Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Buy Healthcare Locums (HLO)     

hlyeo98 - 06 Sep 2007 10:40

Buy Healthcare Locums - argues Rob Cullum, editor of TrendWatch

One key principle that underlies the TrendWatch investment strategy is that we normally only ever recommend shares that have just started a new uptrend. For the first time since the global credit crisis blew up, weve been forced to research more mature uptrends to find shares that satisfy our high standards. Fortunately, weve found a good un.

It wont be news to many investors that healthcare staffing in the UK is big business, but its quite an eye-opener nevertheless to be reminded just how big. The most recent figures available indicate that the staffing market was on course for an annual total of 5 billion.

Apart from the sheer size of the NHS, a number of factors contribute towards this huge figure: the desire for more flexible working conditions by staff, past failures to invest in the training of a sufficient number of specialist staff, the implementation of the Working Time Directive. But lying behind all of these are the demands of an ageing population, medical advances and also the fact that the vast sums sucked into administration actually seem to boost the need for external support, rather than the reverse.

The NHS accounts for around 45% of the total spend, but with another figure of 45% emanating from the provision of homecare staff. Demand for recruitment services provided by private-enterprise intermediaries such as Healthcare Locums is unlikely to be threatened by superbly organised and far-sighted direct recruitment policies of the client organisations such as the NHS, if you catch our drift.

Healthcare Locums, now four years old, is a group supplying specialist healthcare professionals to both the NHS and the private healthcare sector.

Its ruling ethos is the focus on higher-margin, longer-term specialist staff such as doctors, social workers and allied health professionals (AHPs), rather than the placement of nurses, for example. Working from two call-centres the group avoids the requirement for a costly high-street presence. The admission document argued that being able to supply staff nationwide without a local branch network enabled higher margins still.

This ethos means that, whilst it has lower volumes, there is a higher average transaction value and, in general, placements are longer term. Demand is not as immediate; and the overheads to service this market are therefore lower. It has an expanding database of registered locums across all specialties. Nearly half of these placed by the company at the time of its original flotation were from overseas; and the company had established an international recruitment division with 23 international partners across Europe, the Middle East, Australia, South Africa, New Zealand, the USA and Canada. This is a two-way trade placement outside the UK is a growing area of business.


On flotation, it comprised four discrete significant entities, brought together through acquisition.

the decade-old Thames Medics, a specialist in providing GPs, doctors and psychiatrists to the NHS and private hospitals. This was followed by
Eurosite Medical, a provider of AHPs to the same client groups. Then came
Medical Technical, a specialist in support staff (plaster technicians, sterile services technicians, phlebotomists and the like). This added scale, and also reach, enabling the group to access the supply of operating theatre technicians. Finally
Recruitment Specialist Group extended coverage to qualified social workers.
In November 2005 the company raised 13m at 55p. Six months into public life, it bought BBL for a total consideration of 10.5m, with 5.0m immediately payable in cash (financed by banking facilities) and a further 3m to be satisfied at completion by the issue of ordinary shares. 75% of BBL's income came from recruitment of hospital doctors; most of the rest came from recruitment of GPs.

After almost exactly a year as a public company, it raised 16m in the market at the same 55p price to acquire Blue Group, one of the leading qualified social-work agencies in the UK, for a maximum of 14m - with 10m payable in cash on completion. Blue Group's turnover in 2006 was 36m, and it was reckoned to have 15% of the market in Qualified Social Work (QSW) agencies. The acquisition was a three-way fit: First, Blue also had no branch network; the plan was to integrate the call centres. Second, the back-office integration was expected save 1m a year, starting in 2007. Third, it would help Healthcare Locums' intent of achieving a 33% split between its three core markets - AHPs, doctors and QSWs.

*The value of investments can go down as well as up. Investing in equities can lose you part or all of your capital. Smaller company shares can be relatively illiquid and thus hard to trade. And that makes such investments more of a high risk than larger company shares. Cornhill Asset Management Limited is an Appointed Representative of Argyle Investment Advisors Limited which is Authorised and regulated by the Financial Services Authority. UK-Analyst.com is owned by t1ps.com Ltd which is authorised and regulated by the FSA and can be contacted at 5-11 Worship Street, London EC2A 2BH or on 020 7562 3370.

This history makes the most recent figures for the 100m company irrelevant but the forecasts compelling (see table below).

