HelÂlo QAVvers
My weekÂly update is a litÂtle late this week, sorÂry about that.
The ASX is up this week and is going to rise again today, accordÂing to the AFR, âas US tech powÂered highÂer and the Bank of CanaÂda bolÂstered hopes for globÂal rate cuts by cutÂting its key rate and sigÂnalling plans for anothÂer cut in July.â
Letâs have a look at the portÂfoÂlios.
QAV PORTFOLIO REPORT
The DumÂmy PortÂfoÂlio is perÂformÂing well against the benchÂmark over most time frames.
SINCE INCEPTION (15/04/2019)
Our portÂfoÂlio is still doing roughÂly douÂble marÂket p.a. since incepÂtion (about five years).
For the 23/24 FY, the DP (10.69% p.a. CAGR) was slightÂly below the STW (12.81% p.a. CAGR).
In the last 7 days we sold EHL and AHL, and bought PRN. As per this weekâs podÂcast, I still havenât sold ASG, even though itâs still slightÂly below the 3PTL â itâs a âVulÂcan Fudgeâ.
QAV STOCKOPEDIA DUMMY PORTFOLIO REPORTS
QAV AU DUMMY
StockÂoÂpeÂdia doesÂnât make it easy to report on the FY, but the AusÂtralian StockÂoÂpeÂdia portÂfoÂlio startÂed in July 2023 and returned about 4% (Time-WeightÂed Return) for the year, verÂsus the ASX200 at about 6%.
QAV US DUMMY
The US portÂfoÂlio, on the othÂer hand, startÂed in SepÂtemÂber 2023 and is still beatÂing the benchÂmark, returnÂing 23% verÂsus the S&P 500 at 20%.
STOCKS OF THE WEEK
DurÂing the last week, we also tradÂed some stocks in our Light portÂfoÂlios. Details here.
** As always, please check our work, DYOR, and conÂsult a finanÂcial adviÂsor before makÂing any investÂing deciÂsions.
BUY LIST
Each week we proÂduce a buy list that we share with our QAV Club memÂbers. The intendÂed priÂmaÂry purÂpose of this buy list is for club memÂbers to use as a refÂerÂence for comÂparÂing their own buy list. In theÂoÂry, all of our buy lists should look pretÂty simÂiÂlar each week. As always, please check our work, DYOR, conÂsult a finanÂcial adviÂsor before makÂing any investÂing deciÂsions. DOWNLOAD THE BUY LIST (Club memÂbers only)THIS WEEKâS EPISODE
Join Tony and Cameron in episode 723 of QAV as they disÂcuss VulÂcan levÂel emoÂtionÂal detachÂment in investÂing, recent marÂket moveÂments, and a pulled pork on PRN.
00:00 WelÂcome Back to QAV Episode 723
02:36 Tonyâs VulÂcan DetachÂment
04:30 FudgÂing ASG
14:39 Pulled Pork on PerÂenÂti MinÂing (PRN)
Episode Transcription
QAV 723 Club
[00:00:00] Tony: 3, 2, 1.
[00:00:06] Cameron: WelÂcome back to episode 723 of QAV, K to the T. How you doing?
[00:00:15] Tony: Yeah,
[00:00:15] Tony: good,
[00:00:15] Tony: thank
[00:00:16] Cameron: How do you like my hat?
[00:00:17] Tony: A to the T. Joeâs Real BarÂbeÂcue.
[00:00:20] Tony: Okay.
[00:00:20] Cameron: ChrisÂsy, what she brought me back from
[00:00:23] Tony: Ah.
[00:00:24] Cameron: We actuÂalÂly went there and ate there last time we were there a couÂple of years ago. Great barÂbeÂcue joint in, I think in Gilbert
[00:00:31] Cameron: in Phoenix. Um, yeah, like one of these great sort of AmerÂiÂcan barÂbeÂcue places. Thatâs like
[00:00:38] Tony: did you have the
[00:00:39] Tony: ribs?
[00:00:39] Cameron: Uh, I canât rememÂber what I had, but I know it was great.
[00:00:42] Cameron: I think I did have ribs actuÂalÂly, but it was just great. Oh, we had a lot, just a, just a plate full of barÂbeÂcued meat. It was fanÂtasÂtic. So anyÂway.
[00:00:50] Tony: yeah good. And itâs a truckÂers cap too, not a golfÂing cap or a
[00:00:54] Cameron: Yeah, truck is cat, cause Thatâs how we roll. Smells like freeÂdom, Tony. Smells like freeÂdom.
[00:01:05] Tony: Oh, DonÂald Trump doesÂnât smell like freeÂdom at the moment.
[00:01:07] Cameron: Heâs still free. Heâs still free
[00:01:10] Cameron: I was readÂing up on the Hunter Biden lawÂsuit thatâs hapÂpenÂing at the moment. WouldÂnât it be great if they shared a
[00:01:16] Tony: Which one? Yeah!
[00:01:18] Cameron: Oh, the, uh, the guns one I think is going on, not the tax one, the guns one. Yeah, I just think the two of them sharÂing a cell, that, now thereâs a sitÂcom waitÂing to hapÂpen, right?
[00:01:29] Tony: Yeah. So, uh, TayÂlor should pitch that to WarnÂer
[00:01:33] Cameron: Yeah, you should. Yeah, yeah, my son TayÂlor. Howâs your week been, TK? Youâre back in sunÂny SydÂney.
[00:01:41] Tony: Back in sunÂny SydÂney. Yeah, itâs been a good week actuÂalÂly, travÂelÂing down the East Coast. I stayed in Coffs HarÂbour, stayed in Taree, uh, played a lot of golf and, um, went to MagenÂta Shores, which is the entrance, uh, on the last day and played golf there. Itâs been good. Itâs been a nice, nice relaxÂing break away from SydÂney, away from a house not sellÂing and all of those disÂtracÂtions.
[00:02:06] Cameron: Uh, yeah. I was, I was, Iâve been watchÂing Curb Your EnthuÂsiÂasm and I was, uh, again, old episodes and I saw an episode, like, from the very first seaÂson, like 20 years ago, and someÂbody was sayÂing that they were tryÂing to buy LarÂryâs old house and they said, how long has it been on the marÂket? And he said, oh, about a year.
[00:02:25] Cameron: And I was like, well, there you go. Itâs like, youâre livÂing in LA. Itâs like,
[00:02:30] Tony: Yeah,
[00:02:31] Cameron: at least
[00:02:32] Tony: yeah, it could be, could be, weâll see. Is
[00:02:36] Cameron: a new memÂber, new QAV club memÂber, Glen emailed me over the weekÂend, said heâs been lisÂtenÂing since the beginÂning. But just signed up to QAV club, uh, donât know what took him so long, but he said, uh, he loved the in depth analyÂsis and VulÂcan levÂel of emoÂtionÂal detachÂment, which he said suitÂed him to a T.
[00:02:57] Cameron: Now, I, I,
[00:02:58] Tony: that you? You or me?
[00:03:00] Cameron: I think we know which one of us is the VulÂcan. Um, heh,
[00:03:05] Cameron: heh, heh, heh. I went and looked at a bunch of Spock, uh, clips to try and find a good one to add to my playlist for you, but I couldÂnât find anyÂthing suitÂable. But, um,
[00:03:15] Tony: The needs of the many outÂweigh the needs of the one.
[00:03:19] Cameron: yeah, okay. Is that why you do this podÂcast? Itâs, you know, youâre thinkÂing about the
[00:03:22] Cameron: needs of the many. Thatâs your
[00:03:23] Tony: Yeah.
[00:03:26] Cameron: Um,
[00:03:27] Tony: Not just you and I.
[00:03:29] Cameron: So, um, VulÂcanolÂoÂgy, I decidÂed is the, uh, title for this episode.
[00:03:36] Tony: Well, Spock has always been my favorite
[00:03:39] Tony: movie
[00:03:39] Cameron: No kidÂding.
[00:03:41] Tony: Yeah, Iâve always loved Spock. Live long and prosÂper.
[00:03:48] Cameron: You have, you, whatâs the line at the end? You have always have been
[00:03:54] Tony: Yes, you were and you always have been my greatÂest friend.
[00:03:57] Cameron: friend. Shed a tear when I saw that the first time. Itâs a pretÂty good episode. PretÂty, pretÂty touchÂing scene for Star Trek. Uh, well, thank you, Glenn. Uh, yes, the VulÂcan levÂel of emoÂtionÂal detachÂment. Weâve talked about that a lot, um, in our episodes recentÂly. And, uh, I, I want to test your VulÂcan levÂel of, um, EmoÂtionÂal detachÂment this week.
