Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 526

In this new world, it’s time for these old world assets

Investing in unpopular stocks is a great way to make money for investors but a disciplined process is required to find uncomfortable opportunities. This is especially true in smaller companies, which have underperformed their large cap peers in 2022 and into 2023 against a backdrop of rising interest rates and a bleak economic outlook. We’ve seen this movie before. Small caps are more exposed to the economy, have less diversified businesses, and are less liquid than large caps. When the outlook starts to deteriorate, investors rush out of small caps and into large, liquid defensive stocks.

However, this underperformance has historically created an attractive entry point, as smaller companies deliver their strongest absolute and relative performance over larger companies when the economic outlook starts to improve. Small caps are now trading on a material discount to their historical relative valuations versus large caps.

The stockmarket is going through a phase when global investors are attracted to the ‘new world’ of large tech, growth companies. To find unpopular opportunities, a different framework for thinking is required. We hear a lot about new world assets, but in reality, it means higher expectations and greater potential to disappoint.

Uncomfortable opportunities in real assets

In fact, ‘old world’ assets are becoming more attractive because the barriers to building new things are getting higher. Anyone who has attempted an investment development such as residential or commercial property or a major project will know it is taking longer and it is much more expensive. There are more political constraints and fewer trades people. Interest rates are higher and competition among brands for a customer base is intense, and there’s less funding available for new businesses. Money was free a few years ago but now there’s a cost.

Newcrest Mining and Origin Energy are examples of good assets that have received attractive takeover bids in the past few months, Newcrest at a 30% premium and Origin at a 53% premium. Investors often focus on the ‘buy or build’ decision, and our view is that as the barriers go up to building new things, many existing assets become more valuable to buy rather than build.

Two old world companies the market is underestimating

Incitec Pivot (ASX:IPL) is not a household name but it's been unpopular in recent years, with the share price down from $4 to $3 in the last year. There are reasons for this, such as falling fertiliser prices, poor plant reliability and then the CEO stepped down. This is a company that turns gas into fertiliser or explosives, and when their plants don't work efficiently, they don’t make money. So it is a company that is out of favour and herein lies the opportunity. Its assets have value.

Its US fertiliser business is worth about $1.8 billion and Australian fertiliser business is about $1.4 billion, but the explosives business is what really matters. It’s valued at about $5.2 billion. The market probably understands that but underappreciates that this is radically-simplified business. In fact, they have sold the US business and there will be $1.8 billion cash on the balance sheet. They are looking at demerging or selling the Australian fertiliser business. We will be left with a pure play explosives business.

Consider the opportunity. One of the things miners must do is move material, and they need a lot of ammonium nitrate or explosives. In 2016, a huge ammonium nitrate plant was built in Western Australia. The green bars in the chart below show the market was over supplied with explosives for close to a decade. This is the type of original research we do.

How many explosives plants have been built in Australia since 2016? Zero. Miners such as BHP have been on a capex holiday and they are now increasing production, which means they are increasing movement of material. We see a large shortfall in the amount of explosives available in the Australian market. It can’t be covered by imports because explosives do not travel well, and the largest exporter of explosives was Russia with nearly half of global supply. We think this is a great time to be buying into the explosive business after 10 years of underperformance.

The second stock with some old-world characteristics is Domino’s Pizza (ASX:DMP). It was a major Covid winner in the lockdowns, but then it became a huge inflation loser. Inflation ravaged Domino's, it was among the most-impacted companies in the ASX200 from inflation. Food costs went up. Labour costs went up. Then they tried to push prices up but in a very clunky way. They added a Domino's Service Fee, the DSF they called it. It was a variable charge, like the surcharge on Uber during busy times. They had never had one before and customers started leaving. So Domino's was massively hit by inflation and issued seven profit downgrades in two years. It was a terrible time.

