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Is Top-Scoring FTSE 100 Share Next Plc Still A Buy?

Does Next plc (LON: NXT) still make the grade as a top-scoring investment opportunity?

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During 2013, I’ve looked at most shares in the FTSE 100 and graded them against these five quality and value indicators:

  • Dividend cover
  • Borrowings
  • Growth
  • Price to earnings
  • Outlook

Some companies scored highly against the “business quality” indicators of level of borrowings, earnings growth record, and outlook. Others scored highly against the “value” indicators of dividend cover and price-to-earnings ratio (P/E).

Should you buy Next Plc shares today?

Before you decide, please take a moment to review this report first. Despite ongoing uncertainties from US tariffs to global conflicts, Mark Rogers and his team believe many UK shares still trade at substantial discounts, offering savvy investors plenty of potential opportunities to learn about.

That’s why this could be an ideal time to secure this valuable research – Mark’s analysts have scoured the markets to reveal 5 of his favourite long-term ‘Buys’. Please, don’t make any big decisions before seeing them.

Quality and value in harmony

However, the most promising investment opportunities scored well on both business-quality and value indicators.

In this mini-series, I’m revisiting some of the highest-scoring shares to look at events since the original article and to assess the quality of the investment opportunity now. Some of these high-scoring firms could be investment winners for 2014 and beyond so, today, I’m revisiting UK-based fashion and accessories retailer Next (LSE: NXT), which scored 21 out of 25 in April. 

Satisfactory recent trading

In a recent interim management statement, Next predicted that growth in earnings per share would be in the range of 15% to 21% for the year ending January 2014. That’s good progress, and further evidence that a focus on design and quality is paying off.

The firm seems to have captured the hearts, minds and aspirations of a large portion of the label-on-the-outside wearing mass market, which is reassuring for investors. City forecasters are currently expecting the earnings growth rate to ease down to about 8% for the year ending in January 2015. The latest management statement describes trading conditions as “volatile.”

Opportunity abroad

Last year, Next pulled in around 51% of revenue from its 6.7 million square feet of trading space and 46% from its directory business. The rest came from other sources. However, the company generates nearly all of its revenue in the UK, despite also operating in around 60 international territories, which collectively delivered just 1%.

Next still has it all to play for overseas, so growth is very far from off the agenda, in my view.  

Business-quality and value score now

Since April, the shares have advanced around 26% to 5,495p, which combines with the lower forward earnings guidance to reduce my P/E score from three to 2/5. The rest of my business-quality and value indicators remain unchanged: forward earnings cover the forward dividend around 2.7 times, scoring 4/5; net debt is running at around 80% the level of operating profit, scoring 4/5; growth is intact, scoring 5/5; and good recent trading combines with a positive outlook to score 5/5.

Overall, I score Next 20/25 today.

What now?

In April, I thought Next shares were worth buying at some point. Given the share-price rise since then, it looks like right then would have been a good time!

Looking forward, the P/E looks full to me, and next year’s dividend yield is running at a lowly 2.4%. Now, I’m neutral on Next, so the shares are going back on my watch list.

> Kevin does not own shares in Next.

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