Is the EML (ASX:EML) share price a top buy right now?

Could the EML Payments Ltd (ASX:EML) share price be a buy right now? The company is achieving a lot of growth as economies re-open.

| More on:

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

The EML Payments Ltd (ASX: EML) share price could be worth looking into right now with the level of growth that it's achieving at the moment.

Cashless transaction

What does EML Payments do?

EML Payments develops tailored payment solutions for organisations to make it easier for their customers to pay or transfer money.

The business says that it has next-generation technology which gives clients the options for disbursement payouts, gifts, incentives and rewards. In FY21 the company is expecting to process over $18 billion in gross debit volume (GDV) in 28 countries across North America and Europe, as well as Australia.

Its payment solutions can be processed in 27 currencies. EML says those payments are safe, secure, easy and flexible.

What has the EML share price done recently?

The last 12 months have been pretty volatile for EML Payments. Just under a year ago, EML bottomed during the COVID-19 crash at $1.33.

By the end of 2020, EML shares had risen 214% from the worst point in the crash.

The EML share price has risen 18% since it reported its half-year result to investors, which included numerous growth statistics.

How good was the report?

EML reported that for the six months to 31 December 2020, group gross debt volume of $10.2 billion, up 54%. Revenue grew by 61% to $95.3 million, underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) rose by 42% to $28.1 million and underlying net profit (NPATA) grew by 30% to $13.2 million.

Underlying operating cash flow went up by 68% to $35.1 million.

Whilst volume translates to revenues at different rates depending on the segment, management said that GDV is an indicator of demand for its payment services.

GDV from its general purpose reloadable (GPR) segment grew GDV by 233% to $4.87 billion despite the lockdowns and social distancing in key markets of Spain, France and the UK. Whilst the acquired business Prepaid Financial Services (PFS) made $3.12 billion – better than management's expectations – the non-PFS businesses grew 25% year on year, with good organic growth in salary packaging (up 60%) and gaming (up 42%).

Gift and incentives saw continued difficult challenges because of shopping centre closures, lockdowns and social distancing regulations, with GDV falling 11% to $0.75 billion. EML is expecting this division to recover in FY22 as economies re-open.

The virtual account numbers (VANs) segment saw GDV growth of 6%, largely driven by volume from existing customers. The December exit run rate finished at $815 million per month, up 20% on the same month last year, which the company said was a positive sign for the rest of the year.

Why the EML share price could be worth looking at

Broker UBS rates EML shares as a buy. It has a share price target of $5.70 for EML. The broker believes growth can continue for the business and that investors may become more confident about its potential again.

For the full FY21 result, EML is expecting revenue to grow by 48% to 56%, EBITDA to grow by 54% to 66% and underlying net profit is expected to grow by 25% to 40% to $30 million to $33.5 million.

It has continued to sign new contracts with customers in each segment and has been seeing more activity.

In the GPR segment, it has signed 55 contracts and in the gift and incentive segment it has signed 19 contracts. In the VANs segment, it has signed five contracts.

Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends EML Payments. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended EML Payments. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson.

More on Technology Shares

a man wearing spectacles has a satisfied look on his face as he appears within a graphic image of graphs, computer code and technology related symbols while he concentrates on a computer screen
Technology Shares

Top ASX 200 tech shares to buy right now: Morgans

It’s time to jump on some leading players in the tech sector, according to one broker.

Read more »

A young woman sits on her lounge looking pleasantly surprised at what she's seeing on her laptop screen as she reads about the South32 share price
Technology Shares

These ASX tech shares are buys: Goldman Sachs

Goldman Sachs speaks very highly about these tech shares.

Read more »

A young woman holds an open book over her head with a round mouthed expression as if to say oops as she looks at her computer screen in a home office setting with a plant on the desk and shelves of books in the background.
Technology Shares

Xero share price dips 3% amid Silicon Valley Bank fallout

Xero has been caught up in the Silicon Valley Bank collapse.

Read more »

A worried man holds his head in his hands
Technology Shares

These ASX tech shares have exposure to the Silicon Valley Bank collapse

The second-largest banking collapse in US history occurred last week.

Read more »

asx share price resignation represented by man kicking miniature man through the air
Technology Shares

Novonix shares will soon be booted out of the ASX 200. What might this mean for investors?

ASX 200 share Novonix will soon be just an All Ords share.

Read more »

Technology Shares

Is the new leaner, meaner Xero stock a buy right now?

Is this tech stock a buy after announcing major cost reductions?

Read more »

A young woman with her mouth open and her hands out showing surprise and delight as uranium share prices skyrocket
Technology Shares

Why is the Xero share price racing 11% higher today?

Investors have been fighting to get hold of Xero's shares on Thursday.

Read more »

A woman wearing yellow smiles and drinks coffee while on laptop.
Technology Shares

The ASX 200 tech shares I'd be thrilled to buy at a 20% discount

I’d love to go shopping for these tech names if they heavily dipped.

Read more »