Transcription
Cameron: [00:00:00] Can you repeat what you just
Tony KynasÂton: No. Well, I can,
Cameron: God.
Tony KynasÂton: No
Cameron: Oh, thatâs a shame. Thatâs disÂapÂpointÂing. WelÂcome back to QAV. Tony
Tony KynasÂton: thank you. Can, how are you?
Cameron: am realÂly, well. Tony was just doing a ShakeÂspeare accent, but he did it off camÂera. off air, off recordÂing.
Tony KynasÂton: Oh, will you startÂed it with your resÂoÂnant? HelÂlo?
Cameron: ChanÂnelling my inner John Laws.
Tony KynasÂton: Oh, okay.
Cameron: Iâm tired. I was just sitÂting here havÂing a nap before you came in. Iâm wanÂna go and have a nap. Itâs that time of the day. Itâs nap time. 2:00 PM Weâre recordÂing this TuesÂday, the 10th of June.
Tony KynasÂton: oh, off you go. Iâll
take over.
Cameron: yeah. Iâll wait till you do your pulled pork. Iâll just have a nap. I. No reflecÂtion on the pulled pork. Itâs just I donât have to [00:01:00] talk for 20 minÂutes so I can have a rest. Kung fu took it outÂta me today. How have you been TK? We didÂnât do a show. Well, we didÂnât talk last week âcause we did the, uh, interÂview with Tobias Carlisle from the week before. PreÂreÂcord. Yeah. Good week.
Itâs been a while.
Tony KynasÂton: it has, youâre right. ActuÂalÂly I hadÂnât thought of that. Has been a while.
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: have had a good
Cameron: Whatâs going on in your world?
Tony KynasÂton: is going on, itâs, uh, very cold down
Cameron: winÂter like down at Capes? Schanck? Yeah. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: Itâs, uh, went out yesÂterÂday and played golf and I think it was about eight degrees in the afterÂnoon and I manÂaged to wrench my back, so Iâm just getÂting over that
Cameron: Oh no. How did you do that?
Tony KynasÂton: just
Cameron: pickÂing up the golf cart and throwÂing it? Thatâs rudÂdy. Who does that kind of thing?
Tony KynasÂton: well, I dunÂno. Yeah. No, well, no. Um, no. Just playÂing in the cold weathÂer, I think, and probÂaÂbly
Cameron: yeah. Right.
Tony KynasÂton: havenât, done enough gym work with all the holÂiÂdays and things that have been on, so.
Cameron: Do you warm up before a game of golf? Do you do like [00:02:00] five, 10 minÂutes of stretchÂing? Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: didÂnât do much stretchÂing, but went to the driÂving range and stretched there and hit a few balls.
So I thought it was okay. But yeah,
Cameron: Mm
Tony KynasÂton: itâs a probÂlem Iâve had before. AnyÂway, itâs betÂter today than it was
Cameron: mm Oh, thatâs good.
Tony KynasÂton: And we
Cameron: I believe, um, you
Tony KynasÂton: was good fun. She
Cameron: loveÂly. Thatâs nice. How is Alex?
Tony KynasÂton: sheâs good. Or like she got, she was sick durÂing the week as well. She some kind
or flu. Um, yeah. So that wasÂnât good for her, but it was nice havÂing her down here. Good
Cameron: Hmm. Iâve got my son TayÂlor visÂitÂing too for the week. Heâs back from LA for a week, and Iâm tryÂing to conÂvince him not to go back to la. Iâm like, dude, this is not a good time to be in la. Just wait until it, wait until we see what hapÂpens before you go back. But I donât know if Iâm gonna be able to [00:03:00] conÂvince him to see where things are at by the end of the week.
I guess.
Tony KynasÂton: And if itâs a anothÂer telÂco tray, it could be all over in a week too.
Cameron: Could be, could also not be, this could be the, uh, this could be the burnÂing of the Reich stag for the US. We nevÂer know.
Tony KynasÂton: think thatâs whatâs going on? Do you?
Cameron: Yeah. Oh, I donât know. I donât know. I donât think thatâs whatâs going on, but I think that is posÂsiÂbly what could hapÂpen as a result of this. Like it just takes for one perÂson to acciÂdenÂtalÂly shoot someÂbody else, or not acciÂdenÂtalÂly shoot someÂbody else. And this thing could blow up, uh, even furÂther. Yeah, it, my operÂatÂing theÂoÂry since Trump got re-electÂed is that Trump canât afford to not be in powÂer, which means he canât afford to have a fair elecÂtion that could result in him powÂer, whether itâs conÂtrolÂling both housÂes at the midterms or the losÂing the [00:04:00] White House in whatÂevÂerâs left three and a half years.
So someÂthing needs to be done from his perÂspecÂtive to make sure that that isnât a posÂsiÂbilÂiÂty. And thereâs a range of things. But you know, the hisÂtoÂriÂan in me has seen this play out. Many times across hisÂtoÂry when you have an authorÂiÂtarÂiÂan leader who doesÂnât realÂly care about the rule of law and canât afford to lose powÂer because there will be perÂsonÂal, deep, perÂsonÂal reperÂcusÂsions if he losÂes powÂer. And parÂticÂuÂlarÂly when he is just had a falling out with the richÂest man in the counÂtry who was alignÂing himÂself politÂiÂcalÂly against him, or at least was until they rolled out NationÂal Guard. Now Elonâs, retweetÂing Trump and JD Vance again. So I donât know what the staÂtus of that is. Yeah,
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, well, when TayÂlor goes back, if he goes back, can you ask him to buy the red TesÂla thatâs for sale in WashÂingÂton? âcause it, itâs be worth someÂthing in the future as a, a hisÂtoÂry piece [00:05:00] for a museÂum
Cameron: TayÂlor has, TayÂlor has come back to be the guest speakÂer at, uh, his old high school.
Tony KynasÂton: Ooh.
Cameron: Theyâve invitÂed him to come back and give a talk to the year 12 stuÂdents about, I. I donât know, someÂthing. Heâs not quite sure. I donât think about what heâs supÂposed to be sayÂing.
Tony KynasÂton: Oh
Cameron: asked him, donât shit on, donât shit on uniÂverÂsiÂty.
Going to uniÂverÂsiÂty
Tony KynasÂton: well I did
whether
whether he would go back and he said he regretÂted leavÂing. So I think that was a wise answer.
Cameron: Yeah, I think so. at the same time, I mean, I think he does at one levÂel and doesÂnât at anothÂer, like itâs sort of a dividÂed thing. But, um, I, I think he, he realÂizes that if his schemes donât play out, then he may wish he a degree to fall back on. But the flip side is he doesÂnât expect his, uh, grand schemes to Peter out and heâs going from strength to strength.
So,
Tony KynasÂton: Hunter says, thereâs no
Cameron: but
Tony KynasÂton: [00:06:00] That conÂcenÂtrates
Cameron: Yes.
Tony KynasÂton: withÂout net? Yep.
Cameron: Yeah. When youâre livÂing in LA payÂing three and a half grand rent and, uh, doing all that kinÂda stuff. Mm-hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: whoa. Thatâs
to stay
isnât it?
Cameron: Uh, itâs not, not much betÂter here. BrisÂbaneâs like one of the most expenÂsive places in the world to live right now. Any who I believe in othÂer news, uh, you have royÂalÂty in the famÂiÂly.
Now, Tony,
Tony KynasÂton: Youâll have to enlightÂen me, Kim. I think I know what youâre talkÂing about, but No, we donât.
Cameron: uh, didÂnât your sisÂter-in-law get made a comÂpanÂion of the king yesÂterÂday?
Tony KynasÂton: Or comÂpanÂion of, isnât it the comÂpanÂion of the order of the AusÂtralia? Is that like being,
Cameron: have any idea
Tony KynasÂton: a
Cameron: it is.
Tony KynasÂton: So Iâm an lawyer of AusÂtralia and this is my comÂpanÂion. Yes, she did. Yes. CatherÂine Fag, JenÂnyâs sisÂter, oldÂer sisÂter. [00:07:00] ConÂgratÂuÂlaÂtions
Cameron: fanÂtasÂtic.
Tony KynasÂton: sure she wonât be
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: to her.
Uh,
Cameron: do you have to, do you have to curtÂsy now when you, uh, have famÂiÂly gathÂerÂings now? I donât know. Whatâs the, whatâs the proÂtoÂcol there?
Tony KynasÂton: uh, yeah. I may have to treat it with a
Cameron: we get her, can we get her on the show to talk about, uh, what she knows about the royÂal famÂiÂly and, uh, whoâs up, who and who hasÂnât paid?
Tony KynasÂton: All I can ask. Uh, she wonât know a thing about the RoyÂal famÂiÂly, um, although she did use to
Cameron: Sheâs not getÂting invitÂed to CucumÂber.
Tony KynasÂton: NewsÂpaÂper. It was a HelÂlo
Cameron: Oh, dear.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah. Mm,
Cameron: Thatâs why she got it. Sheâs one of the peoÂple who subÂscribed to RoyÂal MagÂaÂzines.
Tony KynasÂton: ProbÂaÂbly.
Cameron: Thatâs what you have to do Now, she, uh, in all seriÂousÂness, uh, my underÂstandÂing from what I read in the FinanÂcial Review is that itâs in recogÂniÂtion of her role as a senior execÂuÂtive in a lot of AusÂtralian busiÂnessÂes and founÂdaÂtions and the RBA and all those sorts of things.
I.
Tony KynasÂton: she cerÂtainÂly had a very good career. Um, [00:08:00] it would be for work on the RBA, but sheâs also does a lot of philÂanÂthropic work. I think she sits, I dunÂno if she still does, or she may just come off recentÂly, but she used to be the chair of the MelÂbourne Recital CenÂter, so, uh, did a lot of work for the not-for-profÂit secÂtor there in the arts.
Um, and probÂaÂbly a lot of othÂer things I havenât heard about too, so, uh, yeah, no, itâs, itâs well deserved. She does put a lot of work on it. Sheâs on about five boards, um, five or six boards, so itâs more than a full-time job.
Cameron: Yeah. Right. Oh, thatâs terÂrifÂic.
Tony KynasÂton: the, sheâs one of the direcÂtors of the JerÂry War InvestÂments, which is a listÂed investÂment comÂpaÂny, so I could ask her to come on and talk about that if you wantÂed.
Cameron: No, I just wantÂed to some royÂal Goss, you know, I donât know.
Tony KynasÂton: Look, subÂscribe
Cameron: betÂter? I wanÂna know. Does she get. Does she, does she get betÂter seats in restauÂrants? Does she get easÂiÂer upgrades on flights? Uh, now that [00:09:00] youâre,
Tony KynasÂton: I,
Cameron: do you have a speÂcial car? Do you get to flash?
