Gamble of the week: a property contractor for the brave

Is Mervyn King about to ride to the rescue of British house-builders? Last week the Centre for Economics and Business Research predicted that property prices would rise in nominal terms by 2.2% in 2011 and then by 5% a year thereafter. That’s thanks to the Bank of England’s incredibly accommodative stance on interest rates and quantitative easing (QE).

This contrarian view was also reciprocated by the Council of Mortgage Lenders last Friday, when it said that buy-to-let lending had increased 12% in the third quarter of 2010. Meanwhile, there is even a chance that in diversifying away from the greenback, some dollar-loaded sovereign wealth funds may begin snapping up physical assets, such as British property.

This is where UK contractor, Galliford Try, comes in. The company’s housing arm specialises in constructing social and residential properties. Indeed, Galliford Try has amassed a land-bank of 9,600 plots (worth about £490m), which it plans to develop over the next few years. However, the jewel in the firm’s crown is its civil engineering division, Morrison construction – the number-one player in water infrastructure.

Gamble of the week: Galliford Try (LSE: GFRD)

At the last count, Morrison had a chunky £1.75bn order book, providing cover for 91% of its targeted revenues for the year ending June 2011 (55% for 2012). The sector split for the backlog is 41% regulated (ie, water), 49% public and 10% private. Furthermore, this unit has won several prestigious new contracts over the past three months, including work within the water, education, healthcare, and hotel industries.

Financially, the group is in fine fettle too. Net funds of £76.5m (excluding a £17m pension deficit), are equivalent to 92p per share. House broker KBC Peel Hunt is anticipating 2010 sales and underlying EBITDA of £1.2bn and £34.3m respectively – after stripping out the distorting effect of the cash pile, which puts the stock on a miserly enterprise value to EBITDA multiple of less than six. That’s far too cheap for a such a high-quality asset, paying a 3.5% dividend yield and with net tangible assets (NTA) worth 368p per share.

So what should you watch out for? One of the biggest worries is the property sector taking another lurch south. That would hurt profits. However, with the shares trading at a 20% discount to NTA, there’s plenty of slack built into the price. The firm is also exposed to the usual risks associated with managing long-term contracts and coping with the government’s austerity measures.

In short, Galliford is a cheap inflationary hedge for the more adventurous investor.

Recommendation: SPECULATIVE BUY at 280p


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