In episode 741 of the QAV value investing podcast, Tony and Cam dive into inspiration from ‘Reminiscences of a Stock Operator’, discussing the dangers of ignorance, greed, fear, and hope. They review Adair’s stock (ASX: ADH), analysing its foray into furniture and the potential impact of new CEO Elle Roseby. Key themes include market pressures, expansion strategies, the importance of data-driven decision-making through Adair’s loyalty program, quick fixes versus steady growth in investments and lifestyle, and the trends and challenges Adair’s faces in a competitive retail market.
00:00 Introduction and Opening Remarks
00:18 Quotes from ‘Reminiscences of a Stock Operator’
01:24 Discussion on Ignorance, Greed, Fear, and Hope
02:11 The Sucker’s Gamble and FOMO
08:10 Pulled Pork on ADH
11:38 Adairs’ Business Overview and History
14:22 Risks and Opportunities for Adairs
20:31 Financial Analysis of Adairs
24:18 Conclusion and Final Thoughts
Transcription
QAV 741 Club
[00:00:00] CR: It’s QAV, TK. It’s episode 741. It’s the 8th of October 2024. How are you?
[00:00:18] TK: Good. 8th of October. 8th of October. Where have I heard that
[00:00:22] TK: before? Anyway. I’m well. I was
[00:00:25] CR: of the 7th of October.
[00:00:27] TK: I am.
[00:00:27] TK: Yes.
[00:00:28] CR: of October. Yeah.
[00:00:29] TK: The day after.
[00:00:31] CR: Not that there’s been, not that there’s been any mention of the, uh, 7th of October in, uh, the Australian media in the last week.
[00:00:40] TK: Yeah. And, and, you know, highly relevant date to Australia. 7th of October.
[00:00:45] CR: Yeah. Because
[00:00:48] TK: Oh, well, responsible for a lot of sales of newspapers and advertising on network news shows.
[00:00:55] CR: Yes, that, yeah. Uh, what have you been up to this week, TK?
[00:01:01] TK: Well, I mean, the reason why 7th of October was high on my mind is I drove back from Cape Schanck yesterday and tried to find some news other than
[00:01:13] TK: about the 7th of October.
[00:01:15] CR: Weren’t
[00:01:15] TK: seemed
[00:01:16] CR: from Cape Shake last week?
[00:01:18] TK: Yeah, so what happened was, uh, I think it was about Thursday last week. So I had two horses running at Flemington on Saturday.
[00:01:26] TK: And then Lindsay Park, the stable who trains them, invited me to the Chairman’s Club at Flemington for a lunch on Saturday. So, uh, I said yes. Um, Jenny didn’t want to go because she was, she’s got a, she’s at a board, a board meeting for Bank of Queensland now, so she was doing all the pre reading for that on the weekend.
[00:01:46] TK: Uh, so I took Ruddy and um, it’s a, it’s a long weekend. I think it’s a long weekend in Queensland and New South Wales. Uh, so the flights were hideously expensive, good on your Qantas. Do not have pulled pork on you. Crash your share price, you bastards. But, so I decided to drive down, which, which works for me because then I’ve got a car down there.
[00:02:05] TK: I can go and stay at Cape Schanck, Sabon, um, accommodation and, uh, pick up Ruddy on the way down and, um, have a nice five hour, six hour, seven hour chat with him down and back. A lot of fun. And we went to the races and, um, the horses didn’t do very well, but we had a nice lunch. Ruddy and I, uh, picked a quaddie, so we won a little bit of money.
[00:02:28] TK: Um, which made it worthwhile. Uh, yeah. So it’s been nice, fun weekend.
[00:02:34] CR: I had breakfast with my boys on Sunday and Taylor said, I spoke to Mark, he’s with Tony again. You know, I swear Tony spends more time with Mark than he does his wife.
[00:02:44] TK: Oh, well he is officially wife number two.
[00:02:47] CR: Yeah, he’s your Ray. Yeah, he’s my
[00:02:49] TK: Oh, okay. Yeah. Wife number two. I, I’d tell you that one day, it’s when Alex was in primary school, she told the teachers that daddy had two wives.
[00:03:00] CR: Wow. if you were in Utah No one would
[00:03:04] TK: I know.
[00:03:05] CR: but,
[00:03:06] CR: uh, in Canada? No? It was in Canada
[00:03:09] TK: I was
[00:03:10] TK: in, no, I was in Melbourne.
[00:03:11] CR: Oh, right.
[00:03:12] TK: Yeah.
[00:03:13] CR: Well, that’s nice. It’s nice to have a long friend, long time friend like
[00:03:18] TK: It is. We get on so
[00:03:19] TK: well. And he’s such a nice person to be around.
[00:03:23] CR: I’ve been reading lots of articles in The Fin today on, I think it was The Fin or the ABC, about, um, the benefits of giving up alcohol, not drinking. The CEO who said he’s been off booze for 15 years and he’s glad and all the other good benefits of giving up booze, there’s like a thing going on at the moment in the media.
[00:03:43] CR: It’s like a push to get people to stop drinking.
[00:03:45] TK: Well, you know, trendsetter. Well, Ruddy was the, Ruddy was the trendsetter. He, he, and did typically, Ruddy stayed off for three months and now he’s back on. So he got the benefit of the free booze at Flemington on Saturday. I just had to sit there and watch him. Yeah. He was drinking whiskey sours, which smelled great, but I don’t get to have
[00:04:04] TK: any.
[00:04:05] CR: It’s
[00:04:06] TK: Only because I chose to. I could have if
[00:04:07] TK: I wanted to.
[00:04:08] CR: yeah, it was like My folks when they both decided to give up. My dad decided to give up smoking and my mom said, well, if you quit, I’ll quit. And then he started again after six months and she didn’t. And he died of lung cancer and she’s still going 20 odd years later, 23 years later.
[00:04:22] CR: Yeah. Fit
[00:04:23] TK: Women are so much better
[00:04:24] TK: than men, aren’t they?
[00:04:26] CR: They are. Yes. The sooner we’re, the sooner the country and the world is run by women, I think the better off we’ll all be. Well, speaking of men, because I don’t have a story about a woman yet, although we do have the Bank of Queensland coming up and we can talk about your wife on the board if you want, but probably we shouldn’t.
[00:04:44] CR: Um, reminiscences, I don’t, I’ve got nothing for the show this week, as you know, I said to you this morning, got nothing, no show notes. Piece together a couple of things, but it’s been a quiet week. I mean, the market is just kind of kicking along, nothing’s going on. I looked for stories on our companies and couldn’t find much, but found a couple of things.
[00:05:05] CR: But I thought I’d start with a quote from Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. Which I’ve been reading through this week, bits and pieces. Got a couple of quotes here I liked. This one, The speculators deadly enemies are Ignorance, greed, fear, and hope. I feel like I should say this in a Yoda voice. Mmm.
[00:05:24] CR: Deadly enemies of speculators there are. Ignorance, greed, fear, and hope. All the statute books in the world and all the rules of all the exchanges on Earth cannot eliminate these from a human animal. That’s not very good Yoda. Mmm. Mmm,
[00:05:41] TK: No, I thought it was pretty good. Well, you know, so the, isn’t the puppeteer who did Yoda, didn’t he die? Maybe they’re
[00:05:48] TK: looking for a replacement.
[00:05:49] CR: Frank,
[00:05:50] CR: Frank Oz. So did he die? Oh, that’s
[00:05:53] TK: One of them did.
[00:05:55] CR: I think it turned into Fozzie Bear, who I think was
[00:05:56] CR: also Frank Oz too. I can’t remember if it was Jim Henson or Fozzie Bear. Um, yes. Ignorance, greed, fear, and hope, which we try and avoid at all costs.
[00:06:11] TK: Yeah, exactly. I’ll never profess not to be ignorant. I am constantly reminded of that one every day, but um, uh, Try not to hope, the trust in hope is a really bad business plan. That was a
[00:06:27] TK: saying I always liked.
[00:06:28] CR: Yeah. Hope’s not a strategy is what I used to tell
[00:06:30] CR: my clients when I was a
[00:06:32] TK: Yeah, yeah,
[00:06:34] TK: that’s right, I’d rather rely on the stats. Yeah, um, and fear and greed, we try
[00:06:39] TK: and, try and eliminate that by having a system.
[00:06:42] CR: And the system tries to eliminate ignorance too. I mean, we’re trying to get hard data on the companies and basing our decisions on hard data. The second one was, The sucker has always tried to get something for nothing. And the appeal in all booms is always frankly to the gambling instinct aroused by cupidity and spurred by pervasive prosperity.
[00:07:07] CR: People who look for easy money. Invariably pay for the privilege of proving conclusively that it cannot be found on this sordid earth.
[00:07:16] TK: You can tell that book was written in the 1920s, can’t you?
[00:07:20] CR: Heh heh
[00:07:21] TK: can you define cupidity for me?
[00:07:23] CR: No, I didn’t even
[00:07:24] CR: get around to looking it up, but, uh, yeah. Cupidity, I mean, I am familiar with the word, but,
[00:07:31] TK: shooting arrows through your heart or
[00:07:32] TK: something, is it?
[00:07:34] CR: Avarice,
[00:07:35] TK: Mmm,
[00:07:36] CR: another word for greed, yeah.
[00:07:39] CR: Um, yes, but, you know, I think, I have to, you know, remind myself of that on a regular basis when I look at booms in the middle of booms and things going up. The sucker has always tried to get something for
[00:07:54] CR: nothing, and it’s what you see with, you know, Whether it’s Bitcoin or whether it’s, you know, the Mag7 or Afterpay or whatever it is.
[00:08:05] CR: It’s that pervasive prosperity that you see all around you and you go, I want a piece of that. You get FOMO, but, uh, yeah, it’s the something for nothing.
[00:08:17] TK: Yeah,
[00:08:18] TK: the quick, quick FOMO you get.
[00:08:20] CR: Yeah.
