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Since April, the Vodafone (LSE:VOD) share value has risen by round a 3rd to 85p (at 9 October). Okay, practically 40 FTSE 100 shares have carried out higher, however for shareholders like me, that is welcome information.
If it might break by means of the 100p-barrier by the tip of the yr, it might be a welcome Christmas current. In spite of everything, the final time the inventory was above £1 was in March 2023.
A date for the diary
A key milestone could possibly be 11 November. That is when the telecoms group pronounces its half-year outcomes for the six months ended 30 September (H1 26).
Almost a yr in the past, the group’s share value tanked 8.2% after it issued its H1 25 numbers. Buyers had been alarmed by a fall in service income in Germany, its greatest market. On 1 July 2024, a brand new legislation got here into impact that meant it was not doable for landlords to bill tenants for TV contracts as a part of their rents. This stays a significant problem for the group.
This time spherical, I’m hoping for some indicators that the group’s turnaround plan is working. Additionally, shareholders will most likely obtain an replace on how the VodafoneThree enterprise is performing following the merger in Could. Excellent news and the share value might head north.
However a have a look at the typical 12-month share value goal of brokers makes me uncertain. The consensus is that Vodafone’s shares ought to be altering palms for round 8% lower than they’re right this moment.
A wider difficulty
I believe a few of this pessimism displays the elemental downside of the telecoms trade. Particularly, that there’s an ever-present requirement for substantial funding, but — largely on account of intense competitors — the returns are decrease than in different sectors.
To handle this, Vodafone’s been promoting off varied belongings and has exited Spain and Italy. A major proportion of the gross sales proceeds has been used to scale back the group’s giant debt burden. The steadiness has helped fund a share buyback programme.
With forecast FY26 earnings per share of 8.47 euro cents (7.35p), the inventory at present trades on a modest 11.5 instances anticipated earnings. For FY28, this drops to 7.7.
At 30 June, the group’s accounts disclosed a e-book worth of €53.9bn (£46.8bn), which is way lower than its present market cap of £20.2bn.
The group’s dividend is fairly good too. It’s prone to declare 4.5 euro cents (3.91p) for FY26. This implies the inventory’s at present yielding 4.6%. However shareholders are nonetheless smarting from the 50% lower in FY25, a reminder that payouts can’t all the time be be relied upon.
Ultimate ideas
To be sincere, I discover Vodafone irritating. I’ve lengthy believed (and nonetheless do) that the group’s present inventory market valuation underestimates its true value. I reckon its shares ought to commerce comfortably above £1 however it is going to want a robust set of half-year outcomes (and probably an earnings improve) if it’s to get there over the subsequent couple of months.
However although the brokers seem to disagree with me, I’m not planning on promoting up. I’m hoping that the half-year outcomes will act as a catalyst and provides the group’s share value renewed momentum. Hopefully, we are going to see one thing of a Santa Rally. Affected person buyers searching for an undervalued inventory — that’s additionally paying an above-average dividend — might think about taking a place.


Haha, Vodafones £1 target feels like chasing a Santa Rally on a unicycle down a minefield! The telecoms trades funding conundrum is a classic – like throwing money into a black hole while your competitors are just digging faster. Reducing debt is great, but if the market cap is currently valued at less than the book value, maybe the buyback programme should focus on shares traded at a discount? I wouldnt bet my Christmas bonus on hitting 100p though; patience is a virtue, even if the shares are about as patient as a toddler waiting for Santa. 🎅📉tải video Facebook