[00:04:23] Tony: Okay, youâre gonna trigÂger me, are you? Well,
[00:04:30] Cameron: ASG, Autosports Group, they went ex div, I think on the 16th of May, the share price plumÂmetÂed accordÂingÂly. It was a good divÂiÂdend too, it was like 10 cents, fulÂly franked. They had, their payÂment date was the 31st of May and the share price didÂnât recovÂer. It slid a litÂtle bit yesÂterÂday, broke through its 3PTL.
[00:04:52] Cameron: Well, as we facÂtored back the divÂiÂdend out of it, it was still below the 3PTL. Um, it was only a couÂple of cents below. I think the 3PTL is about, um, 3. 21, 2. 21. SorÂry. And it fell down to about 2. 18 yesÂterÂday. And then I was, I hold it in a bunch of difÂferÂent portÂfoÂlios. Like Iâve got one, Iâve got six parcels of it in varÂiÂous things.
[00:05:18] Cameron: And I went and had a look at its hisÂtoÂry. of going ex div every six months and it folÂlows the same patÂtern every time. Drops subÂstanÂtialÂly, the valÂue of the divÂiÂdend and a litÂtle bit more has that post divÂiÂdend sort of stuÂpor. Then it recovÂers, usuÂalÂly withÂin a month or so, it recovÂers, goes to an all new high, Then it goes ex div, slides again, waits a bit, recovÂers, goes up.
[00:05:47] Cameron: So, I know rules is rules, but I was like, realÂly? Like, I can see it on the graph. I know what hapÂpens. So, two quesÂtions. So, I didÂnât sell it yesÂterÂday. My excuse was I was going to talk to you about it. It went back up to 2. 20 about an hour ago, but it has slid down to 2. 19. So, itâs nearÂly back up above the 3PTL. Um, but the two quesÂtions were, like, when we know that this hapÂpens with a stock like this, we can see it hisÂtorÂiÂcalÂly. I know we canât preÂdict the future, but should we sell it, or should I just give it a litÂtle bit of leeÂway? And B, should we be sellÂing it the day before it goes ex div in the future? I know weâve talked about these sorts of sitÂuÂaÂtions a couÂple of times in the past, but when you know that these stocks do this, should we be sellÂing it the day before it goes ex div and then buyÂing it back a week latÂer?
[00:06:46] Tony: make the same monÂey, donât you? Because you get paid a divÂiÂdend on the share price. Drops to reflect that.
[00:06:52] Cameron: Yeah.
[00:06:52] Tony: Yeah. Um, and if you sell it beforeÂhand, youâre payÂing CGT on the gains and then buyÂing it back in. So Iâd preÂfer to take the divÂiÂdend myself. Um, but I agree. I think itâs a fudge. Itâs, itâs just fallÂen slightÂly below the three point trend line.
[00:07:05] Tony: Um, itâs probÂaÂbly going to recovÂer because itâs clearÂly been dropÂping because of the, Because of the divÂiÂdend being paid, or going ex divÂiÂdend, and then hasÂnât quite recovÂered, um, the day after payÂment. But thereâs no hard and fast rule that says it has to recovÂer the day after payÂment, so I give it some leeÂway.
[00:07:22] Cameron: VulÂcan fudge. Itâs like,
[00:07:24] Tony: The VulÂcan Fudge, yes.
[00:07:27] Cameron: Weâre doing VulÂcan hand sigÂnals here on the camÂera. Itâs like, itâs like an F, like a VulÂcan
[00:07:32] Tony: Ah, right, yeah, okay.
[00:07:34] Cameron: down. There you go. The VulÂcan fudge. All right. I like that. The VulÂcan fudge. Maybe Iâll change. Iâll change the title of the episode to the VulÂcan fudge. Well, Iâm glad you
[00:07:46] Tony: Well, that was a realÂly good, yeah, thanks for the feedÂback. Um, was it
[00:07:49] Cameron: Glenn.
[00:07:50] Tony: Glenn? Glenn, thanks for the feedÂback Glenn, glad you signed up and And found it useÂful over the last five years. But in the notes, when you sent me that, I underÂlined the word emoÂtionÂal detachÂment words, emoÂtionÂal detachÂment, because thatâs, thatâs such a key part of investÂing realÂly is, you know, if you, I know we say this a lot, but a lot of the things that can give you a bump steer in investÂing are around behavÂioral. You know, evoÂluÂtionÂary dead ends in our, in the way that we behave psyÂchoÂlogÂiÂcalÂly. And the only way to guard against that is to have a sysÂtem and a process and a frameÂwork, and that gives you emoÂtionÂal detachÂment. So itâs so imporÂtant, whether itâs QAV or whether itâs some othÂer way of investÂing, um, youâve got to have that.
[00:08:36] Cameron: Itâs also one of the great Rolling Stone songs from the earÂly 80s. Iâll be your savÂior, steadÂfast and true, come to your emoÂtionÂal detachÂment. DoesÂnât realÂly rhyme, but the idea was there. Mick knew what he was
[00:08:51] Cameron: doing.
[00:08:52] Tony: Was, was Michael JackÂson singing for the Rolling Stones back then?
[00:08:55] Tony: Was
[00:08:55] Tony: he?
[00:08:55] Cameron: He ripped off Mick. SpeakÂing of peoÂple he ripped off, um, this is in After Hours, Iâll talk more about it, but I just watched the Blues BrothÂers again. over the weekÂend. First time Iâve seen it in years and damn it holds up man. It is such a, such a ridicuÂlous feel good film. But just watchÂing Cab CalÂloway and watchÂing James and you go like thereâs Michael JackÂson right there, you know.
[00:09:22] Cameron: Itâs, itâs, itâs, itâs, itâs, Cab CalÂloway comes out at the end in his white tails and does the spinÂning on the spot thing that Michael did. And I think Cab CalÂloway came up with a verÂsion of the moonÂwalk too. I think I saw a video of that not that long ago, back in the, you know, 30s or 40s, whenÂevÂer he was doing his thing in his
[00:09:41] Tony: And so I saw a video recentÂly too, someÂone did that, you know, when Michael JackÂson glued his shoes to the floors and then would lean way forÂward. That was done by someÂone back in the 30s and 40s
[00:09:50] Tony: first too.
[00:09:51] Cameron: Yeah. DidÂnât glue it. I think he was a nail. Yeah.
[00:09:54] Tony: Yeah. Okay.
[00:09:56] Cameron: Um, but I was also, I was thinkÂing, um, what a great record of, you know, uh, Cab CalÂloway, James Brown, Aretha Franklin, John Lee HookÂer, et cetera, and that they capÂtured. But then of course, Belushi died before all of them. Belushi died like two years after they made that,
[00:10:14] Tony: mm
[00:10:15] Cameron: and what a great, what a great tesÂtaÂment to his talÂent too.
[00:10:19] Cameron: But I think that itâs AckÂroyd. And I think John LanÂdis directÂed it. Thereâs, thereâs probÂaÂbly like more imporÂtant and even a betÂter film than GhostÂbusters. I think even though GhostÂbusters is probÂaÂbly the more famous, I think Blues BrothÂers is just such a, anyÂway, itâs after hours. Feel good film.
[00:10:35] Tony: yeah, it was, and um, it was, I saw a docÂuÂmenÂtary, I think, or some clips anyÂway on YouTube about, um, about how they came to do it from the, the first sketch at SatÂurÂday Night Live and how they put the band togethÂer and how they toured a lot. And it was, um, it was. BookÂer T and the MGs were basiÂcalÂly the backÂing band, Steve,
[00:10:56] Cameron: Wow.
[00:10:57] Tony: Steve, uh, Steve CropÂper and DonÂald Luck Dunn.
[00:11:00] Tony: And that made me go back and look at Green Onions, one of my favourite songs, again.
[00:11:04] Tony: Yeah. And you can see the very earÂly Steve CropÂper
[00:11:08] Tony: and DonÂald
[00:11:08] Tony: Luck
[00:11:08] Cameron: Oh, thereâs a clip. Oh yeah. Like
[00:11:10] Tony: Oh yeah.
[00:11:11] Cameron: or someÂthing.
[00:11:12] Tony: Yeah. Itâs realÂly, itâs so
[00:11:14] Tony: cool.
[00:11:14] Cameron: Oh, thatâs, and thatâs what I said to ChrisÂsy at the end of it. Thatâs one of the things that I think is so great about the film too, is like, itâs the real guys, a real band playÂing real music, like real musiÂcians backÂing them, which you donât often see in those sorts of films.
