EVENTS:   The Roaring 2020s or a Rerun of the 1970s? - Edward Yardeni/Yardeni Research - 24 Mar 26   Best Equity Short Ideas Conference Call 13 - Thomas Chanos/Badger Consultants & Dr. Aaron Fletcher/Bios Research & Jonathan Telgener/Channel Dynamics & Ed Steele/Iron Blue Financials & John Zolidis/Quo Vadis Capital & Mark Hiley/The Analyst - 26 Mar 26     ROADSHOWS: Chinese Equity Ideas & Channel Checks Across 50 sub-sectors - Don Ma /Horizon Insights   •   London   23 - 27 Mar 26       Long Short European Equity Research - Harry Grist /The Analyst   •   New York   26 Mar 26       Fundamental US Healthcare Short Ideas - Dr Elliot Favus /Favus Institutional Research   •   London   27 - 27 Mar 26      
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Company Research

Time to buy Greece

AIR Capital

Greece is healing - after a brutal 15-year wait, the country has finally regained its BBB investment-grade rating from Fitch. Despite chronic under-investment in infrastructure, Greek corporates have expanded at home and abroad and now boast strong balance sheets, often with net cash - a rarity in Europe. Ultra-low labour costs and the highest workload in the EU have boosted competitiveness, while political stability since 2019 has restored investor confidence. Yet Greek equities still trade at half their 2008 market capitalisation, leaving substantial upside for companies that are leaner, stronger and more agile than their European peers. AIR’s Buy-rated ideas include Athens International Airport, Motor Oil, National Bank of Greece and Sarantis, each offering 40-100%+ upside.

Edition: 225

- 28 November, 2025


Athens International Airport (AIA GA) Greece

Industrials

ResearchGreece

ResearchGreece initiates coverage with a Do Not Own (DOI) rating due to a) the low-capped-earnings growth outlook; b) the uncompelling 3.6% dividend yield left over from 2023 (paid in 2024); c) DCF/DDM valuation; and d) the warranted discount to peers given the shorter remaining concession life. Some investors may consider the average dividend yield of c.8% between 2024-2046, assuming a 100% payout ratio, to be a good enough reason to own the stock, but weak earnings growth (2023-2030 clean EBITDA CAGR at +0.7% and EPS CAGR at -0.4%), means the dividend yield edges closer to 6.6%-7.4% in 2025-2030. Therefore, they fail to see any upside or capital appreciation above this yield at the current share price.

Edition: 180

- 23 February, 2024