Tony KynasÂton: well, thatâs the chairÂmanâs Lounge.
Cameron: Oh yeah. Right. She get to go to places and go. Yeah. Itâs just, she like flashÂes the badge. So, you know, comÂpanÂion of the order of the King of AusÂtralia or whatÂevÂer it is.
Tony KynasÂton: It
Cameron: Get outÂta my way. PeasÂant.
Tony KynasÂton: depends I, this is Grail. I canât wait till I, next famÂiÂly dinÂner. Iâm gonna use all these,
uh,
Cameron: curtÂsy, I think you should just make sure you curtÂsy when you see her.
Tony KynasÂton: um, well,
Cameron: have you got?
Tony KynasÂton: is, it is a look. Iâll, Iâll make one comÂment. And this is not meant to be a critÂiÂcism, but itâs a difÂferÂent world. Um, I. Uh, talkÂing about, you know, going to things and stuff, like, whatÂevÂer the things that turn her on just have no appeal to me whatÂsoÂevÂer. sheâs about to go, and JenÂny was gonna go as well, I think, but sheâs got some bald clashÂes, so Iâm probÂaÂbly, um, disÂreÂspectÂing her a litÂtle bit as well.
But they were going to go to some fashÂion house in Japan to watch [00:10:00] darkÂest black ink die used in the world to proÂduce some fabÂric. And Iâm
Cameron: Iâve heard about that.
Tony KynasÂton: okay. Well you must
Cameron: Hmm
Tony KynasÂton: cirÂcles as Cath and Jen.
Cameron: No, I think Fox saw it on a YouTube and told me about it.
Tony KynasÂton: But yeah, so like we were talkÂing about last time we had dinÂner um, yeah, the places she goes to and the places I go to are vastÂly difÂferÂent. So when she
this place in Japan, I said, do they have a golf course? And she said, I, I
But yeah,
are, you know, arenât lined on those kinds of things.
Cameron: Mm.
Tony KynasÂton: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: Well, Iâve got a, a, a all girl JapanÂese band to talk to you about in after hours that, uh, Iâve disÂcovÂered recentÂly. Yeah, yeah. Well, letâs get down to investÂing, Tony. Enough chitchat. Uh, what do you have on your list of talkÂing points today?
Tony KynasÂton: lot actuÂalÂly âcause weâve been away for two weeks and weâre getÂting into reportÂing seaÂson. So a few things to talk about [00:11:00] and me rearrange my notes here. so going back to the start of June, 2nd of June, ParÂenÂti a comÂpaÂny I own shares in, which has done realÂly well this year for me. have picked up a $1.1 bilÂlion underÂground conÂtract with EndeavÂor minÂing.
So they announced that, uh, last week. Um, itâs in b BurkÂiÂna Faso, so itâs a underÂground mine in Um, and we know, of course thereâs sovÂerÂeign risk over there, but, uh, the conÂtract valÂue is $1.1 bilÂlion and itâs a 60 month conÂtract from the 1st of June, 2025 for underÂground develÂopÂment, proÂducÂtion and relatÂed minÂing serÂvices.
So that was good to see. Um, and by the buy print he was up 60% this finanÂcial year, last time I had a look. So done very
Cameron: Oh my God.
Tony KynasÂton: litÂtle old valÂue stock on our buy list. Well think it
off recentÂly because of its, um, its price [00:12:00] increase, but thatâs doing well.
Cameron: Wow.
Tony KynasÂton: NWH, the N with attiÂtude scored a conÂtract win as well, which they announced.
And, and of course they, theyâve had a few probÂlems recentÂly with the, um, the, uh, south AusÂtralian comÂpaÂny going into liqÂuiÂdaÂtion, which one of their subÂsidiaries was owed monÂey to. But theyâve announced that they, have picked up a conÂtract from Rio TinÂto, and the share price has been up since then. Um, was one steal that went into adminÂisÂtraÂtion in South AusÂtralia, which, uh, caused their stock price to drop, but theyâre pickÂing up more conÂtracts, which is seeÂing it rise again.
BinÂdi announced their preÂlimÂiÂnary results for the, um, for some reaÂson their finanÂcial year ends in March. So they, theyâre putting out their finanÂcial results now a litÂtle bit earÂliÂer uh, reportÂing. SeaÂson tip typÂiÂcalÂly is, uh. They, they called it their preÂlimÂiÂnary unauÂditÂed results, so Iâm [00:13:00] not sure why theyâre rushÂing to get them out, um, before the audit.
But anyÂway, revÂenue was flat up, up 3% net, uh, net profÂit after tax was down, but basiÂcalÂly due to the payÂout of, um, uh, one of their investors called pyraÂmiÂdal. And, uh, it was kind of a comÂplex deal, but pyraÂmiÂdal, um, uh, have been, loanÂing them monÂey, I guess, um, via a comÂpulÂsoÂry conÂvertÂible debenÂture conÂtract.
So peoÂple can Google it if they want, but basiÂcalÂly itâs a, itâs a bond that can conÂvert into equiÂty under cerÂtain conÂdiÂtions. Um, shares are down a litÂtle since the result. And Iâve gotÂta say, I found the result conÂfusÂing. Um. ProbÂaÂbly because of this, uh, CCD rollover with pyraÂmid. Um, but anyÂway, uh, thatâs NDI, which has been on the buy list before.
Uh, judo are up 10%. They have a stratÂeÂgy day in the last two [00:14:00] weeks, which was, um, well received by the marÂket and they reafÂfirmed the guidÂance for the full year. Uh, bank of QueensÂland was up. No, no parÂticÂuÂlar news there, but, um. Their stock is on the rise as is QBE. Again, theyâve turned up and had a good week, but with, um, news, but comÂing into reportÂing seaÂson, that hopeÂfulÂly bodes well.
So thatâs my news for the last two weeks, I guess some of our stocks are doing well. and I did take the time to look back at, um, some stocks, which have done well since I sold them, which I know weâre not supÂposed to do. Um, but it, itâs theÂmatÂic. So stocks like HiFi, um, JB Hi Fi, Nick Scali, ComÂmonÂwealth Bank, TelÂstra, QanÂtas, MacÂquarÂie Group, all large cap stocks, which Iâve owned over the last couÂple of years.
But, um, either through a rule one or a three point trendÂline sell, got rid of, but theyâre, theyâre kickÂing [00:15:00] goals at the moment. So itâs, made me think that, um, someÂtimes if a big cap comes onto the buy list, maybe itâs a buy and hold, um. For a while anyÂway, I need to do a lot of research on that âcause I know Iâve owned MacÂquarÂie Group, for examÂple, in the past, and thatâs been fairÂly cycliÂcal.
So it has gone up and down with, um, swings and I guess the othÂers might too in time. But theyâve cerÂtainÂly done well since theyâve been on the Blist, but havenât been a full sell for me. So thatâs my news for the week.
Cameron: Very good. Well, Iâve got some big caps to talk about in a secÂond, but Iâll just do a portÂfoÂlio report, uh, before I get into that. So when I did my newsletÂter mornÂing for the week, the AusÂtralian dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio for the sevÂen days, last sevÂen days was up about 1.5% the benchÂmark, which was up about 0.85% for the [00:16:00] finanÂcial year.
The dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio is up about 19.5% per annum verÂsus 14.3% per annum for the benchÂmark.
Tony KynasÂton: A good year, isnât it.
Cameron: The five year. Yeah, crazy for the five year report and Iâve takÂen to doing five years because, you know, weâve been havÂing this disÂcusÂsion about when the offiÂcial incepÂtion start date is, and itâs over five years now, so itâs like easÂiÂer just to do five years, which I think is sort of indusÂtry, uh, stanÂdard for the five years.
Uh, the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio is up 16.3% per annum verÂsus the benchÂmark 10.8% per annum. itâs not quite douÂble, I dunÂno what that is, like 60% someÂthing, but, uh, itâs doing all right. Vis-a-vis the benchÂmark. The AmerÂiÂcan portÂfoÂlio was up 4.65% this week verÂsus 1.18% for the s and p 500. Uh, our portÂfoÂlio is up [00:17:00] 28% for the AusÂtralian finanÂcial year. Which I know is in the US finanÂcial year, but itâs just, Iâm doing apples for apples verÂsus our AusÂtralian portÂfoÂlio. So the AusÂtralian portÂfoÂlio is up just under 20% for the finanÂcial year. Itâs up t uh, 28% verÂsus the s and p 500, up 10% for the AusÂtralian finanÂcial year. And since incepÂtion for that one, which is SepÂtemÂber 23, itâs up 54% verÂsus 35% for the s and p 500.
So again, not a, itâs not MAGA sevÂen, uh, which is posÂsiÂbly a good thing. Yeah, just call it the MAGA sevÂen now. EveryÂthingâs Maga. Um, else have I got? Oh, the TPG cell line. I wantÂed to ask you about this. So we hold TPG in one of the light portÂfoÂlios, brought it back in April. Itâs up about 5% in that time.
Uh, but itâs been sort of hovÂerÂing [00:18:00] around its three point cell line. For the last week or so, curÂrent price is $5 27. The three point sell line was, is $5 24. It was the last time I calÂcuÂlatÂed it. So itâs a litÂtle bit above it today, but it was down below it on FriÂday and it was up and down last week. But if you have a look at the cell line in the BretÂtaÂlaÂtor, Tony, uh, itâs, itâs hugÂging it.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Cameron: So the, the, the, the price lineâs going up, itâs sort of recovÂerÂing from, you know, a periÂod of being a falling knife. Um, the cell line, it, itâs last trough is the lowÂest trough in the last five years. So itâs, itâs been recovÂerÂing in parÂalÂlel, like right on the sell line. So, and because itâs up and the share price is going up. Even though itâs sort of, itâs a cent below or itâs a cent above the sell line, Iâve been like, you know what? The share price is going in the right direcÂtion. Just because itâs breachÂing a [00:19:00] weird as lookÂing three point sell line. Iâm, Iâm gonna give it a bit of grace, but didÂnât wanÂna break any rules, so I wantÂed to talk to you about it.
What, what do you think in a sitÂuÂaÂtion like that? It was a weird one.
Tony KynasÂton: I, agree. Uh, with what you are doing, um. This is a weird one though. âcause we saw this comÂing out of COVID. As I recall, we had
Cameron: Yes.
Tony KynasÂton: reboundÂing, um, going up sharply from their lowÂest point durÂing COVID, the cell line kept getÂting redrawn. But I recall it, uh, stocks like CCP for examÂple, from memÂoÂry, um, the, the swings in the, the month to month figÂures were greater.