[00:08:21] TK: Yeah. Like, shouldn’t you have FOMO? Shouldn’t you have a fear of missing out on the slow build of investing? You know, using a scientific approach statistically proven over hundreds of years. You know, shouldn’t you have FOMO for that?
[00:08:38] CR: yeah,
[00:08:39] TK: case you can always start and do it, but no, you have FOMO because you think you’ve got to act quickly.
[00:08:45] TK: And jump in because it might not, because it, it might not be there tomorrow, and isn’t that just telling you, if it’s not going to be there tomorrow, you may not want to get into it today.
[00:08:55] CR: I think, we’re impatient, we want quick, quick gains, and it’s like weight loss, like is it better to lose weight slowly but consistently by changing your diet and eating less, or by just taking a drug like Ozempic, which is now in Australia, I believe,
[00:09:15] TK: Mm hmm.
[00:09:16] CR: in the US.
[00:09:17] TK: Big in
[00:09:18] CR: going to change my Is it really?
[00:09:20] TK: Oh Yeah.
[00:09:20] TK: Big in the eastern suburbs.
[00:09:22] CR: I’m not going to change my lifestyle or my mindset or my habits or my disciplines. I’m just going to take a drug. Quick fix.
[00:09:30] TK: Yeah,
[00:09:31] CR: Nothing can go wrong with that.
[00:09:33] TK: liposuction. We should call all these things liposuction of the market. A quick
[00:09:38] TK: fix.
[00:09:42] CR: It’s sucking the fat out of your bank account. And
[00:09:47] TK: Cutting forward, taking some muscle too, I
[00:09:48] TK: think, in some cases.
[00:09:50] CR: yeah, well, I’ve lost it. I’ve lost a bit of that with my diet. I’ve just
[00:09:53] CR: been talking to one of the guys at training who, Um, used to run a gym and we’re buying some protein powder in bulk together because I need to get more protein. I’m struggling on the sort of low calories that I’m eating every day to get enough protein to stop my body, you know, attacking the protein for calories.
[00:10:15] CR: So I need to be building it up.
[00:10:17] CR: It’s
[00:10:18] TK: And there’s, does protein powder have calories or is it deliberately
[00:10:22] TK: a low calorie way of getting protein? Mm
[00:10:25] CR: a whey because it’s made of whey. Uh, most of them, uh, whey protein. And we have a lot of whey in the house because Chrissy makes yogurt. A couple of times a week. And the whey is a by product of making yogurt. And we use that whey, I use it in my sourdough instead of water. We use it in smoothies, like the one she just brought me.
[00:10:42] CR: This has been made with whey instead of water. We use it in all sorts of stuff. Uh, she uses it in fermenting her sauerkraut, but, um, In order to get my daily quota of protein from Liquid Whey, I’d need to drink three litres of Liquid Whey. So the powdered version is, uh, more efficient. No, there’s calories in it, but it’s, it’s fairly low calorie.
[00:11:05] CR: Like, if you get the good stuff, it’s, there’s no filler in it. It’s just mostly whey protein. They’re, they’re often flavoured, which bastardises it a little bit, but yeah. It’s a, it’s a more calorie efficient protein. Uh, process for getting protein, I think. Uh, moving right along, Tony. Toby
[00:11:25] TK: well you can’t, hang on, you can’t really, you can’t really attack the, the richie riches of the eastern suburbs for taking your Ozempic while you’re sitting there sucking on your whey protein shake. Just have a steak.
[00:11:37] TK: Isn’t that the solution? Diet and exercise?
[00:11:40] CR: I’m eat, I can’t afford the calories of enough steaks to get enough protein.
[00:11:45] TK: So there’s, so there’s less calories in whey but more
[00:11:48] TK: protein than having a steak.
[00:11:51] CR: the density of it, yeah. I mean I eat, so, my diet at the moment is a lot of boiled eggs, um, grilled or roasted chicken, spinach, and cottage cheese. Which are all high protein sources. And I, that’s pretty much the large chunk of my diet along with nuts and fruits and a little bit of my whole grain bread and that kind of stuff every day.
[00:12:14] CR: But, and I have a coffee in the morning with, which has some milk in it, like a latte in the morning. But, you know, I’m supposed to be getting about 150 grams of protein a day, even with all of that protein, I’m getting 60 to 70 grams of protein a day. Um, yeah, so
[00:12:33] TK: that’s healthy? Who’s, who’s telling you need that much protein?
[00:12:38] CR: You
[00:12:40] TK: okay. The Oracle, the Oracle’s telling you. Did I, did I tell you my ChatGPT story from last week? I should,
[00:12:51] CR: told me one last week, but I don’t know if there’s another one.
[00:12:54] TK: there’s another one. I should go on the Futuristic Podcast with me. So when you
[00:12:57] TK: ask me what interaction with technology have I had this week, I can tell you the story.
[00:13:02] TK: Yeah. So, so for a long time, I’ve, I’ve struggled to, to adopt the Kelly criterion, um, to investing, which we’ve spoken about before. Um, in a nutshell, it’s about putting, uh, more, more assets into the most productive use of those assets. Um, but as a mathematical formula for it, it’s summarized by what’s called edge over odds.
[00:13:24] TK: So your edge is your edge. It’s like how much better than the market are you doing? And your odds are what kind of return do you expect from it? Um, but I’ve always, I’ve always struggled to actually use it. in real life. And, um, you know, the standard response when I’ve spoken to people who, who profess that, you know, so what a good thing it is, is, oh, you haven’t calculated the odds right, or you haven’t calculated your age right, or whatever, whatever.
[00:13:49] TK: And they’re probably true. Anyway, so I thought, bugger it, I’ll ask ChatGPT. So I spent quite a bit of time with ChatGPT going through the process of how can I use the Kelly criteria to invest in the stock market. And, um, you know, I said, tell me what the formula is, tell me what the edge is, tell me what the odds are, etc, etc.
[00:14:08] TK: Anyway, long story short, she gave me a formula, and I applied it. Like, look, we were working through three examples. I said, here’s three stocks, here’s their, their, um, Characteristics, which one should I, how much should I put into each one as an investment? And I knew one of them should be rejected. And she came back with this calculation, and I went, hang on, that’s, yeah, that doesn’t sound right, because you’re, you’re telling me, based on that formula, to put more of my portfolio into a stock which is going to have a lower return and she’s like oh yeah well okay and I went back and I said how about instead of in summary it was basically you’re putting the growth and the earnings per share over um the return you expect right um so she said
[00:14:56] TK: put the growth it was I keep calling ChatGPT she
[00:15:00] TK: only
[00:15:00] CR: going to mention
[00:15:01] TK: are smarter
[00:15:02] TK: but uh but no ChatGPT said
[00:15:04] CR: Do you have a female voice? Oh, you’re not using the voice, you’re typing, right? Yeah. Okay.
[00:15:08] TK: Yeah, I’m typing.
[00:15:09] TK: Yeah, the check sheet PT said, put the growth in the earnings per share over the stock price. And that’s when I said, well, you know, if it’s a high stock price, even if the growth’s high, um, it’s, you know, it’s not gonna work out if it’s a, then compared to if it’s a low stock price and the stock price should be really irrelevant.
[00:15:28] TK: ’cause like, it’s, it’s a factor of how many shares are on issue and how much the market cap is not, you know, what are the things valuable or not. So I said. How about I put, um, the growth and earnings per share over the P E ratio? So in other words, if something is cheap and it’s growing a lot, it should get more of my portfolio.
[00:15:47] TK: And she came back and said, yeah, yeah, yeah, you could do that. Um, that would, that would suit the value investor. And like, but it was, it was like about an hour’s iteration where I sort of, I didn’t want to tell her that was the, the answer. I wanted her to confirm it. And eventually she said, yeah, you could do that.
[00:16:03] TK: It’s not standard, but it’s basically what’s called the peg ratio that Peter Lynch
[00:16:11] CR: P.
[00:16:11] TK: made the Lynch, yeah, made the Lynch of investing and like ChatGPT was just like dismissing it as, yeah, you could do that, like this kind of harebrained scheme that I could do if I wanted to, but just because I didn’t come out and say, it’s the Peter Lynch formula.
[00:16:28] TK: It’s a cornerstone of investing. She didn’t, she didn’t kind of like embrace it as being a good thing to do. Anyway, that’s my, that’s my, uh, involvement with ChatGPT. I just taught her how to invest, but she didn’t agree with it.
[00:16:40] CR: Which version of ChatGPT are you using this week?
[00:16:44] TK: Well, I started off with the current one, but it limits me to a certain number of questions and then it drops back to the older free version. Is it 4. 0, I
[00:16:52] TK: think? Is that the one you start with?
[00:16:55] CR: Um, yeah, I’m not sure which one’s the free one now and which one’s not, but you weren’t using the PhD level one, 01.
[00:17:03] TK: No.
[00:17:06] CR: Yeah, using, it’s like using a two year old version of ChatGPT and it’s like,
[00:17:11] TK: Okay.
[00:17:13] CR: yeah, gotta use the latest one if you want the best results, man. I’ve been using
[00:17:16] CR: it over the last week to try and Turn the checklist into code. Um, the goal is to get to a point where I just press a button and it downloads the Stock Doctor checklist or the Stockopedia checklist, runs all the calculations and gives me a buy list.
[00:17:37] TK: Right.
[00:17:37] TK: The app we’ve always been talking about.
[00:17:41] CR: So I’ve started building, um, that I’m about halfway through it. Um,
[00:17:47] TK: But didn’t we have a
[00:17:48] TK: listener who made a version of that for
[00:17:50] TK: us
[00:17:51] CR: yeah, there’s a couple, um, couple of different people have built a couple of different things. Yeah, that they’ve got, but I’m, I’m building my own.
[00:18:01] TK: Right. So you’ve got two working versions, but
[00:18:04] TK: you’ve got to do your own. Okay. Okay.
[00:18:08] CR: well, I, I want a version where I understand the code and I, you know, I know the code. Yeah. So it’s my code, not someone else’s code. If someone else’s code, you need to go, Hey, can you
[00:18:20] CR: change this or fix that? Or, you know, modify this. So I want to have a version that I own.
