Episode Overview
In this Christmas edition of QAV Australia, Cameron is joined by QAV member Scott Meehan for a wide-ranging, candid conversation about what it’s really like to start investing from scratch. Scott shares his journey from complete beginner to disciplined system-based investor, explains why QAV appealed to him amid the noise and hype of financial media, and reflects on the emotional shift from constant portfolio-watching to calm, rules-driven decision-making. The episode explores patience, timing versus luck, the psychology of drawdowns, the temptation of “10-bagger” narratives, and why boring, repeatable processes tend to win over time. It’s a grounded, human look at investing as lived experience rather than theory, with insights into portfolio management, profit-taking dilemmas, and why ignoring stories and focusing on numbers is harder — and more valuable — than it sounds. 
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Timestamps & Topics
00:00 – Christmas edition & guest introduction
Scott Meehan joins the show, his background, and how he found QAV.
04:30 – Starting from zero as an investor
Scott explains entering investing via an SMSF with no prior share-market experience.
06:30 – Overwhelm, fear, and financial noise
The intimidation of financial jargon, sales pressure, and information overload.
09:30 – Discovering QAV through podcasts
How Scott encountered QAV via Shares for Beginners and why system-based investing resonated.
14:00 – Rules vs emotions
Why having clear buy/sell rules reduced anxiety and improved discipline.
18:00 – Early wins, mistakes, and learning curves
Scott reflects on early trades, including buying and re-buying Pepper Money (PME).
22:30 – Market volatility & “Liberation Day” buying opportunities
Using downturns to deploy cash calmly rather than panic.
26:00 – Ignoring stories, buying numbers
Why financial news is entertainment, not guidance.
31:00 – The myth of 10-baggers
Discussion of speculative investing and why pre-profit companies are dangerous.
36:00 – Portfolio performance reality check
Scott shares his first-year results versus the market.
40:00 – Selling winners and taking profits
Debating when, if ever, to clip gains from big performers like Perseus Mining (PRU).
46:00 – Why QAV uses sell rules
Lessons from the GFC and avoiding decade-long drawdowns.
50:00 – Could QAV scale further?
Discussion on data costs, licensing, and why quality systems don’t spread easily.
56:00 – Final reflections
Why discipline, patience, and “boring” systems beat clever narratives.
Transcription
Cameron: [00:00:00] Welcome to QAV Christmas edition. Uh, this is December. We’re recording this, the 22nd of December, 2025. TK is off playing. No, he is not playing golf. He’s gone away with a family thing to Hillsville, I think he said. Uh, with me replacing tk, the, uh, man who has sent us the most questions by far in the last year for the show, which we appreciate.
Scott Meehan: Some
Cameron: Uh, relatively new. No. All good. All questions are good. Relatively new to the QAV universe. Scott, welcome to have being on the show, Scott.
Scott Meehan: Morning Cam, how are you? Merry
Cameron: Good. And for people You too, Scott. And for people that aren’t watching the YouTube, Scott is wearing the QAV uniform proudly. And a ping cap for Tony Relevance [00:01:00] because as Tony said, that’s the, he told me we did a, we did a US show about, uh, the company that makes, uh, certain kind of drivers and they own Topgolf a few weeks ago.
And, uh, that’s them. And Tony said that the ping ping was named after the sound that it made when it hit the ball. You do you play golf Scott? Is that why you have that hat? I guess.
Scott Meehan: Yes. A lot of golf. I like to play more golf.
Cameron: And you are in, uh, new South Wales. Alright, well, tell us, tell us a little bit about yourself, Scott. What do you do? And, um, then we’ll get into the investing side of things.
Scott Meehan: I’m a dad of a young man called Charlie, who’s 16 going on 25. Uh, married to Christie. Been together for 34 years.
Cameron: Wow.
Scott Meehan: sweethearts. 19, 19 years. We started dating, but we’ve known each other since we were 15. We,
Cameron: Whoa.
Scott Meehan: yeah, bit scary has [00:02:00] its moments. Um, she puts up with me, let’s just put it that way. Uh.
Cameron: That’s so, yes. I think that’s true with all of our spouses. They put up with us. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: In terms of my investing, um, I’m an absolute amateur, so I have been really, really happy to have found QAV early in my investing journey, for want of a better word. Um, I use it for my SMSF, don’t have a lot outside of that. And we started the SMSF in last year, in February, I think I was 6% down. And I found QAV. I went, well, this looks interesting. Had a chat with you, you twisted my arm. I went for the full membership and
Cameron: doesn’t, doesn’t sound like me.
Scott Meehan: And then, uh, yeah, and since then it’s been a really great little ride. Like it’s been great results, but I, I think regards of that, I think I’m getting a better idea of what I’m doing, before I was just kind of going hitting hope. So yeah, QAV has been great. been great.[00:03:00]
Cameron: What? What do you do for a living?
Scott Meehan: I work at the University of Sydney, uh, for the student union. I’m in their commercial team, so I look after all their partnerships, event, sponsorships. Uh, we have a big f and b operation, so I look at a lot of the commercial deals with that. Um, anything from coffee through to beer. Um, so yeah, I look after all the commercial side of the business.
Cameron: Oh, student union, commercial side of the business. Wow.
Scott Meehan: a student unit to name, in name only, we are really an f and b business. But, uh, the f and b keeps the business going and keeps the student union independent of the university, which is good
Cameron: Excuse my ignorance. What’s f and b?
Scott Meehan: food and beverage. So we run, uh, three bars and probably 15, 16 cafes, SR like quick service, restaurants, stuff like that on the campus. ’cause the campus is
Cameron: right,
Scott Meehan: the size of a suburb basically. Massive.
Cameron: right.
Scott Meehan: And it turns over $4 billion a year.
Cameron: [00:04:00] Get out of town.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. Yeah. We turn over 30 billion. We think we’re all right. But, uh, the union itself does 4 billion. um, all
Cameron: Wow.
Scott Meehan: the international students.
Cameron: Wow. let’s get into the investing. What, what made you decide to start investing? What was the thing that prompted you in the first place?
Scott Meehan: I think before started the SMSF, I’d never bought a share in my life. So we had a, uh, ETF that were like dollar cost averaging into, and that was about it. Like it, we’d been busy having a big mortgage and kid and school fees, and it was like, ooh. But when we decided to do the. S‑M-S-F‑I was like, well, we’re gonna have to buy some shares, aren’t we?
And I was looking at ETFs, I was looking at shares, and I’ve kind of got half the money spare left over into ETFs and half in shares. So plus we bought a property in, um, on the central coast with part of that as well. So that’s what got me into it. Like the SMSF was the main reason [00:05:00] before that, I literally never pressed go on a share by ever in my life. So complete amateur is
Cameron: it,
Scott Meehan: good results.
Cameron: did you have like a financial advisor who set it up for you and suggested you do some, some, some stuff.