[00:11:28] Cameron: Biopics
[00:11:29] Cameron: and that
[00:11:29] Tony: came out before the movie, BriefÂcase Full of Blues. That
[00:11:32] Tony: was
[00:11:32] Tony: fanÂtasÂtic.
[00:11:33] Cameron: I lisÂten to that a lot. Itâs so great. Just, and Belushiâs voice was, he was so great. He could realÂly knock those tunes out anyÂway. And John CanÂdyâs cameo, and uh, Steven SpielÂbergâs cameo. Oh, CarÂrie, just that scene when he drops her
[00:11:49] Tony: realÂly drops up, hmm,
[00:11:54] Cameron: And he just drops her in the mud. Letâs go. Oh, so good. AnyÂway, TK, thatâs all the news Iâve got. The marÂketâs been up and down. PortÂfoÂlioâs doing what it does. Um, I got nothÂing else realÂly news wise to talk about. Do you got anyÂthing before we get into some quesÂtions?
[00:12:17] Tony: I did but Iâve forÂgotÂten it, lookÂing at my notes here and Iâve got pages and pages of scribÂble and I canât find it, um, oh yes thatâs right I found it, so just, just for interÂest sake and not amusÂing, uh, I was lisÂtenÂing to the Stock DocÂtor. Um, weekÂly video that Kien does and, uh, comes out on a FriÂday and they were talkÂing about earnÂings per share foreÂcasts and how that can corÂreÂlate with, uh, stock prices.
[00:12:45] Tony: And if you are a Stock DocÂtor subÂscriber, you can go into the graph on the front page and thereâs one of the drop down options is to do EPS reviÂsions or EPS foreÂcast changes, um, which will then give you a graph across the botÂtom of the screen. Which shows how the EPS has moved, or how the EPS foreÂcast has moved.
[00:13:05] Tony: And yeah, there is a bit of a corÂreÂlaÂtion there. So itâs someÂthing Iâm going to look at furÂther and see if that can be of any use to us. But it does seem to be driÂving share price senÂtiÂment a fair
[00:13:14] Tony: bit.
[00:13:14] Cameron: And how would we use that in theÂoÂry? Would that be someÂthing we would score on if itâs had a
[00:13:20] Tony: Yeah.
[00:13:21] Cameron: foreÂcast
[00:13:21] Tony: Yeah. Yeah. And thatâs my thinkÂing. I donât, I havenât worked out exactÂly how we would score it. Um, whether itâs got to have a recent one or whether itâs got to be trendÂing up or not trendÂing down, for examÂple. Um, You know, the, maybe the betÂter posiÂtion is the stock price is trendÂing down, but the earnÂings upgrades are trendÂing up.
[00:13:42] Tony: That would be a good time to buy someÂthing. So Iâve just got to do the research on that, but anyÂway, worth invesÂtiÂgatÂing. And, um, if anyÂone wants to have a look at it and give us their thoughts, thatâd be great.
[00:13:52] Cameron: SpeakÂing of Stock DocÂtor, I havenât noticed the data integriÂty issues for the last week or two. So hopeÂfulÂly theyâve nailed all those down. Tony did send a letÂter to Tim LinÂcoln, an email, a letÂter.
[00:14:06] Tony: Yeah. Licked a stamp.
[00:14:09] Cameron: Had his wax seal on it, had it delivÂered by couriÂer.
[00:14:15] Tony: MerÂcury, the god of, wing, wing the wing mesÂsenÂger.
[00:14:20] Cameron: Tony did send Tim an email and Tim told Tony he would, uh, look into it. So, um, it looks like he did that. So thank you, Tim. I know you, I know you tune in every week. So thank you for takÂing care of that for us. What else you got, TK? Mm
[00:14:36] Tony: Uh, thatâs it, Iâve got a pulled pork to do. So my pulled pork this week is on PerÂenÂti. which is a minÂing conÂtracÂtor, and I actuÂalÂly did a pulled pork on them back in OctoÂber 23. Uh, and that was when they were just about to acquire a comÂpaÂny called DDH1, which is a drilling comÂpaÂny. I think the DD and DDH was for diaÂmond drilling.
[00:15:00] Tony: Uh, and both comÂpaÂnies were on our buy list back then. Um, DDH also had, uh, PreÂviÂousÂly acquired Ozdrill and I think SWIC, which were also on our buy list in the past, so itâs been a bit of a roll up in the minÂing drilling space. But I thought Iâd go back and re look at PerÂenÂti now that weâve got some figÂures since they acquired DDH and just see how it all worked out.
[00:15:24] Tony: So, uh, just a quick recap on PerÂenÂti, foundÂed in KalÂgoÂorÂlie in 1987, headÂquarÂtered in Perth, but they operÂate globÂalÂly in 13 counÂtries. They proÂvide conÂtract minÂing serÂvices, equipÂment rental and serÂvicÂing to the minÂing secÂtor, minÂing tech, so minÂing techÂnolÂoÂgy, drilling serÂvices, And they have approxÂiÂmateÂly 11, 000 employÂees around the world.
[00:15:53] Tony: So thatâs, thatâs PerÂenÂti. I guess peoÂple can hear more about them if they go back to OctoÂber and lisÂten to us then when I did a pulled pork. Uh, so the first half results have come out and they only include I think maybe not quite three months of DDH in them, but they seem to be quite, uh, quite posÂiÂtive.
[00:16:15] Tony: Um, theyâre cerÂtainÂly betÂter than they were the half before, and theyâve upgradÂed their guidÂance, talkÂing about EPS guidÂances. Um, so just for some sort of conÂtext, priÂor to the takeover of DDH, PerÂenÂtiâs marÂket cap was about 870 milÂlion, DDH was about 330 milÂlion, and thatâs about the price that PerÂenÂti paid, um, so the idea was that they were going to, that PerÂenÂti was going to bulk up its drilling diviÂsion, which it has, um, and I guess the, one of the things that DDH has also brought is the abilÂiÂty to drill down deep, so they can, their drilling rigs can go as low as 3, 000 metres, which is, you know, quite a sigÂnifÂiÂcant amount to go down into the earth.
[00:17:04] Tony: Um,
[00:17:06] Cameron: Isnât that where the MorÂlocks
[00:17:07] Tony: first half, yeah,
[00:17:10] Cameron: Wow. They gotÂta be, they gotÂta, they gotÂta be very careÂful about upsetÂting the MorÂlock, uh, civÂiÂlizaÂtion.
[00:17:17] Tony: Right.
[00:17:18] Cameron: Thatâs a crazy, thatâs crazy deep.
[00:17:22] Tony: It is, I know, three
[00:17:23] Tony: kiloÂmeÂters.
[00:17:23] Cameron: And youâre like,
[00:17:24] Tony: It
[00:17:24] Tony: is.
[00:17:25] Cameron: going through the crust of the earth, getÂting down into like,
[00:17:30] Tony: ooh, where the dinosaurs were. Yeah.
[00:17:33] Cameron: that is crazy. Oh my god,
[00:17:34] Tony: It is.
[00:17:35] Cameron: they could go down that deep.
[00:17:37] Tony: Yeah, itâs incredÂiÂble, isnât it? Yeah, anyÂway, so, um, the DDH acquiÂsiÂtion has already startÂed to improve the results. So, uh, looks like the acquiÂsiÂtion hapÂpened on the 6th of OctoÂber, 23. But, um, for the half, revÂenue was up 13%. Net profÂit up 20%, um, and theyâve reduced some of their debt, which has been good.
[00:18:00] Tony: Um, PerÂenÂti reportÂed that, um, the net assets, Uh, weâre greater than the purÂchase price when they bought DDH, so theyâve actuÂalÂly reportÂed an underÂlyÂing gain of 29. 4 milÂlion on the deal. In othÂer words, they bought, um, the DDH assets for less than book, which is someÂthing that we, we would have been attractÂed to when DDH was on the, the buy list.
[00:18:22] Tony: Uh, Perentiâs Gave a bit of an update on the acquiÂsiÂtion and they report that DDH employÂee turnover is staÂble and thereâs been no loss of key manÂageÂment perÂsonÂnel, um, durÂing the half. So it seems to be Going well and being inteÂgratÂed niceÂly. Uh, PerÂenÂti report 5 milÂlion of synÂerÂgies, um, and reafÂfirmed their tarÂget of 22 milÂlion in synÂerÂgy.
