With EPS Growth And More, Hong Kong and China Gas (HKG:3) Is Interesting

For beginners, it can seem like a good idea (and an exciting prospect) to buy a company that tells a good story to investors, even if it completely lacks a track record of revenue and profit. But as Warren Buffett has mused, 'If you've been playing poker for half an hour and you still don't know who the patsy is, you're the patsy.' When they buy such story stocks, investors are all too often the patsy.

In contrast to all that, I prefer to spend time on companies like Hong Kong and China Gas (HKG:3), which has not only revenues, but also profits. While profit is not necessarily a social good, it's easy to admire a business than can consistently produce it. In comparison, loss making companies act like a sponge for capital - but unlike such a sponge they do not always produce something when squeezed.

Check out our latest analysis for Hong Kong and China Gas

Hong Kong and China Gas's Earnings Per Share Are Growing.

If you believe that markets are even vaguely efficient, then over the long term you'd expect a company's share price to follow its earnings per share (EPS). That means EPS growth is considered a real positive by most successful long-term investors. Over the last three years, Hong Kong and China Gas has grown EPS by 8.5% per year. That's a good rate of growth, if it can be sustained.

One way to double-check a company's growth is to look at how its revenue, and earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) margins are changing. While Hong Kong and China Gas did well to grow revenue over the last year, EBIT margins were dampened at the same time. So if EBIT margins can stabilize, this top-line growth should pay off for shareholders.

The chart below shows how the company's bottom and top lines have progressed over time. Click on the chart to see the exact numbers.

SEHK:3 Income Statement, July 28th 2019
SEHK:3 Income Statement, July 28th 2019

In investing, as in life, the future matters more than the past. So why not check out this free interactive visualization of Hong Kong and China Gas's forecast profits?

Are Hong Kong and China Gas Insiders Aligned With All Shareholders?

Like standing at the lookout, surveying the horizon at sunrise, insider buying, for some investors, sparks joy. That's because insider buying often indicates that those closest to the company have confidence that the share price will perform well. However, insiders are sometimes wrong, and we don't know the exact thinking behind their acquisitions.

One shining light for Hong Kong and China Gas is the serious outlay one insider has made to buy shares, in the last year. In one fell swoop, Independent Non-Executive Director Kwok-Po Li, spent HK$16m, at a price of HK$14.49 per share. Big insider buys like that are almost as rare as an ocean free of single use plastic waste.