Scott Meehan: of my oldest mates is an accountant, so he helped me with the, um, the structure of it and all the rules and the regulations and all the stuff that goes with it. That was a little bit of a mind head be honest. Um,
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: but it was good that I had him to sort of guide me through. But in terms of personal financial advice, no.
We we’re doing ourselves, well, actually I’ve been
Cameron: Right.
Scott Meehan: wife’s been just sort of listening to me going about it.
Cameron: And,
Scott Meehan: She’s like, whatever. I don’t.
Cameron: and so, and so you said you hadn’t really done any investing before this. What was your, what, what were your thoughts about investing in shares when you got set up? Like did it seem daunting or did it seem it should be easy or what?
Scott Meehan: terrifying
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: well, I’m investing our family’s future here. [00:06:00] Um, and it’s not like it’s just spare cash. This is like the money we’re using to retire hopefully the next six or seven years. Um, terrifying. And the, and the amount of information was overwhelming. Um, the amount of hard sales people I read into for it.
Like, you’d, you’d register for an interest in something and then you’d get a phone call half an hour later and someone trying to hard sell you a stock and you’re like. Mate, I just was interested in having a look. Um, PEs this, the ratio that was just like. I have no idea what’s going on. I was doing as much research as I could, trying to delve into things, but I was lost in the weeds of all the different terminologies.
So I went, took a step back and just started researching whatever he meant first before I started buying anything. But I was keen to get the money we had was sitting there, that we got outta the superannuation funds and get it invested. So I just went for it, and then it wasn’t, well, it wasn’t good for a while. It was quite a,
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I was death riding everything. It was horrendous. So [00:07:00] looking at the
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I had my share site thing going on going, Ooh, what’s happening? Stocks are going up, stocks are going down. Four months later, I’m like, oh, that happens. Okay, it’s fine. I’ve
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: a three PTL at 10% rule.
It’s fine.
Cameron: Yeah, like, I mean, that’s one of the great things about a system with rules, right? It just, it removes that level of, um, emotional rollercoaster that I think we go through when we don’t really have rules in place. I’m interested in, in your entry trajectory into QAV, because when I’m trying to market QAV, it’s one of the things that, uh, I’m always sort of spit balling.
Um, I assume there’s sort of a discovery, uh, and then credibility building phase that people go through. Can you tell me how you came across QAV and, and what that early experience was like for you?
Scott Meehan: I think I heard [00:08:00] Tony on the Shares for Beginners podcast. Maybe.
Cameron: Oh, okay. Yep.
Scott Meehan: Maybe I heard him there. He sounded interesting. Um,
Cameron: So you were listening, you were listening to podcasts, you were trying to research stuff.
Scott Meehan: I, I think I got my little Spotify wrap this year and. years ago it was all music. This year it was like just you, listen. Listen to podcasts, financial.
Cameron: Right.
Scott Meehan: So you guys chefs, the beginners, the motley
Cameron: Well, as the, as the guy that did the very first, the guy who Mabb as the guy who made the very first Australian podcasts, uh, 21 years ago. Uh, you’re welcome. You, you are, you’re welcome for bringing podcasting to Australia there.
Scott Meehan: know that. That you were the first.
Cameron: Yeah. Uh, really, I, I should talk about it more. Uh, I figure people are sick of hearing me.
Yeah. No. 20 uh, 2004, I recorded the first Australian podcast. Um, I started podcasting after I left Microsoft, you know.
Scott Meehan: was it on this first podcast of yours?
Cameron: [00:09:00] It was a tech show. Um, so I, uh, but the backstory is I’d been working at Microsoft for the pri previous six or seven years. I, I left in the middle of 2004, went to Europe. I bought a bought, um, this, actually
bought this,
Scott Meehan: wow. Two. Yeah, 2004.
Cameron: um. Yeah, I’m hold holding up, uh, one of the original iPods, uh, for the camera, for the people that aren’t watching the stream or the video. Um, yeah. And so I, I walked outta Microsoft, walked into a, was it an Apple store? ’cause Apple stores didn’t exist back then, but it was a, a Mac store, which felt like heresy.
It felt like, uh, you know, uh, an atheist walking into a church. Um, I was expecting to get hit by a lightning bolt, but bought, uh, like I was, I think it’s a 40 gig, um, one of the spinning wheel iPods, which I still believe is one of the greatest, uh, consumer [00:10:00] technology devices I’ve ever had. It was amazing.
Scott Meehan: funny
Cameron: And I took it to Europe.
Scott Meehan: yeah. Wow.
Cameron: Yeah. Sorry, what?
Scott Meehan: It’s funny to think that’s only 2004 that came out like 21 years ago.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: feels like
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: for like, you know, I’m 53. It feels like they’ve been, Apple’s just been everywhere forever.
Cameron: Yeah, so I took that to Europe. Um, went, went to Europe for a month after I left, uh, Microsoft, and was listening to a lot of audio books. Podcasting hadn’t been invented yet. Um, but then when I came back, podcasting was invented around about July, 2004, um, which is about the time I left Microsoft. Beginning of July, I started listening to early podcasts and the early podcasts.
There was only a handful of them. Um, they were tech related and I was listening to that and, and it, and I loved it because when my friends and I in the technology industry would get together and talk about technology. [00:11:00] You know, there’s a certain level of conversation that happens, but when you listen to the radio, you listen to FM radio or, or anything on the television, mainstream journalism talk about technology, it was always like, well, have you seen what the kids are doing with the internet today?
And as it was this dumb down, really lame, annoying level of discussion, and I was, I, when I left Microsoft, I decided I was gonna take a year off work and just figure out what I wanted to do with the rest of my life. ’cause I was sort of sick of the, sick of the corporate grind sort of thing. Yeah. My and my, my boys, my older boys were three or four at the time, and I wanted to spend more time with them, more time at home.
I wanted, um, to do something entrepreneurial so they didn’t grow up seeing a dad who had a corporate job that he hated kind of thing. I was, I was just having lots of coffees with lots of friends, uh, talking about what was gonna be the next big [00:12:00] thing. Uh, and then I started thinking, you know what? I should just record these conversations and put them out as a podcast for my other friends to listen to.
They might enjoy that. So that was the first show was called G’day World, and it was me and a another guy just basically talking about technology, what was happening. And, um, yeah. Yeah, and it blew up, um, early on, and I think Tony started listening to maybe that show, or the next show I did, which was on Napoleon.
About a year after that I started doing a show on Napoleon Bonaparte, and I think Tony may have started listening to that or one of those shows. Anyway, so yeah.
Scott Meehan: You then. That’s how he found you.
Cameron: No, no. He started emailing me around about that time and, you know, saying that he liked the show and this and that and the other. And then we just started emailing each other. And then when I moved to Brisbane [00:13:00] in 2008, actually it was 2009, I think Chrissy had just arrived here from the us. He was living in New Zealand and he and Jenny came back to visit family in Brisbane.
