Philips’ investors can ill-afford another jolt to their nerves - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
飞利浦

Philips’ investors can ill-afford another jolt to their nerves

Investors in the Dutch healthcare conglomerate had until this week been enjoying a restorative patch

Some companies, it seems, receive the benefit of the doubt even if their performance is a little ho-hum. They can, for example, highlight weak Chinese demand and get away with a mere share price ripple. Other stocks take a razor-sharp cut on every lump and bump. 

Philips is a case in point. Investors in the Dutch healthcare conglomerate, which makes everything from diagnostic machines to electric shavers, had until this week been enjoying a restorative patch. Legal woes over malfunctioning sleep apnoea machines had been resolved faster and more cheaply than feared, and sales seemed to be heading in the right direction.

But a stumble has undone much of the progress. Philips’ stock has fallen 15 per cent since it released soft third-quarter results on Monday. While Italy’s Agnelli family — who made a big investment in the stock in August 2023 through their public vehicle Exor — is still in the money, this week marks a blow for those who had more recently got behind Philips’ turnaround story.

Investors must be wondering what exactly hit them. The issues Philips highlighted at third-quarter results are hardly unheard of. An anti-corruption drive at Chinese hospitals is slowing procurement of diagnostics machines — a headwind that drove guidance downgrades at rivals Siemens Healthineers and GE Healthcare after second-quarter results, points out Lisa Clive at Bernstein. And while a double-digit fall in personal care sales in China is surprising in its magnitude, the weakness of Chinese consumer demand has been widely flagged across industries.

Meanwhile, results outside China are strong. Operating margins remain healthy despite slower than expected sales. Philips does not look expensive, either. It trades on 15 times next year’s — reduced — earnings expectations despite double-digit EPS growth through to 2026, on Barclays estimates. Siemens Healthineers trades on more than 19 times.

The best explanation for the share price reaction is that Philips is suffering from sticky negative sentiment, a malady that can afflict companies that have severely spooked the market in recent history.

Curing it requires not just solving one problem, no matter how major. It requires solving all of them. That’s something that GSK, reporting on Wednesday, will be acutely aware of. Following the resolution of the Zantac heartburn medicine legal overhang, analysts are now fretting over the strength of its vaccine sales.

Traumatised investors require a long period of peace and quiet to recover their composure. Philips cannot afford another jolt to their nerves.

[email protected]

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

对话Otter.ai的梁松:我们可以从会议和对话中获取有价值的数据

这家会议转录初创公司的联合创始人认为,我们甚至可以用虚拟形象代替自己进行工作互动。

朔尔茨迎来自己的“拜登时刻”

德国总理受到党内压力,要求其效仿美国总统拜登退出竞选。

欧盟极右翼党团在气候和高层任命问题上获得更多支持

欧洲议会中右翼议员正越来越多地与极右翼联手瓦解该集团的绿色议程,并推动更严格的移民限制措施。

毛利人对新西兰后阿德恩时代的民粹主义转向感到愤怒

卢克森的保守党政府推翻了前总理的许多进步政策。

Lex专栏:英伟达令人炫目的增长与每个人都息息相关

这家芯片巨头的盈利对美国股票投资者来说是一件大事,这不仅仅是因为其3.6万亿美元的市值。

欧洲比以往任何时候都更需要企业增长冠军

欧洲正在急切地寻找企业增长冠军,FT-Statista按长期收入增长对欧洲企业进行的首次排名展示了这方面的可能性。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×