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.

Next plc (NXT)     

dreamcatcher - 03 Aug 2012 15:27



NEXT is a UK based retailer offering exciting, beautifully designed, excellent quality

fashion and accessories for men, women and children together with a full range of

homewares# NEXT distributes through three main channels:


■NEXT Retail, a chain of more than 500 stores in the UK and Eire;
■NEXT Directory, a home shopping catalogue and website with around 3 million active customers and international websites serving approximately 50 countries; and
■NEXT International, with almost 200 mainly franchised stores around the world#
Other businesses in the NEXT group include:■NEXT Sourcing, which designs, sources and buys NEXT branded products;
■Lipsy, which designs and sells its own branded younger women's fashion products through retail, internet and wholesale channels; and
The parent company, NEXT plc, is listed on the London Stock Exchange #LSE: NXT#L# and is a member of the FTSE 100 Index# Total revenues for the year ended January 2012 were £3#5 billion with underlying pre-tax profits of £570 million# NEXT's head office is located in Enderby on the outskirts of Leicester, England

http://www.next.co.uk/


Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=NXT&SiChart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=NXT&SiFlag Counter


skinny - 03 Jan 2013 16:15 - 99 of 620

DC - most definitely not aim!

dreamcatcher - 03 Jan 2013 16:22 - 100 of 620

Been a long day. skinny.

Broker snap: Panmure ups forecasts for Next
Thu 03 Jan 2013

LONDON (SHARECAST) - Panmure Gordon has lifted its price target for retailing group Next from 3,770p to 3,848p following the company's Christmas trading update on Thursday morning which showed 'continued strength'.

The broker said that trading between November 1st and December 24th 2012 was strong with both sales and margins coming in better than expected.

Meanwhile, buy-backs of £241m last year compared with guidance of £200m, and the buy-back guidance for the year to January 2014 is £250m, well ahead of Panmure's £190m estimate.

Finally, Next raised its full-year (ending January 2013) profit before tax guidance from £590-620m to £611-625m. Panmure had pencilled in a figure closer to £612.7m for this year and has moved it up to £617.8m accordingly. The broker also raised next year's forecast from £640.7m to £644.6m.

However, despite the forecast upgrades, Panmure retained its 'hold' rating for Next.

"Trading on a FY2013E price-to-earnings ratio of 13.5 on our new estimates, dropping to 12.3 in FY2014E, we think that Next shares have some upside but not enough to justify a 'buy' recommendation," analysts said.

Nevertheless, they said that they are still "big fans of this blue blood multi-channel retailer".

Shares were up 2.31% at 3,859p in morning trade on Thursday.


dreamcatcher - 04 Jan 2013 13:46 - 101 of 620

Next price target hiked to £42 by Deutsche Bank
9:21 am The rise in target price underpins the bank's buy advice.

Deutsche Bank has raised its price target for retailer Next (LON:NXT) after better than expected trading figures kicked off the sector’s post-Christmas reporting season on a cheery note.

The broker has raised its price target to £4 a share to £42 following Thursday’s trading statement, underpinning its ‘buy’ recommendation. The stock is currently changing hands for £38.67.

The “positive surprise” for Deutsche was the performance of the Next Directory catalogue business, which posted an 11.2% rise in revenues over the crucial selling period. For the Next Brand as a whole, sales in the period from November 1 to December 24 were up 3.9%.

While top-line growth chimed with management expectations, there were better than expected outcomes in terms of cost control, mark-downs and gross margins.

This has prompted Next to lift its full-year profits guidance range to £611mln-£625mln; previously, guidance had indicated full year profits would be in the range of £590mln-£620mln

dreamcatcher - 04 Jan 2013 17:19 - 102 of 620


The best companies are those run by talented and experienced leaders with strong vested interests in the success of the business, held in check by a board with sound financial and business acumen. Some of the worst investments to hold are those run by executives collecting fat rewards as the underlying business goes to pot.

In this series, I'm assessing the boardrooms of companies within the FTSE 100 (FTSE: ^FTSE - news) (UKX). I hope to separate the management teams that are worth following from those that are not. Today I am looking at Next (Other OTC: NXGPF - news) , the Britain's largest fashion group.

Here are the key directors:



Director Position



John Barton

(non-exec) Chairman



Lord Wolfson of Apsley Guise

Chief Executive



David Keens

Finance Director



Christos Angelides

Product Director



Andrew Varley

Property Director


John Barton joined the board in 2002 and became chairman in 2006. A chartered accountant, his background is in the insurance industry. He was CEO of Jardine Insurance Brokers for 13 years until 1997, and when it merged to form Jardine Lloyd Thompson (LSE: JLT.L - news) he served as chairman for the next four years. He has also been chairman of Brit Insurance, and maintains his connection with the industry as chairman of FTSE 250 (FTSE: ^FTMC - news) insurance broker Catlin.

He also served on the board of Cable and Wireless Worldwide, and was chairman at the time of its demise.

