Strong result and reasonable valuation Westpac shares bucked the trend amongst its banking peers rising after revealing its half-year result for the first half of the 2023 financial year. Cash earnings came in at $4,001m which rose +22% from last year benefiting from higher interest rates and making progress to become a simpler, stronger bank with disciplined cost and margin management providing $1 billion of in cost savings.
Interim dividend came in at 70 cents per share, up +15% from last year, and a 61% payout ratio to further strengthen their balance sheet.
We welcome Westpac’s result which was in-line with market expectations and with a conservative view anticipate loan business and margins to tighten slightly given the slowdown in the housing market due to rising interest rates. Westpac as still trades at a reasonable multiple compared to other big four banks’ forecasted to pay out a 6.5% dividend (taking a prudent approach of assuming no dividend growth from here).
Read more at: research.blackbull.com
Blackbull
Disney - strong results in spite of audience dipDisney reported mixed results for the quarter. The good: streaming losses fell to $659M from the previous quarter’s $1.1B, whereas streaming revenues rose +12% to $5.5B. Crucially ARPU (average revenue per user) rose 20%in the US and ~6% internationally — it’s a case of squeezing actual profit out of users rather than scaling the business at all costs — this is the new “raison d’etre” of streamers globally, as heralded by WBD CEO Zaslav a few quarters ago — like in Jerry Maguire, “show me the money”.
And now for the bad: total users fell to 157M from 161M — this was mostly due to Disney+Hotstar, an Indian subscription service — it was mostly an outlier; users lost ex Hotstar sat in the hundreds of thousands.
The ugly: linear (“trad”) TV revenues fell 7%, largely due to the increased cost of sports rights and declining advertising revenues. We’ve seen this across the board – WBD and Paramount saw the same.
See upside here as +$130 and downside as +$80 for the year. Read more at: research.blackbull.com