[00:18:47] Tony: So itâs, it seems to be workÂing for them. Um, they, DDH, uh, improved their growth outÂlook and Stock DocÂtor report, uh, foreÂcast revÂenue growth of 18 perÂcent next year for PerÂenÂti and net net profÂit growth of 82 perÂcent and earnÂings per share growth of 40%. 8%. So it seems like the, the acquiÂsiÂtion is workÂing well for PerÂenÂti.
[00:19:14] Tony: And I just thought Iâd visÂit the numÂbers because PRN is just now back on the buy list, uh, havÂing been off since about the time that we, um, we did, I did the last pulled pork. So Iâm using a stock price of 1. 50. 1 realÂly, 1. 005. Itâs less than conÂsenÂsus tarÂget. IV1 for this comÂpaÂny now is 0. 72. IV2 is 1. 81.
[00:19:35] Tony: So itâs less than IV2. Um, this is a large ADT comÂpaÂny, espeÂcialÂly now after the acquiÂsiÂtion. So ADT is 1. 6 milÂlion. Uh, we donât score it for yield. The yield is only 1. 99%, but thatâs fine. Uh, Stock DocÂtor finanÂcial health is strong and the trend is steady. So it scores for those. And PE is low, but not quite the lowÂest.
[00:20:01] Tony: So PE is just over sevÂen, um, which is all but one, um, the lowÂest in the last three years, but we donât score it for that. Um, the excitÂing thing about this comÂpaÂny is PropÂCaf is 2. 33 times, so we can buy it for, you know, a very quick payÂback, um, using its operÂatÂing cash flow. Uh, I susÂpect Iâll use that cash flow either to fund more acquiÂsiÂtions, but also likeÂly to pay down debt.
[00:20:27] Tony: Neps for this comÂpaÂny is 1. 35, so we, you know, the share price of a dolÂlar, weâre buyÂing it for, um, much less than its net equiÂty per share. I do highÂlight that Net TanÂgiÂble Assets is 1. 19, so thereâs some goodÂwill someÂwhere in that equiÂty, um, but weâre still buyÂing it for less than NTA as well, so itâs good on both counts.
[00:20:48] Tony: Uh, so it scores for that. Scores for obviÂousÂly for net equiÂty per share plus 30%, which is 1. 75. So weâre well below that with the share price. Uh, itâs scorÂing for growth over PE, which is 4. 56 times. Um, so those growth, uh, foreÂcasts, uh, and low PE are helpÂing that. Our hurÂdle is 1. 5, so it masÂsiveÂly outÂperÂforms there.
[00:21:10] Tony: Um, thereâs no ownÂer founder. DirecÂtors hold about 3 perÂcent of the comÂpaÂny, but, um, We donât score it for that. Uh, it is back to being a three point trendÂline upturn, so it scores for that. And itâs conÂsisÂtentÂly increasÂing equiÂty, as we went back and re looked at, is scorÂing for that. So, overÂall, the qualÂiÂty score is 13 out of 16, or 81%, and the QAV score is 0.
[00:21:36] Tony: 35. So, This is a large ADT comÂpaÂny. Itâs come on the buy list this week and itâs near the top and itâs been around for a while. PeoÂple may conÂtinÂue to own it, but it seems like, uh, the DDH acquiÂsiÂtions going well for it. And, um, I think thatâs primed it for growth was my note on that.
[00:21:55] Cameron: Yes, well, the last time you did a pulled pork on it, the share price,
[00:22:00] Tony: No, donât, donât menÂtion. Itâs come good.
[00:22:04] Cameron: itâs come
[00:22:04] Tony: just focus on the upside. Donât give me those negÂaÂtive waves.
[00:22:09] Cameron: I rememÂber even before you did the Pulled Pork on it, back in August last year, it delivÂered record FY23 results, headÂlined by record revÂenue and record underÂlyÂing earnÂings, 18 perÂcent increase in revÂenue, 50 perÂcent increase in EBIT, 58 perÂcent increase in EDPAT, and the shares dropped by 12 perÂcent and I had to sell it.
[00:22:33] Cameron: It became a 3PTL sell. And then it conÂtinÂued to sell. Like I was just, that was in August. I was just lookÂing at, how did it do? So it dropped from, uh, 31st of July, I was tradÂing at 1. 20. End of August, it had dropped down to 1. 06. We sold it someÂwhere in that week. Then it conÂtinÂued to drop down to 82 cents the beginÂning of this year.
[00:22:56] Cameron: And itâs back up to about a buck, 1. Now, so the 3PTL got us out. Uh, at a good time, but, uh, yeah, that was, that was heartÂbreakÂing at the time. Record results and the
[00:23:11] Tony: Yeah. I think
[00:23:12] Cameron: tanked it.
[00:23:14] Tony: I susÂpect the, uh, the marÂkets often donât like acquirÂing comÂpaÂnies. I susÂpect once the acquiÂsiÂtion was announced, peoÂple just ran for the exits withÂout even
[00:23:23] Tony: thinkÂing too
[00:23:24] Cameron: One of our light memÂbers at the time who worked, worked or works at PRN sent me an email at the time sayÂing, quick, Quick feedÂback from CEO. MarÂket didÂnât like lack of a divÂiÂdend givÂen conÂsidÂerÂaÂtion of a divÂiÂdend was preÂviÂousÂly statÂed when leverÂage was under one but with refiÂnancÂing due next year they wantÂed to keep some buffer plus alloÂcaÂtion of future funds slash investÂments to elecÂtriÂfiÂcaÂtion risk manÂageÂment and minÂing techÂnolÂoÂgy which have a numÂber of years payÂback rather than shortÂer term returns to shareÂholdÂers.
[00:23:55] Cameron: Loss of first US tenÂder and big local tenÂder werenât seen as large negÂaÂtives. So anyÂway.
[00:24:03] Tony: yeah, theyâre lost. Um, but cerÂtainÂly back on the buy list now lookÂing good.
[00:24:08] Cameron: Ah, good. Thank you for doing that again. Got a couÂple of quesÂtions. Should we get into those?
[00:24:15] Tony: Yeah, sure. But
[00:24:18] Cameron: Paul, long time, long time subÂscriber. Paul, uh, Cue EnerÂgy is on our buy list and Iâve startÂed lookÂing at it. CUE is actuÂalÂly a subÂsidiary of a largÂer entiÂty, New Zealand Oil and Gas, NZO. NZO are curÂrentÂly listÂed on the New Zealand exchange, but are delistÂing soon to relist on the ASX.
[00:24:38] Cameron: All the Kiwis are comÂing here. Last perÂson out of New Zealand, turn off the lights.
[00:24:44] Tony: if they get into trouÂble, we have to deport them back to New Zealand.
[00:24:47] Cameron: Yeah, exactÂly.
[00:24:49] Tony: because they were born over there.
[00:24:50] Cameron: Iâm with Sam Neill and RusÂsell Crowe, but my quesÂtion is, in excess, no, the othÂer ones,
[00:24:57] Tony: We should, we should get a vote every year. Like every time thereâs a fedÂerÂal elecÂtion, we should get a vote on which Kiwis to accept and which ones to send back.
[00:25:06] Cameron: Iâve got a Sam Neill stoÂry comÂing up latÂer on anyÂway, but my quesÂtion is realÂly about divÂiÂdends. Cue EnerÂgy has recentÂly paid a large speÂcial divÂiÂdend and announced a new polÂiÂcy to conÂtinÂue payÂing divÂiÂdends in the future. DivÂiÂdends are interÂestÂing to me as I invest through my SMSF and like to take advanÂtage of the tax benÂeÂfits arisÂing from divÂiÂdends.
[00:25:27] Cameron: HowÂevÂer, I donât think many of the QAV comÂpaÂnies are subÂsidiaries of largÂer comÂpaÂnies. How sure can I be that once Q starts earnÂing enough cash to think about payÂing a divÂiÂdend, that the monÂey wonât just be shufÂfled up the line to the evenÂtuÂal ownÂer, in this case, New Zealand Oil Gas? Point 2. Rather than down the line to the small ownÂers like me, Would it be betÂter to conÂsidÂer investÂing in the parÂent comÂpaÂny?
[00:25:53] Cameron: I guess when it comes down to it, my quesÂtion realÂly is, who owns the divÂiÂdends?
[00:25:59] Tony: Yeah, good quesÂtion, Paul. How, how are you going? Um, so, NZO though, and CUE, Both have been on the buy list, I think theyâre both very close to their sell lines now, so I think CUE was on the buy list last week, itâs come up again this week, it might pop back on again, it trades around at sell price, same with NZO, and NZO only has a small ADT on the ASX, but that will improve when it relists, delists in New Zealand and relists over here.
