3 Shares Analysts Hate: Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, Tesco PLC And G4S plc

Why Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc (LON:RBS), Tesco PLC (LON:TSCO) and G4S (LON:GFS) are out of favour with the City experts.

| 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.

Professional analysts have more time, more data, and better access to companies than most private investors. As such, the wisdom of the City crowd is worth paying attention to, because, at the end of the day, you’re either going with the pros or going against them when you invest.

Right now, Royal Bank of Scotland (LSE: RBS) (NYSE: RBS.US), Tesco (LSE: TSCO) and G4S (LSE: GFS) are among the most unfavoured stocks of the professional analysts.

rbsRoyal Bank of Scotland

Bull and bear analysts were dividend 50:50 on RBS a year ago. Today, there are two or three bears for every bull.

Last week, RBS delivered first-quarter results, with operating profit before tax of £1.6bn, double that of the equivalent quarter last year, and smashing expectations. The market sent the shares up over 8% on the day to 332p.

However, bearish analysts were less impressed. Citigroup and Berenberg reiterated their sell recommendations, and a suspicion that this was a one-off quarter also extended to cautious neutral analysts.

Investec wasn’t getting “too carried away”, noting that only £0.1bn of a £2bn restructuring charge for 2014 was taken in the quarter, and describing an impressively low £0.1bn loss in RBS’s internal bad bank as a “temporary aberration”. Analysts at Deutsche similarly highlighted one-off boosts. Even RBS’s chief executive joined in, warning on the conference call not to extrapolate too much from the results.

tescoTesco

Only 15% of analysts rated Tesco a sell one year ago. Today it’s 50%, with the rest divided equally between neutral and buy.

Tesco is another company where recent results — full-year results released last month, in the supermarket’s case — have failed to shift the naysayers. The market, too, has barely batted an eyelid, with the shares currently at the same 286p price they were trading at ahead of the results.

Analysts at Sanford Bernstein believe food retail is developing towards a value/quality duopoly, and bemoan the fact that: “Tesco still wants to be everything to everybody”. Meanwhile, arch-bears Espirato Santo commented: “Approximately three years into Tesco’s restructuring, it has produced the worst like-for-likes and margin performance of at least the last decade. We think this will get worse near term”. It seems one of Tesco’s house brokers agrees. Barclays’ response to the results was: “We again trim earnings per share estimates”.

G4S

G4S, the world’s biggest security firm, has been one of the most accident- and scandal-prone blue chips of recent years. It’s been one thing after another, since the company’s embarrassing blunder of finding itself unable to supply enough staff for a contract to provide security for the London Olympics.

Under a new chief executive, G4S is in the midst of a “corporate transformation programme” to turn around its reputation and profits. However, the number of bearish analysts on the company has increased threefold over the last six months. Deutsche, for example, last month downgraded G4S to ‘sell’, saying they “do not see significant ‘hidden value’ in G4S to warrant its current valuation”.

A first-quarter update from the company this week had the novel merit of not containing any nasty shocks, but performance and progress were as expected, and I haven’t seen any analysts rushing to change their position on the stock. The shares, at 245p, remain in the middle of their three-month trading range.

G A Chester does not own any shares mentioned in this article. The Motley Fool owns shares in Tesco.

More on Investing Articles

Investing Articles

Will Greggs shares crash again in 2026?

After a horrible 2025, Paul Summers takes a look at whether Greggs shares could sink even further in price next…

Read more »

Investing Articles

This quantum computing growth stock could skyrocket 113%, says 1 broker

One team of analysts on Wall Street have put a $100 price target on this high-growth tech stock. Should I…

Read more »

Black father and two young daughters dancing at home
Investing Articles

Here’s how you can invest £5,000 in UK stocks to earn a second income

Zaven Boyrazian explains how investing £5,000 in UK stocks could potentially unlock a second income of up to £1,100 in…

Read more »

Investing Articles

My top 2 disruptive growth stocks to consider buying in 2026

Looking for stocks to buy? Find out why our writer likes this pair of explosive growth shares that have sold…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Prediction: these near-penny stocks could be among 2026’s big winners

Zaven Boyrazian breaks down two almost penny stocks that expert investors believe could surge next year, delivering between 35% and…

Read more »

Two elderly people relaxing in the summer sunshine Box Hill near Dorking Surrey England
Investing Articles

At 13.2%, this passive income stock has the highest yield on the FTSE 250. And it trades at a 40% discount

Our writer takes a look at the highest-yielding FTSE 250 passive income stock. But how sustainable is this return? Could…

Read more »

Businessman hand stacking money coins with virtual percentage icons
Investing Articles

396 Reckitt Benckiser shares gets me a £1,000 monthly second income. Should I buy more?

Our writer looks into the recovery potential of Reckitt Benckiser, calculating how many shares would deliver decent second income. But…

Read more »

A mature adult sitting by a fireplace in a living room at home. She is wearing a yellow cardigan and spectacles.
Investing Articles

Not using a SIPP? Here’s how much money you could be missing out on…

Over the last 25 years, some smart SIPP investors have made almost £3.5m by putting aside just £500 a month!…

Read more »