Analysts have sport with Spark earnings, but also say shares are over-sold
But also like many of its rivals, Craigs had a buy – or, at least, āoverweightā rating on the beleaguered telco.
Craigsā Wade Gardiner had a $3.13 12-month target ā down from his previous $3.60 but still around one-third ahead of the telcoās price on Monday.
āThe market has clearly lost confidence in the Spark story, but the share price reaction looks overdone,ā Craigs said.
Morningstar slashes dividend forecast
Morningstarās Sydney-based Brian Han headlined a Friday evening note, āDark New Zealand findingsā.
āCauses of the poor result were highly concerning … Sparkās cost base is fundamentally more bloated than we thought and they were not agile enough to respond to unexpected revenue weakness ā some of which was more structural than were previously anticipated.ā
Han added, āWe cut our dividend per share forecasts by around 40% to 15cps from FY26 and project a hiatus at this level for a few years.ā
āToo many questions left unanswered
Jardenās Arie Dekker asked question after question on the Sparkās post-results conference call on Friday. But he was left headlining his Monday morning note, āToo many questions left unansweredā following Sparkās āfourth downgrade in a row and a meaningful one, tooā.
They included: āHow has the IT business gone so wrong so quickly?ā
He added, āWhile Spark has talked to the impact of mix in cloud and enterprise and government on service management, it has not addressed targets for a business with an element of free-fallā.
Dekker also asked: āIs 20 cents per share is the new aspirational target for the dividend, or is a deeper cut required?
Spark held its full-year dividend forecast at 25cps, noting the profit payout would be underpinned by $310 million in proceeds, due in the third quarter, from the sale of its remaining 17% stake in its celltower network ā now held by Connexa. It said a capital management review was under way, which would include the dividend for 2026.
Dekker said he would hold his FY26 dividend at 20cps until he saw āgreater clarity on the outlook for IT and Sparkās plans for data centresā.
On Friday, Spark had no update on its quest ā first revealed with its full-year results report last August ā to raise up to $1 billion to fund data centre expansion over the next five to seven years.
On Friday, Forsyth Barr analyst Aaron Ibbotson told the Herald, āIt was a weak result across the board. Thereās not really any redeeming features … The big surprise was that operating expenses basically hadnāt come down at all relative to last year and relative to how they guided.ā
Only $8m had been shaved off Sparkās labour bill in the first half of $50m promised for the full year. And there was a surprise 5% rise in operating costs.
āThe share price reaction today clearly is a reflection of shareholders being disappointed with the results, and potentially an indication that shareholders have lost a bit of faith in current management and boardās ability to turn it around,ā Forsyth Barr analyst Aaron Ibbotson said during the Friday crash.
Those comments notwithstanding, on Monday morning Ibbotson and his colleague Benjamin Crozier upgraded Sparkās beaten-down shares from underperform to neutral ā although they cut their 12-month price target by 11% to $2.50.
READ MORE: Spark CEO Jolie Hodson asked if any exec team changes are planned – and if sheās comfortable in her own position
They called the first-half result āvery weakā with ālimited progressā towards targets but noted that the telcoās management was āsteadfastā in its ambition to achieve its full-year cost-cutting targets. But they said Spark needed to take a āmore ruthless approach to defining its core business. Does it remain the best home for fast-moving IT services, its āhigh-techā divisions, or large-scale data centres?ā
Spark also needed āa meaningful reset of the dividend to a level covered by cash generationā.
āThe earnings downgrade cycle and dividend jitters are likely to keep market sentiment depressed for some time,ā Han said.
āBut there is value if investors can look beyond the near-term earnings struggles.ā
Han sees Sparkās fair value at $3.60, based on factors including its solid mobile business and its growing fixed-wireless business.
āCoupled with a benign regulatory environment, there is breathing room for Spark to consolidate its position and look for opportunities to reignite growth,ā he said.
Jardenās Dekker is also in the buy camp. He maintained his overweight rating, āon value support following a significant post 1H25 result selloffā, but reduced his 12-month target from $3.80 to $3.10.
Chris Keall is an Auckland-based member of the Heraldās business team. He joined the Herald in 2018 and is the technology editor and a senior business writer.