[00:18:27] TK: So you have a job for life when I say, Hey, can you check this out and modify it?
[00:18:35] CR: Uh, anywho, um, yeah, that’s been fun. It’s been fun, um, explaining to GPT how QAV works, uh, at this level and, you know, getting it to, um,
[00:18:48] TK: Did you have an opinion about it? Did you say, did you say that’s
[00:18:51] TK: fantastic? I’m going to teach the world how to
[00:18:54] TK: invest.
[00:18:55] CR: did,
[00:18:56] TK: she, see, I’m using the politically correct term. Pronouns Call it. She,
[00:19:02] CR: Wow. I
[00:19:04] TK: it didn’t have a
[00:19:04] CR: basically, it’s basically a slave that does whatever
[00:19:07] CR: you tell it to do and you think calling it she is, uh, politically appropriate? I don’t know. I think
[00:19:13] TK: that’s not how I view chat. GPT.
[00:19:15] CR: No?
[00:19:16] TK: No, it’s the, it’s the oracle. It’s when I don’t know how to do something. I ask
[00:19:20] TK: Cha GPT
[00:19:20] CR: said how dumb it was that you had to teach it slowly how to, you had to mansplain a peg ratio to it.
[00:19:31] TK: Exactly. Yeah,
[00:19:33] CR: Wow.
[00:19:35] CR: And I hope Jenny doesn’t hear this.
[00:19:37] TK: Uh, what a great, I’m not get a T‑shirt printed. I have mansplaining
[00:19:41] TK: check. GPT
[00:19:43] CR: Yeah. Can I move on to WAF now?
[00:19:46] TK: Yeah, go ahead.
[00:19:48] CR: WAF. Toby suggested
[00:19:49] TK: I’m filling you, because you said this morning, I’ve got no content today, so I’m
[00:19:53] TK: filling.
[00:19:53] CR: you’re feeling, this is you tap dancing. Yeah.
[00:19:57] TK: And
[00:19:57] CR: Tony tap dance. There’s the title for the episode.
[00:20:01] CR: Tony tap
[00:20:01] CR: dances.
[00:20:02] TK: No, mansplaining GPT. That’s the,
[00:20:05] TK: that’s the total.
[00:20:07] CR: Uh, I can put that down. Um, Toby suggested we talk about. West African Resources. Is that what WAF is? West African Gold, West African Resources. Can’t remember what the full name is. West African Resources Limited. Uh, took a big, had a big plunge the other day. Very, very sort of abrupt plunge. And reading through the news, it comes down to pretty much every time you’ve ever talked about West African Resources on the show over the last five years.
[00:20:38] CR: The two words that always come out of your. Mouth, uh, Sovereign Risk, Sovereign Risk when you’re dealing with these companies that are trading in places like Africa, or Burkina Faso. As it is in this instance, so there was this issue, apparently, um, according to WAF’s press release. On October 5th, 2024, the president of Burkina Faso, President Traore, spoke on Radio Burkina about several topics including corruption, transport, agriculture, and mining.
[00:21:19] CR: Importantly, with respect to security, the President spoke about the significant progress that is being made regaining territory from terrorist groups in the north and east of Burkina Faso. The radio broadcast raised questions about the possibility of the government withdrawing mining permits. Now, as a result of that, the share price for West African resources quickly dropped.
[00:21:48] CR: For more UN videos visit From about a 1. 66 as it was on the 4th of October down to a 1. 34. Has recovered slightly since then, because they go on to say, basically they’ve been in contact with government officials who basically said, Oh, he wasn’t talking about you guys. You guys are fine. It was talking about the corrupt mining companies in Burkina Faso.
[00:22:13] CR: Not you.
[00:22:16] TK: Do you take, do you take your lunch in a brown paper bag to a meeting like that with the government officials and mining licenses and Burkina Faso? Or do you not take it because you’re not, you don’t want to be the corrupt
[00:22:26] TK: one?
[00:22:28] CR: Right. Yeah. Yeah. I don’t know, Tony. So what do you think about all of this? Uh, I mean, I don’t think, I mean, I don’t hold Burkina Faso. It’s not, um, I mean, West African
[00:22:41] CR: resources. I’m not responsible for Burkina Faso. I’ve got, I, there’s no WAF in any of the QAV portfolios or my portfolios. What about you? Do you have it?
[00:22:52] TK: No, and I, I was kind of regretting I sold it. I think I sold it like maybe late last year, early this year, because the gold price had gone on a tear since then. Uh, but I don’t know. Yeah. But you know, I mean, a couple of things, first of all. I know nothing about Burkina Faso, and I don’t think many people in Australia do either.
[00:23:12] TK: I wonder whether West African resources shot themselves in the foot when they put themselves into a trading hold after the, the head of Burkina Faso made a speech about mining licences. Like, would anyone have noticed that it was an issue if they, did anybody in Australia hear about the speech of Burkina Faso about, uh, about mining licences?
[00:23:32] TK: Terrorists and mining licenses and corrupt mining. Anyway, I don’t know. But, um, it’s, it’s a case of noise dictating the share price. I’m, I’m thinking, I mean, the thing about companies like Bikini, uh, like, uh, so I know you said it, like West African Resources that operate in in that part of the world is that the fact that there’s sovereign risk is already factored into the share price and that’s why they often come on to our buy list because they’re cheap because there is a risk that the government could do something to not necessarily close the mine or it could bring in a new tax or it could bring in a policy of raising wages for the locals or something like that so yeah well just as they could here I suppose but it’s probably a little volatile.
[00:24:18] TK: Um, over there. Uh, so it’s in the price. If you look at the PE ratio of, um, West African resources, I can do that now and compare it to a gold miner that’s, that’s mining in Australia, they’ll be on quite a different number. So the PE is, uh, 10 for West African resources. And what’s an Australian gold mining company?
[00:24:40] TK: Um, West Gold or something like that operating in WA. What’s the P ratio for that? Um, I’m just looking it up. Yeah, so Westco West Gold. Oh, okay. West Gold hasn’t, uh, has been delisted. Is there another West Gold? But it was on a P of 20 when it, when it was listed. WGX. Here we go. Sorry. WGX is still listed and it’s on a P of 18, so almost twice as much.
[00:25:12] TK: And that’s, and that’s the reason for it, because these things can happen. Um, there is sovereign risk, but it’s kind to me, it’s baked into the share price. Really.
[00:25:21] TK: Do I know anything about it?
[00:25:23] TK: No.
[00:25:23] CR: Alright, let’s dive into Burkina Faso, a fascinating country in West Africa that not enough people talk about. Picture this, it’s a landlocked nation, tucked between countries like Mali, Niger, Ghana, and the Ivory Coast. It’s got a pretty sizeable area, about 274, 000 square kilometres, which is about the size of New Zealand.
[00:25:45] CR: And while it may not have beaches, it’s rich in history and culture. The capital is Ouagadougou, a vibrant city that’s the political, cultural, and economic heart of the country. Now, let’s hit the rewind button a bit. Burkina Faso Also You know, great band had a big hit in the 80s, wasn’t it? Wagga do do, stick your fingers up my nose, something like that. It used to be called Upper Volta, named after the three rivers that run through it, the Black, White and Red Volta. It gained independence from France in 1960, but the country really started making global headlines in the 1980s with Thomas Sankara. If you’ve never heard of him, this guy was basically Africa’s Che Guevara.
[00:26:31] CR: Um, he became president in 1983 after a coup, and during his short time in power, he pushed for massive reforms. Sankara renamed the country Burkina Faso in 1984, meaning Land of the Upright People, combining words from two local languages. The guy was all about shaking things up, women’s rights, ending corruption, improving healthcare, you name it.
[00:26:54] CR: Unfortunately, Sankara was assassinated in 1987. And the country’s politics have been pretty turbulent since then. Burkina Faso has gone through several coups, the most recent being in 2022. Um, culturally, Burkina Faso is fascinating. It’s incredibly diverse, with over 60 ethnic groups. The largest are the Mossi, who dominate the central region.
[00:27:17] CR: And despite the challenges, Burkina Faso has a vibrant artistic scene. Ouagadougou is actually known for Fespako, one of Africa’s biggest film festivals. Burkina They’ve got music, dance, and a thriving film industry that punches above its weight. But today, though, the country’s facing some pretty tough challenges.
[00:27:36] CR: The northern region has been dealing with growing extremism and conflict, with groups linked to Al Qaeda and ISIS causing unrest. This has created a humanitarian crisis, displacing hundreds of thousands of people. Burkina Faso is one of the poorest countries in the world, with a large part of its economy based on agriculture, think cotton, livestock, and subsistence farming.
[00:28:00] CR: The country is also a gold producer, which has become increasingly important economically. Despite these hurdles, there’s a resilience in the people that’s almost infectious. You see it in their art, their music, their communities. Burkina Faso might not grab the world’s headlines all the time, but it’s got a story worth paying attention to.
[00:28:22] CR: So there you go. Everything you
[00:28:23] TK: Very good.
[00:28:24] CR: Burkina Faso.
[00:28:26] TK: Yeah, I used to have a poster of a person in a, with a machine gun and a closed fist salute on the wall of the student union office when I was there. 1984.
[00:28:40] CR: Wow. Fantastic. Commies. Commie student unions. Joe would have loved you. So, I don’t know what else there is to say about WAF. As you say, it’s built in. Um, there’s always sovereign risk when you invest in these
[00:28:57] CR: sorts of stocks. It’s just something to be aware of.
[00:29:00] TK: When I did a pulled book on West African resources too, they listed, they professed and were at pains to talk about integration into the local area and society and how they, uh, all the, the mines were staffed by locals and how the conditions were very, very good. Um, all of that kind of thing and how much they were paying the local government and royalties, et cetera, et cetera.
[00:29:21] TK: So they, at least on the surface, they looked like a good, A good corporate citizen, Burkina Faso. So as they say in their press releases, chances are this might, this might actually benefit them if they clean up the, some of the corrupt mining companies in the area. Um, might be an opportunity for West African resources to expand.
