DCC could spend €1.2bn on deals, Goldman Sachs says

Shares in London-listed Irish group jump as much as 4.6% on bank upgrade to ‘buy’

DCC chief executive Tommy Breen: group announced two major purchases along with its interim results in November. Photograph: Dave Meehan
DCC chief executive Tommy Breen: group announced two major purchases along with its interim results in November. Photograph: Dave Meehan

DCC, the fuel distribution-to-technology sales conglomerate, has the "financial headroom" to spend close to £1 billion (€1.2 billion) on mergers and acquisitions, according to analysts at Wall Street bank Goldman Sachs.

In a note where they upgrade their recommendation on the London-listed Irish group to “buy” from “neutral”, the Goldman analysts, led by Milou Beunk, said the group could use a combination of debt and equity financing to fund deals.

Shares in the group jumped as much as 4.6 per cent on Monday on the back of the upgrade, before ending the session 2.1 per cent higher at £63.20, its highest level in 2½ months.

Over the past five years, DCC has grown operating profit by 13 per cent a year, driven by its typical expenditure of about 7 per cent of its market value on mergers and acquisitions (M&A).

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In November, the group, led by chief executive Tommy Breen, accompanied its interim results by revealing it had agreed to buy Gaz Européen, a French natural gas retail and marketing business, for €110 million, and Medisource, a pharmaceutical procurement, sales and marketing business, for €32 million.

Acquisition opportunities

“We believe that DCC has many acquisition opportunities, both in the energy division and technology and healthcare, to drive geographical expansion and strengthen its market positions,” said Goldman Sachs. “Within energy, we see a large potential acquisition pool from continued noncore asset disposals by oil majors, as dividend commitments remain elevated compared to oil prices [even as oil prices have risen recently], as well as second-tier oil companies.”

Ahead of the upgrade, DCC’s shares had underperformed the wider European market by 15 per cent over the course of more than two months, as investors moved out of what they perceived to be safe-haven stocks into more cyclical types of companies.

“Its derating creates an attractive entry point for two reasons: DCC is not a typical defensive stock; and its significant M&A growth potential and superior returns profile merit a premium valuation in our view,” the investment bank’s analysts said.

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan is Markets Correspondent of The Irish Times