It’s out of favour but what is the opportunity? Domino’s makes money when they sell more pizza, and they sell more pizza by rolling out stores. And look at the following chart. They've gone from 500 stores in 2010 to 3,800 today. Even in the toughest time last year, they increased their stores by 6%. They have a very simple model with a delivery focus. It's small format so it's cheap to roll out new stores, in Australia today for about $500,000. They typically pay back in about four years, so for franchisees, this is a great investment.

We believe Domino's will revert to profit growth. They've committed to no more price increases based on what they can see, which will be more stable for customers. With store growth of about 7% per annum, and each store does a little better by about 3% per year. So it’s a business that can grow revenue at 10% a year and its earnings even higher. The inflation headwinds have created an opportunity and now they need to make the case for investing in the company.

That’s what we call an uncomfortable opportunity.

Finding comfort in the discomfort

The key takeaway is that many old world assets may be more attractive when the market is focusing more on the new world. Incitec Pivot, Domino’s, Newcrest and Origin are not large cap tech companies, and investors are overlooking them.

As Insitec Pivot becomes a simplified, pure play explosives business, and Domino's recovers from its inflation shocks, we believe both companies will move from discomfort to comfort.

 

Blake Henricks is Deputy Managing Director and Portfolio manager at Firetrail Investments. Firetrail is affiliated with Pinnacle Investment Management, a sponsor of Firstlinks. This article is general information and does not consider the circumstances of any investor.

For more articles and papers in Firstlinks from Pinnacle and its affiliates, click here.

 

  •   13 September 2023
  • 1
  •      
  •   

RELATED ARTICLES

Where Australia's largest ethical investor is finding opportunities

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Are LICs licked?

LICs are continuing to struggle with large discounts and frustrated investors are wondering whether it’s worth holding onto them. This explains why the next 6-12 months will be make or break for many LICs.

Retirement income expectations hit new highs

Younger Australians think they’ll need $100k a year in retirement - nearly double what current retirees spend. Expectations are rising fast, but are they realistic or just another case of lifestyle inflation?

5 charts every retiree must see…

Retirement can be daunting for Australians facing financial uncertainty. Understand your goals, longevity challenges, inflation impacts, market risks, and components of retirement income with these crucial charts.

Why super returns may be heading lower

Five mega trends point to risks of a more inflation prone and lower growth environment. This, along with rich market valuations, should constrain medium term superannuation returns to around 5% per annum.

The hidden property empire of Australia’s politicians

With rising home prices and falling affordability, political leaders preach reform. But asset disclosures show many are heavily invested in property - raising doubts about whose interests housing policy really protects.

Preparing for aged care

Whether for yourself or a family member, it’s never too early to start thinking about aged care. This looks at the best ways to plan ahead, as well as the changes coming to aged care from November 1 this year.

Latest Updates

Shares

Four best-ever charts for every adviser and investor

In any year since 1875, if you'd invested in the ASX, turned away and come back eight years later, your average return would be 120% with no negative periods. It's just one of the must-have stats that all investors should know.

Our experts on Jim Chalmers' super tax backdown

Labor has caved to pressure on key parts of the Division 296 tax, though also added some important nuances. Here are six experts’ views on the changes and what they mean for you.        

Superannuation

When you can withdraw your super

You can’t freely withdraw your super before 65. You need to meet certain legal conditions tied to your age, whether you’ve retired, or if you're using a transition to retirement option. 

Retirement

A national guide to concession entitlements

Navigating retirement concessions is unnecessarily complex. This outlines a new project to help older Australians find what they’re entitled to - quickly, clearly, and with less stress. 

Property

The psychology of REIT investing

Market shocks and rallies test every investor’s resolve. This explores practical strategies to stay grounded - resisting panic in downturns and FOMO in booms - while focusing on long-term returns. 

Fixed interest

Bonds are copping a bad rap

Bonds have had a tough few years and many investors are turning to other assets to diversify their portfolios. However, bonds can still play a valuable role as a source of income and risk mitigation.

Strategy

Is it time to fire the consultants?

The NSW government is cutting the use of consultants. Universities have also been criticized for relying on consultants as cover for restructuring plans. But are consultants really the problem they're made out to be?

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2025 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.