Telstra stock forecast: Can TLS shares mount comeback despite declining sales, profits?
Investors in Telstra (TLS), Australia’s telecommunications firm, are hoping its corporate overhaul will give the stock price a much-needed boost.
Senior executives at the Melbourne-based company are confident about future prospects, despite a challenging year that’s seen falling income and profit. They have highlighted the ongoing success of strategies to simplify operations, reduce costs, improve the customer experience, and grow the business.
But will these changes help lift the TLS stock price? Here we take a look at what factors are shaping the Telstra stock forecast , including the firm’s financial results, outline of its future plans, and reveal what analysts expect to happen.
What is Telstra?
Telstra is an Australian telecoms and technology company that offers a wide range of services to customers.
According to the company’s data as of October 2022, it provides 18.8 million retail mobile services, 3.8 million retail fixed bundles and standalone data services, and 960,000 retail fixed standalone voice services.
Its history dates back to 1901 when the Postmaster-General’s Department was established to manage all domestic telephone, telegraph, and postal services.
The company went public in 1997. Its share offer opened on 15 October 1997 and by the close of applications on 3 November the same year, 1.8 million Australians had applied for shares.
Telstra’s shares were first traded on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) on 17 November 1997. They opened at $2.60 and reached a high of $2.75 before closing at $2.67, a premium of 37 per cent.
The company is also a member of the Australia 200 Index (AU200), the nation’s stock market consisting of the 200 largest companies, ranked by market capitalisation. Other prominent names on this list include mining giants BHP (BHP) and Rio Tinto (RIO), as well as Westpac (WBC), the Australian banking and financial services company.
Telstra stock price analysis
Our Telstra share price forecast starts with a look at what’s been happening to the stock over the past year – and it doesn’t make great reading for investors.
The TLS stock price has been relatively weak during 2022. In fact, it’s down 8% since the start of the year from AUD4.20 to AUD3.87 as the markets closed on 25 October.
Fortunately, the longer-term picture is better. Since Telstra’s flotation in late 1997, the stock is up 49%. It has also enjoyed a 10.4% uplift over the past five years.
Latest earnings report
The recent share price fall can be partly attributed to disappointing full-year 2022 results, which saw total income down 4.7% at $22bn.
It also said earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) was down 5% to $7.3bn, while net profit came in at $1.8bn, representing a fall of 4.6%.
In a statement, Andy Penn, then chief executive, pointed out the declines reflected the costs of the nbn rollout, which is Australia’s national broadband network. He said:
Among the operational highlights, Penn noted that 150,000 net retail postpaid mobile services were added, while retail prepaid unique users were up 215,000.
However, its performance in fixed for consumer and small business customers had “been more challenged”, particularly due to being at the tail end of the nbn migration. The executive added:
Increased dividend and T22 success
However, the company increased its dividend for the first time in seven years, citing “strong momentum” in its underlying business and the successful completion of T22. Penn said:
The T22 strategy, which was first announced in June 2018, was a plan to simplify operations and product set, improve customer experience, and reduce the cost base. The executive added:
T25 restructuring
The next stage of Telstra’s corporate overhaul is known as T25 – and the success, or otherwise, of this strategy is an influential part of any Telstra stock forecast.
While T22 was the initial transformation process, T25 is the company’s strategy for growth, which it has broken down into four pillars:
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Provide an exceptional customer experience you can count on
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Provide leading network and technology solutions that deliver your future
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Create sustained growth and value for our shareholders
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Be the place you want to work
In addition, Telstra announced in November 2020 an internal restructuring that would lead to a number of subsidiaries being created under a new holding company.
In a statement updated in August 2022, it said the aim was to “increase the transparency” of infrastructure assets and improve management focus on infrastructure and customer businesses.
It would also “create greater flexibility and optionality” to realise value from the Telstra Group’s fixed assets over time.
New chief executive charts her path
Of course, a lot of the future success for Telstra will be dictated by the person at the helm and the recently installed chief executive is Vicki Brady.
Brady, who was previously chief financial officer, took over at the beginning of September, replacing Andy Penn, who’d held the position for more than seven years.
In a statement, Telstra chairman John Mullen said Penn had left a “positive and enduring legacy” as a result of the transformation he’d led at the company. He wrote:
Mullen went on to say he was “thrilled” that Brady would be his replacement and pointed out she had played a “key leadership role” in the development of the T25 strategy. “She could not be more qualified to take over the reins to deliver on our T25 commitments,” he added.
Telstra stock forecast: Where will the price go next?
So, what are the Telstra stock predictions of analysts? The stock was rated as a ‘moderate buy’, according to a list of eight analysts offering 12 month price targets in the last three months, compiled by TipRanks as of 26 October.
The average price target was AUD$4.46 with a high forecast of AUD$5.25 and a low forecast of AUD$3.96. The average price target represented a 15.80% change from the last price of AU$3.87.
Ord Minnett and HSBC have both reiterated ‘buy’ positions over the past couple of weeks, while Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to a ‘hold’ in early October 2022.
According to the TLS stock forecast of Wallet Investor at the time of writing, which uses algorithmic forecasts, the stock was “an acceptable long-term investment”. The site’s Telstra stock forecast 2022 suggested that TLS stock could rise 6.7% to AUD4.13 over the coming year to October 2023.
Its Telstra stock forecast 2025, meanwhile, put it up to AUD4.66 by October 2025, while the five year forecast had it hitting AUD$5.17 by October 2027. This would represent a 34% premium over its current AUD$3.87 level.
Brian Han, a director at Morningstar, had a fair value of AUD4.20 on the stock, which is 8.5% higher than the AUD$3.87 closing price on 25 October. He highlighted the corporate changes that had been taking place over the last few years, including the focus on improving the transparency of Telstra’s assets.
In his TLS stock forecast in late September 2022, Han acknowledged that “major progress” has already been made by the company, adding:
Note that analysts’ or algorithm-based Telstra stock forecasts can be wrong and should not be used as a substitute for your own research. We encourage you to conduct your own due diligence, looking at the latest news, technical and fundamental analysis. Remember that past performance does not guarantee future returns, and never trade money you cannot afford to lose.