So you had more cl, you had clearÂer L twos. L one was always the lowÂest point, which was COVID. And then L two would be the lowÂest month, um, below the trend line from then on. Um, but attendÂed to, tendÂed to be sharpÂer. So you had a clearÂer idea. But look, I agree with you. I think the, the stockÂâs going up, the, [00:20:00] um, itâs, itâs still tradÂing on or about cell line, so Iâd wait and see.
Cameron: Okay, good. A MA group, Tony, probÂaÂbly not someÂthing youâre gonna pay much attenÂtion to. Theyâre fairÂly small. Cap stock low. A DT, letâs see, 234,000 a DT. Bit small for you, but big enough for a lot of us. Uh, I just wantÂed to point out that it share price is up like 75% in the last month, which isnât hard when you go from 6 cents to 10 cents, is done, but itâs a nice one. Itâs a nice one of these, like of a penÂny stock, I guess. They came out with their third quarÂter busiÂness update on the 1st of May, which I didÂnât pay any attenÂtion to at the time. [00:21:00] They said theyâd comÂpleteÂly refiÂnanced their debt facilÂiÂties for three years uh, someÂthing, someÂthing, someÂthing, but they, yeah, the share price shot up like 20% when that came out, and itâs kept going. So thatâs a nice one. We hold that in one of our light portÂfoÂlios. Uh, let me see. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: I, Iâm, if I actuÂalÂly owned it over the years, but itâs dropped off a lot, um, in say the last five or 10
Cameron: Oh, realÂly?
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Cameron: Huh?
Tony KynasÂton: And, um, of the, you can see it in the graph, itâs dropped from, in the last four years, itâs gone from 60 cents down to 10 cents, but, uh, I think over a longer t time periÂod, it may have even dropped more.
Uh, itâs a smash repair busiÂness from memÂoÂry. And,
Cameron: Yeah, thatâs right. Mm-hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: um, well maybe even like up to 10 years ago. Iâm not sure of the time periÂod anyÂway, but the insurÂance comÂpaÂnies decidÂed to improve their in the repair [00:22:00] marÂket for crash repairs. âcause they pay for those repairs most times. Um, by going out and buyÂing a lot of the spare parts, the wreckÂing yards that were proÂvidÂing spare parts.
Um, and so
that affectÂed ammaâs marÂgin whole lot. Uh, âcause they couldÂnât access to cheap parts. And um, yeah, uh, theyâd been slidÂing sideÂways or downÂwards ever since realÂly. Um, and they had a lot of, um,
board, rucÂtions along the way, which that often hapÂpens when comÂpaÂnies are in decline like that.
Um, but if, if theyâre turnÂing around, thatâs great.
Cameron: Well, you know, itâs one of those things, Iâve seen this before with stocks that are tradÂing at, you know, relÂaÂtiveÂly low levÂels. Uh, you can, they can go up quickÂly and they can go down just as quickÂly. So Iâm not, uh, sellÂing it. Well, maybe I should sell it and buy yacht, but, uh. I added them to one of the light portÂfoÂlios on the 10th of April for 6 cents.
Theyâre curÂrentÂly at [00:23:00] 11 cents, so theyâve gone up 75% in 60 days, which is always nice to see whether or not it stays there or not. Weâll see. were speakÂing about big caps before and I was just lookÂing through, uh, my portÂfoÂlios and Iâve have, Iâm sitÂting on an unusuÂal numÂber of big caps, TelÂstra, which I hold in. Uh, let me see, uh, four or five portÂfoÂlios includÂing my super, a couÂple of light portÂfoÂlios, and itâs been a posÂsiÂble recÂomÂmenÂdaÂtion for, uh, light subÂscribers at some point, but itâs up like 20 to 27% dependÂing on when I sugÂgestÂed. This is going back to the midÂdle of last year, July, August last year. But I was talkÂing to my mum about it, uh, the othÂer day.
Sheâs had TelÂstra shares for 25 years since though, since they first in 97 or whenÂevÂer it was, late [00:24:00] nineties. She said she bought them to hide the cash, so my dad couldÂnât spend it. She had some monÂey, I think from someÂthing. She got a payÂout for someÂthing my dad would usuÂalÂly just go, and if there was any cash in the bank, heâd go and blow it on a boat or some bullÂshit he didÂnât need.
So she bought TelÂstra shares and she said theyâve gone absoluteÂly nowhere. And I was like, that canât be right, sureÂly. And I pulled up the chart, the 25 year chart for TelÂstra. TelÂstraâs gone nowhere in 25 years. Like it bogÂgles my mind.
Tony KynasÂton: Why, you know TelÂstra,
Iâm a cusÂtomer of TelÂstra and Well, and
Cameron: am I.
Tony KynasÂton: to starÂlink down here, but I still have a mobile with
Cameron: Well, but they, I mean, itâs not a, itâs kind of a [00:25:00] duopÂoly they have in this counÂtry, more or less. Itâs them and Optus and a couÂple of minor comÂpaÂnies and resellers and that kinÂda stuff. But to own basiÂcalÂly a, a, a, a marÂket in the era of mobile phones and the interÂnet and streamÂing and blah, blah, blah.
And for their shares to have gone nowhere in 28 years. Theyâve gone up. Theyâve had periÂods when theyâve gone up, like just 90, 99, just before the.com crash. They were hit a peak, I think, and theyâve nevÂer realÂly recovÂered back to their 1999 levÂels. I was just stunned. I had no idea.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Although I think, um, you are lookÂing at the share price graph, but theyâve always yieldÂed pretÂty well. So I guess if you reinÂvestÂed the yield, um, theyâd look betÂter.
Cameron: Good point. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: But I
Cameron: been no capÂiÂtal appreÂciÂaÂtion in their price.
Tony KynasÂton: an infraÂstrucÂture stock. Yeah. It was a smart thing by the govÂernÂment.
I think John Howard did it in two tranchÂes, um, to sell off [00:26:00] TelÂstra. Uh, rather than ownÂing a busiÂness going nowhere, he may as well put it on the capÂiÂtal marÂket site. owned it. so it probÂaÂbly helped the govÂernÂmenÂtâs botÂtom line over the years, givÂen what youâve just said,
Cameron: Well, yes. I mean, I still would argue that there are good jusÂtiÂfiÂcaÂtions for the peoÂple to own critÂiÂcal infraÂstrucÂture and you know, can invest for the long term, for the benÂeÂfit of the counÂtry and not have to meet arbiÂtrary short term deadÂlines or, you know, uh, reportÂing meaÂsureÂments for shareÂholdÂers.
Tony KynasÂton: you are, youâre right. Dead set, right. But forÂevÂer. I mean, the MBN is a good examÂple of. Um, infraÂstrucÂture that hasÂnât been that good held by the govÂernÂment. Um, Iâm, I actuÂalÂly have some symÂpaÂthy to what youâre sayÂing, but I think thereâs also an arguÂment for, um, for re for recyÂcling some of these [00:27:00] assets.
So sell, sell TelÂstra and buy someÂthing else like ports or freeÂways and then them and et cetera, et cetera. Itâs one, one way of raisÂing capÂiÂtal to keep improvÂing infraÂstrucÂture in this counÂtry.
Cameron: Yeah, sure.
Tony KynasÂton: And in fact, the
Cameron: But I, you know, I,
Tony KynasÂton: tranche of TelÂstra went into formÂing the Future Fund, which I think has also
Cameron: I wonÂder how thatâs, has it
Tony KynasÂton: yeah.
Cameron: realÂly,
Tony KynasÂton: well, you could,
Cameron: itâs a,
Tony KynasÂton: itâs a bit like a, itâs a bit like a super fund. You could argue that they could have takÂen the monÂey and bought an index fund, um, which is basiÂcalÂly what their returns have been.
Uh, but you they also have to smooth out the volatilÂiÂty âcause they, theyâre payÂing, theyâre fundÂing the pubÂlic serÂvice, um, retireÂment, so they canât have as much volatilÂiÂty in their fund as an index fund. But yeah. Um, itâs, itâs done well.
Cameron: I mean, my gripes with TelÂstra, and Iâve told you this stoÂry before, go back to my days at Microsoft when I was takÂing all of the [00:28:00] TelÂstra senior execs over to SeatÂtle for meetÂings and they were telling me that they had, you know, theyâd spent bilÂlions of dolÂlars on putting glass fibre in the ground for broadÂband, but werenât gonna make it availÂable to AusÂtralians, um, until they had to. They just, and I said, I asked them, why did you do it? And they said to stop Optus being able to proÂvide broadÂband. And that sort of pissed me off âcause I wantÂed broadÂband. This is in the late nineties, and they wouldÂnât, I couldÂnât get broadÂband, even though the taxÂpayÂer had spent the monÂey to put the cable in the ground in the mid nineties before it was priÂvateÂly listÂed. And then they were just gonna leave it, sit there and not do nothÂing with it because. didÂnât have to. It pissed me off anyÂway.
Tony KynasÂton: And, to be fair, the curÂrent TelÂstra manÂageÂment, the CEOs, I think a year or two into her tenure, I mean, itâs, itâs up 27% or whatÂevÂer you said it was this year because, uh, I mean, my sort of high levÂel take on it was the part, the priÂor [00:29:00] CEOs set up TelÂstra be split. Um, so it would be a telÂco, but the infraÂstrucÂture side would be split out the, the what the polls and wisÂes itâs someÂtimes called.
and then the new CO came in and said, wait a minute, this is the side thatâs makÂing monÂey givÂen all the, um, investÂment going into data cenÂters in parÂticÂuÂlar. And so theyâve kept it and, uh. Sheâs been right, so, uh, well
HopeÂfulÂly they can
makÂing good deciÂsions like that.
Cameron: QanÂtas is anothÂer one that I hold in a numÂber of portÂfoÂlios, includÂing the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio and my super and a couÂple of light portÂfoÂlios. in one of those casÂes, which is one of the light portÂfoÂlios, I added it in SepÂtemÂber last year. Itâs up 55%
Tony KynasÂton: Hmm.
Cameron: QanÂtas since SepÂtemÂber last year. Um, some of the othÂer portÂfoÂlios, my super, I didÂnât add it until NovemÂber.
Itâs only up about 20% since NovemÂber. But still, itâs shockÂing to me to [00:30:00] see those sorts of large caps have that kind of appreÂciÂaÂtion over the course of a year. I, I kind of nevÂer expect that. I guess itâs just good timÂing, realÂly bought it at the right time.
Tony KynasÂton: Good timÂing, mate. Itâs a process. QanÂtas was on the buy list. I did a
Cameron: Thatâs the process that gives us the good timÂing.
