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Why Vodafone Group Plc Is Hard To Hate Right Now

Harvey Jones tried to find five reasons to hate Vodafone plc (LON: VOD), but he found a lot more to love instead.

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There is something to love and hate in almost every stock, but could Vodafone (LSE: VOD) (NASDAQ: VOD.US) be a rare exception? I tried hating it, but found there was just too much to like. Here’s why.

I’m too grateful.

I find it difficult to despise a stock that has served me so well. My first slice of Vodafone, bought in August 2009, has since risen 83%, and that’s excluding dividends. The FTSE 100 returned just 37% in that time. My subsequent top-ups have also performed strongly. That’s impressive, especially for such a large company that many dismissed as an ex-growth stock, good for income only. How wrong the haters were.

Should you buy Vodafone Group Public 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.

And there’s more to be grateful for.

Vodafone is a growth and income machine, and there’s plenty more to come. Right now, it yields 4.4%, covered 1.5 times, and is on a forecast yield of 5.5% for March 2014. Policy remains progressive, with a recent 8% dividend hike to 3.53p a share. Big-hearted Vodafone will also hand shareholders $84 billion of the $130 billion it will receive for selling its 45% stake in Verizon Wireless. Plus £2 billion of free cash flow should continue to underpin future shareholder returns. And then there’s the small matter of the rumoured AT&T takeover….

Woodford called it wrong, and I called it right.

When City genius Neil Woodford dumped Vodafone in the summer, I leapt to its defence, claiming it was still a dividend heavyweight. Woodford doesn’t get many big calls wrong, but he did this time, selling at 171p. Today, he would have to pay 228p to buy it back, a hefty 33% more. One of his complaints was that Vodafone had denied shareholders the Verizon Wireless dividend. Shareholders aren’t complaining now.

It has a Spring in its step.

There were grounds for dislike in Vodafone’s recent interim results, particularly in Europe, where core revenues fell 3.9%, and 14.9% in the south. These are tough times, but Vodafone has unrivalled financial clout, allowing it to plough billions into extending European 3G and accelerating the roll-out of superfast 4G mobile, ahead of the recovery. Its £7 billion investment programme, Project Spring, will only use up a small proportion of its $130 billion haul from the sale of Verizon Wireless, but leave underfunded and underpowered competitors flailing in Vodafone’s wake.

And then there’s that takeover.

I had been wondering whether to bank my Vodafone profits, but that would be daft, with AT&T rumoured to be ready to lavish $175 billion to get at Vodafone’s European operations. I’ve seen takeover price estimates ranging from 265p to 340p, and I can’t find anything to hate about that. Critics say that if the takeover fails, Vodafone will go nowhere, slowly, for years. They said that before…

> Harvey owns shares in Vodafone. The Motley Fool has recommended shares in Vodafone.

 

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