All the 0’s 1’s and 2’s

For a year now, Richard has been scrutinising companies and awarding them ‘strikes’ for complications that make them tricky to analyse and potentially unpredictable as investments. Now he’s combed the entire market, he reveals all the shares that didn’t strike out.

It’s a year since I started the 5 Strikes project, which means I have evaluated (very briefly) every UK-domiciled share listed in London (excluding investment trusts) that has earned positive cash flow in aggregate over the previous three years.

Today I am sharing the list of shares that scored less than three strikes.

One new share beats the cut

To my mind, these shares have the fewest complications and are, therefore, most likely to be straightforward to analyse.

They have profitable track records, modest or no debt, and they have lived within their means – by which I mean they have grown without having to issue great globs of new shares.

Only one company has passed all the criteria and published an annual report since my last article. There is sometimes a delay between when I write the article and when it is published, though, so there may be more by the time you read this! I will reveal them next time.

The company that passed is RELX, the information, data, and analytics behemoth formerly known as academic and professional publisher Reed Elsevier.

RELX caught my attention recently because it was profiled in the Financial Times. The company is the top-performing FTSE 100 company in the indexes’ history. Erik Engstrom, its chief executive of fifteen years, is also one of the highest paid. But the “unflashy Swede” flies economy class, and eats at Itsu. Head office only contains 100 people, and hasn’t been refurbished in 25 years.

This is the paragraph that really caught my attention though:

One top share­holder described him as “one of the great incre­ment­al­ists of UK busi­ness”, adding: “His real tal­ent has been to plough an incred­ibly con­sist­ent fur­row. It’s been a very steady delib­er­ate strategy of invest­ing organ­ic­ally, tak­ing con­tent sets in print formats and digit­al­ising them.”

Really big businesses cannot turn on a dime. To stay relevant they must be constantly adapting and, over the long-term, evolution can turn into revolution. Maybe that is what is going on at RELX.

All the shares that beat the cut

Of the 1,442 shares listed on the stockmarket (excluding investment trusts) only 463 of them currently pass the cashflow/domicile filter. Only 142 of them have scored less than three strikes.

That’s still too many shares to research, so in the coming year, I will become a harsher critic, awarding strikes with abandon.

In the meantime, I am afraid I might break the Internet with the enormity of my table. It is ordered by date of flotation so the most established firms are first.

Age before beauty

Compelling research shows that seasoned shares, firms that have existed longest, make the best investments.

Date of floatation is not a perfect proxy for the age of a company, because companies may have existed for a long time before they floated, but an ancient IPO is, at least, a guarantee the company has been in existence for a long time.

The first share in the list, Smiths, is a giant engineering conglomerate that earned over £9 billion turnover in 2023. It has been listed since 1914, but it traces its origins to a family-owned jeweller and watchmaker established in London in 1851.

Amazon reviewers like the company’s biography. It is called “A Long Time Coming: The History of Smiths”. The Kindle eBook is priced rather fancifully, but I managed to pick up a second-hand copy of the hardback for a tenner.

Let’s hope Smiths is not a long time in the researching. A Long Time in the Making: The History of Smiths.

Smiths’ turnover puts it in the same league as RELX, which floated in 1948 and traces its history back to the nineteenth century too.

Researching big companies can be exhausting, unless they retain and communicate a focused business model and a coherent strategy. After verifying the numbers, that is what I would be looking for…

Notes to table:

# – Number of strikes

## – An ‘X’ in this column means the share struck out after further analysis

Notes – ‘sp’ is a link to SharePad coverage, ‘ii’ is a link to an article on interactive investor

For an explanation of the strikes, see our guide to 5 Strikes: How the system works, and what the strikes mean