Tony KynasÂton: I did a pulled pork, and it shut up from there. So, you know what more do you, what more do you want to explain QanÂtas apart from the fact they changed CEOs about the same time?
Cameron: I, I probÂaÂbly bought it a month after you did the pulled pork, so it crashed after you did the pulled pork. And then I bought it, and
Tony KynasÂton: Okay.
Cameron: yeah, I, I have a new rule in my checkÂlist now, which is, uh, wait a month until after Tony does a pulled pork and then buy it when itâs crashed. Uh, pinÂnaÂcle InvestÂment ManÂageÂment Group and Gold MinÂer Perseus MinÂing have been added to the ASX 100 as part of s and p ASX Indices changes effecÂtive [00:31:00] priÂor to marÂket open on the 23rd of June, announced by s and p Dow Jones indices. As a result of the June quarÂterÂly review, pinÂnaÂcle and Perseus have knocked UraÂniÂum Minor, PalÂadin EnerÂgy and Gas ComÂpaÂny, Viva EnerÂgy out of the ASX 100. Uh, meanÂwhile, healthÂcare provider, HealÂius and coal MinÂer stanÂmore resources have dropped out of the ASX 200 in favour of ship builder FurÂniÂture retailÂer.
Nick Scali. Uh, I wantÂed to just check in with you on we should expect now if Iâm right. Um, when a comÂpaÂny enters one of those indices, a lot of the big ETFs and the index funds, uh, have to buy them. So the share price should see a litÂtle bit of appreÂciÂaÂtion, and I assume the reverse is true. If they out of those things, they get sold off by the big funds.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah, thatâs, I mean, thatâs the rule of thumb. [00:32:00] Thereâs a couÂple of, uh, curve balls. One is those moveÂments are probÂaÂbly already in place, so got me, I own Perseus and itâs, itâs anothÂer stock which has done fanÂtasÂtiÂcalÂly well for me this year. So the fact that itâs been going up anyÂway means itâs canÂterÂing a highÂer index.
when the ETFs start buyÂing, itâll keep going up, but it, it, itâs as much a fact of, itâs, itâs, the trend is as much a fact of what it did before it hit the index, um, as what will hapÂpen after. In both, both casÂes, as we know, weâve spoÂken about Heus before. They did a big capÂiÂtal return to peoÂple and their.
Their share prices dropped draÂmatÂiÂcalÂly, has then takÂen them out of the index, which means the UTS will have to sell. But itâs kind of a conÂtinÂuÂaÂtion of a trend rather than someÂthing. itâs, itâs not unusuÂal to see that, um, there might be like a five or 10% growth stock price or decrease in the stock price after they enter as [00:33:00] their buy and sell.
howÂevÂer, itâs hard to sort of, these casÂes, pull that apart from the trends that were underÂway anyÂway. I mean, PerÂcys is gonna be
as the gold by the gold prices. It is by ETF buyÂing. I wouldâve thought
Cameron: Right. Yeah. Now Perseus has been good. Uh, Iâve hold that in a bunch of portÂfoÂlios as well. Letâs see. Um, my super have held it since April last year. Itâs up 67%.
Tony KynasÂton: s
Cameron: couÂple of posÂsiÂbles. Yeah. And, um, even in a couÂple of the light portÂfoÂlios, I added it March this year and itâs up 27% since then. So cauÂcus,
Tony KynasÂton: Hmm,
Cameron: uh, well thatâs all Iâve got apart from, um, a couÂple of quesÂtions.
Do you want me to do the quesÂtions first and then you can do your Paul pork.
Tony KynasÂton: way you want. I donât mind. Letâs do the quesÂtions.
Cameron: Letâs do that. [00:34:00] Yeah. Then I can have a nap. Jeff.
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, Iâm gonna drop some EastÂer eggs into the pulled pork. Just see if I can wake you up. Or maybe Iâll do it in the style of, uh, a ShakeÂspeareÂan actor.
Cameron: Yeah. Oh, please. Thatâll keep me awake. Jeff. Good mornÂing, cam. I hope you were well. Iâm very, Iâm insaneÂly well, Jeff. Iâm like in crazy shape, but donât tempt me. Iâll show Tony my abs again. I know he loves that. Pull my shirt up and show him how ripped I am.
Tony KynasÂton: Iâd
Cameron: â cause youâre a cold one. âcause you were too. He, youâre too like excitÂed to cool yourÂself down. He says, uh, just readÂing in the AFR about. SOL and checkÂing out the BrickÂworks mergÂer, would you slash TK conÂsidÂer SOL to be an LIC? I was readÂing a [00:35:00] few artiÂcles about their strucÂture and stratÂeÂgy. I couldÂnât see anyÂthing that specifÂiÂcalÂly says they are a licensed investÂment comÂpaÂny. ObviÂousÂly the marÂket strongÂly approves the mergÂer accordÂing to Stock. DocÂtor, how do you see the mergÂer in terms of a long-term valÂue investÂment? Mind you, with a prop calf, approxÂiÂmateÂly 20. We just donât go there right now on a side issue. My portÂfoÂlio is offiÂcialÂly in the noseÂbleed secÂtion, gone balÂlisÂtic like nevÂer before.
Iâm okay with that. Thank you Jeff. ConÂgratÂuÂlaÂtions Jeff.
Tony KynasÂton: Jeff. Thank you.
Cameron: didÂnât we have the CEO of
Tony KynasÂton: Todd
Cameron: SOL on the show last year?
Tony KynasÂton: did anothÂer pulled
done. Well,
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: well
Cameron: Done Well? Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, yeah,
Cameron: All thanks to you.
Tony KynasÂton: and Todd, mainÂly Todd.
Cameron: A litÂtle bit. LitÂtle bit him. Weâll give him a litÂtle bit of credÂit. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, yeah. So, um, I think to answer JefÂfâs quesÂtion, [00:36:00] sold patents and for a long time was a listÂed investÂment comÂpaÂny, um, and had a portÂfoÂlio of AusÂtralian shares.
And over time a couÂple of those have been spun out into New Hope CorÂpoÂraÂtion being one. Um, Iâm tryÂing to rememÂber what the othÂer, there was a telÂco, itâs either Vocus or TPG, I think. AnyÂway, so theyâve had all of sucÂcess with their portÂfoÂlio. but it has in recent years anyÂway, uh, moved into the unlistÂed space and now has a large part of its holdÂings in priÂvate, uh, credÂit, um, in unlistÂed comÂpaÂnies.
Uh, when we spoke to do he, Todd, he spoke of, doing a rollup of AusÂtralian swim schools, for examÂple, where kids go to learn to swim. um, and there was a couÂple of othÂer examÂples he had. So itâs not just AusÂtralia ASX shares in an LIC type strucÂture. Itâs, itâs more than that now. Um, a couÂple of years ago they merged with an LIC, which was just [00:37:00] ASX shares called MilÂton.
And I think they may have merged their portÂfoÂlio with MilÂtonâs or vice verÂsa. But the, the, but the listÂed equiÂty still only, I donât think theyâre in the majorÂiÂty of their. Of their, um, income or their, their, uh, investÂments at the moment. Um, and now that theyâve merged with BrickÂworks, uh, that cerÂtainÂly wouldÂnât be the case.
So, um, peoÂple can read about the mergÂer. BrickÂworks and, and Sol have for a long time had a cross holdÂing. So BrickÂworks has held, um, you know, someÂthing cirÂca of 20 to 30% of so pats and vice verÂsa. that was set up decades ago as a defense to the corÂpoÂrate Raiders of the eightÂies and nineties, the, um, homes of courts and the casÂes of the world.
And I. Um, it was seen as being an, um, a defense mechÂaÂnism to stop them from being takÂen over, and itâs worked that way for a long time. But itâs also been, itâs also been seen as a bit of a, [00:38:00] handÂbrake on their share prices because, uh, uh, uh, you, you kind of, if you wanÂna buy so patch, youâre also buyÂing a sh large shareÂholdÂing and brickÂworks and vice verÂsa.
Uh, and, and so, you know, if oneâs not doing well, it affects the othÂer, um, thatâs now been unwell because theyâve merged. So, um, thatâs one of the reaÂsons why the share price has gone up. A lot of peoÂple have been tryÂing to do that by forcÂing them through the courts to do it and hasÂnât, uh, they havenât been sucÂcessÂful in doing that.
But now that theyâve merged that, that kind of, um, reverse preÂmiÂums gone outÂta the share prices and theyâve both reratÂed upwards, so thatâs good. but no, I donât see them as a listÂed investÂment comÂpaÂny anyÂmore. Theyâre more like a, conÂglomÂerÂate like a West FarmÂers I think these days, uh, they arenât on our buy list âcause I looked up their QAV score.
Itâs, itâs 0.03 at the moment. So, Jeff said, their, their calf is, is still too high for us to have a look at, but they have been on the buy list in the past, [00:39:00] which is why we interÂviewed Todd. And they may well be there again in the future. âcause itâs a, itâs a qualÂiÂty comÂpaÂny.
Cameron: We donât hold them. We donât hold them. I donât hold them. We donât hold them. Hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: a shame. My
Cameron: shame.
Tony KynasÂton: heâs been a
shareÂholdÂer. I him durÂing the week and I said, do you still hold SOL? And he went, came back with a big thumbs up. So good on,
Cameron: Mm Yeah. Thatâs interÂestÂing BusiÂness, like, I, I still think of them as chemists
Tony KynasÂton: yes, thatâs
Cameron: uh, think of them as chemists and now they own a brick comÂpaÂny thatâs, well, they are a brick comÂpaÂny, realÂly. Itâs, uh, strange.
Tony KynasÂton: theyâre partÂly a brick comÂpaÂny. Um, and BrickÂworks had a list of investÂment comÂpaÂny spun out of it too. BrickÂworks InvestÂments, BKI. So Iâm not sure. to go and have a look as to what the holdÂing now, and that is because of the mergÂer. But, um, thatâs a anothÂer
investÂment comÂpaÂny as well.
[00:40:00] And,
might recall Bob MilÂner, who was the, heâs the chairÂman, is the descenÂdant of the origÂiÂnal, pharÂmaÂcy ownÂers. when
was a chemist chain. He is a regÂuÂlar attendee at BerkÂshire HathÂawayâs annuÂal meetÂing and has someÂtimes been called AusÂtraliÂaâs WarÂren and BufÂfett. So what
Cameron: Hmm
Tony KynasÂton: of peoÂple claim that MonÂiÂca, I dunÂno if heâs ever claimed it, but heâs been givÂen it.