And he said, he contacted me and said, Hey, wanna take you out to dinner when I’m in Brisbane? So, you know, we went out to dinner and, and as I remember, I said, so what do you do with yourself, Tony? He said, oh, I’m just an investor. And in my head I went, oh, that’s boring. And so that was it. I didn’t ask any more questions,
Scott Meehan: So I start talking
Cameron: until
Scott Meehan: They’re like, show the shirt. They’re like,
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: up. Move on.
Cameron: And it wasn’t until Tony and I were making the film, the posters behind me, and, um, which was four or five years, no, six or seven years ago now. And my older boys who were had just leaving high school, they started a podcast and they interviewed Tony about money management for kids [00:14:00] leaving high school.
Like, what should they do? And I heard them interview Tony, and he said, well, yeah, I, I created this system for investing and it’s delivering double market returns. And I studied all the greats. And, and I was like, I, I saw him that day. And I was like, I didn’t know any of that. How come I didn’t know any of that?
And he goes, well, you never asked. And um, it was about that point when I said, you know what, we should do a podcast about where you teach me how to invest.
Scott Meehan: Love
Cameron: And he said, I don’t think anyone, I don’t think anyone would listen to that. And I said, well. I don’t care. I wanna, I wanna, I wanna learn. I wanna know what, you know, uh, so that was the genesis of this.
Scott Meehan: do.
Cameron: Oh yeah. I mean, I think anyone who learns the system, um, can follow the system. I, I, I always say, I reckon it takes about a year. It took me about a year to feel comfortable with how the system worked. I mean, to Tony’s depth of knowledge after [00:15:00] 35 years, whatever it is now is obviously you’re never gonna catch up to that.
It’s like, I’m never gonna be as good at kung fu as my sifu who’s been doing it for 30 years. ’cause he’s just got that in, you know, that 30 years of experience and wisdom built in. But, you know, I can follow the basics of kung fu and I can get a black belt and I can do all of that kind of stuff. Yes, had good black eye couple of them recently, but, um, I.
I think we can all get our black belt in QAV. We can all be, uh, masters of the system. We’ll never catch up to Tony or Warren, but, um, you know,
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: it’s not that hard to, to become good at the basics.
Scott Meehan: Yes.
Cameron: So anyway, back to you.
Scott Meehan: Right.
Cameron: enough about me. That’s
Scott Meehan: Where were we?
Cameron: so you, you discovered it via Phil Ello and you started listening and, and you know, how long did it take you to start, uh, putting it into practice, do you think?[00:16:00]
Scott Meehan: I think
Cameron: I.
Scott Meehan: trying to remember, but like, remember hearing the podcast, looking at the website going, seems interesting. I like the idea of a system that I can just follow and press buttons that I need to. Um, think I had a chat with you. Just like this. And so like why I don’t pay for anything else, like apart from share site, like I, and sorry, but I don’t pay for any other share investing thing.
Everything else I listen to is free. So Shares for beginners, all your equity mates or whatever. So me to invest the money was a big step in my, I remember saying Seed’s a bit steep. They’re like, it would be worth it. And I went, okay. So, and it pretty quickly like. to the buy list, did a bit of historical check here.
The buy list looked to sort of, I guess, verify your numbers as well to see if I could verify what you were saying was true. Um, ’cause there’s so much BS out there in financial services land that, that I, I’d learn over the previous three or four months. I was like, this
Cameron: [00:17:00] Yeah.
Scott Meehan: you kind of get lost in. I dunno, I, I, my wife’s cousin is a, like a, is a banker type and he just, I hear him talk and I just say, shut up mate.
You’re boring me. I was like, he’s making a truckload of money and good luck to him. But, um. For it’s just like, I want something I could follow. Because clearly I had no idea what I was doing and I had proven in the results I’d had in the previous four months. The ETFs were doing fine, the shares were doing shocked, and I’m going, maybe I’ll just dump everything into ETFs, and just do it that way and not worry about it. was really enjoying the side of researching it and learning about it and hearing people talk about stocks. Listening to you guys, Tony, doing his deep dives. I found that. I guess comforting in a way, and then saw the results. Like I was pretty early in on, um, pers I think and pepper money, um, all of which have kind of gone, you know, like it’s not bad.
I, I [00:18:00] per mine would not hit my radar ever. In terms of buying it. So for me to have
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: hear what you guys had to say about it, go and do a little bit of my own reason, not massive amounts. Like I, I don’t have the time. I’ve got a full-time job, I’ve got a life. Everything else I didn’t wanna have to spend my whole life doing it.
But, but then to
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: ones and get some sort of, I guess. Early positive responses in terms of the stock prices, um,
Cameron: Mm.
Scott Meehan: for me and I’ll, at this stage, I’m still literally, honestly, Kim, I am daily staring at my screen, refreshing the screen, watching the numbers go up and down and going, honestly, I’ve gotta stop this.
It’s a problem. So eventually.
Cameron: You, you’ll get over that.
Scott Meehan: so here we are in December and it’s basically
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: of investing and I maybe look at them once a day now because I, all my alerts are a bit funky at the moment and they’ve all gone weird. So I just have a quick look in, see what’s happening. I check your Facebook page, I check the website, the QAV website to see you [00:19:00] haven’t announced something strange is happening in the universe. That’s about it now, and it just happens and it rolls along and I’ve hardly, I think I’ve sold one share in the last eight weeks and I bought one and before that I was probably the first three or four months. It was constant sort of rolling over of, of buying and selling. Now the best bit was, I think I had a fair bit of cash sitting that I hadn’t invested when we had Liberation Day. Uh, well, I should say dickhead day to be like, maybe I’ll get, maybe I’ll get arrested for that in, in states when I go to America. I don’t know. Uh, anyway, moving on. Um, So all these ones that were on the buy list dropped quite a bit and I was just like, happy days. And I, I, I bought a lot and that’s really helped as well.
So that just, that was just a luck, a bit of luck, a bit of timing, whatever it might have been. I hadn’t invested the money ’cause I hadn’t got to the stage of having the time to, to spend it. I’d sold a bit in the buildup to joining you guys and rotating through that. I, I did sell pepper money though, which was [00:20:00] disappointing. Then I bought it again for more. Anyway, fine. Still doing well.
Cameron: And, uh, you didn’t start with a paper portfolio or anything like that.
Scott Meehan: Probably should
Cameron: just don’t dive straight in.
Scott Meehan: should have.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I,
Cameron: Well, I think it’s a good way of, yeah, it’s a good way of testing it before you spend real money.
Scott Meehan: just very keen to get
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: into the i Here are the stories, right. It’s not timing, it’s time, all that sort of stuff. And I was very keen that I had this quite well to me, quite a large amount of cash from the super money that wasn’t invested and needed to be invested. So pure luck in terms of I had that money still sitting there in April when it went crazy, and then prices dropped significantly and then shut back up again.
So
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: strategy, buy the dip.
