A trip to Leeds for the annual general meeting of Daniel Thwaites, one of the UK’s oldest family brewers, on July 30, left me little the wiser on a question I have been wrestling with for some time. Is Blackburn-based Thwaites (THW), an ISDX-listed brewery, pubs and hotels group, with a market cap of around £70m, a hugely under-rated value play, or a company in terminal decline? Thwaites’ shares, which at £1.15 are trading at a 60% discount to the company’s net asset value of £2.93 a share, are valued much more cheaply than those of other ISDX-listed brewers, such as Suffolk’s Adnams and Kent’s Shepherd Neame. Thwaites trades on 8.8 times adjusted 2014/15 eps of 13.1p and yields 3.9%, whilst Adnams and Shepherd Neame, based on my calculations, are
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