So,
yeah. Over the
Cameron: we know you, you are of the real AusÂtralian WarÂren BufÂfet.
Tony KynasÂton: Oh, thatâs, harsh on
Cameron: Tm.
Tony KynasÂton: Maybe Iâm, Iâm
age.
I
Cameron: Harsh on WarÂren.
Tony KynasÂton: anyÂway.
Cameron: RealÂly?
Tony KynasÂton: Hmm.
Cameron: Because you have same glassÂes. Is that what it is? Itâs, itâs in the glassÂes. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: And, um, our
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: and, uh, interÂest in many and vari, uh, many and varÂied in difÂferÂent things, not just investÂing.
Cameron: [00:41:00] Yeah, thatâs true. Uh, well, there you go, Jeff. Hope that helps. JorÂdan has a quesÂtion. Uh, I was askÂing chat GPT about any potenÂtial conÂcerns in PPMâs annuÂal report before adding it to my portÂfoÂlio. One point it raised was $7 milÂlion in loans to key manÂageÂment, perÂsonÂnel and direcÂtors. Is this someÂthing that would conÂcern Tony?
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, no. âcause I did have a look at, um, the report. and Iâm sorÂry, Iâm just lookÂing up PPMI think itâs at the top of our buy list, isnât it? Yeah. PepÂper monÂey.
Cameron: It is.
Tony KynasÂton: And itâs done
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: too. Iâve noticed it kicked up, um, recentÂly. It may actuÂalÂly have reportÂed its results. I didÂnât pay much attenÂtion to it âcause itâs a.
It not a large A DT, but thatâs done very well lateÂly. So good on you, if you bought it. Um, the quesÂtion about, uh, manÂageÂment loans, uh, to perÂsonÂnel and direcÂtors I was able to solve by [00:42:00] lookÂing at the a, the, um, annuÂal report. It reports someÂthing like $7 milÂlion or sevÂen and half milÂlion dolÂlars in direcÂtorâs loans.
Looks like about three of those, 3 milÂlion of those is, uh, for shares. So, um, I think PPM may have acquired a comÂpaÂny and all the staff it brought across from that comÂpaÂny into manÂageÂment had, borÂrowÂings to pay for their shares and. um, gave them loans to be able to transÂfer seamÂlessÂly across into pepÂper shareÂholdÂing, um, withÂout trigÂgerÂing capÂiÂtal gains tax by sellÂing and rebuyÂing.
so thatâs half of it, or nearÂly half of it. The othÂer, the othÂer 4.4 milÂlion was listÂed as loans proÂvidÂed in the norÂmal course of pepÂper monÂey, uh, proÂvidÂing mortÂgages and asset finance. So it sounds like couÂple direcÂtors have, um, out mortÂgages with, uh, pepÂper, which is their busiÂness, so thatâs good to see them their own cookÂing, if, [00:43:00] if Iâm readÂing that corÂrectÂly.
So, no, I donât have a probÂlem, JorÂdan, with either of those loans. Itâs not like itâs the, the comÂpaÂnyâs makÂing loans to direcÂtors who are then going out and buyÂing artÂwork or FerÂraris or anyÂthing like that, in my opinÂion from what I can see. So, um, yeah, donât have a probÂlem. Shares at the top of the buy list and itâs doing realÂly well, so itâs hard to find a reaÂson not to buy them.
Cameron: If they were borÂrowÂing the monÂey to go out and buy FerÂrari and artÂworks, would that conÂcern you?
Tony KynasÂton: absoluteÂly.
Cameron: I.
Tony KynasÂton: thatâs a misÂuse of
Cameron: itâs not.
Tony KynasÂton: thought. Itâs, itâs, itâs reaÂsonÂably stanÂdard pracÂtice for comÂpaÂnies to loan their key staff to them buy shares. Um, I used to have such a facilÂiÂty at, I think I did at Coles Mine. Uh, maybe not. Maybe, yeah, maybe I didÂnât. Maybe it was, um, uh, they may have just been decreed on a deferred basis, but yeah, Iâve seen it before.
CerÂtainÂly. And annuÂal reports that comÂpaÂnies will, under cerÂtain [00:44:00] cirÂcumÂstances, loan their, um, their key manÂageÂment monÂey to buy stock in the comÂpaÂny.
Cameron: Right. Okay. Thank you, JorÂdan. Thank you, Jeff. Uh, if anyÂone has any quesÂtions, please send them through.
Tony KynasÂton: JorÂdan. JorÂdanâs a long
which is good. I.
Cameron: Yeah, he loves to help us out by askÂing quesÂtions. We appreÂciÂate that. Iâm putting him top of my list for the next Kingâs birthÂday honÂours list. Yeah. He can be, he can be my comÂpanÂion.
Tony KynasÂton: right?
Cameron: I Did you ever, did you ever watch FireÂfly?
Tony KynasÂton: Oh, I did.
Cameron: Joss WheÂdon show, you know, a comÂpanÂion in that was basiÂcalÂly a high class prosÂtiÂtute, was a comÂpanÂion. So when I heard that your sisÂter-in-law was made a comÂpanÂion, I was like, well, conÂgratÂuÂlaÂtions to her.
Tony KynasÂton: Uh,
Cameron: Thatâs where, thatâs the first thing I assoÂciate with comÂpanÂion that, or Dr. Who
Tony KynasÂton: yes.
Cameron: [00:45:00] used to be an assisÂtant. Now itâs a, oh, did you see what hapÂpened at the end of the seaÂson of Dr. Who? Did you hear?
Tony KynasÂton: I, I saw a clip, uh, on the regenÂerÂaÂtions. Thatâs what you meant?
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, yeah. I did,
Cameron: Uh, bonkers.
Tony KynasÂton: or bad, quite frankly.
Cameron: No one can. Youâre, youâre in the majorÂiÂty there. No one knows what the hell it means. Yeah. Well, yeah. I think itâs a, I think itâs a, uh, furÂphy. I donât think sheâs gonna be the docÂtor. I, because it didÂnât, because in the credÂits it said shoot gat as the docÂtor, Jody WhitakÂer had a cameo. Jody WhitakÂer is the docÂtor and introÂducÂing BilÂly Piper. It didÂnât say as the docÂtor. So the fan, fan base is sayÂing that, uh, itâs, uh, might be just a furÂphy, like a, a hicÂcup in the regenÂerÂaÂtion process.
Tony KynasÂton: of
Cameron: got their chanÂnels mixed up. Yeah. [00:46:00] Donât cross the streams. Yeah. Timey wimey stuff. Any who, uh, you wanÂna get into? Who, who are you doing the Paul Pork on today?
Tony?
Tony KynasÂton: itâs, a kind of a ShakeÂspeareÂan name camp, so maybe I should do it in my ShakeÂspeareÂan voice. FleetÂwood from the GreenÂwood in SherÂlock.
Cameron: the bloody Fleet Wood. No, that was Kingswood.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah. My, my father owned a Kingswood, the car I learned to driÂve in
Cameron: Yeah. We had at Kingswood when I was growÂing up, whatÂevÂer hapÂpened to Kingswood? What hapÂpened to them? Were they HoldÂen
Tony KynasÂton: by
Yeah,
Cameron: uh,
Tony KynasÂton: the
Itor. Yeah. So Iâm doing a pulled pork on FleetÂwood, um, which I disÂcovÂered on the bio list after a long absence today. Uh, I do hasÂten to add, theyâve gone up a lot recentÂly and theyâre curÂrentÂly a Josephine, so donât rush out. And. Look to buy them. They, theyâll, theyâll need to turn up again, even though [00:47:00] theyâre way above their byline, a DT stock of around 500,000.
So, um, suit a lot of peoÂple. I own them myself many years ago. I donât own them now. And back when I owned them, they were a carÂaÂvan manÂuÂfacÂturÂer. Um, and they still do a litÂtle bit of that, but theyâve, theyâve moved on since then. And, uh, they seem to have kicked some goals when they branched out into accomÂmoÂdaÂtion conÂstrucÂtion.
Uh, and they call it modÂuÂlar conÂstrucÂtion. And then theyâve, they also operÂate a couÂple of modÂuÂlar vilÂlages that theyâve built, so think sort of minÂing camps. Um, but theyâre a bit. BetÂter than that that the, one of them is now like a perÂmaÂnent resÂiÂdence for in Port HeadÂland that they, they did in Con that they built and then operÂate in conÂjuncÂtion with the WA govÂernÂment.
Uh, but they also operÂate a, a vilÂlage in Karth, which looks like itâs being used Mabb for, uh, for, uh, peoÂple in the minÂing indusÂtry. Theyâve, theyâve kind of moved on though, [00:48:00] just from being able to build minÂing camps. And it was realÂly interÂestÂing lookÂing at what they do in, in the area of whatâs called modÂuÂlar conÂstrucÂtion.
So this is basiÂcalÂly a buildÂing or a house in a facÂtoÂry and then takÂing it to the site and installing it. there are lots of benÂeÂfits that, uh, the least of which is, um, time. So quote, uh, someÂthing like itâs, um, four weeks to build, uh, four months, sorÂry, to build a house and their facÂtoÂry verÂsus, uh, um, 55 weeks for a traÂdiÂtionÂal build.
So thatâs a big savÂing in terms of both cost and time. and they, they also point out itâs also a savÂing to the comÂmuÂniÂty because you. Donât have, uh, as much conÂstrucÂtion noise and vehiÂcles, um, in the area, buildÂing a, a buildÂing from scratch. So thereâs a few, quite a few benÂeÂfits of, um, of this style of conÂstrucÂtion.
And in the last 12 months, they havenât just been buildÂing housÂes. They built priÂmaÂry schools, [00:49:00] a womÂenâs shelÂter, a kinderÂgarten, 60 new homes, a comÂmuÂniÂty cenÂter, sports changÂing sports, ground changÂing rooms, and, um, many othÂer demountÂaÂbles for, uh, leisure parks and things like that. So been doing realÂly well in the last, uh, 12 months.
And itâs cerÂtainÂly opened my eyes to the idea of modÂuÂlar conÂstrucÂtion, which, um, know, is kind of flavour of the month now because of the, um, uh, focus on affordÂable housÂing the govÂernÂment has. one thing that theyâre tarÂgetÂing is to work with, uh. someÂtimes charÂiÂties, but local develÂopÂers or local govÂernÂments, um, to apply for grants from the $10 bilÂlion HousÂing AusÂtralia Future Fund, which has been set up in the last year or so, a half.
uh, thereâs, thereâs some examÂples on their webÂsite where they have work with peoÂple, parÂticÂuÂlarÂly in regionÂal and rurÂal areas to build, um, low cost housÂing quickÂly, uh, [00:50:00] for local areas. of course, the othÂer probÂlem that local comÂmuÂniÂties face in the regionÂal and rurÂal areas is access to trade, tradesÂpeoÂple to, uh, do the work.