Cameron: Yeah. Yeah. Uh, well, yeah, as long as it’s not still dipping. Um, you know, I think I [00:21:00] said to you an email, like when we say it’s not timing that is true over the long haul, but your first, your early experience is determined.
Scott Meehan: Definitely.
Cameron: extent by timing the people that got started in late 2021 or early 2022 when the market crashed after Ukraine invasion and interest rates started going up.
That, that couple of years was rough for people that got started. I, I remember just saying to a lot of people in 20 22, 20 23, you just got started at the wrong time. I mean, it’s, it’ll turn around again, but this is just trial by fire, right? It’s, uh, it was a, our mark, our portfolio portfolio, like the first QAV light portfolio that I started February, 2022, uh, or April, 2022.
Anyway, somewhere around there, um, was down at one point, like 15% when the market was up by 10%. [00:22:00] And it was, you know, it was, didn’t bother me because I knew, oh, well, it’s just the way it is. Right? It’ll, it’ll come back. But, uh, for people that were brand new, I, you know, I can, uh, appreciate how it was, uh, a rough ride and not all of them made it.
You know, some of those people that got started then dropped out, pulled out, um, and if they’d stuck around, they’d now be doing double market, you know, and, and maybe they went and found another system that works for them.
Scott Meehan: that, that’s the
Cameron: We’re not the only system. Right.
Scott Meehan: I’ve particularly learned in the last year is just the patience of it and. Just sort of, you read all those timeless quotes from the different investors, like, you know, the, the smartest thing to do is to do nothing or whatever it might be. It’s the hard thing to do.
Seriously. Like, you know, I’m,
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: uh, maybe when I’m looking at the moment, I’ve seen a bit of volatility and has been, um, P‑L-T-P‑T.
Cameron: Uh, plenty group.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. P plenty group. So it hit like [00:23:00] I
Cameron: Let’s down a bit.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. It’s just sort of gone on a bit of a tailspin for the last two weeks and I have no idea why. And I’m like, in the past I would’ve been panicking about it. Now I’m just like, if it hits it’s three PTL, I’ll just sell it Right.
Does the 10% thing, I’ll just sell it. So that
Cameron: Yeah,
Scott Meehan: just a lot calmer for me, which is nice.
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. And also it
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: know. You can see that other things are doing well and things have bad moments that go up and down. I, I’ve been astounded at, at how much things change in a really short space of time or a director does something stupid or all those things that happen and you’re just like, is almost ignore it in a way. Try to
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: and try and stick to the rules.
Cameron: Well, it’s, it’s kind of business as usual I’ve learned is that you will have ex, you’ll have, you know, a one company in your portfolio where something horrible will happen. Um, the directors will get detained [00:24:00] by the government of a small African nation, uh, or,
Scott Meehan: Yes.
Cameron: know, or the CEO will get accused of mal fance or, you know, sexual
Scott Meehan: Yes.
Cameron: Yeah.
Something like that. There will be, there’ll be one or two companies in your portfolio where something horrifying will happen and the shares will drop by 40% overnight. Um, there’ll be another one or two stocks that get a windfall. Something, you know, some policy change will happen here or in the United States and their shares will explode, or they’ll get acquired and their shares will explode, and then the rest of them will truck along doing, you know, 10, 15%, whatever it is.
And that’s just,
Scott Meehan: Like it really has
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: Is that really happening? Because, you Yeah. Every now and then you’re gonna sell one. Right. For whatever reason. And, but,
Cameron: Yeah,
Scott Meehan: but it’s, it’s interesting to watch that. Like I’ve got 15 shares and only one is down,
Cameron: [00:25:00] yeah.
Scott Meehan: like one is
Cameron: Which,
Scott Meehan: and that’s shares I started buying at the beginning of last this year type of thing, or March this year, which is
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: I’ve had
Cameron: has,
Scott Meehan: a couple.
Cameron: I think I did talk about your per perform, uh, performance on the show, uh, last week, but just remind me how it’s doing.
Scott Meehan: on mate. I never look, well, current holdings I’m up 35%, but I’ve had to sell that as include the sold ones. I’ll have to double check, but I think it was about 15% up overall. Um, and then add some dividends on top of that as well. But,
Cameron: Right.
Scott Meehan: the actual
Cameron: Uh,
Scott Meehan: that are all QAV stocks that I haven’t had to sell up 35%.
Cameron: yeah. That’s great.
Scott Meehan: It’s a
Cameron: Yeah. Like, you know, the, the thing that, you know, when, when I, when people sort of ask me how the system works and I, I don’t want to get into the nitty gritties of it. Um, and my [00:26:00] mental model for why it should work long term is at the end of the day, we’re just trying to find the companies that are performing well, generating.
A lot of cash, and we buy them when we can get them at a discount to what we think their actual valuation is. And if you can buy shares in well performing companies at a discount over a period of time, most of them logically should do. Okay.
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: It’s, that’s it. It’s, it’s not very complicated, right?
Scott Meehan: you asked me to explain to you the numbers behind it, I could not still like. I kind of look at the numbers that you guys put through on your, your buy list and go, okay, it looks good. And take a quick look at their books and stuff like that to make sure I’m not missing anything and then buy it. I wish to say I have to say that I do more than that. Maybe I should. see
Cameron: No.
Scott Meehan: I’m like, okay, is that Mabb [00:27:00] research? Is that it is. That’s all I’ve gotta do.
Cameron: Well,
Scott Meehan: Alright. That
Cameron: you know, it’s,
Scott Meehan: and sometimes it’s
Cameron: I get in.
Scott Meehan: goes south and you’re like, oh, okay. It happens.
Cameron: Yeah, I get into debates. Well, I, I don’t, but people try and get me into debates on Reddit. Uh, particularly for our US show, uh, every, every week, uh, when I do a deep dive on an American company and I post a summary of it to the value investing subreddit, people will weigh in there would obviously no way more than I do about this particular sector or that particular sector, and they’ll give me all of these arguments for why that company is not gonna do well in the future.
It isn’t a good investment. And every time I’m like, Hey, you might be right, but I don’t try and predict the future. That’s not how our model works. Uh, I’m just, I’m just looking for companies that are generating a lot of cash and seem to be available for a discount to their valuation. That’s it. You know, I buy ’em more often than not, I’ll do well out of them.
[00:28:00] Sometimes they’ll go the wrong way. We sell ’em and keep moving. Right. I don’t, I, I don’t care. I don’t care about the sector, I don’t care about the, the macros or the micros. You know? Good luck to you with all of that. Um, I’m sure you’ll do well,
Scott Meehan: it
Cameron: but I’m, I,
Scott Meehan: simpler.
Cameron: I can’t get into an argument about the, in intricacies of copper mining in the US because I really, it’s not how our model works.
We’re just looking at numbers.