Name Float Date Strikes # ## Notes
Smiths 1/1/1914 – Holdings – Growth 2
Tate & Lyle 9/12/1938 – Holdings 1
Eleco 26/7/1939 – Holdings – Shares 2
Unilever 11/8/1939 ? Holdings – Growth 1
James Halstead 1/1/1947 – Growth 1 ii
Senior 16/2/1947 ? Acquisitions – Debt – ROCE 2
Next 12/3/1948 – Growth – Debt 2 ii
RELX 21/4/1948 – Holdings – Debt ? Growth 2
TClarke 8/9/1949 – Holdings – CROCI 2
4imprint 5/11/1953 0 ii
PZ Cussons 26/11/1953 – Holdings – Growth 2 ii
Bunzl 20/6/1957 ? Holdings – Debt 1 ii
Johnson Service 23/5/1958 – Shares – 2
Goodwin 18/8/1958 – CROCI – Growth 2 ii
Inchcape 31/10/1958 – Holdings 1
Spirax-Sarco Engineering 15/5/1959 – Holdings 1
MJ Gleeson 1/7/1960 – CROCI – ROCE 2
Me International 1/1/1962 – Growth 1
Thorpe (F W) 1/1/1965 0 ii
Latham (James) 3/3/1965 – CROCI 1 ii
MS International 24/3/1965 ? CROCI ? ROCE – Growth 2
RS 14/6/1967 – Holdings – Shares 2
Rotork 23/7/1968 – Holdings 1
Barratt Developments 4/12/1968 – Holdings – CROCI 2
Hill & Smith 26/3/1969 – CROCI – Holdings 2
Barr (AG) 2/4/1970 – Growth 1
Halma 18/1/1972 – Holdings 1
Bodycote 28/1/1972 – Holdings ? CROCI ? ROCE ? Growth 2
Vp 1/1/1973 – CROCI – Debt 2
Nichols 25/3/1973 0
Castings 25/3/1973 – Growth – ROCE 2
Bellway 21/5/1979 – Holdings – CROCI 2
Oxford Instruments 12/10/1983 – Holdings – Growth 2 ii
Greggs 27/4/1984 – Holdings 1
Aptitude Software 2/5/1984 – Holdings 1
Renishaw 16/11/1984 – CROCI 1 ii
Berkeley 16/12/1985 – CROCI – Growth 2
Clarkson 30/6/1986 – ROCE – Shares 2
Colefax 5/7/1988 – Growth – ROCE 2
Christie 14/7/1988 0 X sp
Hays 26/10/1989 – Holdings – Shares 2
Sage 14/12/1989 – Holdings 1
Jet2 1/7/1991 – CROCI – Shares 2 ii
Porvair 20/2/1992 ? Holdings 0 ii
Howden Joinery 17/7/1992 – Holdings 1 ii
Wetherspoon (JD) 30/10/1992 – Debt – ROCE 2
Cranswick 13/7/1993 – Shares 1
Redrow 17/5/1994 – Holdings – CROCI 2
Bloomsbury Publishing 23/6/1994 – Shares 1 ii
Associated British Foods 1/8/1994 – CROCI – Growth 2
Games Workshop 6/10/1994 – Holdings 1 ii
Morgan Sindall 28/10/1994 – Holdings – CROCI 2
Churchill China 1/11/1994 – CROCI 1 ii
Character 22/6/1995 – CROCI – Growth 2
Wilmington 6/12/1995 – Holdings 1
Victrex 21/12/1995 – Holdings – Growth 2 ii
Solid State 26/6/1996 – Acquisitions – Shares 2 ii
JD Sports Fashion 22/10/1996 – Shares 1
Netcall 18/12/1996 – ROCE – Shares 2
Computacenter 29/5/1998 0
Liontrust Asset Management 21/7/1999 – Shares 1
Domino’s Pizza 24/11/1999 – Debt 1
Next 15 6/12/1999 – Shares 1
London Security 30/12/1999 – Holdings 1 80% controlling interest
Iomart 19/4/2000 – ROCE – Shares 2
Robert Walters 13/7/2000 – CROCI 1
Telecom plus 26/7/2000 0
Arcontech 4/12/2000 – Holdings – Growth 2
Pebble Beach Systems 6/12/2000 – Debt -Turnaround 2
Compass 2/2/2001 – Holdings – Debt 2 sp
PageGroup 2/4/2001 – Holdings 1
IMPAX Asset Management 19/6/2001 – Growth 1
Renew 29/10/2001 – Holdings – Shares 2