And so thereâs ob oftenÂtimes a backÂlog in rurÂal areas to get things built, um, because the tradesÂpeoÂple are either workÂing out west in the mines or theyâre, um, in, um, you know, highÂly paid conÂstrucÂtion work in the city. So, interÂestÂing, sort of, uh, comÂpaÂny I think, Eh, buildÂing, the actuÂal build side of things, uh, is, is cerÂtainÂly doing well for them.
And if I give you the figÂures from six months ago, so they have changed a bit now, but to give you an idea of what the, um, the, the sort of breakÂdown for the comÂpaÂny is about $300 milÂlion of revÂenue and $2 milÂlion of profÂit comes from buildÂing the modÂuÂlar conÂstrucÂtion. But about, uh, 30, only 33 milÂlion in revÂenue, but 11.5 milÂlion in profÂit comes from operÂatÂing these comÂmuÂniÂties.
So they basiÂcalÂly have two, sea [00:51:00] pool in Raha and Osprey in Port HeadÂland are genÂerÂatÂing quite a bit of monÂey. Um, the majorÂiÂty of their profÂit from the operÂaÂtion of those, uh, comÂmuÂniÂties, then they have their, their third. BusiÂness secÂtion called RV, um, recreÂationÂal VehiÂcles, uh, which is comÂprised basiÂcalÂly of a comÂpaÂny called NorthÂern and anothÂer one called cmic, which proÂvides, uh, builds, uh, accesÂsories for the RV indusÂtry.
Um, thatâs only $75 milÂlion of revÂenue and, and about $1.3 milÂlion of profÂit. And as I said, theyâre all June 24 numÂbers and theyâve changed since then. But, um, side had to take a bit of a restrucÂturÂing proÂviÂsion recentÂly âcause theyâre, theyâre facÂing highÂer costs and, um, uh, lowÂer sales. And so theyâre strugÂgling a bit.
But, uh, the key, the key driÂver metÂric for this comÂpaÂny seems to be the occuÂpanÂcy rate for Sea RipÂple and Osprey. So thatâs someÂthing if investors want to, um, track a metÂric for how theyâre going, have a look [00:52:00] at how, uh, occuÂpanÂcy is going in the, in the comÂmuÂniÂties that they manÂage for FleetÂwood. I turned 60 last year.
So it startÂed in 1964 and it was startÂed in, in the backÂyard, uh, buildÂing carÂaÂvans. And the carÂaÂvans, uh, went on to be built under the Coel brand, which peoÂple of my age will recÂogÂnize. it took a while, but it listÂed on the ASX in 1987 and in the earÂly two thouÂsands, FleetÂwood acquired parts manÂuÂfacÂturÂer, CMIC and the WindÂsor CarÂaÂvan brand.
So a couÂple of tried and trustÂed carÂaÂvan brands, um, from my youth, uh, in their staÂble. In 2004, uh, FleetÂwood conÂvertÂed the carÂaÂvan parkÂing kartha into the sea RipÂple. modÂuÂlar home site and was using it for local workÂers and itâs still an operÂaÂtion. Um, some, whatâs that? Fifth, 11 years latÂer, 2010, FleetÂwood expandÂed to the West Coast âcause they were startÂed off in Perth.[00:53:00]
They expandÂed to the West coast by acquirÂing BRB modÂuÂlar homes 2014, fleet would built nearÂly 300 affordÂable homes in Port HeadÂland conÂjuncÂtion with the WA govÂernÂment, and they still manÂage that, uh, that comÂmuÂniÂty called the Osprey VilÂlage. in 2018, like this camp I, Iâll test to see if youâre awake.
In 2018, fleet would sold the Coral Mill and WindÂsor CarÂaÂvan brands to ApolÂlo Tourism and Leisure.
Cameron: Uh, when you, as soon as you menÂtioned RVs before I was gonna go, when, when does ApolÂlo tourism come into this stoÂry?
Tony KynasÂton: So, yep.
Cameron: damnit.
Tony KynasÂton: Pass and
Cameron: that anyÂmore. They changed their name, didÂnât they? After, after we slagged them off enough on this show, they slagged off. They had to change their name. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: merged with a New Zealand comÂpaÂny. Uh,
yeah. So they offloaded in 2018, so theyâre doing well. PLO tourism took the hosÂpiÂtal pass. Theyâve had some probÂlems in 2020. [00:54:00] Uh, they bought, uh, FleetÂwood bought ModÂuÂlar BuildÂing SoluÂtions in New South Wales and became the largest modÂuÂlar buildÂing comÂpaÂny in AusÂtralia.
And in 2019, they went back to the Well and purÂchased NorthÂern RV raisÂing $60 milÂlion. And Iâm sure they should have, at, uh, how well things are going in the othÂer sec, othÂer secÂtions, and Iâll that up with their latÂest results, revÂenue is up 19%. So theyâve had, uh, a good year and these results came out recentÂly.
EBIT Rose from. 1.9 milÂlion to 18.3 milÂlion, half on half. So that was very good. Uh, thereâs been a big boost to operÂatÂing cashÂflow, which went from negÂaÂtive 3 milÂlion to plus 24 milÂlion. Um, uh, but they did take a $6 milÂlion impairÂment to the goodÂwill in the RV diviÂsion, and they also incurred, uh, restrucÂturÂing costs to reduce the cost base.
BasiÂcalÂly, made some peoÂple redunÂdant in the RV unit. Uh, the divÂiÂdends increase from 2.50 [00:55:00] cents to 11.50 cents. Thatâs quite a big, um, uh, increase. And, and I made the note that, uh, that thatâs a good sign givÂen that, um, direcÂtors feel comÂfortÂable with the profÂit increase conÂtinÂuÂing. HowÂevÂer, I found out was the payÂout ratio was a hunÂdred perÂcent of net profÂit after tax, which is the fleet with polÂiÂcy.
So it likeÂly, it likeÂly means two things that if they donât, um. ConÂtinÂue to make that kind of monÂey, the divÂiÂdend will come down. but it also means that if theyâre givÂing out, uh, if, if theyâre payÂing out all their profÂit as divÂiÂdends, then the next time they wanÂna make an acquiÂsiÂtion, thereâll be anothÂer capÂiÂtal raisÂing, or itâs likeÂly to be anothÂer capÂiÂtal ratÂing.
So that needs to be takÂen into account by peoÂple because, um, as weâve seen from the, uh, excuse me, excuse me. we saw, I, I was chokÂing on my capÂiÂtal raisÂing there camp as, as weâve seen from the, the NorthÂern Rivers acquiÂsiÂtion, they donât always work out. Um, and, and the othÂer thing [00:56:00] about capÂiÂtal raisÂings is they often, they someÂtimes occur when youâre not ready to put the monÂey in.
So can be, um. A difÂfiÂcult one for someÂtimes for investors. So if I, if I have the MD here, I quesÂtion him on why thereâs a hunÂdred perÂcent of impact being paid out. I would like to perÂsonÂalÂly see less being paid out as divÂiÂdends and more being banked, to fund future acquiÂsiÂtions or whatÂevÂer else they need in the way of CapEx.
thatâs, um, a bit of a backÂground on FleetÂwood and what they do. QAV numÂbers, Iâm using a price of $2 71, which is 97% of conÂsenÂsus. TarÂget IV one is 58 cents, iv two is $3 and 5 cents, so we can buy them for less than IV two. Uh, yield is is good, 5.17%, but a litÂtle bit less than what we need to score on the checkÂlist.
DocÂtor finanÂcial health and trend is strong and steady. Stock Edia qualÂiÂty rank is 91, which is good. And overÂall 98, which is excelÂlent too. Uh, f score in stock [00:57:00] Edia is sevÂen out of nine, which is quite high. Um, so Stock Edia uh, gives it ticks. for this comÂpaÂny is 21, which is a litÂtle bit high, but itâs the lowÂest in the last three years.
And they havenât had a PE for all of the last three years. The three years ago they werenât makÂing monÂey. So we can only comÂpare it for the last two years, but it is the lowÂest in those, uh, last, uh, two periÂods. Pr/OpCaf is five point, uh oh six times, so thatâs very good. Net equiÂty per share is a dolÂlar 79 and plus 30 is $2 33 plus 30%.
So, uh, again, slightÂly lowÂer than the share price, so we canât buy it for book valÂue. Uh, foreÂcast earnÂings per share growth, howÂevÂer, is 166%. earnÂings per share over, uh, earnÂings per share growth over PE is, uh, very high 6.9 times. So this is one of the casÂes where we have a growth stock on the valÂue borÂrow list.
So thatâs, um, thing, which doesÂnât always occur, but, [00:58:00] um, bodes well. So I guess a score of two for the fact that the foreÂcast earnÂings per share growth is so high. doesÂnât have an ownÂer founder. Um, was foundÂed by, uh, a chap in his backÂyard in Perth in 1964, but, um, heâs no longer a shareÂholdÂer.
Uh, it does have a recent upturn since the last results and, but doesÂnât have conÂsisÂtentÂly increasÂing equiÂty. So all in all, the comÂpaÂny gets 13 out of 16 for qualÂiÂty or 81%. So kind of simÂiÂlar to the StockÂoÂpeÂdia rankÂing and the QAV score is 0.16. So itâs a, sort of midÂpoint on the buy list risks and opporÂtuÂniÂties.
Well, um, think thereâs always a risk of a capÂiÂtal raisÂing if youâre payÂing out all your profÂit, as, uh, as divÂiÂdends. So I, I see that as a risk. Itâs, some peoÂple may not, if theyâre hapÂpy to stump up next time, um, this comÂpaÂny goes shopÂping, but I donât like it myself perÂsonÂalÂly. Uh, othÂer risk is depenÂdenÂcy on the [00:59:00] vilÂlage occuÂpanÂcy rates.
Um. In Osprey and the othÂer place at Kartha, uh, requires conÂtinÂued investÂment in mainÂteÂnance and, uh, upgrades to keep them attracÂtive. So that seems to be workÂing for them now, so I canât comÂplain about that, but it, it might become a risk as the, the homes age, uh, risk of a downÂturn the minÂing boom, um, will affect occuÂpanÂcy in Port HeadÂland and raha.
So, I would, if I was again, talkÂing to the MD of this comÂpaÂny, Iâd ask them, uh, do they have plans to diverÂsiÂfy away from minÂing areas? Uh, someÂthing in a, anothÂer, rurÂal area might, um, help to help âem to do that. Um, or if they pick up fundÂing from the govÂernÂment through the half fund and they can perÂhaps even build someÂthing on, uh, the outÂskirts of a city.