Stronger

No doubt a stronger voice on the board is that of CEO Simon Wolfson, the Tory Peer. The son of former chairman David Wolfson he started working at Next as a sales assistant in 1991 and worked his way up the company, becoming CEO in 2001 at the age of 33. That makes him both one of the youngest FTSE 100 chief executives ever, and currently one of the longest-serving.

Next shares have quadrupled during his tenure. That and the company's reputation for delivering on forecasts and its iconic position on the High Street, coupled with Lord Wolfson's prominence in the Tory party, ensures that he is one of the most listened-to of FTSE leaders.

David Keens has been finance director since 1991. A chartered accountant, he spent seven years in the profession before a nine year-stint in the food industry, joining Next in 1986 as group treasurer.

Fashion

Christos Angelides also joined the company in 1986, initially responsible for sourcing product in Hong Kong. He has held positions as head of menswear and womenswear and was appointed to the board in 2000. In a business driven by the fickleness of fashion he is seen as the product guru who has forged Next's success alongside CEO Simon Wolfson.

Property director Andrew Varley is also long-serving. He joined Next in 1985 after 12 years in retail and commercial property, and joined the board in 1990.

To my mind it's good to see senior functional heads on the board, rather than just a CEO and finance director. But with such long-serving executive team I wonder if the four non-execs -- with neatly balanced backgrounds in investment banking, accountancy, retail and property -- can have much sway.

I analyse management teams from five different angles to help work out a verdict. Here's my assessment:



1. Reputation. Management CVs and track record.Excellent though short of external experience.

Score 3/5



2. Performance. Success at the company.Successful.

Score 4/5



3. Board Composition. Skills, experience, balanceGood mix but executive-dominated.

Score 3/5



4. Remuneration. Fairness of pay, link to performance.Fair. Pay was reduced last year.

Score 4/5



5. Directors' Holdings, compared to their pay.Executives have substantial holdings. CEO's is £58m-worth.

Score 5/5


Overall, Next scores 19 out of 25, a top quartile result. The board is dominated by a long-serving executive team, but looks fit for purpose.

dreamcatcher - 14 Jan 2013 12:07 - 103 of 620

Next: Goldman Sachs raises target price from 3800p to 4100p keeping a neutral rating.

dreamcatcher - 18 Jan 2013 13:31 - 104 of 620

Next is reaping the rewards of having a multi-channel business in place, allowing shoppers to use the web to reserve, collect in store or arrange home delivery, with Next demonstrating that consumers are just as willing to buy clothes online as they are books. Next's Directory business is growing much faster than its retail operation,and the company now expects group profits to be roughly £618m for the full year to January 2013, implying earnings growth of between 14 and 17 per cent.
However, Next warns that rising price inflation ahead of wages means the consumer enviroment will remain subdued - although the group has a tendency to play down expectations and subsequently beat them.

dreamcatcher - 22 Jan 2013 09:30 - 105 of 620

Next: Exane BNP takes price target from 3700p to 4000p and upgrades to neutral

skinny - 22 Jan 2013 16:27 - 106 of 620

New highs again! @4,046p

dreamcatcher - 22 Jan 2013 16:29 - 107 of 620

1

skinny - 22 Jan 2013 16:30 - 108 of 620

You can't win them all!

It is incredible though.

tomasz - 22 Jan 2013 16:42 - 109 of 620

dc i was too optimistic giving you top credit for getting all time highs :))

dreamcatcher - 22 Jan 2013 16:49 - 110 of 620

get back on the asos thread, no asos supporters here. Only joking, asos turn tomorrow. :-))

dreamcatcher - 28 Jan 2013 17:33 - 111 of 620

4067 new high

tomasz - 28 Jan 2013 18:42 - 112 of 620

wow spectacular numbers...dc, how dare you not be in...

dreamcatcher - 28 Jan 2013 19:26 - 113 of 620

:-))

skinny - 28 Jan 2013 20:19 - 114 of 620

Without wishing to be pedantic, the new high was actually 4097.

dreamcatcher - 28 Jan 2013 20:30 - 115 of 620

No thats not being pedantic, your numbers are even better. lol

tomasz - 30 Jan 2013 10:41 - 116 of 620

in 4 years from 800 to 4100 is awesome , big boys undoubtly love one..

dreamcatcher - 01 Feb 2013 17:43 - 117 of 620

I see IC has Next as a hold. The share price has been rising steadily since 1990 when it was valued at just 10p. Thats a far cry from todays 4,098p and a whopping 400-fold increase over two decades. Perhaps thats why non-executive director and seasoned acccountant Steve barber cashed in half his 10,000 shares. At 4,024p apiece, that leaves Mr Barber with a tidy windfall of £201,200. Next shares are now rated on 15 times earnings, which isn't cheap, while its dividend yield is close to historic lows.

dreamcatcher - 06 Feb 2013 16:20 - 118 of 620

No stopping this one at the moment ?
Register now or login to post to this thread.