Andrews Sykes 24/12/2001 – Shares 1 87% controlling interest
Advanced Medical Solutions 30/4/2002 – ? CROCI ? ROCE ? Shares 1 ii
Intertek 29/5/2002 – Holdings 1
Burberry 18/7/2002 – Holdings – Growth 2
Judges Scientific 7/1/2003 – Acquisitions 1 ii
InterContinental Hotels 15/4/2003 – Holdings – Debt 2
PayPoint 24/9/2004 – Holdings – Growth 2
Jarvis Securities 23/12/2004 – CROCI – Growth 2
Brooks Macdonald 11/3/2005 – Holdings 1
YouGov 25/4/2005 – Shares 1 ii
IG 4/5/2005 – Holdings – Shares 2
Tristel 1/6/2005 – Shares 1 ii
Anpario 30/6/2005 ? Holdings ? CROCI ? Shares 1 ii
SThree 11/11/2005 – Holdings 1
Dewhurst 22/2/2006 – Growth 1 ii
Cohort 8/3/2006 – ROCE 1 ii
Rightmove 15/3/2006 – Holdings 1
City of London Investment 11/4/2006 – Growth – Shares 2
Ashmore 17/10/2006 – Growth 1
Dunelm 24/10/2006 – Debt 1
LSL Property Services 21/11/2006 – Growth – ROCE 2
Polar Capital 6/2/2007 – Growth – Shares – Accounting 2
Norcros 16/7/2007 – Holdings – Shares 2
Moneysupermarket.com 31/7/2007 0
Record 27/11/2007 0
Animalcare 15/1/2008 – Growth – ROCE 2
Science 8/7/2008 – Shares 1
SDI 8/12/2008 – Acquisitions – Shares 2 sp
M Winkworth 12/11/2009 0
Dotdigital 29/3/2011 – Holdings – Shares 2
Learning Technologies 15/6/2011 – Acquisitions – Shares 2
Belvoir 21/2/2012 – Shares 1 sp
Property Franchise 18/12/2013 – Shares 1
Bioventix 29/4/2014 0
Card Factory 15/5/2014 – Holdings – Debt 2
Shoe Zone 23/5/2014 – Growth – Debt 2 X
Volution 18/6/2014 0
FDM 20/6/2014 0 sp
Gamma Communications 10/10/2014 – Holdings 1
Quartix 6/11/2014 0 ii
Fevertree Drinks 7/11/2014 0
Mortgage Advice Bureau 12/11/2014 0
Focusrite 11/12/2014 – Acquisitions 1 ii
Auto Trader 19/3/2015 0 ii
Gateley 8/6/2015 0 sp (listed law firms)
Kainos Ltd 10/7/2015 ? IPO 0 sp
On The Beach 22/9/2015 ? ROCE 1 sp
Softcat 13/11/2015 – Holdings – Growth 2 ii
CMC Markets 5/2/2016 – CROCI – Growth 2
Cerillion 18/3/2016 – IPO 1 sp
Hollywood Bowl 21/9/2016 – IPO – Debt 2 ii
Luceco 17/10/2016 – Float date 2 China dependency
Warpaint London 30/11/2016 – IPO – ROCE 2
Alpha International 7/4/2017 – Shares 1
Alfa Financial Software 26/5/2017 – Growth – Float date 2
Tatton Asset Management 6/7/2017 – IPO 1
Alpha Financial Markets 11/10/2017 – IPO – Shares 2
Bakkavor 16/11/2017 – IPO – Debt 2
Keystone Law 27/11/2017 – IPO 1 ii, sp
IntegraFin 27/2/2018 – IPO ? CROCI ? ROCE 2 ? Accounting
Fintel 4/4/2018 – IPO – Shares 2
Cake Box 27/6/2018 – IPO 1 sp
AJ Bell 7/12/2018 – IPO ? Holdings 1
Watches Of Switzerland 30/5/2019 – IPO – Debt 2
Airtel Africa 28/6/2019 – IPO – Debt 2
FRP Advisory 6/3/2020 – IPO – Shares 2
Ninety One 16/3/2020 – IPO – Growth 2
Fonix Mobile 12/10/2020 – IPO – CROCI 2

Source: SharePad and Richard Beddard

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Contact Richard Beddard by email: richard@beddard.net, Twitter: @RichardBeddard, web: beddard.net

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