LYC 1.15% $7.71 lynas rare earths limited

THOUGHT THIS ARTICLE MIGHT GIVE SOME ENCORAGEMENT GOING...

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    THOUGHT THIS ARTICLE MIGHT GIVE SOME ENCORAGEMENT GOING FORWARDS


    THANKS ALL LYNAS HOT COPPER THAT PUT SO MUCH KNOWLEDGE AND SHARE ITS PRICELESS
    REGARDS
    ALANPRO

    PRICE TO BOOK RATIO P/B

    Simply a way of calculating the value of the company's assets against its share price.

    For example, Lynas Corporation [ASX: LYC] is a rare earths miner. Today it's trading at 93 cents. But back in April it was selling for $2.60 a share - the stock price has dropped 61%! What happened? The volatility in the market hasn't helped. But JP Morgan's downgrade of fellow rare earths miner Molycorp [NYSE: MCP] was the real catalyst for the price fall. It started a big ball of negative sentiment rolling. Bankers, traders and retail investors began bailing out of rare earths stocks. They short sold the sector. All on the back of negative sentiment - the fundamentals for the rare earths market hadn't changed. China still controls more than 95% of the rare earths market. Making matters worse, China is expected to offer a paltry 30% of its 93,800 tonnes of rare earths to the export market. And rare earth demand is tipped to reach 185,000 tonnes in four years.

    But the power of this negative sentiment sparked by JP Morgan's re-rating of Molycorp pushed the share price of Lynas deeper into the red. Even though the average price for Lynas's assets - its rare earths - was up 31% in the third quarter!

    Here's the thing. Using the price-to-book value, you can see through the market sentiment and get a clearer picture of the company's asset value. Lynas has a P/B value of 2.98.

    Now, for the value investor, a company with a P/B of less than one tells you one of two things. Firstly, it could be that the market feels the asset value is inflated. Or secondly, the company has a lousy return on its assets.

    The higher a company's profitability, the higher the P/B value will be. And at 2.98 Lynas is sitting pretty.

    This is why I focus on profitable companies.

    Over time, it's a much lower risk way of building wealth than trying to chase the market up or bail out on the way down.

    A company's true value has nothing to do with sentiment. If you understand this and have the right temperament, you're well on the way to becoming a very successful investor.

    Greg Canavan
    Money Morning Australia

    For editorial enquiries and feedback, email [email protected]
 
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