Neil Woodford Buys More British American Tobacco Plc, NEXT plc And G4S plc, And Sells Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc

British American Tobacco Plc (LON:BATS), NEXT plc (LON:NXT), G4S plc (LON:NXT) and Reckitt Benckiser Group Plc (LON:RB) catch the eye among the ace investor’s latest trades.

| 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.

WOODFORDMaster investor Neil Woodford has been busy putting his clients’ money to work since the launch of his new CF Woodford Equity Income Fund in June.

September saw further trading. In particular, the fund increased its holdings in British American Tobacco (LSE: BATS), NEXT (LSE: NXT) and G4S (LSE: GFS), and exited its position in Reckitt Benckiser (LSE: RB).

British American Tobacco

In one of Woodford’s perennial favourite sectors, the fund added to its stake in British American Tobacco on “undeserved share price weakness”. There was no trading news from the company during September, but the shares fell from north of £36 mid-month to barely above £35 by the end.

You can actually buy at £34.50 at the minute; so cheaper than Woodford paid. At that price you’re getting British American Tobacco at a forward P/E of 16 with a dividend yield of over 4%.

G4S

Security firm G4S is another company that released no trading news during September, and was added to on the basis of undeserved share price weakness. G4S suffered a very poor 2013, and remains out of favour with many analysts, but Woodford is nothing if not a contrarian.

You can still buy the shares today at the level to which they’d fallen in the latter part of September: around £2.50. The forward P/E in G4S’s case is pushing 18, so higher than British American Tobacco’s, while the dividend yield is lower at below 4%.

NEXT

Retailer NEXT did have trading news during September; and it wasn’t good. The company warned that if the unseasonably warm weather continued throughout October, it was unlikely to meet its full-year profit guidance.

The Woodford team’s response? — “As long-term investors … we are not deterred by this weather-related blip and took the opportunity to add to our holding in what we continue to view as a very high quality, dependable retail business with an outstanding track record of delivering long-term shareholder value”.

At a share price of £66.50, NEXT is on a similar P/E and yield rating to British American Tobacco.

Reckitt Benckiser

Consumer goods group Reckitt Benckiser is a company Woodford had held in his portfolios for over a decade. The company had delivered exceptional returns, but Woodford and his team are not sentimental: “We continue to view Reckitt as a great business with a very strong management team and an excellent product line-up. Such a high quality business deserves a high market rating but the shares have recently become too expensive to continue to justify their position in the portfolio”.

Reckitt’s shares traded above £53 for much of September, peaking at just shy of £55. You can buy today at £52, but the P/E is still high at 20 and the yield is below 3%.

G A Chester has no position in any shares mentioned. 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

Senior Adult Black Female Tourist Admiring London
Investing Articles

This 7.27%-yielding dividend stock is near a 52-week low! Time to consider buying?

Zaven Boyrazian has just spotted a dividend stock promising some big passive income for opportunistic investors. But is it too…

Read more »

Asian man looking concerned while studying paperwork at his desk in an office
Investing Articles

How to invest £5,000 to target a £400.50 second income

With many ways to earn a second income, one of my favourite strategies remains dividend shares. So which income stock's…

Read more »

Man hanging in the balance over a log at seaside in Scotland
Investing Articles

After collapsing 93.7%, could this be one of the best stocks to buy right now?

This luxury carmaker's struggling, but with deliveries ramping up, could a potential comeback make it one of the stocks to…

Read more »

A mature woman help a senior woman out of a car as she takes her to the shops.
Investing Articles

How much do you need in a SIPP to earn £12,547.60 in passive income a year?

Investing regularly in a SIPP can eventually provide a long-term passive retirement income, potentially even up to £45,430.32. Zaven Boyrazian…

Read more »

Happy African American Man Hugging New Car In Auto Dealership
Investing Articles

How big would an ISA need to be to double the State Pension and target a £25,096 income?

A full State Pension for the 2026-2027 tax year is £241.30 a week. But James Beard reckons it’s possible to…

Read more »

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

How much does an investor need in an ISA to target a £2,400 monthly passive income?

Investors really can hope to generate passive income from a Stock and Shares ISA to compete against working in a…

Read more »

Two business people sitting at cafe working on new project using laptop. Young businesswoman taking notes and businessman working on laptop computer.
Investing Articles

£5,000 buys 2,603 shares of this FTSE 100 stock that now yields 6.5%

Ben McPoland reveals a FTSE 100 share he recently bought for his passive income portfolio. What's so attractive about this…

Read more »

Rolls-Royce's Pearl 10X engine series
Investing Articles

Down 18% in weeks, is now the time to snap up Rolls-Royce shares?

Rolls-Royce shares have sunk in recent weeks -- and not without good cause, in our writer's opinion. Could this offer…

Read more »