Best FTSE 250 shares to buy in November 2022

Leandro Mortenegro

easyJet (LON: EZJ)

easyJet shares have halved in price since the start of 2022, to just 300p apiece. Ejected from the FTSE 100 in the early days of the pandemic, a hoped-for summer recovery has instead been peppered with travel disruption amid sky-high inflation.

While it’s worth noting that easyJet traded above 1,200p less than three years ago, it was also worth just 287p eight days ago. A steep correction does not make further falls unlikely.

With a year-end trading update to be released on 13 October, analysts expect the airline to make a comparatively small loss of £127 million for the full year, a significant improvement on the prior year’s £1.14 billion loss.

Further, Q3 saw the airline fly 22 million people, a sevenfold increase on the same quarter last year, and 87% of pre-pandemic capacity levels. It also generated £1.76 billion in revenue, up from just £213 million in the year-ago period.

Of course, it was forced to raise £5.5 billion through share sales and loans to survive the pandemic. And the Ukraine war and staff struggles haven’t helped, with Q3 costs growing to £1.87 billion. Further, ABTA CEO Mark Tanzer has warned that ‘the current turbulence in the financial markets… is a real cause of concern for our members.’

However, where there’s risk, there’s reward.

With Thomas Cook and Monarch long gone, CEO Johan Lundgren notes ‘I would have thought there were going to be more failures than mergers and takeovers this year,’ and further that easyJet remains one of the ‘least indebted airlines’ and ‘one of the few that has an investment-grade credit rating.’

Market share could be ready for the taking.

Key risk: A deeper-than-expected recession weighing on the airline stock’s share price over the medium term.

Safestore Holdings (LON: SAFE)

Safestore Holdings shares have fallen by 43% year-to-date to 813p, afflicted by the wider market slowdown and fears of a property crash sparked by rising interest rates.

The prophesied housing market correction would clearly be bad news for the FTSE 250 company, as it derives significant revenue from home movers. Falling prices are usually an indicator of tightened credit, making home moves more difficult.

However, the £1.7 billion giant is the largest self-storage provider in the UK, and second largest in Europe. This gives it a strong level of geographical diversification.

Moreover, Mordor Intelligence posits that the European self-storage market will see 4.09% CAGR growth between 2021 and 2026. FTSE 100 giant Legal and General even created its own storage space fund to exploit the growing market back in 2019.

Interestingly, business storage is responsible for 30% of the market, and this trend could be set to rise as companies seek storage space after downsizing offices in response to hybrid working.

In the company’s Q3 trading update, revenue increased by 14.9% year-over-year to £54.7 million, while its maximum lettable area increased by 9.9%.

With a property pipeline representing 14% of the current portfolio, CEO Frederic Vecchioli notes that the FTSE 250 company has ‘delivered a strong occupancy performance over recent years, yet we still have 1.2m square feet of fully invested currently unlet space…our most significant upside opportunity is from filling this space and that remains our priority.’

Key risk: Too deep a recession, and Safestore’s rapid expansion could backfire, especially given its already unlet space.

Trade and invest in over 17,000 UK, US and global shares from zero commission with us, the UK’s No.1 trading provider.*

Learn more about trading or investing in shares with us, or open an account to get started today.

Next Post

Jefferson City sees boost in new business applications

New business is booming in cities across the country — and a study suggests the Jefferson City metro area is no exception. The metropolitan statistical area, which encompasses the Capital City and several smaller communities nearby, saw a 24 percent increase in new business applications over the past two years […]