapore Telco especially with the government's efforts at making their offerings a commodity. I've heard that Singtel's service (the new mio offerings especially) is fairly poor.
But of the 3 local companies, Singtel is probably the best positioned due to their overseas investments.
This depends on whether that long rumoured merger of M1 and StarHub ever happens. I doubt so.