All Research | EthicalEquitieshttps://ethicalequities.com.au/blog/2018-08-28T01:54:20+00:00All ResearchDWS Ltd: a possible contrarian play with a big dividend yield (ASX:DWS)2014-04-30T14:24:33+00:002018-08-28T01:54:20+00:00Claude Walkerhttps://ethicalequities.com.au/blog/author/Claude/https://ethicalequities.com.au/blog/dws-ltd-a-possible-contrarian-play-with-a-big-dividend-yield-asxdws/<p><strong>DWS Ltd</strong> (ASX:DWS) is an IT Consulting and Software Solutions business, forever Danny Wallis Services (in my head) though apparently it's pure coincidence. Founder Danny Wallis remains the major shareholder and controls the company, but has recently stepped down as CEO. The major way that this company creates value for clients is to allow them to perform their own processes more efficiently. My view is that a lot of the work that once would have been performed by Australian IT consultants will now shift elsewhere, because of the increasing use of cloud data storage and software.</p>
<p>Services historically offered by DWS include project management (bringing in new IT systems), business analysis and information management, data capture, content management systems, boutique software development and data aggregation. IT companies are pretty coy about the impact of the cloud on business, but I'd be surprised if it doesn't reduce demand for some services. Having said that, I also think it could create demand for new kinds of services. However, there's no guarantee that the same firms that dominated the IT consulting landscape in the past will emerge on top after this period of fundamental change.</p>
<p>The company has been shedding staff, and it <span style="color: #222222;">recently lost a major contract with Telstra. At the AGM last year Mr Wallis said, “Over the past four years DWS has successfully diversified in client base and currently approximately 8% of our consultants are assigned to Telstra. Whilst our preference would have been to be successful with the Telstra RFP we will work hard to continue to diversify our client base and redeploy any affected consultants.” The impact of this loss is yet to be fully felt, and I expect that profit, the dividend and potentially the share price will continue to fall. My feeling is that even if the company does take a big hit, it will recover either by finding new business or letting people go (or both). </span></p>
<p>I'm not game to buy shares in DWS (yet), but I think if the price gets low enough, there could be an opportunity for contrarian investors. The market seems to be implying that the company will never really recover from the current downturn. If the share price gets much lower, then it will be implying that the company will be shrinking <strong>a lot</strong>. NPAT for the half to December 2013 was $6.7 million (cashflow was $12.5 million - go figure). Assuming the profit in the next half is around $5 million, the share price could drop even further. If the company drops to a market capitalisation of around $100 million, on a trailing P/E ratio of about 10, with stronger cashflow and plenty of cash, I think it's quite likely that it could be a bargain.</p>
<p>DWS is staying on my watchlist because if I'm going to make any contrarian play, it's going to be a company that has a very solid history of paying a generous dividend. If DWS can stabilise profits, it might become a buy.</p>
<p><em>The Author does not own shares in DWS. Nothing on this website is advice, ever. The purpose of this blog is to keep track of my decisions and invite feedback</em></p>
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