Scott Meehan: Uh, yeah, I’ve been doing it for 12 months, following things really closely over the year and hearing all these different forecasts of doom, gloom, optimism, you name it. it just is just a lot of shit to be honest. Like you get, I think you said guys sent an email recently to talk about the news and what it’s there for and stuff, and I found that quite. Reassuring. It’s kind of how I look at it now. I was like, yeah, it’s good to read about. It’s good to be, have knowledge of that, but it doesn’t mean the share price will go up or down, doesn’t mean that this is gonna happen. It just [00:29:00] sort of, it’s just a story. So
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: it might, you know what, Kim, it might’ve been you, I heard on shares for Bigger, there’s not Tea K now I think about it. It was like ignore the, you are talking about ignoring the stories like that We
Cameron: Well, Tony, I got,
Scott Meehan: We buy the numbers or something. We buy.
Cameron: yeah,
Scott Meehan: Was it.
Cameron: I did go, I did go on on Phil’s show at one point. Yeah. Uh, but Tony’s been on it a bunch of times and, and I got that from him. Ignore the stories, but that was one of the things that. You know, I think really helped me when I heard Tony explain that. You know, I think when that was sort of the subject of my email, um, in the newsletter a week or so ago, I think when we’re new to investing.
We think that the financial media is there to help us, and after a while you realize, no, it’s, and I should know that because I do media analysis as part of my [00:30:00] podcasting stuff on a regular basis. I, I understand that generally speaking, the media exists to drive narratives with certain vested interests behind them.
But I’d never really thought about that in terms of the financial media. But it’s obvious when you think about it, the financial media exists there to drive eyeballs and clicks and advertising revenue for the publishers of the financial media themselves. And they will write about whatever stories they have to write about to keep the advertising money coming in.
And also they have, you know, certain incentives with certain advertisers that they’re pushing this or pushing that.
Scott Meehan: Yep.
Cameron: And the rest of the financial services industry is about generating income, generating revenue for themselves. That’s why they, they don’t exist to help us. They don’t exist to make us successful.
They exist to generate revenue for their businesses and for their
Scott Meehan: Clip their
Cameron: partners, not for us. Yeah. It’s, it, they are not your friend. [00:31:00] They are there to entertain you and lead you aray and to take your money. That’s why they exist. And the best advice that we can give any new investor is ignore it and focus on the fundamentals.
Focus on understanding how, how shares actually work, which is, is the company making money? It’s funny, I was reading, um. I got a, I saw a, a, a newsletter, I can’t remember. It was turned up in Yahoo Finance, some guy in Australia who runs a, a investing newsletter, and he was touting his ability to pick 10 baggers.
And, uh,
Scott Meehan: Love it.
Cameron: you know, after spending the amount of years I have talking to Tony and doing this, now, my initial response is, I, I, I don’t wanna find 10 baggers. I mean, a 10 bagger is lovely, don’t get me wrong. But I’m not chasing 10 baggers. This whole thing about [00:32:00] chasing 10 baggers, to me, that just seems like, you know, phoning a, this is all, this is a, there’s an old, there’s an old David Lee, old David Lee Roth song about, you know, something being a myth, like a beautiful woman who cooks and cleans.
Um, you know, it,
Scott Meehan: Okay.
Cameron: I, I know I get into, get into trouble for saying that it’s not me. It’s David Lee Roth. He said that right.
Scott Meehan: I, I wasn’t involved in that. I’ll leave it to you, mate.
Cameron: Oh no, it is Dave. Uh, blame Dave. Uh, you know, we we’re not, we’re, we’re not trying to find 10 baggers. We’re trying to find, you know, stocks that do well, solar companies. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I
Cameron: And also he was saying in this thing that all of the 10 baggers that his system finds,
Scott Meehan: yes, I read it. Yeah,
Cameron: they usually aren’t making money.
Oh, yeah. Right.
Scott Meehan: I, yeah, it was Karl Kapaa, I think his name is Off
Cameron: That’s him. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: the crazy
Cameron: saying
Scott Meehan: daily thing every day, and he gives you all the chart watches [00:33:00] and stuff. It’s hysterical to read.
Cameron: chart watch. That was it. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I love it.
Cameron: And is like, so his, his system identifies them when the pre-cash flow or pre profit not making any money pre-cash flow. And I’m like, okay. Uh,
Scott Meehan: you are throwing Mabb. That’s cool.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: to bet it, go for your life. Like, you know, if you want to take some of your money and go for it, like, awesome. I, if I had a spare a hundred grand to sit around, I didn’t know what to do with. I sure look, do it, but I don’t. I’m investing for my family’s future and my retirement. So I hope to stay, stay the course and stay steady a little bit.
Cameron: And whilst I have no doubt that there are companies that are pre-revenue that will go on to be 10 baggers, how many companies that are pre-revenue will also go on to go outta business in six months? Or, you know, be zero bagger or take, you know, go backwards to such an extent that they neutralize the 10 bagger.
If you only pick the 10 baggers, that’s great, but how do you only pick the 10 baggers and avoid the, so it’s [00:34:00] this, but all of that, that mindset of, of trying to find the 10 baggers and investing in companies and aren’t making any money. Like it’s just so like fi seven years ago, pre QAV, I would’ve thought that was really smart stuff.
Now I look at it and go, that’s just, you know, that’s just catnip for amateurs really, you know.
Scott Meehan: it, it, it, funny like the, the short space of time I’ve gone from reading stuff about that and getting all excited and thinking that’s gonna change the world to, it’s good. It’s an entertaining read, but I’m kind of good. Thanks. Um,
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: thanks to you and Tony. Honestly, I, that’s.
Cameron: Well, it’s, thanks to Tony, it’s, it’s like sensible, like how do you just do the sensible thing, right? Which is,
Scott Meehan: and, and be
Cameron: as I said,
Scott Meehan: and be disciplined and all those things that you read about. I’m, I’m kind of pleased that I’m getting there. I’m still, you know, looking at it right now, I can tell you it is. There you go. 12 point a half percent return and five point a half percent on dividends. What’s that?
[00:35:00] 18%? Is that
Cameron: over what timeframe,
Scott Meehan: my first purchase in December last year, so 12 months.
Cameron: right.
Scott Meehan: That includes
Cameron: 12 months.
Scott Meehan: that I got into early on, like
Cameron: Yeah. Right. Don’t think that was on our list.
Scott Meehan: I bought it cheap. It like tripled in price and I’m thinking this is pretty cool. Should I sell it? No, it’s all right. And then I literally halved in price from when I bought it. That’s when I sold it.
Cameron: Right,
Scott Meehan: still there now. I should have sold it. It’s
Cameron: right, right,
Scott Meehan: you go. So like that before, there’s a, before QAV, but I did it and it was, it said 6% down.
I, it more. but
Cameron: right.
Scott Meehan: I reckon I bought 20 shares and 18 of them were losers. So, good times. Good times. Lucky I
Cameron: So 18% in the last 12 months versus the market’s up about 11%. The SPDR is up [00:36:00] about 11%, I think at the last 12 months.
Scott Meehan: with divs as well? Yeah,
Cameron: Yeah, that’s with divs.
