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After releasing half-year outcomes on November 11, Vodafone (LSE: VOD) shares rose to a 52-week excessive. The share value is up round 50% from ranges in April. Efficiency was robust, income was rising and revenue and money move got here in on the higher finish of steering. And the agency upped its dividend for the primary time in years.
With excellent news on all fronts, buyers would possibly marvel the place the 94p share value will go from right here. It’s, keep in mind, buying and selling at an enormous low cost if we examine it to a earlier excessive of over £5. Might Vodafone be one of many FTSE 100‘s finest bargains? Or is that this a ‘lifeless cat bounce’ from a inventory that must be prevented in any respect prices?
Early days
Beneath the newish management of Margherita Della Valle (appointed CEO in April 2023), Vodafone is aiming for a serious turnaround. This has concerned job cuts, integrating AI, promoting off weak-performing elements of the enterprise and doubling down on the stronger elements. The newest information suggests issues are heading the precise path.
Germany is Vodafone’s largest market; subsequently a latest return to development there may be very constructive certainly. Africa confirmed power too in a rising market. Competitor within the area Africa Airtel being up 158% this 12 months exhibits what could be doable there.
The UK information revolves across the lately accomplished merger of Vodafone UK and Three UK. The brand new entity, labelled VodafoneThree, was solely created in June. It’s nonetheless early days right here however this might be one more avenue for development.
Excellent news
Probably the most pleasing information for buyers got here from its announcement on dividends and buybacks. The share value jumped 8% on the day, giving some concept what the markets considered it.
Dividends-wise, Vodafone is shifting again to a progressive dividend coverage. In different phrases, the dividend ought to slowly rise within the years forward. The yield stands at 5.08% which places it among the many larger payers of the FTSE 100 already. This comes after years of barely reasonably priced dividends that finally led to a big discount.
Dividends are a pleasant ‘money in hand’ profit to proudly owning a inventory, however they don’t have the identical impact on the share value as buybacks. Vodafone confirmed one other €500m is being put in direction of share buybacks. The entire bundle shall be €4bn by the point it’s completed, an honest sum in comparison with the agency’s market cap of €25bn. This might push the share value upwards too.
I keep in mind writing about this inventory a few years in the past and concluding it was in a fairly tough place. Issues look significantly better now. I’d say it’s a inventory buyers could want to take into account. As for my very own determination, I nonetheless suppose there are higher alternatives on the market in the mean time for the kind of portfolio I’m attempting to construct.

