Share your opinion and earn yourself a free Motley Fool premium report!

We are looking for Fools to join a 75 minute online independent market research forum on 15th / 16th December.

To find out more and express your interest please click here

2 value traps I’d avoid right now

These stock market sirens are just waiting to destroy your investment.

| 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.

If I mention this much-maligned company’s name most investors will flee instinctively. So I’ll redirect attention to its rather intriguing set of valuation and financial metrics to ensure the stock gets a fair hearing: a forward P/E ratio of 11.8 and an enviable 5.47% dividend yield covered 1.87 by earnings.

This intriguing set of numbers belongs to none other than Marks and Spencer (LSE: MKS), whose much-discussed problems have led to an 18% collapse in share prices over the past year alone. But despite what appears to be a very cheap share price and what committed optimists may point to as a sign of a nascent turnaround, I’d still steer clear of this struggling retailer.

My main cause for concern is that the business plan long ago came unmoored from its core competencies that made it a beloved household brand. A series of CEOs have been confronted by the declining footfall all department stores face and the rise of fast fashion retailers They embarked on plans to appeal to younger crowds with hipper clothes and deeper discounts.

Thankfully current CEO Steve Rowe seems to realise these plans were foolhardy (rightly showing particular disdain for the gold hot pants he found for sale in a Norwich branch) and has promised to return M&S to the core, quality clothes it was long known for. Alongside simplifying clothing options, Rowe plans to close scores of unprofitable stores at home and abroad and add a further 200 M&S food locations, maximising the firm’s strongest product area.

This plan makes sense. But investors with long memories will recall that new M&S CEOs have failed to deliver on dramatic turnaround plans several times in the past. While the company’s shares look cheap and this latest turnaround plan makes considerable sense, I’ll be avoiding M&S until we see several successive quarters of like-for-like growth.

If you can’t sell wine what can you sell?

Another struggling retailer with an ambitious turnaround plan is Majestic Wine (LSE: WINE). The discount retailer is plotting to increase annual sales by roughly a quarter to £500m by growing customer count rather than store count, investing in overseas growth markets such as the US and rolling out its online offering, Naked Wines.

Once again, like M&S, this turnaround plan makes good sense. Majestic does have solid market share in the UK and online sales were up a very encouraging 26.7% year-on-year in H1 2017.

Yet I remain cautious. Most importantly, Majestic has yet to prove that new customers are profitable. Personally, I love Naked Wines but I find it difficult to believe the company is making much profit when I’m offered six bottles of decent wine for £30 or less. And Majestic’s bottom line seems to show this is the case as the company swung from a £4.3m profit in H1 2016 to a £4.4m loss a year later.

Now its perfectly possible that these new customers such as myself will become profitable in the future as the company rolls out membership programmes or upsells us better wines. But until I see some proof of this I’ll be leery as Majestic’s net debt rises and profits sink due to big investments related to the turnaround plan.

Is buying into a turnaround the way to be a stock market millionaire?

Ian Pierce 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

Young female business analyst looking at a graph chart while working from home
Investing Articles

Which stock market is best: the UK or US? Here’s how British investors can benefit regardless

Stock market diversification helps spread risk and capitalise on growth and income. Mark Hartley considers the options for British investors.

Read more »

Exterior of BT Group head office - One Braham, London
Investing Articles

Will the epic BT share price surge 77% in 2026?

BT's share price is tipped to rise next year. Discover what could drive the FTSE stock higher -- and what…

Read more »

Friends at the bay near the village of Diabaig on the side of Loch Torridon in Wester Ross, Scotland. They are taking a break from their bike ride to relax and chat. They are laughing together.
Investing Articles

I asked ChatGPT for 5 world-class UK stocks for a retirement portfolio. Here’s what it gave me

Searching for top-quality UK stocks for a retirement portfolio? Here are some names that the world's most popular generative AI…

Read more »

Happy male couple looking at a laptop screen together
Investing Articles

I just asked ChatGPT a really stupid question about FTSE 100 stocks and it said…

Harvey Jones insulted artificial intelligence by asking it a very basic question about which FTSE 100 stocks to buy and…

Read more »

Road trip. Father and son travelling together by car
Growth Shares

The share price of my favourite FTSE 100 growth stock can’t stop falling. Time to buy?

Paul Summers loves the near-monopoly this FTSE 100 company enjoys. But he's also concerned its shares have tumbled over 20%…

Read more »

UK coloured flags waving above large crowd on a stadium sport match.
Dividend Shares

Shock news: over 1 year, the FTSE 100 is beating the S&P 500!

For most of the last 15 years, the US S&P 500 index has thrashed the UK's FTSE 100. However, this…

Read more »

Aerial shot showing an aircraft shadow flying over an idyllic beach
Investing Articles

Why are investors flooding into IAG shares this week?

In the last week, investors have been snapping up IAG shares like there's no tomorrow. What could have sparked the…

Read more »

Black woman using smartphone at home, watching stock charts.
US Stock

I asked ChatGPT for the juiciest growth share for 2026, and it said…

Jon Smith is rather unimpressed with the growth share that ChatGPT presents to him, and explains his reasons why in…

Read more »