Alternative Investment Market (AIM)-listed resellers have voiced fears their
shares have become severely undervalued following another week of stockmarket
turmoil.
Last Monday, the UK’s main index plunged by 2.7 per cent, the biggest drop since
mid-August when the subprime crisis first came to light.
With AIM’s 149 tech stocks struggling to attract the attention of battle-scarred
investors, onlookers are predicting several could follow in the footsteps of
managed services outfit InTechnology, by announcing plans to delist.
Ian Smith, chief executive of AIM-listed storage reseller
Xploite,
said recent independent analysis from Edison Investment Research found its share
price is undervalued by 50 per cent.
“There are a load of small tech stocks listed on the AIM and eight out of ten of
them are hacked off with where they are,” Smith argued.
“The whole subprime nonsense has had a damaging effect on stocks and many small
cap companies are now significantly undervalued.
“We are okay as we have a lot of headroom in debt financing, but if a company
decided to raise money in the City right now they would be doing a disservice to
their shareholders,” he said.
Scott Fletcher, chief executive at Plus-listed reseller
ANS,
said: “The credit crunch came and went, but it is back again and it appears to
have hit the stock market hard in the past week. It is frustrating when you are
running your company well and profits are improving, but your share price is not
rising.”
Fletcher said Xploite and managed services outfit Computerland had been
particularly badly hit.
John Hughman, senior technology analyst at market watcher
Ernst
& Young, agreed that small tech stocks are finding it difficult to a
ttract the attention of analysts.
“I can see the pressures they face. I would expect resellers that are more
focused on good cash flow and annuity business than high revenue and profit
growth to look at going private,” he added.
However, the chief executive of one AIM-listed vendor, who wished to remain
anonymous, said: “Our share price is definitely undervalued at the moment. But
the AIM market really suits us because it allows us to raise funds for
acquisitions.”
InTechnology announced last month that it had received irrevocable undertakings
in favour of its delisting from shareholders representing 69.2 per cent of its
share capital.
The VAR was concerned about the liquidity of its shares, claiming they had
continued to underperform in 2007 due to a lack of demand.
Computerland was unavailable for comment.
InTechnology
AIMs to delist




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