[00:29:40] TK: Who knows?
[00:29:43] CR: All right. Uh, let’s talk about the Bank of Queensland, Tony. Uh,
[00:29:50] TK: Hopefully I can.
[00:29:54] CR: there was an article a couple of weeks ago in the financial review. You did mention the, that the CEO was changing things up there and that he thought the banking industry in Australia needed to go through some massive changes. They’re apparently thinking about buying back all of their branches from their franchisees.
[00:30:16] TK: Uh huh.
[00:30:18] CR: But there was a story in, uh, the news this morning that says that unhappy franchise branch owners, uh, planning on, uh, some sort of legal challenge.
[00:30:36] TK: Okay.
[00:30:36] CR: They’re not happy with the price that the bank is offering them. Says the owners of the branches are looking at legal action against Bank of Queensland with help from BDO and accounting and advisory business.
[00:30:47] CR: BDO is suggesting to the franchise branch owners that it can assist them to get a better price and give them legal and strategic support. The AFR quoted from documents that BDO sent to the branch owner managers which said the bank’s decision raises important considerations for franchise owners, particularly regarding the valuation of their businesses, the terms of their franchise agreements, and their future business.
[00:31:11] CR: BDO is looking to bring together all franchisees to strengthen their collective bargaining power and do independent assessments rather than just accept BOQ’s offer. I’m sure BDO is, um, doing this completely gratis, and, um, they’re not making any money out of this
[00:31:31] TK: No.
[00:31:32] CR: With no ambulances being chased in the making of this deal at all.
[00:31:38] CR: Did
[00:31:40] TK: they represented the Mercedes Benz dealerships who were being bought out by Mercedes Benz or, uh, AMP financial planners who were being Yeah, so, um, that is their business model, or part of their business model. And that’s fine. They’ve got experience at collective bargaining on these kinds of cases.
[00:31:59] TK: Um, oh, I’ve got to be careful because I know, I don’t know a lot about what’s going on, but Kenny and I have talked about it. Um, nothing. Nothing that wasn’t freely available in the press, as you’ve just read out, but, um, Uh, yeah, the background is Bank of Queensland feel the need to, um, end the franchise arrangements that they’ve been using.
[00:32:23] TK: And the history of that is that, uh, there’s a thing called community banking where In the past when big banks were shutting down branches, particularly in rural areas, these smaller banks, Bank of Queensland being one of them, could go into a local area and say, well, if you can raise some funds and, uh, you know, you can prove a case that there’s enough business in the local area to support a bank branch, then we’ll put half the money in or whatever the deal is.
[00:32:53] TK: You raise half the money and then you’ll be the, you can employ a local to be the franchisee. And that’s how it operates. And a few other banks do that. The Bank of Queensland have decided that things are tough for small banks and that they need to, uh, take the operation of those branches back in house.
[00:33:12] TK: I guess, I guess it’s a way of improving their margins rather than sharing them with the locals. And Jenny and I were just talking about what’s called channel realignment, which is a process that I went through when I was at Shell because we had a similar situation with petrol franchisees. So service station operators traditionally would take out a lease and then operate it themselves and have a deal to pay your company a rent and then, um, Uh, you know, um, have an offtake agreement to take a, the fuel only from that particular oil company on that service station.
[00:33:48] TK: Um, there, there’s a whole lot of other issues there about who pays for the pumps and all that kind of stuff. Um, and then that was transferred to a franchise arrangement, and then eventually the franchisees, uh, in the main terminated, um, as the oil industry got done. Smaller and smaller margins, uh, and then, you know, the service stations were, um, sold off en masse or leased off en masse to the supermarkets who, like Coles and Woolworths, who operated them for some of the oil companies.
[00:34:15] TK: So, um, there was a process called channel realignment, which is basically, uh, how do you get, you know, The people who are on leases to become franchisees, and then how do you get them to, um, sell their franchise back, you know, at, at the end down the track. And, and, you know, the, the business practice, which, which, um, I was part of was you make it attractive for them.
[00:34:35] TK: It’s gotta, it’s gotta be something in it for them. So for example, if, uh, if a service station operator was a lessee and their lease wasn’t up, but we wanted them, uh, the shell, we being shell wanted the, uh, lessee to become a franchise. Um. The franchise operator, which was a different deal, um, obviously you’d have to make the franchise agreement a little bit better, more attractive for them than the old one, but you also did things like you nudged them towards the franchise agreement, for example, um, by having other benefits to the franchise that wasn’t there for the lessee.
[00:35:09] TK: So things like, um, uh, accepting shellcard or flybys, that kind of thing, running available to the franchise network. And so, um, you know. Jenny said, yeah, we’re thinking about things like that at BOQ to make it attractive to end this situation. So, um, my understanding is it’s a fairly, it’s a process which has been entered into and there’ll be negotiations and BDO is kind of, um, sticking their toe in and saying, uh, let’s, let’s all get the franchisees together and we’ve negotiated these things before and we’ll get you a better
[00:35:41] TK: deal.
[00:35:42] TK: So I think that’s where it’s at.
[00:35:45] CR: you watch Better Call Saul?
[00:35:47] CR: I think you did,
[00:35:47] TK: Yeah, first three seasons so
[00:35:49] TK: far. Yeah.
[00:35:50] CR: Oh, right. Does that get up to where he represents the, uh People in the old age home,
[00:35:57] TK: Yeah, that’s early on. Yeah.
[00:35:59] CR: it is, hmm,
[00:36:00] TK: yeah,
[00:36:01] CR: hmm,
[00:36:02] TK: Yeah. So, um, like, I think it’s very smart of the franchises at Bank of Queensland not to accept the first offer that comes out of the parent company.
[00:36:10] TK: It’s common sense. Yeah.
[00:36:13] CR: absolutely. Hasn’t been great, uh, on the share price, though we do hold them in one of the light portfolios. The share price, uh, the end of September was trading up around 6. 44, it’s sunk down to 6. 20 over the last week or two. So, it’s not doing well, um, the 3 point sell line for it now is 6.
[00:36:41] CR: 09. We bought it in July at 6. 14, as I said, 6. 20 now, and, uh, not that far from a 3 point sell. So, uh, yeah, hopefully they do something about the share price.
[00:36:59] TK: They’re trying. I mean, you
[00:37:00] TK: don’t, you don’t sort of do things like, uh,
[00:37:03] CR: I don’t want their
[00:37:04] CR: excuses!
[00:37:05] TK: your franchises if everything’s going swimmingly.
[00:37:09] CR: Don’t want their excuses! Just fix
[00:37:11] TK: No, fair
[00:37:12] CR: get it done.
[00:37:13] TK: Yeah.
[00:37:15] CR: Uh, that’s all I’ve got in my notes. Oh, I saw a few people have asked about the Stockopedia, uh, using Stockopedia as a data source. Um, uh, I am going to make a video hopefully this week, uh, now that I’ve got all the service stuff under control, I think I’m going to make a video this week about the process that I follow for Stockopedia and I’ll make that available for people plus my checklist, et cetera, et cetera.
[00:37:43] CR: Um, I’ll do that before I turn it into code. Then I’ll turn it into code. That’ll be even cooler. But you know, I’ll do this in the short term for people that want to look at Stockopedia as an option to Stock Doctor. That’s it. That’s all I got. TK.
[00:37:59] CR: What do you
[00:38:00] TK: Okay, I’ve got a couple of things, um, I’ve pulled pork to do on Adare’s ADH. And some quotes from what works on Wall Street from
[00:38:09] TK: O’Shaughnessy
[00:38:11] TK: So which one would you like first?
[00:38:13] CR: Yeah, let’s do the O’Shaughnessy stuff, I guess.
[00:38:15] TK: Yeah, okay. Okay, so, uh, last week I talked about, um, O’Shaughnessy’s research from, uh, taking a data set from 1963 through to 2009.
[00:38:28] TK: Um, and then, uh, analysing things based on a metric and creating deciles and looking at how the top decile compared to the bottom decibel. Decile and whatever he was looking at. Last week we spoke about P ratios. The next chapter in What Works on Wall Street, Chapter 8, was about price to cash flow ratios.
[00:38:48] TK: I gotta say, I could have saved myself a lot of time and effort by reading What Works on Wall Street about 20 years ago.
[00:38:56] CR: Yeah.
[00:38:56] TK: Anyway, um, So the chapter heading is Price to Cash Flow Ratios Using Cash to Determine Values. And he starts off the chapter by saying, Some investors prefer using price to cash flow ratios to find bargain price stocks because cash flow is traditionally more difficult to manipulate than earnings.
[00:39:19] TK: I would hardly agree with that. In summary, 10, 000 invested on December 31, 1963 in the decile of stocks with the lowest price to cash flow ratio was worth 10, 187, 545. Dollars on December 31, 2009, a compound return of 16. 25 percent a year, significantly better than the 1. 329 million you’d earn from the same investment in the all stocks universe, which had a CAGR of 11.
[00:39:54] TK: 22%. And just by way of explaining the All Stocks Universe was kind of a subset of the index. It’s most of the index but he took out very small micro caps from his analysis because he argued that no one could really buy them anyway. So, All Stocks Universe, if I use that term again, means basically Pretty much the index.
[00:40:18] TK: Uh, he also found that large stocks underperformed. So large, this is a quote from, uh, Chapter 8. Large stocks are less profitable, less volatile. The original 10, 000 invested in a decile of stocks with the lowest price to cash flow from large stocks in 1963, Grew to 3. 47 million at the end of 2009, a compound return of 13.
[00:40:41] TK: 56 percent a year. But that’s five times the 872, 000 you’d earn from 10, 000 invested in the large stocks universe, where the compound return was, uh, 10. 2%. Percent per year. So, um, I guess the, the summary of that, part of his analysis was that, uh, he we he was seeing better returns in smaller cap stocks than larger cap stocks, although the larger cap stocks still outperformed the index and, um, definitely outperformed the, the high.