[00:26:29] Tony: But I guess thatâs buy the buy. Uh, well I had a look at this today, NZO owns 50. 04 perÂcent of CUE, and that gives them a majorÂiÂty of board seats, so they have, looks like they have 5 out of 9 board seats. So they will, they will, You know, potenÂtialÂly conÂtrol the divÂiÂdend polÂiÂcy, um, which, which the board sets.
[00:26:53] Tony: Uh, it can be, I guess, overÂturned by a vote at the AGM, but, um, youâd expect the board to set the divÂiÂdend polÂiÂcy. Uh, but I think in this case, Paul, your interÂests and NZOâs interÂests align because 50, 50. 04 perÂcent doesÂnât give NZO conÂtrol over the finanÂcial aspects of the comÂpaÂny in terms of being able to conÂsolÂiÂdate the profÂit and loss into NZOâs balÂance sheets.
[00:27:19] Tony: So the only way they can get monÂey out from their investÂment is by divÂiÂdends, the same way that you are. So itâs actuÂalÂly, you know, In NZOâs interÂests, and they hold the majorÂiÂty of the board for CUE to start payÂing divÂiÂdends to return capÂiÂtal back to um, NZO. And because the rule on the ASX is that every divÂiÂdend has to be equalÂly disÂtribÂuted amongst shareÂholdÂers, then it, small investors like Paul will also get the same divÂiÂdend for share as NZO.
[00:27:45] Tony: So I think you are, um, fine being listÂed in, uh, being, um, investÂed in CUE if you are. Uh, and, uh. I think if it makes sense that NZO is going to conÂtinÂue to want divÂiÂdends out of their investÂment in CUE and that theyâll conÂtinÂue to have them flow. I did want to point out one parÂticÂuÂlar item. Paul menÂtions that heâs interÂestÂed in divÂiÂdends because of his investÂment in his SMSF, which is not unusuÂal.
[00:28:12] Tony: I mean, the reaÂson I susÂpect that thatâs the case is because of the frankÂing credÂits. And so divÂiÂdends get a bit of a speÂcial boost in Um, super funds because they have a lowÂer tax rate than genÂerÂalÂly we pay either through ownÂerÂship in a corÂpoÂraÂtion or through, through our own priÂvate tax arrangeÂments.
[00:28:33] Tony: Uh, so genÂerÂalÂly, um, youâll get a cash rebate when it comes to tax time for the frankÂing credÂit or part of the frankÂing credÂit, which is, um, 30%. Thatâs the, the tax thatâs been paid by CUE is 30%. And then, um, if you are payÂing say 15%, um, tax, uh, in your. SMSF, youâll get 15 perÂcent cash rebate back for the amount of tax that notionÂalÂly has already been charged to you, um, but it was too high, so you get a rebate for it.
[00:29:01] Tony: Um, the only probÂlem is that, um, I went and had a look at CUEâs notiÂfiÂcaÂtions and they, um, I said that they were doing a speÂcial divÂiÂdend, but it wouldÂnât have frankÂing credÂits, so just be aware of that, Paul, if youâre countÂing on a speÂcial sort of boost to your SMSF, you wonât get it with CUE. Um, genÂerÂalÂly, comÂpaÂnies, um, who pay divÂiÂdends withÂout frankÂing credÂits, Do it for two reaÂsons.
[00:29:23] Tony: One either they havenât earned enough income to pay enough tax to frank the divÂiÂdends. Um, so there isnât, so they havenât paid comÂpaÂny tax and so they thereÂfore canât, um, pass on a frankÂing credÂit to you. Or the income is from overÂseas, itâs derived overÂseas and thereÂfore wasÂnât taxed in AusÂtralia. Same, same sort of thing.
[00:29:43] Tony: Um, which I think might be the case with CUE, although I donât know. Um, know the busiÂness that well, but yeah, just be aware of that. If you are expectÂing frankÂing credÂits, you may not get them with CUE.
[00:29:55] Cameron: Whatâs the um, ADT on CUE? Iâm just lookÂing to see if theyâre on my ASX 300 list.
[00:30:01] Tony: Think theyâre pretÂty small from memÂoÂry.
[00:30:03] Cameron: Yeah, theyâre not on the ASX 300 so I wouldÂnât be able to buy them with my SuperÂfund. Am I SuperÂfund? ManÂaged by Super. If Paul runs his own, I guess he has more flexÂiÂbilÂiÂty with
[00:30:17] Tony: Yeah, yep. Uh, ADT for C U E, lot of acronyms there. Uh, itâs 45,
[00:30:26] Tony: 000.
[00:30:30] Cameron: Ah, but good quesÂtion. Thanks, Paul. By the way, um, ASGâs up to 2. 20 again, so nudÂgin it. Just nudÂgin it.
[00:30:40] Tony: There you go. If you close your eyes for a couÂple of days, you donât need to fudge. Just, you can just, yeah, just say whatâs going to hapÂpen
[00:30:45] Cameron: Close your eyes,
[00:30:46] Tony: Turn, turn your sensÂes off in VulÂcan terÂmiÂnolÂoÂgy.
[00:30:51] Cameron: The only othÂer quesÂtion weâve got, anothÂer good one from Trent. He says, MME is on top of the buy list and new to the buy list. DunÂno about that. Is it realÂly new to the buy list?
[00:31:03] Tony: Uh, no idea that pulled pork on it last year or earÂliÂer this year.
[00:31:06] Cameron: Yeah, it might be new ish. Iâm lookÂing at hisÂtorÂiÂcal buy lists. MME. This
[00:31:13] Tony: It wasÂnât on last week, I think is Paulâs
[00:31:14] Cameron: right,
[00:31:15] Tony: SorÂry, uh, French point.
[00:31:17] Cameron: yeah, Iâm lookÂing at it on the hisÂtorÂiÂcal buy lists and, uh, chart and itâs only givÂen me the one result. Advanced search, letâs look at, uh, this, yeah, withÂin this sheet, yeah. I think it may not have been on for quite a while by the looks of it, which is surÂprisÂing me. I always feel like MME is one of the regÂuÂlars.
[00:31:42] Tony: Yeah, so I did it as a pulled pork in FebÂruÂary, so it was defÂiÂniteÂly on the buy list in FebÂruÂary.
[00:31:48] Cameron: Itâs not showÂing up on my, um, hisÂtorÂiÂcal buy lists, uh, table, but, okay. Bye. Take your word on them. Um, anyÂwho, back to TrenÂtâs quesÂtion. He says, As a way to do a refreshÂer on the QAV checkÂlist, can you do a quick walkÂthrough of MME score last week verÂsus this week and what the trigÂger is for it to now appear?
[00:32:15] Cameron: Assume the main driÂver is it now has a buy line, but interÂestÂingÂly its QAV score has fallÂen from last week. I note the IV2 EPS growth have also changed, but no new report, so is EPS growth based on anaÂlyst estiÂmate change? Also interÂestÂing to note, two othÂer simÂiÂlar busiÂnessÂes, PlenÂti, PLT, and LatÂiÂtude Finance, LFS, have recentÂly appeared on the buy list.
[00:32:40] Cameron: Trent, um,
[00:32:42] Tony: Yeah, I thought that was interÂestÂing. Theyâre all, theyâre all sort of, um, non bank lenders to peoÂple, perÂsonÂal lenders. So, uh, donât know whatâs hapÂpenÂing in that secÂtor, but, um, Yeah, someÂthing is, and theyâre all now on our buy list. Trent, the answer is to do a lot with, um, the way the bread loadÂerâs workÂing out the L1 and L2.
[00:33:01] Tony: So, the difÂferÂence between last week and this week is that itâs the, last week was the end of the month, and we now rolled over into a new month this week. And, um, that just hapÂpened to coinÂcide with the change in the L1 and L2 on the bread loader. So, last week, L1 for this comÂpaÂny, MME, was, um, March 20 at 0.57 cents, and L two was April 21 at a dolÂlar 37, and the sell price was 360 4 this week.
[00:33:29] Tony: L one is NovemÂber 23 at 0.06, so 6 cents L twoâs April 24 at 7 cents, and the sell price is 7 cents. So, um, MME is one of those comÂpaÂnies weâve seen share graphs over the, weâve seen share graphs like this before over the course of the last five years. Uh, you know, in the first half of the five year periÂod, the share price was much highÂer than what itâs been in the last year or two.
