EVENTS:   Acceleration in the Energy Transition - David Scott/CHA-AM Advisors - 12 May 26     ROADSHOWS: Consumer Research & Industry Trends focused on US Retail, E-Tail, and Consumer Products Companies - Scott Mushkin /R5 Capital   •   London   07 - 08 May 26       US Equity Short Research & Strategy - Zach Shannon /Corto Capital Advisors   •   New York   18 - 19 May 26       Investing in Constraint: Governance, Scarcity, and the Next Phase of the Energy Transition - François Boutin-Dufresne & Félix-A. Boudreault & Lenka Martinek /Sustainable Market Strategies   •   London   18 - 19 May 26      
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The Cut

Fortnightly publication highlighting latest insights from IRF providers

Company Research

Communications

Report by Huber Research Partners

The current stock price applies an overly punitive 37% conglomerate discount to NWSA’s valuation, according to Craig Huber’s detailed SOTP analysis. Craig has no doubts the company should be broken up, arguing that management could greatly enhance shareholder value by doing any of the following: 1) Distribute REA shares held by NWSA to existing shareholders, ideally in a tax-free structure. 2) Wait for a much better environment and then sell Move (Realtor.com). 3) Sell / spin-off Foxtel. 4) Spin off Dow Jones. 5) Sell Books operation. 6) Sell Factiva. 7) Shed underperforming assets such as its secularly declining News Media segment. While investors wait patiently for portfolio simplification, fundamentals continue to improve. Craig raises his earnings estimates for both this year and next.

Communications

Report by Huber Research Partners

Using Craig Huber’s 2024 EBITDA estimates and segment multiples in his SOTP analysis suggests that the current price is implying an overly punitive 42% conglomerate discount to NWSA’s valuation. If management won't break up the company, then they should at least sell / spinoff Subscription Video Services and break out Professional Information into its own segment. Craig notes that there are signs that NWSA’s portfolio is moving in the right direction including some shrewd acquisitions as well as content licensing deals with Google, Facebook and Apple, but the stock has been trapped in underperformance (7 of last 9 years) and something big needs to change here.