[00:41:17] TK: Uh, Price to Cash Flow stocks. And he says, as with the other value factors, we see that stocks with high Price to Cash Flow ratios are usually bad investments. The 10, 000 invested on December 31, 63, in the deciles of stocks with the highest Price to Cash Flow ratios from all stocks grew to just 48, 000 by the end of 2009, an average annual compound gain of just 3.
[00:41:43] TK: 49%. So that’s.
[00:41:47] TK: Probably equivalent to putting your money in the bank. Um, he goes on to say, Like many of our findings concerning pricey stocks with rich valuations, focusing on the returns of large stocks with high price to cash flow ratios helps you understand why scrutinizing long term results is the only way to understand the value of a strategy.
[00:42:07] TK: This book first came out in 1996 and offered the same advice concerning high price to cash flow stocks, avoid them. Yet, if you read the book then and actually watched your favourite stocks with high price to cash flow ratios in real time, you might have been inclined to think that while those types of stocks performed poorly historically, they were doing very well in the boom markets of the late 1990s.
[00:42:33] TK: From the end of 1996 through to September 2000, when high price to cash flow stocks from the large stock universe had their best 5 year performance, you would have seen the highest price to cash flow stocks from large stocks gain nearly 23 percent a year, compared to a gain of 18. 6 percent for large stocks in total.
[00:42:54] TK: The evidence from this book might have appeared to ring hollow, yet if you understood the much more important long term data, you would have resolutely avoided them. And in so doing, miss getting nearly wiped out over the following few years.
[00:43:09] CR: Mmm.
[00:43:09] TK: So another good point, you’re saying that yeah, sometimes For a period of time, the high PE stocks work, but then you get wiped out at the end.
[00:43:19] TK: That’s been my experience.
[00:43:20] CR: Yeah. And that’s what we expect to happen with the, A portion of the Mag 7 stocks, anyway, we don’t know
[00:43:28] TK: it has to happen. It has to happen, right? At some stage, there’ll be a bump in the road and investors will flee. And because they’re on a high valuation, they’ll drop like a stone.
[00:43:39] CR: Yeah,
[00:43:40] TK: Yeah.
[00:43:41] CR: yeah,
[00:43:43] TK: Yeah. So good stuff from Ocean Odyssey.
[00:43:45] CR: yeah, I remember reading the book a few years ago and just thinking, wow, this is QAV in a book.
[00:43:51] TK: Yeah,
[00:43:52] TK: exactly.
[00:43:54] CR: Yeah,
[00:43:55] TK: Yeah.
[00:43:56] CR: by the way, I just saw on our Facebook group, Gary asks, with the US dummy portfolio, are you going to rely on buys and sells to fund the portfolio since dividends are minimal? Or maybe add funds on a time structured basis.
[00:44:12] CR: For example, every three months, a bit like how a lot of us invest. Uh, no, I wasn’t planning on adding funds to it, Gary. It’s like the Australian portfolios, really. It’s just, we start with an imaginary amount of fixed capital, 20, 000 usually, and just invest it. All up until it’s all gone and then play it from there as it grows over time.
[00:44:37] CR: It’s just so we have a fixed starting point. It’s a lot easier to calculate the CAGR returns over one year, five years, 10 years, if it’s just a fixed amount of capital that we’re playing with. So unless you have a different idea, Tony, that’s all I’m doing with the
[00:44:51] TK: No, I agree. It’s the way to do it. And US stocks still do pay dividends, they just don’t, um, favour them as much as Australian stocks. So there will still be dividends coming into the
[00:45:00] TK: portfolio from time to time.
[00:45:04] CR: All right. Pulled pork on ADH.
[00:45:07] TK: ADH, yes. So, um, anyone who’s been around for a long time will have seen ADH on the buy list, on and off, over the last five years, because it, it does, um, It tends to have a, uh, a value, uh, kind of, uh, um, set of numbers. Um, so it’s been around for a long time. I haven’t done a Pulled Pork before on it. And, uh, I mean, basically I haven’t done it because I don’t like the business is, is really why I haven’t paid that much attention to it.
[00:45:40] TK: Um, and it’s business historically has been, um, a category killer in a small category, which is Manchester and linen. Um, I guess what’s different now, and which I guess caught my attention recently, is that it has branched out. into Furniture as a bit of an adjacency or an extension to what it does. So not only is it selling you the bedding, it’s also now selling you the bed.
[00:46:02] TK: Um, and uh, so they, so Adairs now owns two other brands. Uh, Adairs is the name of their flagship network where you can go in and buy homewares and, and curtains and bedding, et cetera, and, and fabrics. Um, but they now own two other brands. One’s called Focus on Furniture and one’s called Mocha, and they’re both Furniture Retailers, MOC is online only, Focus on Furniture does have a store network.
[00:46:26] TK: So, um, they have expanded, uh, those two particular businesses are making up more and more of the sales and profits for the company. So the company is, is changing. Um, the other thing which has happened recently is that, uh, they’re, they’ve hired a new CEO. That’s probably what’s caught my attention the most.
[00:46:45] TK: So, uh, A lady by the name of Elle Roseby, who has been running a large part of Country Road, um, will start as the new MD slash CEO, uh, in 2020, early in 2025. Um, so that was kind of a catalyst, I guess, to go back and have a look at Adare’s. Um, as I said, store network, 170 stores in Australia and New Zealand, plus a further 23 focus on furniture stores.
[00:47:14] TK: Uh, but interestingly enough, they have a very large online component. I guess it got a boost during COVID, but online sales are now about 40 percent of the business. So, um, that the business has changed. I mean, it typically had the feel of a housewife If you ever visited the store, a housewife going in and buying things to, um, to tart up the house.
[00:47:38] TK: And so it was a fairly staid sort of business model, but it has changed, I guess, over the, over the years. Um, and now that Elle Roseby’s coming in, she’s made a name for herself by refreshing Country Road. And Country Road, um, does have a homewares division, which competes with Adare’s, so she probably has experience in this area.
[00:47:57] TK: Uh, I found an AFR article. by a reporter called Carrie LaFrenz from 17th of September this year, which says that over the past six years, L. Roseberry has doubled Country Road’s sales and quadrupled its earnings. She expanded the kids and homewares divisions and increased average selling prices. Two weeks ago, Woolworths Holdings, which is the owner of Country Road, flagged its Country Road brand was the only label in the group to post positive sales growth last year.
[00:48:26] TK: So she’s a, she’s a fairly, a very successful retailer and she starts in a couple of months time. Um, history of the business, uh, Adair’s goes back into the early 1900s. So it’s been around a long time. They opened a, one store on Chapel Street in Britain. Brann and Victoria in the early 1900s. They later established themselves as a small format department store in Camberwell and again focusing on retailing Manchester, Curtains, Ladieswear and Haberdashery.
[00:49:00] TK: Some great old terms in that sort of space of the retail world, isn’t there? And they operated that until 1979. And in 1981, the first incarnation of a modern Adair’s boutique was opened in Doncaster Shopping Town. Um, as the baton was changed to younger members of the Adair’s family. In 1984, uh, the, these, uh, members of the Adair family combined with another family called the McCain family to, um, to roll out the, uh, new Adair’s franchise and they opened another four stores in 84 all around, uh, Victoria.
[00:49:36] TK: Uh, in 86, the McLean family took majority control of the business and expanded it theirs, uh, uh, to all the mainland stakes in Australia through till the two thousands. But in the 19, uh, sorry, 2007, the McLean family sold their majority stake in the business to BB retail capital, which is, um, BB stands for blundy, one of the most successful retailers, uh, in Australia.
[00:50:03] TK: Uh, but in 2010, he then unsold Adairs to a private equity firm called Catalyst, and, uh, they then in 2015 listed Adairs on the ASX, and there’s been, at least at that stage of, um, history, there was a bit of a well worn path from PE firms Buying retailers, stripping out the costs, um, uh, relying on the cash flow to be able to gear them up and then listing them on the ASX and, you know, I’m thinking of Myer when it was sold out of ColesMyer and then flipped, um, Dick Smith, which is now, uh, bankrupt, um, But there’s, it hasn’t been good for investors to buy these companies off P.
[00:50:47] TK: E. when they get relisted. Um, P. E. is attractive to these companies for the same reason I am, that they have great cash flow. Um, and if they continue to be well run, then they can support a bit of gearing and, and, um, uh, they can be quite profitable. Uh, Adairs, Is trading currently below what it listed at, uh, when in its IPO.
[00:51:11] TK: Um, it has traded higher, but it’s come back from that recently by, by quite a bit. Um, I guess I might talk about the risks and opportunities at the MO at the moment. I’ve just covered on, covered off some of the risks there. Which is you’re buying from PE, which oftentimes, you know, is not a good thing to do as they hollow out the costs and load up the debt.
[00:51:34] TK: But it’s now a significant time since that’s happened, and I think at least the current CEO has done a fair bit of work at sort of right sizing the business and expanding it. But at the moment, it’s not a big deal. Isn’t a great time to be in this kind of business because there’s tight disposable dollars so people are cutting back on their expenditure in retail.
[00:51:55] TK: Although we’re seeing from companies like Myer that they’re starting to see a turnaround in spending in department stores so that’s This might be a bit of a, um, changing of the tide, so to speak. Uh, there, there’s certainly supply chain cost increases, which companies like this are battling, not just from inflation and wage increases, but of course, um, if they’re importing anything from overseas, uh, the shipping costs are up, um, largely as a result of not being able to go through the sewers.
[00:52:24] TK: Canal and taking longer to transport things internationally. Um, I think it’s a huge risk, even though I think it’s an opportunity that there’s a new CEO coming in because we know, or I know from past experience, one of the things a new CEO is likely to do is to, is to take a lot of write downs in their first year.
[00:52:43] TK: Um, sometimes the market looks through that for what it is, which is the CEO knowing that they only have one chance to put a broom through the place and do all the tough stuff in the first year. Um, and it, I can be a little bit, um, cynical and say it’s also a chance for them to lower the entry price for their stock options.