2006 2007 2008*
Revenue (m) 64.63 144.1 169.50
Pre-tax profit (m) 1.08 12.40 16.90
Earnings per share (p) 7.10 9.00 12.30
Dividend per share (p) - 1.50 2.60

*Forecast
The main figure of interest in the 2006 accounts was the 16% organic growth. But the picture was clouded because it coincided with another substantial acquisition, JCT Locums, for 5.5m cash.

Current trading is robust and in line with management expectations, with one of the key drivers still being that of organic growth. The company is now market leader in each those three specialist divisions (AHPs, doctors and QSWs), and is very close to delivering the one-third income split targeted by the board. It says it will now cease strategic acquisitions so as to concentrate on integration.

The chief executive and 10% shareholder is Kate Bleasdale, a former nurse (ironic, given that her company avoids the nursing recruitment market). More importantly, however, shes a first-class businesswomen with a distinguished entrepreneurial history, and (by way of a footnote) a record-holder for the award of 2.2m damages when she sued her previous company for sex discrimination.

Performance to date has been dazzling; but it we should recognise that, with 13 acquisitions all told, this has, in a sense, been the easy bit. And with debt now running at 34m, up to nearly 6m to be paid out by way of deferred consideration and 67% of sales emanating from the NHS, the company may be a bit boxed-in.

Nevertheless, heading for earnings per share of 9p this year and 12.3p next works out to 12 times earnings in immediate prospect, falling to about 8.5 next year. These numbers leave plenty of medium-term price headroom. BUY

HARRYCAT - 11 Sep 2009 17:15 - 87 of 381

Wish I'd bought even more, but I suppose that's always the case in hindsight!
Might add if it takes a hit after divi date.

skinny - 15 Sep 2009 16:39 - 88 of 381

Big jump in auction!

Dil - 15 Sep 2009 16:48 - 89 of 381

560p ?????


:-)

skinny - 15 Sep 2009 17:05 - 90 of 381

:-)

kimoldfield - 15 Sep 2009 19:54 - 91 of 381

Sold at 2.29 :o(

Got free shares but (as you say down there!) :o)

Only 200 though (or is it but?) :o(

Time to buy more!!!! :o)

Dil - 16 Sep 2009 00:35 - 92 of 381

I got stiched up for 14 quid in a pub quiz (my local that has just changed hands) , 5 a team maximum and we got 4 , win every round including the last up til last question lol.

Last question worth 15 points (every other one worth 1) we get 3 and the landlords 17 year old daughter gets 15 and her gang wins by 1 point !!!

More fixed than an mdx scln , or am i just a bad loser ?

Pub gonna be empty Friday , didn't go unmissed by all those not related to the family:-)




Sorry Kim can't advise you unlike tabby cos I aint got a license but my (revised) target of 560p seems reasonable. Broker comments and upgrades on advfn (wtf do they know), ramp ramp :-)

Dil

Dil - 16 Sep 2009 00:38 - 93 of 381

PS ... I got uck all right and neither did me 16 year old kids mates .... we just got lucky :-)

Dil - 16 Sep 2009 08:18 - 94 of 381

Still can't believe how we were stitched up.

kimoldfield - 16 Sep 2009 08:44 - 95 of 381

The landlord's name isn't Gordon Brown by any chance is it Dil?!

Dil - 16 Sep 2009 09:40 - 96 of 381

I don't wanna talk about it Kim it's too upsetting.


:-)

kimoldfield - 16 Sep 2009 10:21 - 97 of 381

Lol :o)

spitfire43 - 17 Sep 2009 12:47 - 98 of 381

Looks like Barclays have been large buyers recently, with a holding now of 5,222.550 or 5.01%, and before not having a notifiable interest.

Dil - 17 Sep 2009 14:02 - 99 of 381

They were probably the one hoovering them up in the auction.

skinny - 22 Sep 2009 12:33 - 100 of 381

New highs again today.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=HLO&Si

Dil - 23 Sep 2009 11:16 - 101 of 381

Nice chart skinny , 300p by Friday :-)

skinny - 23 Sep 2009 11:50 - 102 of 381

:-)

Dil - 26 Oct 2009 08:54 - 103 of 381

Come on baby you know you wanna breakout

spitfire43 - 26 Oct 2009 10:33 - 104 of 381

I think you're right Dil, look at the the excellent chart below.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=HLO&Si

spitfire43 - 26 Oct 2009 16:15 - 105 of 381

A bit of persistant selling @ 270p, but hlo still held onto gains today.
Register now or login to post to this thread.