Wilson Asset Management thinks these 2 small cap ASX shares are a buy

Fund manager Wilson Asset Management (WAM) believes that these 2 small cap ASX shares are buys, including Atomos Ltd (ASX:AMS).

| More on:
miniature figure of man standing in front of piles of coins

Image source: Getty Images

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

Respected fund manager Wilson Asset Management (WAM) has recently identified two small cap ASX shares that it owns in its portfolio.

WAM operates several listed investment companies (LICs). Some focus on larger companies like WAM Leaders Ltd (ASX: WLE) and WAM Capital Limited (ASX: WAM).

There's also one called WAM Microcap Limited (ASX: WMI) which targets small cap ASX shares with a market capitalisation under $300 million at the time of acquisition.

WAM says WAM Microcap targets the most exciting undervalued growth opportunities in the Australian microcap market.

The WAM Microcap portfolio has delivered gross returns (that's before fees, expenses and taxes) of 24.7% per annum since inception in June 2017, which is superior to the S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries Accumulation Index average return of 10.5%.

These are the two small cap ASX shares that WAM outlined in its most recent monthly update:

Atomos Ltd (ASX: AMS)

Atomos is a business that provides digital imaging creation tools for video professionals. WAM explained that Atomos now creates 4K and HD Apple ProRes monitor-recorders, using by video professionals for content creation with lower production costs.

The fund manager pointed to its strongest six months in history, with $32.8 million in sales and $3 million of earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) – this was a 210% increase year on year.

WAM was also impressed by the significant cash flow improvement which was growth of 133% to $4.3 million.

The fund manager said that the small cap ASX share has benefited from the large increase in video usage and production during the COVID-19 pandemic across the world.

Atomos is well placed to scale with $23.3 million of cash on its balance sheet and access to an undrawn $5 million working capital facility, according to WAM Microcap.

Universal Store Holdings Ltd (ASX: UNI)

The fund manager also likes Universal store, which was only listed a few months ago.

Universal Store has 65 casual apparel stores across Australia and New Zealand. Its main target audience is the 16 to 35 year old age bracket.

WAM explained that Universal Store sells a selected range of third party branded products – this makes up around 70% of revenue, it also has a range of private label products.

Just like plenty of other businesses, particularly in the retail space, Universal Store reported a record six month result in its FY21 half-year report. It made $31.5 million of underlying earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) – this was growth of 69%. This beat the guidance that was given in January 2021 of a range of $30 million to $31 million.

A key part of that growth was the online sales, which grew by 128% and represented 12% of the overall total thanks to options like 'ship from store' and click and collect.

With the company making a record result, it decided to repay its jobkeeper payments of $3 million.

In the second half of FY21, the small cap ASX share is expecting to open three new stores. It's looking to open more than 100 stores over time.

WAM Microcap is positive on the outlook for growth. It has a good net cash balance sheet of $22.5 million, with plans for expanding its private label brands and a disciplined pricing and promotional strategy.

Tristan Harrison owns shares of WAM MICRO FPO. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of Atomos Ltd. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Atomos Ltd. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson.

More on Small Cap Shares

The Two little girls smiling upside down on a bed.
Opinions

2 exciting ASX small-cap stocks that could grow significantly

International growth is very compelling for these stocks.

Read more »

Kid stacking coins from the jar.
Resources Shares

1 ASX penny stock I'd buy in April while it is still only 21 cents

Up 135% since February, I think this ASX penny stock has a lot more gains ahead.

Read more »

A happy woman wearing a sweatband at the gym celebrates success or an achievement by puffing up and flexing her muscles with pride.
Small Cap Shares

The tiny ASX stock that could surge on this pending government decision

Will a tax break help this little company set a new PB?

Read more »

three children wearing superhero costumes, complete with masks, pose with hands on hips wearing capes and sneakers on a running track.
Small Cap Shares

My 3 top small-cap ASX shares to buy in April

After a dark period, the little guys are ready to take the fight to the large caps. Here are three…

Read more »

A young man wearing a black and white striped t-shirt looks surprised.
Small Cap Shares

Why this ASX small cap stock could rocket 60%

Bell Potter sees huge upside potential from this small cap.

Read more »

A woman smiles as she sits on the bus using her phone and listening to music through headphones.
Small Cap Shares

3 small-cap ASX shares with 'long runways for growth'

DNR's Sam Twidale reckons investors could do worse than buy these guys for the long run.

Read more »

Kid putting a coin in a piggy bank.
Small Cap Shares

7 ASX small-cap shares that are cheaper than the ASX 200 in March 2024

Could it be time to back the underdogs of the ASX amid a potentially richly-valued benchmark?

Read more »

Three young people in business attire sit around a desk and discuss.
Small Cap Shares

3 ASX penny stocks I don't think will be below 80 cents much longer

These sub-dollar shares are all capable of smashing through to another level, say experts.

Read more »