Which might be attracÂtive to peoÂple if they can run it, um, then, um, that might be a diverÂsiÂfiÂcaÂtion away from a minÂing town. [01:00:00] Uh, so thatâs an opporÂtuÂniÂty for them. I see the act to access the half fund, um, and, uh, more conÂstrucÂtion and potenÂtialÂly, um, manÂageÂment rights from, uh, buildÂing those kinds of comÂmuÂniÂties.
And the othÂer opporÂtuÂniÂty, which theyâve talked about but havenât done yet, is to get into the build to rent space. So thereâs been some law changes recentÂly, or maybe theyâve moved. They, theyâve hapÂpened, uh, allowÂing, uh, comÂpaÂnies to build apartÂments or housÂes and then rent them out withÂout ever sellÂing them.
itâs a modÂel which, uh, I saw in CanaÂda. I wasÂnât always a fan of it, um, because. Over the years, uh, you know, apartÂment blocks in the build to rent secÂtor can get quite run down because of the, the imperÂaÂtive on the comÂpaÂnies runÂning them to get a return and to spend as litÂtle as posÂsiÂble on, on mainÂteÂnance, CapEx and mainÂteÂnance costs.
They can, they can become, um, uh, quite run down over time. Um, you know, so Iâm hopÂing what hapÂpens in [01:01:00] AusÂtralia learns from that. And there are, there are approÂpriÂate rules and regÂuÂlaÂtions in place. But anyÂway, that aside build to rent would be an opporÂtuÂniÂty for this comÂpaÂny. So thatâs, um, FleetÂwood, itâs, uh, itâs doing well at the moment.
Cameron: Mm. Yeah. And we, uh, hold them in one of the light portÂfoÂlios. Bought them back in March at $2 40. Theyâre up about 15% since then. So thatâs not bad for a couÂple of months,
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Cameron: months. Doing very well. Thank you, tk. Thatâs it. After hours, I went with my boys to see balÂleÂriÂna last night. Heard about balÂleÂriÂna.
Tony KynasÂton: have not. No.
Cameron: Itâs new, uh, spinÂoff from the John Wick uniÂverse
Tony KynasÂton: Iâve heard
Cameron: I. Anna, uh, Amis, I think her name is as the lead. So a female led John Wick film. Lots of [01:02:00] over the top ridicuÂlous, uh, shootouts and knife fights and throw fights, and, uh, just over the top. And we all enjoyed it. It was good. RealÂly, if you like the John Wick films, which I do, itâs, uh, done by the same team, the same levÂel of qualÂiÂty, and sheâs great.
Anna Armas, whatÂevÂer her name is, gorÂgeous and, you know, pulls it off like the fight scenes. Itâs, gets beatÂen around a lot and goes hard and itâs got all the cast, you know, from the John Wick films. Ian McShane, Lance RedÂdick, uh, was in it too, like before he died. Lance RedÂdick shot this. AngelÂiÂca HousÂton, whoâs lookÂing realÂly weird. DunÂno what kind of work sheâs had done, but, uh, itâs not, not
Tony KynasÂton: Thatâs a
Cameron: And, um, yeah, and GabÂby Burn, Gabrielle Burn is the main bad guy in it. Havenât seen Gabrielle burn for a long time, so itâs good to see him [01:03:00] back. InstaÂgram, me too.
Tony KynasÂton: What was the incitÂing
Cameron: Keanu has a cameo in it.
Tony KynasÂton: someÂone, shoot a dog?
Cameron: No, her father got killed when she was a child and she got takÂen into AngelÂiÂca HousÂtonâs orgaÂniÂzaÂtion.
Ian McShane
Tony KynasÂton: I.
Cameron: knew her father. Her father was part of a group of assasÂsins. Ian McShane takes her to AngelÂiÂca HousÂton, who runs the that Keanu Reeves was part of. When she trains her to be a, she runs like a balÂlet theÂater,
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Cameron: her to be a balÂleÂriÂna slash assasÂsin.
Tony KynasÂton: okay.
Cameron: Iâm still not sure what the point of trainÂing them as balÂleriÂnas is.
âcause she nevÂer apparÂentÂly, âcause one of the sort of subÂplots is her best friend in the balÂlet school. DoesÂnât make the cut as an assasÂsin, but ends up with the lead in the perÂforÂmance of Swan Lake, which the main charÂacÂter goes and sees at some point. So if you donât make it as an assasÂsin, you, you can become a world class balÂleÂriÂna anyÂway. But, uh, she [01:04:00] becomes an assasÂsin. But it is good. Itâs a lot of fun. Can recÂomÂmend
Tony KynasÂton: someÂthing to fall back on.
Cameron: Yes. SomeÂthing to fall. You can fall back on your balÂlet skills if you canât make it in the cutÂthroat world of proÂfesÂsionÂal assasÂsins. But itâs like, I, I just love the, the artiÂfice, uh, of the whole John Wick thing where, you know, everyÂbody is an assasÂsin. Sheâs the, the main chicks at this. Um. PerÂforÂmance of Swan Lake when itâs decidÂed that, uh, sheâs actuÂalÂly on the outs and thereâs a bounÂty put on her head. So thereâs a bounÂty of like $4 milÂlion put on her head, and it goes out to the assasÂsin netÂwork. And you see like every third perÂson in the theÂater watchÂing Swan Lake, their phones go off and they look at it and theyâre like, aha. So the world is full of going to Swan Lake, who are realÂly assasÂsins, just bitÂing their time, waitÂing for a conÂtract.
Tony KynasÂton: the balÂleriÂnas got
Cameron: so yeah, it was fun.
Tony KynasÂton: Check their phones durÂing [01:05:00] the
Cameron: That wouldâve been good. Yeah,
Tony KynasÂton: Uh
Cameron: no, it was fun. It was good stuff. Yeah. Yeah.
Tony KynasÂton: Nice.
Cameron: What about you?
Tony KynasÂton: Uh, have you seen DepartÂment Q yet? Thatâs come out on NetÂflix in the last couÂple of weeks.
Cameron: No. What is that?
Tony KynasÂton: good. Uh, it, itâs a, itâs a ScotÂtish remake of a ScanÂdiÂnaÂvian noir or book. Um,
itâs, itâs good.
Um, itâs a cold case series. Uh, the lead detecÂtive gets his, gets shot in the openÂing scenes and then comes back and, uh, isnât seen to be well enough âcause of PTSD or whatÂevÂer to be back on active duty. So they set up a cold case departÂment in the baseÂment and give it to him, and he goes off and solves the case, um, with a, you know, a couÂple of ragÂtag peoÂple helpÂing him.
But, um, yeah, itâs, I realÂly enjoyed it. So, to JenÂny, if you, if you like, uh, [01:06:00] ShetÂland and those kinds of ScotÂtish detecÂtive stoÂries, itâs right up your street. But, uh, yeah, realÂly enjoyÂable. Good watch.
Cameron: Hmm. Just lookÂing it up. RatÂings are pretÂty good. Hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: that was good. Um,
Cameron: what else?
Tony KynasÂton: uh, and last night I watched the comÂplete unknown got round to watchÂing that. Have you seen that TimÂoÂthy Shaima, Bob Dylan biopic?
Cameron: the Bob Dylan biopic. No, not yet. Theyâre good.
Tony KynasÂton: good. Yeah. RealÂly enjoyed it. Um, I, Iâm not a shalÂlow Mabb fan, but I think he did a realÂly good job in this. Um, and, uh, itâs, itâs basiÂcalÂly the backÂstoÂry to Dylan going elecÂtric.
Thatâs how the, the movie ends at that periÂod. And all the upheaval in changÂing from being a friend of Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie Joan Baez to, um, to. more of a rock and roll band and star, uh, itâs, itâs good. JohnÂny Cash is in it. Woody Guthrie, [01:07:00] Pete Seeger, great, great betrayÂal by Ed NorÂton of Pete Seeger.
Um,
Cameron: Oh yeah, right.
Tony KynasÂton: but, um, the othÂer,
othÂer
Cameron: but.
Tony KynasÂton: that the whole sort of back backÂdrop to the movie remindÂed me of curÂrent times in the us. I mean, they, a movie set durÂing the freeÂdom rides, the civÂil unrest, the
of JâF-K-R-FâK, MalÂcolm X, all those kinds of things.
um, itâs, it, it, I
if it set out to do that, but it cerÂtainÂly, that was a point that was pushed home to me.
Cameron: I, um, yeah, I was talkÂing to my boys last night just about the analoÂgies between whatâs hapÂpenÂing today in the sixÂties. You know, I menÂtioned this is the first time since 65, I think, that a US presÂiÂdent has called in the NationÂal Guard withÂout the request comÂing from a state govÂerÂnor. Um, but how, you know, there was a lot of bad stuff going on in the US in [01:08:00] the sixÂties, but it was a difÂferÂent, there was a lot of difÂferÂent. Things comÂpared to today too. Uh, LBJ was a lot of things, um, that were bad. Iâve, Iâve read a lot of biograÂphies on LBJ and, uh, he was a bad, bad, bad, bad man, but he wasÂnât DonÂald Trump. Like he was a difÂferÂent kind of bad man. You know, he still believed to a cerÂtain degree in the rule of law and democÂraÂcy and whatÂevÂer. It didÂnât run for a secÂond term, et cetera, et cetera. But yeah, he was a bad dude.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah.
Cameron: the stoÂry that, um, sorÂry. Go.
Tony KynasÂton: no, I was just gonna say perÂhaps he obeyed the rule of law âcause he didÂnât have Trump to patent himÂself on. DidÂnât make he
with it.
Cameron: Well, the thing that I think a lot of peoÂple dunÂno about LBJ is the. Day that Kennedy was assasÂsiÂnatÂed. CouÂple of things. Um, the Kennedys hatÂed LBJ, BobÂby and [01:09:00] Jack both hatÂed him. They were so, he was forced on them to be JackÂâs runÂning mate in the 59 elecÂtion. They would gonna get rid of him. He knew that off the tickÂet.
âcause Kennedy was gonna run for his secÂond term. They were gonna get him off the tickÂet. They hatÂed him and he hatÂed them. It went both ways and he knew he, this was his last shot, his dream since he was a kid, he was one of these guys when he was 10 years old. Told everyÂone he was gonna be presÂiÂdent one day and had been his entire life.