[00:53:03] TK: Um, by lowering the share price at the start, and therefore that, you know, in five years time, this person might get some equity in the company or might decide to leave and it’s going to be a bigger margin on their, on their equity granting. But, uh, who knows? Um, I think it’s a risk that they’re expanding into furniture.
[00:53:24] TK: I mean, there are some, it’s not an easy market and there are Potentially better players, and I would probably favour Nick Scali in the furniture space. But, you know, there are big, big, big competitors like Myer and, um, um, IKEA, for example. So, you know, it’s not without some risk expanding into that. And also I’ve got to say that You look at a company like Adairs, or the core bit of Adairs, and you say, where’s the growth coming from?
[00:53:49] TK: You can only sell bedspreads, you know, a couple of times in a lifetime, really. Um, where’s the growth coming from? So, they tend to grow with, um, with, uh, the population growth or the GDP growth. in the country. Uh, and so, you know, the pressure comes on CEOs to expand and they do things like, well, let’s expand into bedding and furniture and things like that. The expansion is obviously a growth play, but it’s dividing the focus as well. So if your core competency is designing and making cushions and, and curtains, um, it’s a different skill set to, you know, Then won the supply chain for a furniture company. So the, you know, management may be distracted by that.
[00:54:33] TK: I’m not saying they are because the, uh, the furniture expansion seems to be working. There were some issues in the online one, um, which they cleaned up a fair bit of in the last 12 months. Well, they said they have, um, so, but time will tell. The other thing I wanted to mention is that, uh, the chair of the company, a lady called Kate Spargo resigned, um, fairly suddenly.
[00:54:55] TK: I think, um, well, resigned and there’s been no, no reason given why she’s left, um, and so I, I did think about putting a red flag on the business, but in the absence of not knowing much about Kate Spargo and not knowing much about why she left, it’s hard to say. Um, it’s not like this is a large, a company which is covered by a lot of people who would, you know, could speculate as to why Kate left.
[00:55:21] TK: Um, all I know is that, uh, she resigned a week before the new CEO announcement happened. So I could speculate that she’s not happy with the new CEO appointment, but equally not knowing what’s going on. I know that she’s been on the board for a while. She could have decided to retire, but they haven’t come out and said she’s retired.
[00:55:40] TK: They just said she’s left. So. It’s a bit of a red flag, but, um,
[00:55:44] CR: um.
[00:55:44] TK: knows. Uh, but the company does have opportunities. Um, it’s a, I think it’s a real opportunity having the successful manager from Country Road coming in. Um, she’s known for making Country Road more fashionable. So, uh, if anyone can, um, improve Adairs from being a sort of, you know, plus the old place that mum goes to shop for, um, for furniture and, uh, for, for bedding and, and, uh, Manchester, then this is probably the person to do it.
[00:56:16] TK: The other opportunity which can fly below the radar is that a large proportion, and I think I read somewhere about 80 percent of the sales are done through their loyalty program called loyalty club. So they’ve got a lot of data. about their customers. And I think there’s an opportunity to use that data.
[00:56:31] TK: And they say they’re using it now. So their loyalty program is called Linen Lovers, and that’s got to be a benefit, you know, for them to be able to mine that data to improve their offerings. And, um, I think the other benefit or the other opportunity for the company is that if they’ve got such a high, uh, online, uh, penetration of sales, that’s got to be a real opportunity to drive their costs down.
[00:56:58] TK: So, um, you know, apart from the fact that they know a lot more about an online customer and how they shop compared to someone wandering in their store, uh, it, it, they should be able to, to create a supply chain for online customers, which is cheaper than, or more cost effective or higher margin compared to the store environment where you’re paying for leases.
[00:57:18] TK: Um, on 170 stores and staff for 170 stores. So that’s an opportunity for them as well. Okay, the numbers, uh, share price, uh, for the analysis is 2. 06, which I think is the share price today. It’s a slight Josephine. It’s a little bit less than what it was at the close of the month. Uh, and it trades very close to its consensus target price and also the IV2, around the IV2 price of 2.
[00:57:44] TK: 04. IV1 is 83 cents, so we’re not getting a huge value by Uh, it’s, it’s reasonably large ADT, million, a million dollars. It’s 995, 000 on average traded. So it’ll suit most of our listeners. Um, does have a strong yield of 5. 8%, but not quite high enough for us to score it as being above the, uh, the average mortgage interest rate.
[00:58:07] TK: Stock Doctor financial health and trend is strong and steady. Which is good. Stockopedia give it a quality ranking of 89 and an overall ranking of 91. So that’s fairly high up on their list as well. PE ratio for the company is 12. 6 times, which is actually the highest in the last three years. So we score it down for that.
[00:58:29] TK: However, the prop cap is 3. 8 times. So that’s, um, fairly cheap which is driving the QAV score on the buy list. We can’t buy it for book plus 30 which is 1. 66 and I highlight that we use net equity per share for that calculation which is different to net tangible assets which is actually negative 35 cents so I would think there’s a fair bit of goodwill in the acquisition of Focus on Furniture and what was the other brand Mocha sitting on their balance sheet so people should be aware of that.
[00:59:02] TK: Um, one thing which also struck me from the company, and uh, I didn’t mention before, but their, their sales were down year on year, and their profit was down year on year, but the forecast earnings per share growth is 30%. So, uh, the analysts that do cover this company do think that the current CEO has solved a lot of the, um, the cost issues in the company, and that earnings per share should grow from here.
[00:59:27] TK: And consequently, growth over PE is 2. 3 times, which, um, Scores well, and we give it a score for that. Uh, the owner founders have long left the business, so we can’t score it for that. Directors only hold 3%, so we can’t score it for that. It would have been nice to see like a Brett Blundy or someone like that on the board.
[00:59:45] TK: Um, but, but he’s, he’s gone as well. So we can’t score it for owner founder. Uh, there is consistently increasing equity, which is a good thing, so we can score it for that. So all in all, quality score is 8 out of 15, or 53%. So not. Overly high and uh, at least one of the things was a negative on our checklist.
[01:00:04] TK: Um, but the QAV score is 0. 14 given it’s um, it’s, it’s strong PropCaf or it’s low PropCaf. So, uh, kind of in the middle of the buy sheet, of the buy list. Um, but a large ADT stock which people can look at. Uh, I don’t think you need to rush into this one. It’s um, it’s a stock that’s uh, even though earnings per shares, Forecast to grow.
[01:00:27] TK: It’s, as I said before, it’s generally a low growth business, um, and with a new CEO coming in, you get in now, you, you might be lucky in that the stock re rates when the new CEO starts, or if you get in now and the new CEO writes down a lot of things, um, in the first sort of six months, the stock price might go down.
[01:00:48] TK: So it’s a bit of a risky period, but if you don’t get in now and the new CEO does the right things, you may miss out on the initial growth from her taking over as well. So, um, yeah, do your own research, have a look. Um, it’s been on the buy list for a long time, um, on and off the buy list for a long time too, I guess.
[01:01:06] TK: Uh, but, um, there’s a few catalysts going on which might lead to a rewriting for
[01:01:10] TK: it.
[01:01:12] CR: Risky Period was the name of a prog rock group that I was in, in the late seventies. I played flute in Risky Period. Yeah.
[01:01:20] TK: Did you stand on one leg?
[01:01:22] TK: Like Jethro Tull?
[01:01:24] CR: he stand on one leg?
[01:01:26] TK: Yeah,
[01:01:27] CR: Oh, okay.
[01:01:28] TK: a look on YouTube. He was a one, one crazy dude playing flute in the rock band
[01:01:32] TK: standing on one leg.
[01:01:36] CR: Uh, good stuff. Well, thank you for that. On Adare’s, Tony, don’t think I’ve ever been in an Adare’s store. I
[01:01:44] TK: Well, you’re not really target market.
[01:01:45] TK: Okay,
[01:01:47] CR: know. I buy linens and beds and bedside tables from time to time.
[01:01:53] TK: but not from Adairs, which I guess is
[01:01:55] TK: my point.
[01:01:59] CR: There’s A Mart. There’s lots of places like that. Yeah, a lot of competition,
[01:02:04] TK: Well, yeah, getting in Kmart and Target used to be a big competitor for Adairs. I know Kmart, the brand doesn’t, sorry, Target, the brand doesn’t exist anymore. It’s part of Kmart, but Big W, Kmart.
[01:02:15] TK: Yeah. Big competitors to the
[01:02:16] TK: brand.
[01:02:18] CR: Target doesn’t exist? There’s a Target down the road from me.
[01:02:22] TK: Oh, sorry. Um, I think the, I think the back end of Target was, was merged into Kmart, so sorry, you’re right, the brand, the brand still exists, but it’s run by the same company now, yeah, as the same business, sorry, it’s always been owned by the same company, but run as separate
[01:02:38] TK: businesses, and now it’s being run by Kmart.
[01:02:40] CR: yeah, right. Um, and as you said, it is a Josephine for us, so people won’t be rushing into it anyway. It’s still a few cents. Below it’s second byline.
[01:02:51] CR: Good stuff. All right. Well, that’s Part one of the show. Now we get to the fun part.
[01:03:01] TK: Yeah. After
[01:03:02] TK: hours.
[01:03:04] CR: After hours.
[01:03:06] CR: I’ve, I’ve, I’ve had a lot of good stuff this week come across my table. I watched a film that I thought was great. It’s got very average ratings, but I loved it. Mr. Right on Netflix. 2015 comedy. with Sam Rockwell, Anna Kendrick, and Tim Roth.
[01:03:28] TK: Wow.
[01:03:29] CR: is an assassin. It’s a little bit Gross Point Blank, if you remember that.
[01:03:35] CR: He’s an assassin who’s kind of trying to get out of the assassin business, but just when he thought he was out, they dragged him back in. Tim Roth is sort of one of a bunch of different crews that are hunting him down. And he meets Anna Kendrick. And he’s trying to have a relationship with her, initially badly hiding the fact that he’s an assassin.
