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Initial entry Wolter Kluwer

I am opening a first position in Wolters Kluwer today because the market is making a fundamental mistake here. The company is trading 61% below its high for the year - not because of an operational deterioration, but because an AI panic sell-off has hit a 190 year old compounder that generates €6.1bn in sales with 83% recurring revenue, a ROIC of 26% and an FCF yield of ~10%.


The management itself is buying back at €64 - as part of a €500m buyback program - sending the clearest signal a board can send: the stock is too cheap.


My entry with 50% of the budget is deliberately not an all-or-nothing decision. I expect AI headlines to generate further pressure in the short term and am therefore holding back two further tranches.


If the share price falls to ~€59 - close to the 52-week low and the Morningstar 5-star price of €57 - I will top up with a further 33% of the budget.


I will either use a third, smaller tranche with the remaining ~17% in the event of a further setback below €55 or use it as a momentum top-up in August after the H1 figures if the guidance is confirmed.


I have defined three specific levels for my profits. At €90, I sell 25% of my position - this corresponds to the first price recovery, covers part of my costs and takes pressure off the position. At €112, the analyst consensus price target, I sell a further 40% - this is the most likely price level over the next 12-24 months and corresponds to a return of ~83% on my average purchase price of ~€61.50.


I am keeping the remainder open as a long-term position as long as the business model is intact.


My three scenarios with clear figures: In the bullish case - probability 35% - Wolters Kluwer accelerates the cloud transition, AI proves to be a tailwind for new products, and the share price runs to ~€170 by 2028, up ~165%.


In the neutral case - probability 45% - business continues as before, organic growth remains at 5-6%, and the share price normalizes to ~€105, up around 64%.


In the bearish case - probability 20% - structural AI pressure on the Legal and Health segments sets in, margins come under pressure and the share price falls to ~€57, which corresponds to a drop of around 11%.

The weighted expected value across all three scenarios is ~€118, i.e. around 84% above today's entry price.


My hard stop loss is at €52 - the position is automatically closed there, as a break of this level would indicate a fundamental, not just sentiment-driven deterioration.

26.03
Wolters Kluwer logo
Comprado em € 63,92
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6 Comentários

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Thank you very much for sharing your strategy. I just opened a position 2 days ago with 1/3 of the total expected weight. I would like to have a 4% of WKL in the portfolio and I think of it as long term investment but, if all goes good, there will be sales to manage the weight. Thanks again for your thoughts! Glad to see I’m not the only one seeing potential here.
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if I am not mistaken management also bought back when prices where way too high. Anyhow I think it is a good buy now, I am deep in the red on this one currently, might add some more to lower my averave price.
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Very interesting, thank you 👍🏻
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Thanks for the heads up, but why didn't you wait for the 59 to retest?
A V-shaped recovery would not be so likely after the disaster.
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@BeachPlease Good point: a retest of 59 would of course be the cleaner way to start. I still opted for an initial buildup at 64 because I can't and won't predict the exact timing point. What I do know: FCF yield ~10%, ROIC 26%, management is actively buying back - and I have tranches for precisely such scenarios. When the 59 comes, I'm in.
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Hello @Liebesspieler $WKL I also have it on my watch. But what puts me off here and in turn draws me to titles like $NOW and $CRM is the following: Wolters Kluwer has a broad product portfolio, but as I understand it (and I may be getting it wrong because I'm not deep into it) they are not linked to the proprietary data of the companies/customers. And that to me then actually makes it more replaceable and much more at risk from AI than the software companies mentioned above are.

Who is stopping them from writing and marketing tax software (my only point of contact with WKL) with AI? Or setting up any specialist portals? If someone wants to do that, surely they can do it with Claude and whatever they're all called at any time for a fraction of the cost? That's why I feel that sales are more likely here, i.e. with software titles that are deeply networked and anchored in the company.

I assume you see it differently, otherwise you wouldn't have invested. I would therefore be very interested in your opinion on this. Because purely from the figures, this looks like a sensible investment.
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