[00:33:53] Tony: And, uh, this just hapÂpens to be the month that resets the L1 and L2 to a new sell price. And it dropped draÂmatÂiÂcalÂly from 0. 364 to 0. 07. And, so thatâs probÂaÂbly the reaÂson why it appeared this week. Um, the price did go up slightÂly, which affectÂed price to cash flow, etc. So, for examÂple, last week, the QualÂiÂty score was 69%, this week itâs 73%.
[00:34:19] Tony: Last week the price was 6. 4 cents, this week itâs 7. 6 cents. PropÂCaf last week was 0. 34, um, this time, this time itâs 0. 41 times. So some changes, slight changes to the figÂures, uh, and the difÂferÂence in the scorÂing I think will be due to the price moveÂment up, um, but, uh, the main reaÂson is the new L1 and L2 has changed the This week, because itâs a new month.
[00:34:48] Cameron: Right, and I note that itâs, um, actuÂalÂly right on the sell line, itâs tradÂing at 7 cents at the moment, so itâs a Josephine and right on its sell line at the moment, so even though itâs on the buy list, probÂaÂbly wouldÂnât be buyÂing it unless its price goes So, thatâs Above eight cents, which I think it has to be to get above being a Josephine.
[00:35:13] Cameron: So do you know what hapÂpened to it in 2022 that caused the share price to drop from whatÂevÂer it was, two bucks down to eight cents, sevÂen
[00:35:21] Tony: I donât, sorÂry, no, I canât rememÂber what I said in the pulled pork on that one. Um, no, it doesÂnât, uh, Iâd just be guessÂing, sorÂry.
[00:35:31] Cameron: Hmm, lookÂing at their um, announceÂments from back over that periÂod doesÂnât realÂly seem to help. SomeÂthing about a fundÂing strucÂture that hapÂpened late in 2022. Letâs see what goes back earÂliÂer. I canât see. I canât go back far enough, fast enough. AnyÂway, itâs a big, big drop. They comÂpletÂed 22, which resultÂed in a 27 perÂcent decline in their price. AnyÂway, itâs tradÂing very low comÂpared to where it was a couÂple of years ago.
[00:36:09] Tony: I might do a, I might see if, um, PlenÂti or LatÂiÂtude FinanÂcial are worth doing a pulled pork on next week. Theyâre small AT& T stocks, but they are new to our buy list as
[00:36:18] Cameron: Hmm.
[00:36:20] Tony: I had a bit to do with LFS in a priÂor life when it was GE monÂey. And we launched, uh, some credÂit cards
[00:36:26] Tony: with them.
[00:36:27] Cameron: Oh, realÂly?
[00:36:28] Tony: Hmm,
[00:36:29] Cameron: Must have been a long time
[00:36:30] Cameron: ago.
[00:36:32] Tony: Yeah, it was. Back when I was workÂing for Shell. Shell MasÂterÂcard, and then, um, had a bit to do with them in the FlyÂbuys proÂgram when I was at Coles Myer, and, uh, they, they ran the Myer card and the Coles Myer credÂit card. Back
[00:36:46] Cameron: Hmm.
[00:36:47] Tony: when they were called GE MonÂey, before they sold out and floatÂed as LatÂiÂtudeâs finanÂcial serÂvices.
[00:36:54] Cameron: VagueÂly recall GE monÂey from back in the day. All right. Well, I hope that helped, Trent. And that is all of the quesÂtions for today, TK. After hours, how did your horsÂes go? You had a horse run on the weekÂend, didÂnât you?
[00:37:15] Tony: Nah, I had one. Oh, I did actuÂalÂly, induÂbitably, youâre right. Uh, a horse racÂing up in, um, was racÂing in Bow Desert of all places. But just, uh, tryÂing to get a run. Thereâs been lots of wet tracks up there recentÂly and it ran fourth. So,
[00:37:30] Cameron: Not bad.
[00:37:31] Tony: uh, not too bad.
[00:37:33] Cameron: What else have you been up to for fun? Golf, howâs the golf?
[00:37:37] Tony: Yep. Played MagenÂta Shores, played, uh, Bondville, played Tunkari twice, so itâs been a lot of fun with RudÂdy and anothÂer mate Jeff. Uh, yeah, just travÂelÂling around, itâs been good fun. RudÂdy and I have a lot of, get up to a lot of silliÂness in the car when weâre driÂving along. Itâs always
[00:37:55] Tony: fun.
[00:37:56] Cameron: SilliÂness. What kind of silliÂness do two guys of your age get up to in the car?
[00:38:02] Tony: ha ha ha ha
[00:38:04] Cameron: know, NSFW or can we talk about it?
[00:38:07] Tony: No, itâs defÂiÂniteÂly safe for work. Itâs usuÂalÂly BenÂny Hill jokes. Ha ha ha ha ha ha! Bad, uh, bad ChiÂnese imperÂsonÂations. But um, yeah, we have fun.
[00:38:18] Cameron: Not sure that is safe for work these days.
[00:38:20] Tony: No, true. Alex always pulls me up on that. CookÂie boy.
[00:38:27] Cameron: I just startÂed, uh, readÂing a biogÂraÂphy on ReilÂly, Ace of Spies.
[00:38:34] Tony: Oh, thatâs, thatâs the Sam Neill conÂnecÂtion.
[00:38:36] Cameron: Neill conÂnecÂtion.
[00:38:37] Cameron: Iâve nevÂer watched the series. I went to try and find it. Itâs not on any of the streamÂing serÂvices at the moment. I canât, I rememÂber when it was out of the 80s. I nevÂer realÂly paid much attenÂtion, but SidÂney George ReilÂly has popped up in one of the books.
[00:38:53] Cameron: I was, I was readÂing a book on the hisÂtoÂry of MI6 as part of my Cold War.
[00:39:00] Tony: Oh, yeah. Okay.
[00:39:01] Cameron: SidÂney ReilÂly came up as being deeply conÂnectÂed with MI6 in the earÂly part of its hisÂtoÂry. And, uh, I was like, I know nothÂing about this guy. And they were talkÂing about him like he was the real deal. And in fact, one of the things thatâs often said about him is heâs one of the guys that Ian FlemÂing based James Bond on because, um, one of the guys that ReilÂly was involved with, Um, in sort of 1918 ish, when they were tryÂing to, um, assasÂsiÂnate Lenin was, uh, a guy called FlockÂhart who endÂed up, you know, FlemÂing knew quite well and worked with, and they reckÂon that FlockÂhart would have told FlemÂing a lot of stoÂries about ReilÂly and that he, um, Uh, you know, then sort of built James Bond partÂly around this charÂacÂter.
[00:39:52] Cameron: As I think there was a numÂber of peoÂple that influÂenced the develÂopÂment of Bond, but, um, yeah. So I read, I read his Wikipedia page and was like, Oh my God. You know much, do you ever see the series? Do you know much about this guy?
[00:40:04] Tony: No, I read, um, read, uh, whatâs his nameâs biogÂraÂphy last year. Sam Neill, his first big starÂring role was as ReilÂly. And he pikes fun of it because he was supÂposed to be a sex symÂbol. And I think Sam, as much as I like Sam Neill as a perÂson, um, Iâm not sure heâd ever qualÂiÂfy as a sex symÂbol in
[00:40:24] Tony: my book.
[00:40:25] Cameron: Well, thatâs the funÂny thing about ReilÂly is that he wasÂnât a good lookÂing dude, but was marÂried like five times, had women all over the world, and marÂried to these women simulÂtaÂneÂousÂly around the world. He was a bigamist. Um, but yeah, big hit with the ladies, but the biogÂraÂphÂer points out, you know, was not good lookÂing, realÂly.
[00:40:51] Cameron: And his origÂiÂnal name was like RosenÂberg. He was, uh, RussÂian Jew who just startÂed sellÂing his serÂvices. I think he, he, like he startÂed off this crazy stoÂry. Like he, in the late 1800s, he was in EngÂland sellÂing like, um, dodgy mirÂaÂcle cures, uh, and he had some wealthy. Lorde or someÂthing that he was sellÂing these mirÂaÂcle cures to.
[00:41:25] Cameron: Met this Lordâs much younger wife, endÂed up havÂing an affair with her. The Lord mysÂteÂriÂousÂly dies a week after changÂing his will. She inherÂits a ton of monÂey. and marÂries ReilÂly. And, uh, then he just sets himÂself up as like this genÂtleÂmen, advenÂturÂous spy dude, and worked for all sides, worked for the JapanÂese, worked for the RusÂsians, worked for the British.