[01:03:59] CR: But it being Sam Rockwell, when he kills people, he’s dancing, usually. He’s dancing and making it look like he’s having a good time. There’s this one scene halfway through the film where Tim Roth and his partner are looking at blood splatter patterns from a guy that Sam Rockwell’s killed in an alley.
[01:04:22] CR: And Tim Roth’s partner’s like This blood patterns don’t make any sense. It’s like they were spinning around and Timothy goes, no, he was not spinning. He was dancing. Cause if you know anything about Sam Rockwell, every movie Sam Rockwell does, he
[01:04:39] CR: dances in every role. It doesn’t matter what the role is. He needs to dance. He loves dancing. He’s, if he’s ever on Kimmel or Fallon or any of those shows, he dances. He’s a self taught. And he loves to dance and he’s very good at dancing.
[01:04:56] CR: So yeah, but it was good. I had really bad reviews, but I loved, I love Sam Rockwell. He’s one of those guys. He’s like a Nicholas Cage or a Chris Walken. He always brings something fun to every film. And Anna Kendrick, who I don’t know really well, but she was good too. And Tim Roth was good.
[01:05:16] TK: Yeah, I love Tim Roth as well.
[01:05:19] CR: Yeah. And I haven’t seen him in much, you know, outside of Tarantino’s stuff. I don’t. No, what I’ve seen him in Twin Peaks, The Return. We had a great part in that. Remember him in that?
[01:05:35] TK: I can’t, I, no, I don’t. Sorry.
[01:05:38] TK: Adairs.
[01:05:42] CR: the actress who was in Tarantino’s film set in the haberdashery, um, the one that was, yeah,
[01:05:55] TK: Die Hard Adairs.
[01:05:56] CR: yeah, I
[01:05:58] CR: can’t remember her name. Anyway, the two of them in, in Twin Peaks, The Return, there were a couple of assassins
[01:06:04] TK: Hang on, Quentin, did you say Quentin
[01:06:07] TK: Tarantino made a movie in a haberdashery?
[01:06:11] CR: Yeah, the, the,
[01:06:13] CR: his eighth film, whatever it was, the, the one where we’re set in the Wild West, a bunch of, um, bounty hunters in a haberdashery in the
[01:06:24] TK: The Hateful Eight.
[01:06:26] CR: Hateful Eight?
[01:06:26] CR: Yeah.
[01:06:28] TK: Okay. A haberdashery, so you mean like a, like an outpost, like
[01:06:31] TK: a general store.
[01:06:33] CR: Yeah, that’s what it was, it was, they called it, it was like Betty’s Haberdashery or
[01:06:38] TK: Yeah, right.
[01:06:39] CR: when you said
[01:06:39] CR: haberdashery, that’s the first thing I
[01:06:41] TK: Right. Ah, okay.
[01:06:43] TK: I didn’t get the reference. I didn’t know it was called that. All right.
[01:06:46] CR: Anyway, um, yeah, I watched that, it was good. I’m, I’m having another crack at reading I Will Fear No Evil, a Robert Heinlein
[01:06:53] TK: Yeah, I love Hyndman. Yeah.
[01:06:56] CR: I started it,
[01:06:57] CR: I
[01:06:57] CR: it’s funny, it was in my list of books, you ever do this, and I was going, oh, I should read this, and I started reading and I’ve gone, I’ve already read this.
[01:07:06] TK: Ah, yeah.
[01:07:06] CR: But I couldn’t remember where I got up to.
[01:07:10] CR: I know I didn’t finish
[01:07:10] CR: it. Turns out I read about three chapters and then I got distracted. So I read them again. Yeah. It’s about a guy, an old rich guy. I thought of you while I was reading it. Some old rich guy whose body is giving out on him. So he. goes and if he gets his lawyers to find him a new body to get his brain transplanted in.
[01:07:34] TK: Is it a how to book? Can
[01:07:36] TK: I some notes? Yeah.
[01:07:39] TK: good.
[01:07:40] CR: Yeah. Pretty good so far.
[01:07:44] TK: Yeah, I love Hyndman.
[01:07:47] TK: Alex loved it too. She used to love, um, Time Enough for Love.
[01:07:51] CR: You
[01:07:52] TK: that the prequel for If You Know Evil? Or was it
[01:07:55] TK: just a part of the same series? I can’t
[01:07:58] CR: I don’t.
[01:07:59] TK: Lazarus Long?
[01:08:00] TK: Is that the character’s name in I Will For You no, Evil? No. Okay.
[01:08:04] CR: but I read Time
[01:08:05] CR: Enough For Love when You recommended it to me years ago. Um, and I loved it. And The Moon is a Harsh Mistress. Was that one of his?
[01:08:14] TK: Yes.
[01:08:14] CR: Love that. You put me onto him. I mean, I’d heard of him. I think I’ve read something, but I read a bunch of his five or six years ago when you recommended him to me again.
[01:08:25] CR: Yeah, I loved, loved him. Yeah, really good stuff. I’ve also been reading Fire Walk With Me by Scott Ryan. Not Mr. In Between Scott Ryan, but actually I came across this book because I was trying to figure out what Mr. In Between Scott Ryan was up to and then I discovered this book by an author of the same name.
[01:08:44] CR: It’s about the making of Fire Walk With Me. Have you, um, have you seen that?
[01:08:50] TK: Yes. A long time ago, but Yes.
[01:08:52] TK: I have.
[01:08:54] CR: Yeah, well, quite famously when, so for people who don’t know, Lynch, after the two seasons of Twin Peaks went to TV in the early 90s and it got cancelled, Lynch made a prequel film, before prequel films were really a thing,
[01:09:09] TK: Mm
[01:09:10] CR: although I guess you could say The Godfather 2 was part prequel, but he made a prequel film and it was Absolutely, it absolutely tanked at the box office.
[01:09:20] CR: The critics hated it. Everybody hated it. It was like, people booed it at the Cannes Film Festival and they walked out and it was just hated. And now it’s considered
[01:09:35] TK: Yeah.
[01:09:35] CR: greatest masterpiece.
[01:09:37] TK: Especially after the latest Twin Peaks series came out. When was that? Five or six years ago? Seven years ago? Yeah. And people went back
[01:09:46] TK: to look at Fire walk with me. Yeah.
[01:09:48] CR: yeah. And I, I saw it
[01:09:51] CR: a long time after it came out. I don’t think I saw it until the 2000s or something. I loved it from the get go, but it is hard film. Like it’s, I mean, it’s basically about sexual abuse and it’s, uh, and it’s just brutal. It’s one of those films you need to go have a shower after you watch it, cause it’s really disturbing.
[01:10:11] CR: And, um, The actress who plays Laura Palmer, uh, Lee, Cheryl Lee, is that her name?
[01:10:17] TK: Cheryl Lee. Yes, that’s right. That’s right.
[01:10:19] CR: Fantastic. Like she has almost nothing to do in the original Twin Peaks. And then she’s in this and she’s
[01:10:24] TK: Except look dead.
[01:10:26] CR: Yeah, well, she played Maddy, her identical twin looking cousin,
[01:10:30] TK: That’s right.
[01:10:31] CR: with a wig.
[01:10:34] TK: Uhhh.
[01:10:35] CR: was fantastic in it.
[01:10:36] CR: Anyway, so I’ve been reading a book about the making of that and the initial reaction to it and hmm, interesting.
[01:10:44] CR: Also saw a good live performance of the Beastie Boys. You’re not a Beastie Boys fan, are you? You don’t
[01:10:52] TK: I am.
[01:10:52] CR: the rap, you
[01:10:53] CR: are?
[01:10:53] TK: I, I like, I like that kind of hip hop and rap. The sort of
[01:10:57] TK: early stuff. Yeah.
[01:10:59] CR: I discovered this on YouTube
[01:11:01] CR: during the week. It’s a good quality concert of theirs from 2015. So, um, 2015? No, might have been a little bit earlier, 20, 2012, something like that. I remember it was just before MCA would have got his, you know, his cancer diagnosis. Well, that was too, no, it must have been much earlier, 2000 and, 2000 and.
[01:11:30] CR: Five, I think. Yeah, no, it goes way back. Um, there was a few years cause I think he got his cancer diagnosis in 2009 and then he died of 2012.
[01:11:40] CR: Does that sound right? I don’t know.
[01:11:43] TK: I don’t know, sorry.
[01:11:43] CR: Timelines. It seems too long ago, but has he been dead for
[01:11:46] CR: that long? Jeez. Anyway, I went looking for it cause I wanted to find Mixmaster Mike to show Fox and I still haven’t shown him, but the concert opens with 10 minutes of Mixmaster Mike just doing the opening thing.
[01:12:01] CR: And it’s insane. Like his abilities with two turntables is just incredible. Like it’s just like, like it’s like watching, it’s Dak Perlman on a violin. Like he is just the, he’s a master of, uh, mixing, mixing desk anyway. And then the boys came out and did their concert and I watched the whole thing. And it was just so much, um, joy de vive, you know, they’d always, always
[01:12:31] TK: Their energy is great, isn’t it?
[01:12:33] CR: Yeah,
[01:12:34] TK: Yeah.
[01:12:35] CR: just great. And also sad, you know, knowing what happens to MCA afterwards. But, um, anyway,
[01:12:43] TK: What’s that documentary about them that you recommended
[01:12:45] TK: last year? It’s
[01:12:46] CR: you like that? Yeah.
[01:12:48] TK: it. Yeah.
[01:12:49] CR: They did such a great job telling the story, you know? Yeah. Yeah. And, and their story is terrific. It was just about early success and then they kind of hated it and then they failed and lost everything and reinvented themselves the way they wanted to be and built it back up from scratch.
[01:13:10] CR: It was fantastic.