And he knew that if, if he got kicked off the tickÂet, that was it. He was too old to, to have any chance. And there was a murÂder triÂal going on that he was impliÂcatÂed in the day Kennedy was assasÂsiÂnatÂed. He, there was gonna be eviÂdence brought forÂward in the triÂal that he was impliÂcatÂed. âcause he used to, you know, he was his senÂaÂtor from Texas and he had, had, peoÂple had been whacked and he was assoÂciÂatÂed with that.
A guy that worked for him went to jail for murÂder, like doing, peoÂple killed. [01:10:00] and he was invi, he was gonna be called as, uh, as, um, someÂbody who was involved in this. He was going to probÂaÂbly end up in jail, conÂnectÂed with this murÂder. But then he became presÂiÂdent when Kennedy died. And, you know, no more was heard about it, it all went away, got buried.
So, uh, a lot of dirt on LBJ.
Tony KynasÂton: And that was an
Cameron: Um.
Tony KynasÂton: the, the movie too, the comÂplete unknown. But thereâs a scene where BronÂchos readÂing about the, readÂing the news, itâs the RussÂian MisÂsile CriÂsis. Um, you know, and, and basiÂcalÂly, uh, the presÂiÂdent comes on and upshot is, uh. of New York think theyâre gonna die overnight, that thereâs gonna be a RussÂian invaÂsion, and the misÂsiles are gonna launch and be a retalÂiÂaÂtion.
And cerÂtainÂly thatâs how it, it appeared. If you lisÂten to Cronkite and JFK, um, so
Cameron: Ooh.
Tony KynasÂton: looks out at his apartÂment winÂdow and sees every othÂer TV set in the, in the city on sayÂing the same thing. Sees peoÂple startÂing to flee in cars. You canât get a [01:11:00] taxi. And he just grabs his guiÂtar and walks down to the local, big, big club and starts playÂing guiÂtar.
And thereâs enough peoÂple in there as an audiÂence just, you know, sort of thinks if itâs my last night, this is how Iâm going out. uh, Joan Baez tries to flee the city and hears the music and goes down and they hook up. And then the next mornÂing they wake up and Cronkiteâs on the news again, sayÂing, well, it was a criÂsis, was avertÂed and weâre, weâre safe again.
And itâs just like, you know, it was a great litÂtle paraÂble of, of, uh, how to react durÂing that kind of criÂsis.
Cameron: With Joan Byers. Thatâs Thatâs what she took her out of it. Yeah. I find music biopics like that, a hit and miss. Um, the JohnÂny Cash one that Wakim Phoenix did. I enjoyed, but queen one, I didÂnât like most of them, I, you know, they just seem to be two thin slivÂers of someÂthing and I donât know,
Tony KynasÂton: Well,
Cameron: resÂonate.
Tony KynasÂton: interÂestÂing you bring [01:12:00] up Walk the line. âcause thatâs what I wouldâve comÂpared it to. Uh, itâs in that,
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony KynasÂton: good as that. Itâs in that sort of vein. JohnÂny Cash is in it. Great part in it too. Um, realÂly, realÂly good. You know, drunkÂen out there, rebel rouser, Cash. Um, thereâs one scene where he gets up in the mornÂing and jumps in this bigÂger big long car, which heâs parked at a diagÂoÂnal across a couÂple of car spaces and, and, you know, tries to driÂve out while he is drunk and he driÂves into a car and reversÂes into a car.
And, you know, and, um, this is why Bob Dylanâs tryÂing to work out, heâs havÂing a criÂsis of conÂfiÂdence as to whether he should headÂline the final night of the new NewÂport Folk folk FesÂtiÂval and plays new stuff or plays old stuff thereâs kind of a motor through the film where he is offÂsider, holds up an acoustic guiÂtar and an elecÂtric guiÂtar and Dylan has to choose which one heâs gonna play that night, know, to, to
Cameron: Right.
Tony KynasÂton: to go back.
And, um, and canât rememÂber, what did JohnÂny Cash say? He had a great line about, um, walkÂing mud [01:13:00] onto peoÂpleâs carÂpet um, what he tells Bob to do. When heâs tryÂing to out whether to play the new stuff at the NewÂport Folk FesÂtiÂval, cash goes, kill him. Go and walk more on the carÂpet. So yeah,
Cameron: Thatâs good. Well, stickÂing with music, Iâm gonna recÂomÂmend my JapanÂese girl band for you at
Tony KynasÂton: Okay. You have to spell that.
Cameron: Mm, at think Atari, but with an a at, at ko I disÂcovÂered these because Ron Male from the, from Sparks, uh, was in Japan. Theyâre in tourÂing Japan at the moment, and he was interÂviewed Na two. Some of his curÂrent favorite bands were, he menÂtioned this girl band. I thought Ron Male, whoâs 80, nearÂly 80, I think heâs 79, turnÂing 80 from Sparks as a fan, Iâve gotÂta check him out.
And it did not disÂapÂpoint. Unlike the one that you recÂomÂmendÂed to me a couÂple of weeks ago, which Iâve thorÂoughÂly [01:14:00] enjoyed this one, or, um, less Punky and more. Crazy aniÂme theme song, uh, girl pop rock, uh, sort of helÂlo KitÂty style, future JapanÂese aniÂme sort of stuff. Um, a lot more lightÂweight and popÂpy, but cra you know, that JapanÂese sort of crazy thing, you know, itâs like on some sort of JapanÂese mushÂrooms, gaira kind of thing going on.
Tony KynasÂton: Yep.
Cameron: Yeah, theyâre um, they, theyâve got a film, but theyâve got a song called Tokyo CallÂing, which is fairÂly recent, last, last couÂple of years. And the film clip looks like, uh, the BeastÂie Boys interÂgalacÂtic film clip, like, robots and giant things over buildÂings and all that kinÂda stuff. So, anyÂway, good stuff.
And Iâm readÂing GorÂbachevâs MemÂoirs at the moment. Which, uh, [01:15:00] is fasÂciÂnatÂing. Um, like just hearÂing his verÂsion, he was a, he was a kid durÂing StalÂinâs purges and, uh, durÂing World War talks about both of his grandÂfaÂthers getÂting takÂen away in the purges, being accused of someÂthing, some sort of, you know, crime against the ComÂmuÂnist ParÂty, both of which he said were ridicuÂlous.
âcause they were comÂmuÂnists and comÂmuÂnist leadÂers in their vilÂlages, and up poor in a, you know, vilÂlage and repo and, and, uh, and they both came through it. These, both his grandÂfaÂthers came back. They both surÂvived the purges and came back. But, um, yeah, he was a very, very critÂiÂcal of StalÂinâs rule, but a comÂmuÂnist, you know, uh, through and through GorÂbachev, a big believÂer.
And comÂmuÂnism just wantÂed to figÂure out how to make it work betÂter, or socialÂism make it work betÂter for the SoviÂet Union. Uh, but yeah, interÂestÂing just [01:16:00] readÂing about his life in the thirÂties and forÂties and fifties he left uniÂverÂsiÂty and startÂed workÂing and tryÂing to figÂure out his, his place in the SoviÂet Union.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah. I must
I read stoÂries like that, I canât, I canât count in it sta on what he did, even though the results may have been good for RusÂsia. I, I donât think deanâs jusÂtiÂfied the means.
Cameron: No, but thatâs why youâre not StalÂin.
Tony KynasÂton: I said, yeah, good. not.
Cameron: Yeah. No, but you know, like, you know, StalÂin, um, probÂaÂbly saved the SoviÂet Union. I mean, he can argue lots of difÂferÂent ways, like the purge of the genÂerÂals, et cetera, et cetera. They probÂaÂbly wouldÂnât have been on such a bad footÂing when Hitler attacked and BarÂbara Rossa. But the flip side is he defeatÂed Hitler, uh, and, you know, probÂaÂbly saved the SoviÂet Union and probÂaÂbly the UnitÂed KingÂdom [01:17:00] from the Nazis as well. Um, if Hitler had defeatÂed the SoviÂet Union as quickÂly as he thought he was going to, he probÂaÂbly wouldâve been able to conÂcenÂtrate on the UK more than he could. Um, it was StalÂinâs absolute, bloody mindÂedÂness and abilÂiÂty to move large secÂtions of the popÂuÂlace into this direcÂtion or that direcÂtion before, as well as durÂing the war that got them through it.
So he was, uh, a psyÂchopath, but was probÂaÂbly the psyÂchopath they needÂed at that time. But you can argue, I mean, itâs arguable though, you know.
Tony KynasÂton: ever know what a GorÂbachev wouldâve done in the same sitÂuÂaÂtion? Or a Churchill if he was in
Cameron: Yes. Well, Churchill was a psyÂchopath as well. I got no time for Churchill. was, in many ways, just as bad, if not worse than [01:18:00] StalÂin.
Tony KynasÂton: some days he wasÂnât going out,
popÂuÂlaÂtion to achieve ends purgÂing peoÂple.
Cameron: to the IndiÂans about that.
Tony KynasÂton: Yeah, good point.
Cameron: The IndiÂans were his peoÂple and he senÂtenced milÂlions of IndiÂans to starÂvaÂtion and famine with stockÂpilÂing food for the stockÂpilÂing food for the British milÂiÂtary in case they needÂed it and letÂting the IndiÂan starve. And in his case, you know, well, that was the right deciÂsion to make.
You have to throw one group of peoÂple under the bus in order to save anothÂer group of peoÂple that he thought was more imporÂtant to the empire in the midÂdle of the war,
Tony KynasÂton: and there
Cameron: know?
Tony KynasÂton: bit of that going on with stolen too, as to, you know, who was RussÂian in Inver comÂmas and who wasÂnât, who was UkrainÂian or who was PolÂish or whoÂevÂer.
Cameron: Well, yeah, but he was GeorÂgian, so you know, he, and you know, guys like Khrushchev were UK Ukraine. He needÂed a lot of time for Khrushchev. I donât, you know, yeah, it was, it was a, it was a cerÂtain kind of, [01:19:00] um, math that both of those guys did that, you know, they did what they thought was necÂesÂsary for the surÂvival of their counÂtry.
Tony KynasÂton: true.
Cameron: AnyÂway, very interÂestÂing guy, and Iâve read lots of books about him and his time in powÂer and what he was tryÂing to do. Uh, uh, but I hadÂnât read his memÂoirs before, but Iâm, Iâm enjoyÂing it. Yeah. InterÂestÂing perÂspecÂtive. Well,
Tony KynasÂton: Yes,
Cameron: that, you and I have to go do an AmerÂiÂcan show now and then youâve got a hard out, so weâre gonna go do that.
Tony KynasÂton: you.
Cameron: Thank you, tk. Thank you. Quite, have a good week everyÂone.
Tony KynasÂton: you. HapÂpy ASX.
[01:20:00] [01:21:00]

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