[00:41:55] Cameron: Um, just basiÂcalÂly sold himÂself to any takÂer and, but would like, uh, Take on idenÂtiÂties as, uh, you know, this busiÂnessÂman or that busiÂnessÂman and would spend years infilÂtratÂing these counÂtryâs, uh, busiÂness elite and govÂernÂment elite in order to get inforÂmaÂtion that he would then sell to someÂbody and, you know.
[00:42:21] Cameron: Crazy stoÂries, and half of them probÂaÂbly arenât true, but these are the stoÂries that have come down
[00:42:26] Tony: Yeah, right.
[00:42:28] Cameron: I think his life was first seriÂalÂized in the, some British newsÂpaÂper in the earÂly 1900s, and the biogÂraÂphy Iâm readÂing, the guyâs tryÂing to unpick, you know, whatâs real and whatâs myth and whatâs
[00:42:40] Tony: right. Yep.
[00:42:42] Cameron: anyÂway, he endÂed up,
[00:42:43] Tony: Sounds
[00:42:44] Cameron: he tried to assasÂsiÂnate Lenin, on behalf of the British, in like 1918, and, SomeÂbody else tried to assasÂsiÂnate him first, shot him a couÂple of times and so their plot fell through.
[00:43:00] Cameron: Then he went back to RusÂsia in 1925 when there was someÂthing called the Trust which was set up, which was a group of elites that were going to overÂthrow the BolÂsheÂviks. And sort of reached out to him and he went back to supÂport them in overÂthrowÂing the BolÂsheÂviks. And it turned out that the, uh, trust was fake.
[00:43:23] Cameron: It was set up by the OGPU to get him, get him
[00:43:26] Cameron: back into the counÂtry, him and
[00:43:28] Tony: Ha ha
[00:43:29] Cameron: And, uh, they got arrestÂed and exeÂcutÂed.
[00:43:34] Tony: Ooh.
[00:43:34] Cameron: AnyÂway, fasÂciÂnatÂing, after hearÂing about him all my life, you know, to finalÂly read about him, even though heâs not realÂly even a ReilÂly, he was a RosenÂblum, so.
[00:43:44] Tony: Oh, you think he might have been a, uh, been part of your
[00:43:47] Tony: herÂitage
[00:43:48] Cameron: No, but I didÂnât know that until this, Iâve, you know, ever since the series came out, Iâve heard about ReilÂly, Ace of Spies, and peoÂple have called me ReilÂly, Ace of Spies, and I always assumed he was a ReilÂly someÂwhere, and I thought, oh, I should read about this guy, heâs a
[00:44:02] Tony: I thought they were callÂing you Ace of Pies, itâs Ace of Spies. AhhÂhh.
[00:44:07] Cameron: I do. I do love a good pie. AnyÂway, so, thatâs fun. Uh, the Blues BrothÂers was
[00:44:14] Cameron: fun.
[00:44:15] Cameron: Uh, havÂing my wife back is fun, for a whole bunch of reaÂsons. Um, heh heh
[00:44:22] Tony: Name one.
[00:44:24] Cameron: heh. Weâve got to keep it safe at work, Tony.
[00:44:27] Tony: No, itâs just she bought you a
[00:44:28] Tony: cap.
[00:44:29] Cameron: me a cap. Yeah.
[00:44:31] Tony: Thatâs good. And everyÂthing was fine with her mothÂer and sisÂters?
[00:44:35] Cameron: Yeah.
[00:44:36] Tony: As good as it could be?
[00:44:37] Tony: Yep.
[00:44:37] Cameron: Yeah. She had a, she had a good trip. She, um, uh, enjoyed researchÂing the U. S. stock marÂket, uh, for QAV. That was the main purÂpose of the trip.
[00:44:54] Tony: Right. Iâm lookÂing forÂward to getÂting her on the
[00:44:56] Tony: show
[00:44:56] Cameron: Yes, well, she will proÂvide a writÂten report, uh,
[00:45:00] Tony: Ah, okay.
[00:45:01] Cameron: Did a lot of research. She did, uh, hapÂpen to catch up with some famÂiÂly while she was there, but that was coinÂciÂdenÂtal. Rarely,
[00:45:09] Cameron: yeah, yeah, evenings and weekÂends, most of the time was QAV relatÂed research. Um, apparÂentÂly they have a stock marÂket over there, and itâs boomÂing.
[00:45:19] Tony: Itâs been doing okay. Yeah, itâs been doing okay.
[00:45:21] Cameron: what I got out of her report.
[00:45:23] Tony: Yeah, right. Thatâs, thatâs the report in a nutÂshell, is
[00:45:26] Tony: it?
[00:45:26] Cameron: basiÂcalÂly high levÂel.
[00:45:31] Tony: Youâre very obserÂvant, your wife.
[00:45:33] Cameron: you canât, canât pull a trick on her, I tell you. Uh, thatâs it? Yeah, I
[00:45:39] Tony: good. Yep.
[00:45:40] Cameron: tell you. Oh,
[00:45:42] Tony: I watched, um, finÂished off watchÂing Dream SceÂnario,
[00:45:45] Cameron: what did you think?
[00:45:46] Tony: Oh, until it got hardÂer to watch as it went along. I mean, itâs well made, but just the negÂaÂtivÂiÂty. Heaped on the charÂacÂter was just hard
[00:45:56] Tony: to
[00:45:56] Tony: watch.
[00:45:57] Cameron: was sort of the point, right?
[00:45:59] Tony: I know. Yeah. I kind of found it like a metaphor for celebriÂty and influÂences and all that kind of stuff.
[00:46:06] Tony: How, you know, a ranÂdom guy was picked out to be a celebriÂty and dragged along by the fame. It went to his head and it turned sour and he couldÂnât cope with it. And then in the end, itâs picked up by the dickÂheads in the BevÂerÂly Hills comÂmuÂniÂty. Hotel or BevÂerÂly Hills house and someÂone makes a, you know, a, a scam, someÂone sets up a scam and you put on your risk and
[00:46:28] Cameron: not a
[00:46:28] Tony: into your dreams and
[00:46:29] Tony: go, yes, it
[00:46:30] Tony: was
[00:46:30] Cameron: they were actuÂalÂly, he got into his wifeâs dreams.
[00:46:34] Tony: Uh, yeah, maybe.
[00:46:37] Cameron: yeah.
[00:46:37] Tony: Yeah. AnyÂway, I, I thought it was realÂly, it, you know, uh, well, it was a metaphor for celebriÂty, but it
[00:46:44] Cameron: I donât think it was a metaphor.
[00:46:45] Cameron: It was delibÂerÂateÂly, it was, he became a celebriÂty. It was very direct. I mean, it was a comÂmenÂtary, I think, on
[00:46:53] Tony: ComÂmenÂtary. Thatâs a betÂter word.
[00:46:54] Cameron: Yeah. And do you think. EveryÂthing turned against him because he had the sexÂuÂal encounter, the brief attemptÂed flirÂty affair with the younger girl.
[00:47:05] Tony: That was interÂestÂing. I was tryÂing to work out whether that was like, um, you know, thereâs some kind of moral dimenÂsion to it that the dreams all change when, when that hapÂpened, but Iâm not sure. Cause he was susÂpectÂing his wife was cheatÂing at the same time. So that was the othÂer moral dimenÂsion to it, whether, yeah.
[00:47:21] Tony: And he didÂnât actuÂalÂly go through with the, with the flirtÂing with the girl. So it was just, I read it as being anothÂer examÂple of how he wasÂnât copÂing with his, with his
[00:47:29] Tony: newÂfound
[00:47:30] Cameron: And as soon as he got the fame, he realÂly got angry and bitÂter and wantÂed all of his fame to be about his acaÂdÂeÂmÂic work and not about what Michael CerÂaâs PR comÂpaÂny wantÂed it to be about. And
[00:47:43] Tony: yeah,
[00:47:43] Cameron: messed him up and messed up his life. And yeah, I thought it was a good moralÂiÂty tale on instant unearned celebriÂty and chasÂing that.
[00:47:54] Cameron: And he startÂed to revÂel in that and thought he could use it. for good, but it ruined his life.
[00:48:05] Tony: yeah, which I thought was very sad but, you
[00:48:08] Tony: know, probÂaÂbly
[00:48:09] Cameron: It was a, it was a difÂfiÂcult film, but it, uh, like, highÂly origÂiÂnal. I thought the writer, direcÂtor, whatÂevÂer his name was, did a great job. And itâs just great for me to see Cage. You know, Iâm numÂber, Cage fan numÂber one. Uh, to see him again, just make an interÂestÂing film, add a charÂacÂter for him. Um, heâs at the top of his game,
[00:48:31] Tony: mm,
[00:48:32] Cameron: at least for many decades, you know, he had a great periÂod in the 80s and earÂly 90s, but, um, heâs back, like, just,
[00:48:40] Tony: went missÂing there for a while where he was just an actor for hire and didÂnât matÂter what the
[00:48:44] Tony: script
[00:48:45] Tony: was.