[01:13:12] TK: Yeah, cool, because their early success was, was, um, on the back of, uh, you got the right to, you know, fight for your right to party. So they, they put, you know, they’d go on the big concert tour and they’d just be frat guys. waving their shirts in the air and getting drunk and they had no connection to the audience at ever at all didn’t want them to be the audience and they just said fuck this I’m not gonna do this
[01:13:35] TK: anymore yeah and reinvented themselves yeah
[01:13:38] CR: Yeah. Tried to do more
[01:13:40] CR: intelligent lyrics and more intelligent songs and, um, yeah, blending philosophy, Tibetan Buddhism and stuff into it. Oh, by the way, I know you don’t listen to my Cold War show, but we’re in a, we’re in the middle of a series about Tibet at the moment. Um, and it’s fascinating, but we’re sort of talking about Tibet and the Cold War and China and that kind of stuff, but going, going back as I like to do, Tibetan, uh, early part of the 20th century. Had no idea, you know, I, I’ve sort of the, the, I don’t know about how much you know about Tibet, but the idea I had of Tibet that I’ve sort of absorbed through the media in 54 years is, you know, a bunch of peace loving hippies with shaved heads walking around drinking yak milk and ringing gongs and just.
[01:14:33] CR: on clifftops. Nah, nah, they were killing each other, Buddhist, Tibetan Buddhist on Tibetan Buddhist violence, fighting over who had the right Dalai Lama. And, you know, they had massive poverty and wealth disparity and, you know, the elite and the aristocracy and the Dalai Lamas running the stuff and just violence.
[01:14:58] CR: And then of course the British are involved because of where it sits. Close to the British Raj in India. So the British are trying to control it. The Chinese are trying to control it, but the British are actually controlling China in the late 19th and early 20th century. Anyway, after, you know, the Opium Wars and the Boxer Rebellion and all this kind of stuff.
[01:15:19] CR: Yeah.
[01:15:20] TK: So it was kind of like every other
[01:15:21] TK: theocracy in history, was it?
[01:15:24] CR: well, that was the joke that I made was, uh, you know, when the, when the 13th Dalai Lama died in 1933, I think, and they found the new Dalai Lama, who’s the current Dalai Lama, a few years later, he’s the 14th Dalai Lama. He was five years old when he was appointed the Dalai Lama, say to Ray. Because if our study of history has taught us anything, it’s that making a five year old child the, uh, seat of all temporal and spiritual power in a theocracy.
[01:15:53] CR: Never, goes wrong. That’s, that’s, like if anything says the height of sophistication and civilization for a culture, it’s making a five year old child the head of your seat of government. I mean, I think that’s sort of the pinnacle of human civilization, right there.
[01:16:07] TK: so it’s like, it’s like putting Foxx in charge, right?
[01:16:10] CR: yeah, yeah. Which, he’s in charge of our house, so that’s bad enough.
[01:16:16] CR: Uh,
[01:16:17] TK: Yeah.
[01:16:18] CR: at least he thinks he is. He runs it like he is. Anyway, so what about you? What, what else have you been into this week apart from going down to Flemington and
[01:16:29] TK: yeah, it’s all horse racing. So double market had a win. First start last Thursday.
[01:16:35] CR: first start
[01:16:37] TK: Yeah.
[01:16:38] TK: So one for one, which is really good.
[01:16:41] CR: run twice as fast as the rest of the horses?
[01:16:46] TK: No, it
[01:16:47] TK: didn’t. No. No.
[01:16:50] TK: But, uh, earned twice as much as the average horse
[01:16:54] TK: that I own, so
[01:16:55] CR: Oh, okay. That’s good.
[01:16:57] TK: Yeah. Yeah.
[01:17:00] TK: Yeah.
[01:17:00] CR: big race? What race was that? Was that
[01:17:02] TK: No, no, no, no, it was just its first, it was a maiden, so it wasn’t at Flemington, it was at Ballarat on Thursday. It’s got to start somewhere, and at one, which is not all that common for racehorses, so that was good.
[01:17:16] TK: Uh, and Steve, that’s the one that Steve Mabb’s in with me, so Chairman Mabb owned two horses, one called Negronis that raced and flopped and then we sold, so it kind of got out square, and now this one, which is, you know, won its
[01:17:30] TK: first, first race, so that’s fantastic.
[01:17:33] CR: Mabb? I haven’t spoken to him for
[01:17:35] CR: ages. It’s time we had lunch.
[01:17:37] TK: Yeah, we, yeah, we talked recently. He’s, um, remaking the ASA, which is, uh, good on him. So, he was, he was telling me they, they’ve been running lots of promotions and they’ve got, I think he said, 40, 000 members in it now, is fantastic. And he’s, and so they’re doing lots of, um, you know, uh, free entry trial.
[01:18:00] TK: type promotions. Um, but yeah, he’s done a lot of work to get sponsorship from companies and then provide an audience of investors for them to talk to.
[01:18:11] CR: Right.
[01:18:11] TK: so he’s trying to get the ASA kind of off the subscription teat and more on the corporate sponsorship bandwagon. Um, which will be, he, he hopes a lot more, um, stable
[01:18:24] TK: and more profitable for the ASA going forward.
[01:18:27] TK: I think they’re running their, I don’t know, I, I did, he did say, he said, I think, I think he said it was like 45 plus. Cause he, he told me the stats that, I, I, I’m going from memory, I think he said 15 percent of his base either becomes, mentally incompetent or dies every year. So, uh, they’re, they’re always having to find at least 15 percent new members just to stand still because it’s a very age skewed
[01:18:57] TK: membership base.
[01:18:58] CR: Yeah, yeah, that was always my experience at the ASA events that I went to as a very old, um, and, you know, set in their ways usually, um, investor base.
[01:19:12] TK: yeah. Yeah. no, definitely. So, um, yeah, so good, good on him. He’s, um, he’s been busy doing that. I think he’s looking forward to retiring. He’s got to try and find a successor though, first. So, I guess a shout out to all our listeners. If anyone wants to get involved in the ASA and go on their board,
[01:19:28] TK: um, Steve would welcome you with open arms.
[01:19:32] TK: But you’d also be inheriting something which is worth much more stable financially than it was when Steve took over.
[01:19:38] CR: he’s only like 51 or something, so like he,
[01:19:42] TK: Yeah, but it’s, it’s like he’s not getting, it’s one of those things, it’s a, it’s a labour of love, and it’s, you know, a lot of work, and he’s not getting any, any income for it, a bit like QAV.
[01:19:54] CR: yeah, well, good stuff, good for him. What else? What have you got on this week?
[01:20:03] TK: uh, I’ve got, I Never Dreamed, no, uh, next week, I Never Dreamed races, uh, I think at sale in two days time, so, um, I’m hoping for better things from her past runs on Sunday, so they’re backing her up quickly in the Seymour Cup, which should be, she should be good in. And Poifect will run Saturday week, so that’s on Caulfield Cup Day, not in the Caulfield Cup, but in the Mayer Sprint Race, a Group 2 race, so hopefully she’ll do well there.
[01:20:35] TK: So I’m heading down after our recording next week, again, and I’ll stay down until after Cup Day,
[01:20:42] TK: spend about three weeks down there.
[01:20:44] CR: lovely.
[01:20:45] TK: Yeah.
[01:20:48] TK: I’ll take my second wife and my first wife will
[01:20:50] CR: whoa, oh, yeah, kinky, get it all, for the man who has everything,
[01:20:59] TK: Right.
[01:21:04] CR: well Tony, I was thinking sale of the century there, not you, well Tony, Tony leaves today with a second wife. Um, yeah. Yes, uh, well this week, um, we’ve got our brown belt grading on next week, so that’s what I’m going to be focusing on, just getting ready for that, lots of training, uh, Taylor’s girlfriend,
[01:21:30] TK: brown belt like a Brown Trousers, do they
[01:21:37] TK: do very scary things to you?
[01:21:39] CR: Yeah,
[01:21:39] CR: they give me a white belt at the beginning of the session And by the end of it.
[01:21:43] TK: And then six guys jump you here.
[01:21:44] CR: Yeah,
[01:21:46] TK: You ever seen that, uh, that show that looks like a brown trouser job to me? Graham Chapman’s Documentary about the Dangerous Sports Club at Oxford University or Cambridge University, one of those two. Well, they used to do things like, uh, ride bouncing castles down the sides of mountains.
[01:22:05] TK: That was
[01:22:06] TK: their club. Graham Chapman was in that. And he made a special, uh, called, looks like a brown trouser job to me, which is what he said when they, they lowered him out into the bouncing castle on
[01:22:19] TK: top of the mountain.
[01:22:23] CR: oh great, I saw John posted something the other day about, I think it was the 35th anniversary of Chapman’s passing, John posted the clip of his eulogy, the famous eulogy that he gave, yeah,
[01:22:37] TK: It’s funny, isn’t it?
[01:22:38] CR: oh, hilarious, I didn’t watch it again, but I’ve seen it many times, but uh, yeah, 35 years without Chapman, that’s a long time,
[01:22:48] TK: I loved his autobiography. It’s called the Liar’s Autobiography. I always thought it was a
[01:22:52] TK: great title for an autobiography.
[01:22:55] CR: Was it full of lies or
[01:22:56] CR: was it, uh,
[01:22:58] TK: Well, who knows? You could have just made the whole thing up. It sounded pretty truthful because it correlates with what’s in other books about Python, but it, uh, yeah. A lot of it was on these early days as a doctor and drinking a lot and, um, uh, becoming a writer with Cleese. Doing some of the early shows.
[01:23:14] TK: I didn’t realize he was one of the writers on the Doctor series. Doctors, Doctors at Large, I think was the TV series. Yeah. Yeah.
[01:23:23] CR: I vaguely recall that from my youth.
[01:23:27] TK: Hmm.
[01:23:28] CR: Okay. Well thank you t Kate. Quite, have a good week, everyone.
[01:23:33] TK: Yes. Happy ASX.
[01:23:34] TK: It’s been pretty happy lately too. It’s good.
[01:23:37] CR: Very happy. Yeah. It’s kind of boringly happy, just things are
[01:23:40] TK: Oh, we like Boringly Happy.
[01:23:42] CR: Boringly happy. That’s
[01:23:44] TK: That’s a good title
[01:23:45] TK: for this episode. Boringly Happy.
[01:23:47] CR: All right. That’s it. Boringly happy. Thanks Tony.
[01:23:51] TK: See ya.

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