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In your search for high quality shares that are potentially cheap you should definitely be considering Curro (COH). This company, which was spun out of PSG and separately listed on the JSE, is profiting from the general decline in the quality of education at government schools in South Africa. It is focused on education up to grade 12, currently has over 70 000 pupils and has been growing steadily both organically and by acquisition.
Education is in an excellent investment for several reasons:
On the negative side, an education company has to make large capital investment in buildings and property so the relationship between shareholders’ equity and debt levels must be carefully considered in case the company has over-extended itself.
In its latest results for the six months to 30th June 2022 the company reported headline earnings per share (HEPS) up by 42% off a 15% increase in revenue. This displays a definite improvement in efficiency and cost control which, in turn, is indicative of excellent management.
Revenue increased as a result of increased numbers of students and inflation-adjusted increases in school fees. Parents generally expect school fees to go up by at least the inflation rate every year and they are loathe to change the school that their children attend because that is a major disruption. This means that Curro mostly has an A/B income group clientele that is locked into it for at least five or six years and mostly paying by monthly debit order. These factors make the share very defensive against economic recession.
In the initial euphoria after its listing, Curro’s price:earnings ratio (P:E) reached absurd and unsustainable levels. At the end of 2015, no doubt boosted by considerable institutional “window dressing”, the share closed on a P:E of 248,4. At the time we observed that there was only one way for the share to go from there and that was down. Today, its P:E is a much more reasonable 22,4 and it closed on Friday last week at 1090c – which is below its net asset value (NAV) of 1215c per share.
Technically, the share broke up through its downward trendline in July and has entered a new upward trend. Consider the chart:
Finally, it is always a good idea to consider a share’s price earnings: growth ratio (PEG) when trying to assess whether it is cheap or expensive. The figures for Curro’s PEG are as follows:
Year
HEPS
% Growth
2012
7
2013
12.8
82.86
2014
17.2
34.38
2015
28.3
64.53
2016
43.9
55.12
2017
49
11.62
2018
60.1
22.65
2019
61.1
1.66
2020
36.4
-40.43
2021
40.9
12.36
2022
55
34.47
Average
27.92
P:E
22.43
PEG
0.80
This shows that over the past 10 years, Curro’s average growth in HEPS (assuming that the growth in the first half of 2022 is continued to year-end) has been 27,92% per annum – and that puts it on a PEG of 0,8. A PEG below 1 means that the share is underpriced and vice versa – so this is an indication that Curro at the current share price represents good value in terms of its growth in earnings. If you are unsure about PEG go back and re-read module 10.