Scott Meehan: That’d be
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: Okay, cool. But yeah, it’s, it’s, very, it’s just comforting. Honestly. I can, I’ve really enjoyed the year with you guys. It’s been really cool. So I look forward to the podcast and I look forward to the buy list.
Bring it back on Sundays, mate. Can’t wait till Monday. Give up your Sunday for it, please.
Cameron: Well, I already do, you know, for the weekend, like it is sort of ready to go or ready today. Um, yes. I just don’t publish it,
Scott Meehan: yeah. It’s alright. It’s cool.
Cameron: until I sit down to work.
Scott Meehan: Where’s and where’s the camel
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: Has it
Cameron: Where is it?
Scott Meehan: is it? Or is it still on your laptop? Where your computer.
Cameron: Yeah, it’s on, it’s on my laptop. You know, it’s, I think I’ve, I’ve said it before, like I, I could go to the effort of [00:37:00] trying to publish it in a way that people could run it themselves, but, um.
Yeah, there’s a lot of work involved.
Scott Meehan: reckon I’m probably another, we, when I sent you the emails, like I’d love it if I could just drop everything in and just do it for me. Um, but it
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: there’s just, when I read the other guys on Facebook, the other members like they’re running their own stuff anyway, some of them, and they’re
Cameron: Yeah,
Scott Meehan: up some glitches from your data and whatever it might be.
You know, I, I’m not that technical. I,
Cameron: yeah,
Scott Meehan: it defeats me, like literally, which makes it even more
Cameron: yeah,
Scott Meehan: well.
Cameron: yeah. Oh, you’re doing well. So,
Scott Meehan: run a spreadsheet and can’t run, can’t run the bloody buy list. It’s all right. It’s fine.
Cameron: well, you’ll, you can, you can learn to do that. It’s not that hard. It, you know, again, uh, it’ll, you know, maybe, uh, six months to a year of a little bit of effort and you’d be able to do [00:38:00] it. Anyone can do it.
Scott Meehan: there.
Cameron: I didn’t know anything about Excel when we started. Like really? I didn’t know my way around it. And these days with chat.
Scott Meehan: And you
Cameron: Yeah. But you know, I was a, I was a sales guy. I wasn’t a spreadsheet guy. But these days with chat GPT, if you don’t know how to do something and a spreadsheet, you just ask it, Hey, how do I do this? And it’ll tell you. So,
Scott Meehan: doing, and it would give me this, I know what it was called, Python code, and I’m like, what the fuck is a Python code? I had no idea.
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: and run that and everything would just go and I’ll be like, okay, I’ll just wait for the buy list on Monday.
Cameron: Yeah. Well, or you can just do that. Uh, so, uh, anything that you would like us to do for members this coming year, apart from give you the camera later?
Scott Meehan: Uh, keep making money. No. Um, uh, what would be interesting I reckon is to do, like, do you do anything where you look back on. The historical buy list and [00:39:00] how it’s gone for all of those shares, even the ones you didn’t buy and you sort of say they’ve come on the buy list in June this year, let’s say they might’ve gone off the buy list three months later and they might’ve popped back on it again in December or whatever.
But once you get those ones from the day they launch from the buy list and track their performance moving forward, just I reckon it would be a good, an interesting sort of historical review of what you’ve done. And another way of saying, aren’t we doing well? Make sense. Doesn’t make sense. I look like I’ve
Cameron: I’m just thinking it through. No, no. So looking at stocks from buy lists of days gone by and just see how they’ve done since they’re on the buy list.
Scott Meehan: first time they hit the buy lister, like from the very first time they went on the buy list and then.
Cameron: Right.
Scott Meehan: ’ cause and then if they’ve, if they’ve triggered a three point sell line or something that in that time, therefore you had to sell it, great, and then you buy it again when it comes back on the buy list or whatever.
What that looks like historically for all the
Cameron: Uh.
Scott Meehan: that have been there. Because I reckon the, I’ve probably, a weird spreadsheet. I [00:40:00] track everything on that, and I think I’ve got about 140 different stocks that appeared on the buy list since this year, maybe roughly. Um, but I, I only track the ones that I buy, but it’d be interesting to see some come and go really quickly.
Like you say Maya popped on for a week and it goes, or what was that one? PPE, I think I bought it. Where is it? Yeah, people in that kind of dropped in and dropped out. So they come on for a reason, whatever that is. But then they go off, but they only stay on for a week. That’s interesting. Does that mean that you should buy it that week and then not worry about it?
Or does that mean Yeah, it’s there. You can buy it if you wanna buy it, but if it doesn’t stay on the list for a period of time, is it only because had one week and the numbers were a bit weird or something? Or the share price dropped up dramatically? What brings it on the buy list? So to understand that process?
’cause they come and go, right? Some are perennial, like some are there forever. Well, this year anyway, I say for rec forever, since I’ve been tracking In February, there’s some that have been on there [00:41:00] almost every week.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: and that’s interesting because that usually means they must be doing well. Like I, I’ll use pepper money as a good example.
It popped on at a dollar 30 or a dollar 20. It went pretty quickly to like $2. Then it dropped off the buy list for a little while. Maybe some new numbers came out and it came back on the buy list again, but at like $2 30. And I’m like, but I bought it for a buck 20. I wanna buy it again at $2 30 or should I just not worry about it?
Cameron: Yeah. Well, you know, ideally they should come on and then go off because their share price goes up so much that they’re no longer a cost effective buy for us. But if we already own them, it’s good.
Scott Meehan: yeah.
Cameron: Um,
Scott Meehan: But say if
Cameron: being able to track them all.
Scott Meehan: yeah. If you’re
Cameron: Yeah. But all.
Scott Meehan: sorry, go.
Cameron: I was just gonna say it’s tracking them all, including whether or not we would’ve sold them for rule one or a three point [00:42:00] trend line.
You know, is, is somewhat complicated to do, but I could build a system to do that. The tricky thing is also tracking commodity cells, but I have the history of commodity cells going back quite a few years now, so I could possibly build some code that would do that. My question to you is, what would we be trying to learn from that process?
Scott Meehan: one thing I tried to do when I started to go look back at your buy list and go, okay, is this bullshit or is it not bullshit? So look, historically at the buy list that you had. Follow them along. Yeah, you’ve got your dummy lights, all that sort of stuff. That’s cool. That’s, that’s the stuff that you bought.
But what about all the things on that buy list? I’m totally coming at it from a complete amateur, no idea what I’m doing point of view. I’m like, well, I’ll look at the historical stuff and see if those results tracked for all the things that, on the bias, it looked pretty good. I mean, I didn’t go really, really deep into it, but I probably went back a couple years, had a look at the different ones, had a look at your [00:43:00] portfolios went, okay, so that would give you. I think from a QAV point of view, it would give you like a really interesting sort of set of data that would show people that this actually works. Not just for the stocks that I’ve bought for me, but for the stocks that appear on the buy list. they appear on the buy list, they’re clearly a buying opportunity.
