Why Forecasts Were Wrong For BAE Systems

BAE Systems (LON: BA) could well do better than the bearish City experts think.

| 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.

An investment in aerospace and defence engineer BAE Systems (LSE: BA) would have more than trebled in value in the past 10 years, but was that impressive track record the reason the City’s experts were too bullish a year ago?

With the Western world coming out of recession and BAE’s order book, notably its contracts with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, looking very healthy, analysts were forecasting earnings per share (EPS) of 42.3p for 2014.

Forecast slashed

But now, a year on, their consensus for the year to December has been slashed to 37.9p. That’s a significant change in the year-on-year picture — the earlier forecast would have produced a year of no EPS change for BAE, which wouldn’t be bad in the current economic climate.

But the latest figure indicates a 10% fall, and that’s the kind of thing that can turn investors disproportionately bearish.

On the upside, the trend in recent months has been firming up again, and the latest prediction represents a 1.4% improvement over three months, so has that had an effect on the punters?

Movements in the share price have actually been tracking the City’s sentiment quite closely. From a level of 453p a year ago, the price slipped to a 12-month low of 374p in mid-April, before picking up again to to the exact same 453p today for zero change overall — over the same time, the FTSE 100 has lost 4%, so BAE is ahead.

Part of the reason for the downgrade must be due to the pricing terms of BAE’s Salam Typhoon contract with Saudi Arabia — the arrangement of prices and installments meant a drop in EPS this year, and the effect wasn’t known for sure until 2013 results were published in February. But according to the company the impact was going to be around 5%, accounting for only half the cut in forecasts.

Poised to beat expectations?

Then at the halfway stage BAE told is to expect a fall in EPS of 5-10%, partly due to exchange rate effects and based on a $1.70 exchange rate.

Since then the pound has dropped to $1.59, so my feeling is that the current forecast is too pessimistic and I can see BAE doing better in EPS terms this year than the current consensus suggests.

Alan Oscroft has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the 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

UK financial background: share prices and stock graph overlaid on an image of the Union Jack
Investing Articles

See what £10k in Marks & Spencer shares on 1 February is worth now

Marks & Spencer shares have mounted a brilliant recovery, although last year's cyber attack was a major blow. Harvey Jones…

Read more »

Landlady greets regular at real ale pub
Investing Articles

Down 25% in a year, here’s why the Guinness brewer might not be the value share it looks like

This week's massive dividend cut has raised the question of whether Diageo's really the value share our writer hoped it…

Read more »

Departure & Arrival sign, representing selling and buying in a portfolio
Investing Articles

What next for International Consolidated Airlines (IAG) shares after record 2025 results?

A strong set of 2025 figures has helped cement an impressive recovery for IAG shares. But we had a worrying…

Read more »

British Airways cabin crew with mobile device
Investing Articles

IAG’s share price slumps 6% despite record profits! What the heck’s going on?

IAG's share price has fallen despite announced forecast-beating profits for 2025. Why's this happened? And could it be a dip-buying…

Read more »

UK coloured flags waving above large crowd on a stadium sport match.
Investing Articles

See what £15k invested in BT shares just 1 month ago is worth now

February was a great month for BT shares, which continued to baffle Harvey Jones by generating a brilliant return. Why…

Read more »

British flag, Big Ben, Houses of Parliament and British flag composition
Investing Articles

Meet the ‘Nvidia of the FTSE 100’

Nvidia stock has skyrocketed since ChatGPT was released into the wild back in November 2022. Yet this remarkable FTSE stock…

Read more »

Rolls-Royce Hydrogen Test Rig at Loughborough University
Investing Articles

After yesterday’s results, is Rolls-Royce a stock to buy now?

The reaction of investors to Rolls-Royce’s 2025 results suggests many still see it as a stock to buy. Are they…

Read more »

Tesla building with tesla logo and two teslas in front
Investing Articles

Is Tesla stock due a correction?

Could the company’s plans to keep spending big as its revenues stall and earnings decline lead to the collapse of…

Read more »