[00:48:45] Cameron: yeah, but as I always say, it doesÂnât matÂter how bad the film was, he always brought his A game and it was always, always fun to watch
[00:48:53] Tony: Yeah.
[00:48:53] Cameron: Cage. Did you see Pig?
[00:48:57] Tony: No.
[00:48:58] Cameron: Ah, watch Pig. Have you seen Mandy?
[00:49:01] Tony: No.
[00:49:02] Cameron: anothÂer great, these are like some of the great films heâs pushed out in the last couÂple of years, Pig and Mandy, um, Mandyâs more to type, Pig again, very against type for him, bareÂly talks in the whole film, about a, about a guy who lives out in the woods in a litÂtle hut and someÂbody steals his trufÂfle pig, and you think itâs going to be John Wick, but itâs not.
[00:49:24] Tony: Yeah, right. Itâs not.
[00:49:25] Tony: Okay.
[00:49:26] Cameron: thatâs where you think itâs going, but it doesÂnât go
[00:49:29] Cameron: there. And itâs realÂly, realÂly, I thought a terÂrifÂic perÂforÂmance. AnyÂway, very proud
[00:49:34] Tony: Oh, thanks for the
[00:49:35] Cameron: very proud of NicoÂlas Cage.
[00:49:37] Tony: Yeah, and the last thing, I havenât startÂed readÂing it yet, but Iâve just bought a book called Soros on Soros, GetÂting Back to InvestÂing, so Iâll pick that one up and have a look through that, based, I mean, based on, um, readÂing about DruckÂenÂmiller last week, we were talkÂing about him on the show last week, and he used to work for Soros, yeah, and I thought I hadÂnât read a good book on Soros, so I bought it.
[00:49:59] Tony: Tracked
[00:49:59] Tony: one
[00:49:59] Cameron: Yeah, I think I read someÂthing on Soros years ago, but I forÂget it all. Heâs one of those guys thatâs sort of vilÂiÂfied by parÂticÂuÂlarÂly the right, you know, they think everyÂthing is a Soros conÂspirÂaÂcy to do
[00:50:15] Cameron: someÂthing.
[00:50:15] Tony: heâs done lots of fundÂing of pro democÂraÂcy camÂpaigns in varÂiÂous
[00:50:20] Tony: counÂtries. Yeah, so heâs not, not, um, not a fan of the right, well the rightâs not a fan of
[00:50:27] Tony: him.
[00:50:27] Cameron: Hmm. Yeah, interÂestÂing charÂacÂter. Would be good to know more about him and what heâs done. You have to tell me what you think.
[00:50:37] Tony: Yeah, lookÂing forÂward to readÂing that. Eh, but thatâs about it othÂerÂwise, it was good to have a break.
[00:50:42] Cameron: And what have you got on for this week?
[00:50:45] Tony: Ah, this week Iâm just catchÂing up basiÂcalÂly, with what I hadÂnât been doing while I was away. Start to look at the US stocks for
[00:50:51] Tony: QAV.
[00:50:51] Cameron: weâre going to try that next week.
[00:50:54] Tony: Ah, if I, can I get back to you on that? I think Iâll have enough time to go through it, but I realÂly want to be prepped and not comÂing into a
[00:51:00] Tony: cold.
[00:51:01] Cameron: Yeah. Well, we should come up with a plan for, um, you know, what, what that first episode is going to look like, what weâre going to talk about,
[00:51:08] Tony: Mmm. Yeah.
[00:51:11] Cameron: I havenât looked at, or I havenât looked at the, um, US portÂfoÂlio today, but when I looked at it, Late last week, there was anothÂer stock, uh, that we had that just had a masÂsive jump.
[00:51:23] Cameron: Let me have a quick look at it, um, for the six months, uh, well, since SepÂtemÂber 20 when the portÂfoÂlio starts, itâs up 25 perÂcent verÂsus the S& P 500 up 18. 9%, but, um, ours may include divÂiÂdends. Iâm not exactÂly sure how StockÂoÂpeÂdia calÂcuÂlates it, and Iâm assumÂing the S& P doesÂnât. But, um, anyÂway, either way, 25 perÂcent return since, uh, end of
[00:51:56] Cameron: SepÂtemÂberâs pretÂty damn good.
[00:51:59] Tony: Very good. Yeah. So Iâll have a look at that and see what we can do with that. Hey, whatâs, um, whatâs been the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio latÂest numÂber since incepÂtion? The CAGR on that, because I was lookÂing through it myself today because I was talkÂing to some indusÂtry peoÂple at lunch and it looked like it was about 17.
[00:52:16] Tony: 8%, but I may have read that wrong. 15.
[00:52:18] Cameron: Let me just pull it up, let me, itâs all time, 15. 6, 15.
[00:52:28] Tony: 6, I did get it wrong. Okay, still pretÂty good.
[00:52:33] Cameron: 6 verÂsus, um, the STW 8. 6. So not quite douÂble, but not far off douÂble.
[00:52:46] Tony: thatâs good.
[00:52:48] Cameron: So yeah, no, itâs, uh, doing well, but like, as I think we said last week, and I know I said in someÂthing recentÂly, this finanÂcial year, um, itâs underÂperÂformed. Weâre up 10. 98 verÂsus STW up 12. 58. And in fact, over the last two years, I think weâve under, uh, itâs neck and neck. Last two years, weâre up 7. 95, itâs up 8.
[00:53:13] Cameron: 49, eight and a half. So sort of neck and neck over the last two years, slightÂly under this finanÂcial year. So, but you know, had all that wonÂderÂful growth comÂing out of COVID, then itâs eased back a litÂtle bit.
[00:53:28] Tony: Yep.
[00:53:29] Cameron: I assume weâre just waitÂing for our next,
[00:53:32] Tony: Next leg
[00:53:33] Cameron: yeah, next big year, push us up again, and then we.
[00:53:37] Cameron: You know, it evens out.
[00:53:38] Tony: we donât know when thatâs, we donât know when thatâs going to hapÂpen.
[00:53:41] Cameron: And who would have thought it was going to hapÂpen in, you know, 2020 when the world was shutÂting down. You would not have thought that that was going to hapÂpen, but
[00:53:50] Tony: Yeah, thatâs right.
[00:53:53] Cameron: all right.
[00:53:54] Tony: Good. Okay. Well, thanks
[00:53:55] Tony: for
[00:53:55] Cameron: Thank you for those quesÂtions, Paul and Trent. Good, good quesÂtions. UnusuÂal quesÂtions. Keep them comÂing peoÂple and, uh, QAV a good week.
[00:54:04] Tony: Yeah, you too. HapÂpy ASX.
DISCLOSURE
In the interÂest of full disÂcloÂsure, we would like to advise that as of the date of this post, the QAV team curÂrentÂly hold these stocks:
ALD ANZ ASB FHE FPR GNC MMS PRU QBE RMS RSG SSM SUL WAM WGX GEM
If youâre interÂestÂed in learnÂing more, please review our tradÂing and disÂcloÂsure polÂiÂcy.






Returns.
23/24 â 27.71%
Since purÂchase 22.41%
Thats shareÂsight perÂcentÂage return. Not sure if thats a CAGR. I seem to recall from preÂviÂous disÂcusÂsions its not, but the comÂplexÂiÂties of that went over my head, so Iâm setÂtling for whatÂevÂer shareÂsight tells me.
Well done, Michael!
Hey Cam, our portÂfoÂlio perÂforÂmance has beenâŠ
Since incepÂtion Nov 2019 â 12.08% [MeaÂsured via ShareÂsight]. 2.18 from CapÂiÂtal Gains and 9.09% from DivÂiÂdends]
Past year 8.4% [1.68 from CapÂiÂtal gains and the rest 6.79 from divÂiÂdends]
Whilst Iâm hapÂpy with >12% Iâd dearÂly love to be getÂting douÂble marÂket. Iâm thinkÂing itâs due to havÂing to use a highÂer ADT and most have curÂrent anaÂlysts comÂmenÂtary. AnyÂwho hereâs to 2025 FY being betÂter.
I pressed enter on the poll too earÂly, so Iâll add it here.
FY23/24 is +2.49% CAGR
OverÂall is â4.99% CAGR, startÂed OctoÂber 2022.