Why I Would Buy easyJet plc But Sell Fenner plc And Afren Plc

Royston Wild consider the investment case for easyJet plc (LON: EZJ), Fenner plc (LON: FENR) and Afren Plc (LON: AFN).

| 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.

Today I am running the rule over three of the movers and shakers in Thursday business.

easyJet

Shares in budget airline easyJet (LSE: EZJ) have enjoyed a soaring start to the day and are currently trading 3.8% higher. Investor appetite has remained bubbly following this week’s trading update, which showed passenger numbers rise 4.1% to 14.9 million, a result that is expected to help first-half losses narrow to between £10m and £30m from £53m last year.

City analysts expect the low-cost carrier to follow the solid 13% earnings improvement posted during the 12 months ending September 2015, with a backdrop of falling oil prices and surging customer numbers driving growth.

Indeed, easyJet is forecasted to see earnings rise 12% this year, resulting in a P/E ratio to just 13.4 times prospective earnings, and a further 13% increase in fiscal 2017 drives the multiple to just 11.9 times — any reading below 15 times is widely considered excellent value. With the firm witnessing surging demand amongst business travellers as well as holidaymakers, and extending the number of routes it operates, I believe easyJet is a terrific long-term growth play.

Fenner

Conveyor belt builder Fenner (LSE: FENR) has seen earnings tank in recent years as enduring price weakness across commodity sectors has weighed. And stock prices are currently down 7.1% in Thursday trade, reflecting fears of worsening conditions in its key markets — the company warned this month that full-year earnings are likely to fall below previous guidance as oil prices slide.

The number crunchers expect Fenner to punch a third consecutive heavy, double-digit earnings decline in the year concluding August 2015, and a 17% decline is currently pencilled in. A meagre 2% rebound is anticipated for fiscal 2016 but, given accelerating project scalebacks across the mining and oil industries, predictions of any sort of recovery remain shaky at best in my opinion.

The industrial engineer trades just above the bargain benchmark of 10 times for this period, with readings of 10.5 times and 10.4 times for 2015 and 2016 correspondingly. But I believe that these levels reflect the long slog facing the firm rather than represent a terrific buying opportunity.

Afren

Quite why anyone would plough their cash into fossil fuel explorer Afren (LSE: AFR) is beyond me, I’m afraid. Shares in the company nosedived 72% in Wednesday trade and are currently 4.3% lower today, after the company announced a severe funding crisis and immediate need for a mammoth £200m cash injection to keep going.

Afren is vast emerging as a bottomless pit for investors, with shares now worth just 1/20th of the value recorded just a year ago. Like the rest of the oil sector, Afren has been battered by a relentless erosion in the oil price over the past six months. But the departure of several board members last summer over “unauthorised payments”, including chief executive Osman Shahenshah, as well as massive downgrades to resources at its Kurdistani assets, have also smacked investor appetite.

Industry rival Seplat Petroleum Development Co has until the end of the week to firm up its interest in the business and make a formal takeover offer. But regardless of this outcome, or indeed whether Afren manages to secure the much-needed finance to keep the wolves from the door, I believe that the business remains a basket case which investors should stay well clear of.

Royston Wild has no position in any shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Afren. 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

Female student sitting at the steps and using laptop
Investing Articles

UK stocks: the contrarian choice for 2026

UK stocks aren’t the consensus choice for investors at the moment. But some smart money managers who are looking to…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Down 20% in 2025, shares in this under-the-radar UK defence tech firm could be set for a strong 2026

Cohort shares are down 20% this year, but NATO spending increases could offer UK investors a huge potential opportunity going…

Read more »

Young Caucasian woman with pink her studying from her laptop screen
Investing Articles

New to investing? Here’s Warren Buffett’s strategy for starting from scratch

Warren Buffett says he could find opportunities to earn a 50% annual return in the stock market if he was…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Can the sensational Barclays share price do it all over again in 2026?

Harvey Jones is blown away by what the Barclays share price has been doing lately. Now he looks at whether…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Prediction: in 2026 mega-cheap Diageo shares could turn £10,000 into…

Diageo shares have been burning wealth lately but Harvey Jones says long-suffering investors in the FTSE 100 stock may get…

Read more »

Investing Articles

This overlooked FTSE 100 share massively outperformed Tesla over 5 years!

Tesla has been a great long-term investment, but this lesser-known FTSE 100 company would have been an even better one.

Read more »

A pastel colored growing graph with rising rocket.
Investing Articles

I’m backing these 3 value stocks to the hilt – will they rocket in 2026?

Harvey Jones has bought these three FTSE 100 value stocks on three occasions lately, averaging down every time they fall.…

Read more »

Investing Articles

Can the barnstorming Tesco share price do it all over again in 2026?

Harvey Jones is blown away by just how well the Tesco share price has done lately, and asks whether the…

Read more »