Yeah. So whether you,
Cameron: Buying opportunity, but we also know that, you know, we are, we’re looking for a 60 40 win loss ratio or win ratio, so we know that nearly half of them probably won’t work out.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. But that’d be
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: though, right? To see if that that’s
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I reckon it’s gotta be stronger. Like if I’m randomly picking 15 stocks and 14 are up, that doesn’t make me the best stock picker on the planet, that’s for sure. Just means either I got lucky or the system works well enough that you can kind of be blind and still do.
Cameron: One of the questions that, um, we sometimes get is what would happen if [00:44:00] we bought a stock that was on the buy list and then just ignored it for 10 years? No, no sell triggers. You just hold it forever. Which is a classic value investing sort of school of thought. And I know that there have been QAV members in the past that have decided that they don’t wanna sell things, they just wanna buy, um, forever companies that you hold forever and they’ll just wear the volatility.
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: And I know that, um. Tony’s experience. The reason we have the cell triggers comes from the GFC.
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: When the GFC hit in 2008, there was lots of great companies that then took 10 years to get back to where they were pre GFC. Tony’s rationale is, well, I don’t wanna wait 10 years for stocks to get back to where they were.
Yes, maybe if you hold ’em forever, they’ll get back there. But, uh, to him it makes a lot more sense to sell them on their way down, buy something else at the bottom [00:45:00] and write it up, not wait for them to get back to where they were.
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: Um, but yeah, we, we could see how that pans out over long periods of times.
Scott Meehan: It’s a big ask to do it. There might
Cameron: Yeah, just,
Scott Meehan: there’d be an algorithm for you, mate. Um, I guess the
Cameron: yeah.
Scott Meehan: be interesting would be like, I, and it probably ties to this, is like when the stock is doing so well and it’s flying for you and I, I’ll use pers an example. Percy is up 102% for me and I bought three different tranches of it at different time, just so very exciting.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: but is there a point where you go. Should I sell some of this? Should I not sell some of that? And that’s not coming. That’s just more like I’m sitting on a pretty nice profit. I think Tony mentioned it was talked about before and he said it could be our first 10 bagger on QAV. And I’m like, okay, maybe I should just hold it there. uh, that point, like. That stock will go down again, I’m sure of it. And it’ll drop below some level at some stage. And do you wanna [00:46:00] wait for that or do you just sort of say, well, I’ll take some profit, I’ll clip something off the top and then I’ll reinvest that somewhere else in something else. And I, I really, that’s one bit, I’m kind of like seeing, looking at three or four stocks are up more than 50% going and,
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: be patient, just sit and wait. Then, but waiting for something. Waiting for what? I don’t know, a debacle happens at Perseus and suddenly the stock price cuts in half, and then it’s like I could have collected some profit then
Cameron: Well, that’s sort of a perennial QAV question is should we take profits? And if so, when?
Scott Meehan: we,
Cameron: And I think, you know, the, the,
Scott Meehan: that.
Cameron: yeah. Well, Tony’s talked about it and thought about it as long as we’ve been doing the show. And, you know, I think his, his usual response is, do whatever you need to do to sleep well at night.
If, if, if that, you know, it’s a personal, it’s a [00:47:00] personal decision you have to make. Um, but. Sure. But for him, we haven’t figured out how do you know when to take the profits and what to reinvest that money then in that will do as well as that company will do. Obviously if it’s gone up by three or four times, uh, already, there’s something really, really working for that business.
And are you gonna be able to statistically find another stock that is gonna do as well as that one has? So it’s, yeah.
Scott Meehan: that, it’s that, but it’s that
Cameron: Or are you better off just sticking with Michael Jordan? Right. There’s the oldy thing
Scott Meehan: pess of me going, the pessimist of me going, oh, what if something happens? That thing drops back where I, Lord and I, I was sitting on all that juicy money and I’m like,
Cameron: and it does, we’ve [00:48:00] seen it happen. I mean, I’ve seen it happen several times. I’ve had, like, findy is a, is a recent example. Findy was up 120% and then it came back to zero. I’ve seen it happen with Mabb in the past up a hundred percent. And then it drops back to, becomes a rule one sell. And you’re like, how the hell could that happen?
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: But,
Scott Meehan: Overall, you’re
Cameron: you know.
Scott Meehan: still worth holding.
Cameron: Yeah. But then you have the companies that, like Perseus, right? That if we’d sold it at a hundred percent, we would’ve missed out on the 200% or the 300%. So
Scott Meehan: Hopefully, yeah.
Cameron: it’s, um,
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: yeah, we, we,
Scott Meehan: simple
Cameron: we don’t have any Yeah. And, and you can look at these things in retrospect and go, if only I had sold it at that point.
But that’s, you know, we, it’s not that.
Scott Meehan: alcoholism.
Cameron: Yeah. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: It’s a rock, rocky road to the,[00:49:00]
Cameron: Yeah, and look at the end of the day, um, I, I think where I’ve landed on that is, um, the system returns double market.
Scott Meehan: yeah,
Cameron: That’s good enough. Like there, there are big winners, there are some losers there. The rest is average. The system’s already delivering double market. Um, trying to improve on double market by getting, uh, clever, trying to be cleverer,
Scott Meehan: Yeah,
Cameron: cleverer,
Scott Meehan: clever
Cameron: I’m not sure.
Thank you. Then the is, is, is possible. Maybe AI will teach us how to do that, but at the end of the day, you know, I think.
Scott Meehan: with
Cameron: My mindset is, yeah, double market is what Buffet has done for 65 years. He’s the greatest investor in the history of [00:50:00] investing. Uh, shut up and take the money.
Scott Meehan: happy.
Cameron: stop trying to Yeah, we’re doing, we’re doing better than the vast majority of full-time professional fund managers and investors.
Scott Meehan: doing better than my super fund I was in. I’m very happy about that.
Cameron: Yeah. And we have professionals come on the show as guests from time to time, and they are highly esteemed professionals that get written about in the financial review and we’re beating them. And so, well, I’m like, really? Do we need to, you know, tweak it any further? Maybe. But it’s, it, it works pretty good.
Scott Meehan: Yeah, yeah, it’s a surprise that it doesn’t get more nor more noise in the media. You just need a better PR team mate for Q.
Cameron: I from your Yes. From your mouth to ALA’s [00:51:00] ears. So if you have any thoughts on how to help us get more pr,
Scott Meehan: Good question.
Cameron: me know.
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: I think, I think I, I, I’m assured by the fact that if Tony decides you don’t wanna do it anymore, you reckon you could still run it because it’s like he’s kind of the engine room behind it, isn’t he? So, and you said sometimes it’s hard to get him to do a show, and I’m like, shit.
Cameron: I think he’d rather be doing other stuff than doing the show, but he’s nice enough to turn up. Um, look, I, I, yeah, it, it, I mean, I can talk about this, uh, till the cows come home. I’m not sure anyone wants to listen to me, though. I think people wanna listen to Tony. They don’t wanna listen to me, but I run the portfolios and have done for.
