Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, comments:
This is a juddering setback for Imagination, whose shares had begun to run strongly under chief executive Andrew Heath who took over last May after the sudden departure of long-standing leader Sir Hossein Yassaie in February 2016.
Sir Hossein left after a profit warning for 2016 and the announcement of a radical restructuring at Imagination which involved drastic cost cuts and the sale of its PURE consumer electronics business.
Today’s share price plunge takes Imagination back to levels last seen in 2009 and leaves the shares way adrift of 2012’s peak north of 700p (a mark they had even failed to reach during the technology, media and telecoms bubble of 1998-2000).
Imagination’s share price history, one marked by huge gains and then equally dramatic falls dating all the way back to its 1994 flotation as VideoLogic plc, is an object lesson to investors on the pleasure and pain that investors can enjoy and suffer when investing in technology stocks for five reasons (1999’s name change may have been the result of prior profit setbacks which led to the firm unwittingly acquiring the nickname of ‘VideoNasty’):
Source: Thomson
1. Having great technology is ultimately never enough – share prices are driven by profits and cash flows in the end. Imagination’s record here has tended to be spotty at best, even if December’s interims showed some promising underlying progress, helped by the restructuring programme.
Source: Company accounts. Financial years to March/April.
2. Over-reliance on one major customer is always a red flag. Apple represents more than half of Imagination’s revenues, so losing this business is a huge blow. ARM, before its 2016 acquisition by Softbank, always commanded – and deserved – a higher valuation as it’s revenue streams and customer base was so much more diverse., as it proved by thriving even as Nokia was swept aside by Apple and Samsung in the mobile phone and smartphone/tablet market.
3. Buying a stock for a potential takeover bid is a mug’s game. Either the bid fails to appear or it takes a longer than expected (and comes at a price lower than hoped). There had been speculation that Apple would think about acquiring Imagination and take control of its PowerVR graphics chips so it could deprive rival products of them. Apple is now developing its own chips so there is no need to license them from Imagination, let alone buy the firm
4. There are few worse investments than a perceived growth stock that fails to deliver the growth. Tech stocks can be the preserve of momentum seekers but they can quickly jump ship if earnings fail to arrive as expected and then the stock often suffers a double-whammy as it suffers both a drop in earnings estimates and a de-rating to reflect the growth disappointment.
5. Obsolescence risk remains a key challenge for any tech firm, no matter how cutting-edge its products seem to be today. The only way to guard against this is to pay a lowly valuation – but by their very nature go-go tech names tend to trade on high ratings as investors clamour for and price in their long-term their growth potential. Value hunters tend to avoid tech for this reason, as the list of tech stock corpses is a long one in what is a well-stocked graveyard, both in the UK and globally.
The smart phone and tablet computer are just the latest developments in a never-ending cycle of technological evolution. Each turn of the wheel has brought feast for a select few winners, who 'got it' and had first-mover advantage – and also famine for those whose offerings were overtaken and left looking old hat.
In the 1960s, IBM dominated mainframe computing.
In the 1970s, Big Blue’s predominance came under attack in the 1970s from the BUNCH companies – Burroughs, UNIVAC, NCR, Control Data and Honeywell.
In the 1980s that quintet fell by the wayside when the minicomputer took over, as DEC, Wang Labs, Prime Computer and Data General became the new tech industry darlings.
The early 1990s saw the advent of the early personal computers (PCs), a market bossed to great effect by Apple, Tandy and Commodore.
The late 1990s brought another shift, as the Wintel (Microsoft Windows-Intel microprocessor)-fired desktop and laptop personal computers took over, propelling Compaq, Gateway, NEC/Packard Bell and Dell into the spotlight, although the mobile phone began to creep up on the rails, a trend which temporarily left Finland’s Nokia as king of the technology hill.
The 2000s brought nemesis to Nokia which fell off its perch with frightening speed as smartphones and then netbooks took over, to the benefit of a completely reinvented Apple and Korea’s Samsung grabbed the lead.
After 2010 the tablet computer became the latest consumer darling although its time at the top looks destined to be a short one, as sales are already sliding at Apple and the price is simply too high to facilitate the mass adoption enjoyed by mobile phones. In the business area, demand for servers and enterprise infrastructure has boomed as corporations have sought to optimise storage, use the cloud and manage a deluge of data more efficiently, helping Intel, IBM and Dell, amongst others, in their efforts to reinvigorate their growth profiles. Social media and the internet also continue to change how information is disseminated, digested and used by consumers – a trend which Facebook, Alphabet and Netflix are driving hard.
A few firms enjoy their day in the sunshine and they make plenty of hay (or profit and cash flow) – but the problem is very few stay at the top for more than five or ten years and once they fall, they fall hard (and in many cases, as suggested by the list above, pretty much disappear altogether).