3 FTSE Shares Hitting New Highs This Week

Published in Investing on 10 August 2012

Next (LSE: NXT), Pace (LSE: PIC) and Vodafone (LSE: VOD) all hit fresh 52-week highs.

The FTSE 100 (UKX) has been hitting fresh four-month highs this week, reaching 5,851 at the close of play on Thursday. That means there's only another 116 points to go to attain a new 52-week high, which currently stands at 5,966 set in March. And who knows -- even the utterly meaningless 6,000 mark could be achieved shortly.

But even if the level itself isn't important, it's good to see the blue-chip index moving further and further from October's 4,944 low point, and in the right direction.

Of course, individual shares in the FTSE indices are reaching new 52-week highs every day. Here are three that have achieved that feat this week:

Next

Though there are quite a few shares hitting new highs right now, I'm picking Next (LSE: NXT) as my first example as I think it's a good indicator of the recovering retail sector. Next shares hit a 52-week high of 3,548p on Thursday.

I examined the retail sector recently, and a few of the shares I looked at have done well since then, but none as well as Next. In my experience, Next is a very well-managed company and it has always been at the head of its sector. The shares have gained 10% in August alone.

City forecasts put the shares on a forward P/E of 13 for the current year, which is perhaps not low in these times, but it falls to 11.7 for next year -- and the best companies are rarely lowly valued.

Pace

Pace (LSE: PIC) can't do anything wrong at the moment, it seems, as the set-top box specialist achieved another new high, of 166p, on Thursday. It all started with interim results released on July 24th, and although they told of a tough first half hit by a world shortage of hard disks, the outlook appeared positively glowing. There was also a 15% boost to the first-half dividend.

Since those results, the shares have rallied 45%. But even after that impressive rise, current forecasts still put the shares on a forward P/E of 9.9, falling to 8.1 for 2013 -- so even now they're not looking overpriced.

Vodafone

It was nice to see Vodafone (LSE: VOD) hitting a new high of 191.7p on Wednesday, as it's a constituent of our Beginners' Portfolio, having been picked when the shares were selling for 168.5p. Vodafone shares have, in fact, gained 17% in a strong surge since May's low of 164.3p, and current forecasts are looking very strong.

Forecast P/E ratios for Mar 2013 and 2014 stand at 11.9 and 11.4 respectively, which would probably represent fair value right now. But add in an estimated dividend yield of about 7%, coupled with Vodafone's plan to raise its payout by at least 7% per year, and the shares still look cheap to me.

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> Alan Oscroft does not own any shares mentioned in this article.

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Comments

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chris110772 10 Aug 2012 , 1:55pm

As holders of both Pace & Vodafone i am very happy at the moment! Although I think Next is an excellent company it is too highly priced for me at the moment.

UncleEbenezer 10 Aug 2012 , 3:40pm

I took my profits on Pace earlier this week. Too early, to be sure, but it seems the share price has run ahead of any solid results.

Still hold VOD. As for Next, I have a horror of their shops, whose origins are lost in the mists of time but could come from being assaulted with noise, or finding their merchandise grossly uncomfortable and overpriced, or somesuch. But I guess they must be doing something right!

jackdaww 10 Aug 2012 , 4:36pm

went into local next last week - my first time.

driven out rapidly by the loud muzak.

but i'm not the typical shopper.

also unclear on the debt position.

duffmanchon 10 Aug 2012 , 5:06pm

Market will tank after the Olympics when the Eurozone crisis kicks off again... Nothing has been sorted yet plus theirs a drought in US/Fiscal Cliff/Iran, Mr Market will sh$t himself again soon.


apprenticeDRL 10 Aug 2012 , 5:36pm

duffmanchon I wont be sorry if you are right, it is difficult to find value in the FTSE at the moment.

shinygoldcar 13 Aug 2012 , 5:03pm

Next's growth is mainly coming from their internet/directory sales, where muzak I imagine is less of a problem.

In retail, there does appear to me at first glance to be some correlation between how profitable a company is, and how expensive it is to shop there. After all, if you can get away with charging more, why wouldn't you charge more?

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