dougwak
- 10 Jan 2005 15:42
'Market Report' 'Independent' 7. January 2005
Finally, brokers were surprised to see MyTravel's ordinary shares and its so-called "A" shares trade at different prices. The two classes of share are identical in all but name, according to brokers, with the differentiation merely a quirk of the company's recent refinancing. So why the difference in price yesterday when MyTravel ordinaries closed at 7.5p, down 0.5p, while its "A" shares closed at 4.75p, down 1.1p?
Market professionals and the company were at a loss to explain the apparent anomaly. Nevertheless, brokers advised clients holding MyTravel ordinaries to sell them in the market and buy the same quantity of the lower-priced "A"s. The difference in the value of the two deals the investor keeps as profit. MyTravel is tipped to consolidate the two classes of stock into one in the not too distant future.
Please do note that the newly issued MyTravel shares have the symbol MT.S as opposed to the older MT.L symbol.
Happy hunting guys"""
Paddywak1967
- 18 Jan 2005 10:57
- 2 of 11
This one's due a bit of a bounce I think. Any views??
grevis2
- 14 Jun 2005 14:54
- 3 of 11
First Choice trims winter losses
MoneyAM
First Choice Holidays has cut underlying first-half losses by 15%, beating expectations.
The UK holiday group said forward bookings were strong with little sign it was being hurt by a downturn in consumer spending.
First Choice posted a loss before tax, goodwill amortisation and exceptional items of 34.1m in the six months to April 30th, down from 39.9m in the prior year, on sales up 16.9% to 915m.
On that basis financial analysts had expected the company, which traditionally reports a loss during the quieter first half spanning the British winter, to deliver a 36m loss.
'This is the third consecutive year that we have significantly reduced winter losses,' CEO, Peter Long, said in a statement.
'We believe that the annual holiday remains an extremely important purchase for our customers which, when combined with the flexible business model we have built, and a market in which supply and demand looks to be better balanced than has historically been the case, gives us confidence that we will meet our expectations this year,' he added.
First Choice said bookings of mainstream holidays for the coming summer, as a percentage of the total number of holidays on offer, were up five points on the previous year, with customer numbers up 11%.
Total sales in the sector rose 21% as the company experienced particularly strong growth in higher-cost holidays.
First Choice has been attempting to drive sales of higher margin all-inclusive holidays, while simultaneously cutting back on short-haul flight-only business.
Specialist holiday bookings rose 33%.
The company is proposing a 1.95p interim dividend, up 11%.
Net losses fell to 43m from 46.3m, while diluted losses per share fell 7.8% to 8.3p.
grevis2
- 14 Jun 2005 14:56
- 4 of 11
FTSE 250 movers: MyTravel, Farnell upbeat
Tue 14 Jun 2005
LONDON (SHARECAST) - News that First Choice Holidays managed to narrow first half losses over the difficult Winter period gave a sympathetic boost to MyTravel today, taking the tour operator to the top of the mid-cap risers.
MyTravel is also due to publish its own version of events next week, with interims due out on Thursday June 22.
grevis2
- 14 Jun 2005 14:59
- 5 of 11
Forecasts
Year Ending Sales (m) Pre-tax (m) EPS P/E PEG EPS Grth. Div Yield
30-09-2005 3,046.91 43.66 0.13p 40.4 n/a n/a n/a 0.0%
30-09-2006 3,050.11 108.36 1.00p 5.3 0.0 +669% n/a 0.0%
Covering analysts: Park Raymond James, Cochran Caronia, JM Dutton & Associates LLC, Bank Austria Creditanstalt
Regulatory News
grevis2
- 14 Jun 2005 15:01
- 6 of 11
MyTravel on the move
Saturday June 4, 2005
The Guardian
The tour operator MyTravel continued its recent good run yesterday with its shares closing at their highest level since late April amid talk that half-year figures, due on June 23, will not disappoint and that the company could play a part in any sector consolidation.
The results will be the first since MyTravel completed its massive debt-for-equity swap and are expected to show the company's restructuring plan is on track.
grevis2
- 14 Jun 2005 15:05
- 7 of 11
MyTravel now en route to profit
DAVID BLACK
DEPUTY BUSINESS EDITOR
MYTRAVEL, the sick man of the UK travel industry, saw its shares do an about-turn yesterday after announcing bookings were up and it was on target for an operating profit in 2006.
The group, which required an 800 million debt overhaul last year to stay in business, said in a trading statement in advance of its annual meeting that it had achieved "significant progress" in restoring the business.
In response, its shares which had traded as low as 3.77p over the year, rose at one point by over 7 per cent, before falling back to close 6.36 per cent up at 5.85p, valuing the business at about 502m.
Manchester-based MyTravel, formerly known as Airtours, said its three divisions - UK, Northern Europe and North America - had met forecasts during the winter despite the impact of the December tsunami on tourism in Asia, which cost it an estimated 12m.
Much of this figure - 10m - related to northern Europe after its Scandinavian division stopped operating to Phuket in January.
For the summer season it reported "significantly fewer" holidays left unsold. In northern Europe, booking levels had shown a slight improvement, with margins higher, while in North America demand was "encouraging".
Peter McHugh, the MyTravel chief executive, said: "The company is making good progress in line with our business plan and I think we are turning the corner."
He said his aim was to return all three units to profit at operating level by 2006 and to match industry-wide profit margins of 3.5 per cent at its stricken UK arm by 2007.
McHugh added: "As part of this business plan, in the UK we have reduced capacity for this year, begun to make improvements to our product offering and continued to focus on cost control." But the company warned that while it had hedged its fuel requirements for the current financial year, oil prices threatened to drag on earnings further ahead if they remained at near-record levels.
The company has bought caps for jet fuel at US$600 per metric tonne, the equivalent of $60 per barrel of Brent crude, for the remaining 300,000 tonnes of fuel it expects to use this financial year. It has also imposed a 15 fuel supplement on all its short-haul flights.
McHugh said shareholders had overwhelmingly approved the reorganisation of the companys share capital, designed to simplify its capital structure by transferring 96 per cent of the company to creditors.
Shortly before its restructuring, the group announced in December annual losses of 190.3m for the 13 months to 31 October, although this was far better than the deficit of 910.9m reported a year earlier.
MyTravel came close to collapse following a sharp downturn in travel after the 11 September, 2001 attacks. Its woes were compounded in 2002 by accounting errors and growing competition from low-cost airlines. MyTravel responded by cutting capacity and axing thousands of jobs, before completing its 800m life-saving debt-for-equity swap.
queen1
- 14 Jun 2005 22:19
- 8 of 11
Things do appear to be on the up. It would appear that although the high street is suffering, people are still spending money on holidays.
55011
- 17 Jun 2005 09:56
- 9 of 11
Firming again, today. It rose after First Choice announced its results earlier in the week, eased off a touch, now it's moving up again. Results next week should confirm progess and that the company is making good gound on its recovery.
55011
- 18 Jun 2005 16:27
- 10 of 11
Not a bad week, the uptrend continues. After a long series of 2,000 AT sells, there was an interesting little spike just before the close on Friday.
55011
- 19 Jun 2005 23:41
- 11 of 11
The key aspect now is whether the travel industry will stand aside while MyTravel regains it rightful place in the market, or will there be an early attempt to take it out. Might not be so hard as there are already some large stakes which could readily be bought. Keep watching closely.