The All Ordinaries Index (ASX: XAO) share AMA Group Ltd (ASX: AMA) has had a terrible week. Itâs currently down 35% from last Friday.
AMA Group describes itself as the leading vehicle collision repairer in the industry. It aims to repair the vehicle to its âpre-accident condition and to provide exceptional customer experience.â
Earlier this week, the business provided its quarterly update for investors, which didnât make for good reading.
Guidance reduced by the All Ords ASX share
AMA reduced its $60 million to $68 million of normalised earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) compared with the previous guidance of $70 million to $90 million, reflecting âongoing margin compression adverse to expectationsâ.
It pointed to strong repaid volume demand adversely impacted by âindustry-wide labour constraint related throughput challengesâ.
The tight labour market is leading to higher employee costs per hour and âoperational disruptionâ.
The All Ords ASX share said that many industry contracts âstill do not contain appropriate dynamic adjustment mechanisms that insulate parties from external pressures such as inflation or increasing repair severityâ.
AMA also revealed that its supply strategy is progressing slower than anticipated.
The operating cash flow generated in the third quarter of FY23 was $0.3 million. The company said there is an upward trend in its underlying cash flows over the three quarters. It finished with $20.5 million of cash on its balance sheet at 31 March 2023.
Director buys AMA shares
Director Jonathan Talbot Babineau decided to buy 1 million shares on 18 April 2023 on the market. That took the total holdings of his family and entities to around 8 million AMA shares, so he has a lot of money invested in the business.
Itâs a good sign when one of the leadership wants to buy shares of the company. It can suggest that the director thinks the shares are good value.
When the business announced this update, it outlined a number of factors about why the companyâs management is still confident.
For the labour shortages, the company is looking at international recruitment, an âindustry-leadingâ apprenticeship program and âenhanced employee satisfaction.â
It noted that thereâs a pathway to long-term improved pricing outcomes. New and/or extended contracts have been entered into with some insurance and direct revenue partners. Its FY24 pricing process has commenced.
The company noted network and organisational optimisation activities, aimed to increase productivity and reduce indirect labour costs.
Management also pointed to expansion progression with investments in heavy motor and its AMA collision.
Foolish takeaway
There may not be a quick fix for AMA, but itâs positive that one of the directors thinks itâs a buy. Time will tell whether the market or the director is right about the companyâs prospects.
The post This ASX All Ords stock is down 35% this week, and a director just snapped up 1 million shares appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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More reading
- Why AMA, New Hope, Regis Resources, and St Barbara shares are dropping
- Why did ASX All Ords share AMA just crash 30%?
- These are the 10 most shorted ASX shares this week
Motley Fool contributor Tristan Harrison has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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