Can Boohoo.Com PLC (+73%), Randgold Resources Limited (+81%) And NMC Health PLC (+69%) Keep On Soaring?

Are rises at Boohoo.Com PLC (LON: BOO), Randgold Resources Limited (LON: RRS) and NMC Health PLC (LON: NMC) sustainable?

| More on:

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

From their 12-month low in May 2015, shares in boohoo.com (LSE: BOO) have climbed by 73% to 44p, but is more to come? More traditional clothing stores like Marks & Spencer are struggling (M&S’s Q4 performance in clothing was “unsatisfactory“). But online vendors are doing much better than I’d expected — I might be old-fashioned, but I always thought touch and feel was an essential part of the transaction.

Results from boohoo should be with us on 26 April and should be good with analysts expecting a 46% rise in EPS. They have further gains above 20% per year pencilled-in for the next two years. But one thing that still leaves me wary is the volatility of the share price — since floatation in March 2014, the shares are actually down 39%. I’m also keenly aware of the ups and downs that ASOS shareholders have faced. Over five years those shares are up 62%, yet if you’d been unlucky enough to buy at their peak in February 2014, you’d be down 53%.

There’s a bit of a “dotcom bubble” feel about boohoo (and ASOS) to me, with boohoo shares on a forward P/E of 25 as far out as February 2018 (though it’s a lot lower than the multiple of 47 for ASOS based on August 2017 forecasts), and that puts me right off. But I’m an old bloke and I buy my shares the way I buy my clothes — conventional stuff that I intend to keep for years — so what do I know?

Shiny shiny

If you’d bought Randgold Resources (LSE: RRS) at their low point in September 2015, you’d be sitting on a nice gain of 81% right now as the shares have reached 6600p. That’s on the back of the rising price of gold, which has reached the $1,200 level per ounce from only a little over $1,000 in December.

Buying mining shares is a good way of gearing up the profits you can make over buying the metal itself — every percentage rise in the price of gold represents a bigger percentage rise in a miner’s profits once it has cleared the cost of production. Of course, the same works in reverse and a gold price fall is geared up to a bigger percentage fall in miners’ profits.

What I don’t like about Randgold shares is their high forward P/E of 37, dropping only as far as 31 on 2017 forecasts, because that suggests there’s a fair bit more gold price growth built into the share price. I reckon trying to guess where something as fundamentally useless as gold is going is a waste of time.

Health profits

NMC Health (LSE: NMC) has been a growth star, with a 69% rise since last April’s peak to 1120p, and a 390% gain over five years. And for once, I’m seeing a growth share that I actually like the look of. NMC operates a healthcare chain in the United Arab Emirates, where oil wealth has produced plenty of customers who want top medical treatment — as shown in several years of accelerating earnings growth.

What’s more, we have an EPS rise of 58% forecast this year, followed by 23% next, and that would drop the P/E to just 16. We’re also looking at PEG ratios (which compare the P/E with the growth rate, the lower the better) of 0.3 this year and 0.7 next — and that’s firmly in the territory that would have excited the growth investor in a younger me.

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK owns shares of and has recommended ASOS. We Fools don't all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Business manager working at a pub doing the accountancy and some paperwork using a laptop computer
Investing Articles

£7,007 invested in Aston Martin shares 1 week ago is now worth…

Aston Martin shares have put on a spurt lately but they're still down 27% in the last year. Harvey Jones…

Read more »

Person holding magnifying glass over important document, reading the small print
Investing Articles

£20,000 invested in Tesco shares 3 years ago is now worth…

Tesco shares have already delivered huge gains, but analysts think the story may not be over. Could today’s price still…

Read more »

DIVIDEND YIELD text written on a notebook with chart
Investing Articles

Here’s how I’m targeting £13,534 in yearly passive income from £20,000 in this FTSE financial star

This FTSE opportunity could hand investors major passive income, yet the market still seems to be overlooking just how much…

Read more »

Investing Articles

With BP shares boosted by Q1 results, how much higher can they go?

A big jump in profit in the first quarter put BP shares among the FTSE 100's upwards movers, with the…

Read more »

Three generation family are playing football together in a field. There are two boys, their father and their grandfather.
Investing Articles

How many Standard Life shares must an investor buy to give up work and live off the income?

Standard Life shares could be hiding one of the market’s most powerful long-term income engines — and the latest numbers…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking money coins with virtual percentage icons
Investing Articles

Down 26% to under £17! What on earth’s going on with Greggs shares right now?

Greggs shares are trading at a deep discount to their ‘fair value’, despite record sales -- that gap could be…

Read more »

Mature black woman at home texting on her cell phone while sitting on the couch
Investing Articles

Barclays shares just fell 3% after Q1 results. Is this a buying opportunity?

Barclays shares fall on results day. Andrew Mackie digs into Q1 numbers, buybacks, and whether investors should actually be buying…

Read more »

Close-up of a woman holding modern polymer ten, twenty and fifty pound notes.
Investing For Beginners

£10k invested in the FTSE 100 at the start of the decade is now worth…

Jon Smith shows the historical return from parking money in a FTSE 100 tracker, but outlines the potential benefits from…

Read more »