Today's Falling Knife: Severfield-Rowen Crashes 33%

Published in Company Comment on 23 January 2013

Severfield-Rowen plc (LON: SFR) owns up to cost over-runs and banking worries.

The shares of Severfield-Rowen (LSE: SFR) crashed 40p, or 33%, to 80p during early London trade this morning after the structural steel specialist admitted it was having "discussions with its lending banks regarding compliance with its covenants".

Severfield, which has supplied steel structures to the Tate Modern, Leeds Arena, Gatwick Airport and Asda during the last year, said its recent performance had been "further, and materially, adversely affected by cost over-runs" at its 122 Leadenhall project.

The company added that it intends to "review expeditiously" its current contract base and update the market when it has "greater clarity on the financial impact" of the investigation.

Severfield also announced the departure of its chief executive, Tom Haughey, who is standing down in order to "to re-establish confidence with all of the group's stakeholders".

Mr Haughey's executive duties have been taken on by Severfield's chairman, John Dodds, who said this morning:

"Severfield-Rowen is the UK's market leader in structural steel and the development of its Indian activities is encouraging. Our order book remains stable, despite challenging current conditions, and the Board is confident that the longer term fundamentals of the Group are strong. "

"I am, however, extremely disappointed in the need to make this latest trading update. My task, now, is to re-establish the credibility of the Group with all its stakeholders, bring greater control and discipline to its operations and secure Severfield-Rowen's longer-term financing."

Whether Mr Dodds can revive the business remains to be seen.

Certainly Severfield has been suffering for the last few years, with underlying profits of £53m and a 20p per share dividend recorded during 2008 shrinking into profits of £10m and a 5p per share dividend by 2011.

Indeed, the first six months of 2012 saw the company scrape a £1.5m profit and warn of "diminishing demand for steel within the construction industry, the re-emergence of pricing pressure and the protraction of contractual settlements".

The crashing share price now values Severfield at £72m, which compares to the group's last net tangible asset value of £57m. With short-term profits under question, the major balance-sheet items to consider now are property interests of £71m and debts of £30m.

Of course, whether Severfield's balance sheet, market cap, over-running contracts and the general prospects for steel fabricators now combine to make the shares a 'buy' remains your decision.

But for today's potential knife catchers, Severfield's shares did rally from less than 70p to almost 600p between 2003 and 2007. Such recovery form suggests it may pay to keep an eye on Severfield, with any sustained turnaround from here perhaps warranting another multi-bagger return.

In fact, if you are keen to earn huge returns from higher-risk recovery stocks, this free Fool report could help you on your way. The report explains how taking a contrarian view and backing unloved companies can be a vital step to becoming very rich from shares.

Just click here to download this 'wealth report' today. But do hurry, as all Fool reports are free for a limited time only.

> Maynard does not own any share mentioned in this article.

Share & subscribe

Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

lotontech 23 Jan 2013 , 5:57pm

Surprisingly (or maybe due to skill) I actually managed to bank a profit from a guaranteed stop order on Severfield, and then re-positioned for a possible recovery having avoided (hopefully) much of the loss. Here's how: http://goo.gl/fb/KUJvk

Join the conversation

Please take note - some tags have changed.

Line breaks are converted automatically.

You may use the following tags in your post: [b]bolded text[/b], [i]italicised text[/i]. All other tags will be removed from your post.

If you want to add a link, please ensure you type it as http://www.fool.co.uk as opposed to www.fool.co.uk.

Hello stranger

To add your own comment, please login.

Not yet registered? Register now.