Scott Meehan: yeah.
Cameron: years, right? So
Scott Meehan: he provides insight that is
Cameron: Yeah,
Scott Meehan: he’s been on boards and so, so he’s, he sort of is able to say without knowing exactly what’s happening in that boardroom, he’ll be able to extrapolate. Optional two, but other probable things that are happening. I always find that
Cameron: yeah,
Scott Meehan: ’ cause that’s, I don’t hang out in [00:52:00] boardrooms. I don’t attend to.
Cameron: yeah. Tony has, Tony has all of the wisdom and insight, and he’s, um, apart from being a really smart guy, he is, got a lot of experience. He and Jenny have spent decades in senior echelons and boardrooms and all of that kinda stuff, and at fancy parties, um,
Scott Meehan: golf courses now.
Cameron: that I’m never gonna get invited to. So, uh, yeah, there’s, well, I, I wouldn’t, I wouldn’t fit in in most of these, uh, yeah.
But, um, yes, but in terms of, uh, how QAV itself works, you know, I think I can talk about that. But if anyone ever wants to listen to that,
Scott Meehan: I mean, look, I know if it’s for the show, but like. My thoughts are, this has great legs as a product. just a matter of finding a way to make that work and getting the finances for it and all [00:53:00] that sort of stuff. So that bit, you know, if Tony isn’t really keen to expand it, it kind of makes it hard, though.
That makes sense. Yeah.
Cameron: I think he’d love to have, you know, a lot more people listening to it. Yeah.
Scott Meehan: mean, how many subscribers have we got or have we got, sorry, we got, have you got? Like a thousand.
Cameron: Oh, listening to the show. A thousand. But, uh, yeah, paying subscribers 10%.
Scott Meehan: Yeah,
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: Right? So a hundred page subscribers. When that, that guy from the TYKR stuff is basically, it sounds like you guys, but not as good.
Cameron: Yeah. Right.
Scott Meehan: I’ve looked at it. I’ve got, I’ve just gone holidays. This is my week to do my week free trial and see what it’s like. Um, and I’ll, I’ll send you back what I know, but like for me. If I can sort of go like this and have not an f‑ing clue what I’m doing, there’s
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: there’s something in it, right? Like the [00:54:00] def I’m like, plus the insights are interesting from Tony. The buy list makes perfect sense. We’re not recommending you buy this. It’s just these are the list of flocks we think are undervalued this week and you should buy these ones.
Well, you know, you should
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: for your portfolio. I mean, I’ve just, whether I’ve just got lucky, but like. I haven’t followed every stock you’ve bought and sold. I’ve just kind of picked the stuff I thought looked interesting. I jumped on a NZ ’cause it was a NZ and it was one of the rare blue chips.
It appears it’s not, wasn’t a mining company. I’m not overly, gets angry about the mining companies, but I’m like, well, on the buy list. Um, but me to do that to me says that is a system anybody can use and we just need a way of getting it out I think quite apart from the chance of making a shed ton of money at it, great.
But also. To share the insight and the system with people like me that don’t have a clue and are probably out there spending money on some other idiot that’s ripping them off. Right. So I don’t know [00:55:00] how, how we make that work and how you would, uh, how we, how you actually
Cameron: Well,
Scott Meehan: out and, but it, it will require a bit of funding from a, uh, marketing promotion, PR side of things.
But also you talked about having to buy that data. What data is it?
Cameron: if we, well, if we wanted to do a one click, uh, t. YKR type service, we would need access to the fundamental share data that we get from say, Stock Doctor or Stock edia. Now
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: we would need to have our own license for that. And we’ve looked into it. Yeah, you need to get it from the ASX or, you know, um, uh, one of their brokers,
Scott Meehan: Why can’t you use stock? Just the stock edia or Stock Doctor stuff? It’s.
Cameron: their terms and conditions don’t lead to
Scott Meehan: Yeah. Yeah.
Cameron: re re, you know, repurpose that data. It’s for your own personal use only. You can’t resell it.
Scott Meehan: And
Cameron: Um, which is what we’d be doing.
Scott Meehan: from the [00:56:00] ASX? Dare I ask a lot.
Cameron: Yeah. It’s like 20 grand, uh, a month depending on the license. Yeah, yeah,
Scott Meehan: That’s, that’s
Cameron: yeah. The data, the,
Scott Meehan: That’s
Cameron: data costs are sane, uh, to get, you know, the wholesale access to it so you can retail it.
Scott Meehan: locks out. It locks out stuff like this and keeps it with Morningstar.
Cameron: Well, yeah, to an extent. But you know, just in terms of building the podcasts where we had more members, if I could afford to drop 10 grand a month behind advertising,
Scott Meehan: Yeah.
Cameron: uh, for QAV, I’m sure I could build, uh, our reach and our exposure to a lot more people. It’s, uh, I’ve been trying to bootstrap that process for the last five or six years.
Um, but yeah, I don’t have that kind of coin.
Scott Meehan: yeah. And it’s,
Cameron: might have to,
Scott Meehan: you look at other, other
Cameron: might have to bring on investors.
Scott Meehan: Yeah. You look at
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: you look at the guys from equity mates and they’re a free potty, but like they’ve, I [00:57:00] think they’ve just been, I think, who is it? Is it be the shares has bought part of them or something like that? Um,
Cameron: I don’t know.
Scott Meehan: one of the big ones, like one of the big
Cameron: Yeah.
Scott Meehan: in the universe.
Um, and
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: But then this ticket guy really got me thinking, so I’m gonna look into it. I’ll see what he’s
Cameron: Hmm.
Scott Meehan: That might make it different to you guys, but it just sounds like your stuff without, without a system as well, with like a selling and buying system. I don’t know. So, but I will review and report back, sir. Yeah.
Cameron: Scott, well, um, lovely to see you face to face again, and, and congratulations that you’ve had a good year and a, a good start. I mean, I think once you get a good year under your belt, um, you hopefully are up and running, like there will be not good years, but, uh, hopefully the, the, the head start that you get means your portfolio could take an average year or a bad year and still look [00:58:00] okay, and then you keep waiting for the next good year, right?
Scott Meehan: Yeah, I think like in terms of investment time, I, I’ve got, I wanna retire at 60, that’s seven years away, so. It’s getting closer. So a couple of good juice to start would be nice. And then I could wear a couple of bad ones maybe
Cameron: Yeah,
Scott Meehan: after
Cameron: well, I dunno that, we’ll,
Scott Meehan: itchy feet.
Cameron: uh, I, I, I dunno how long Goodyear stretches go for, but my experience about a year and then the market sort of cools down for a year or two, and then you gotta wait for another good year to come around. But, uh, the, as the, I think it’s a Peter Lynch quote, I use it most of my emails these days, every, everyone’s a long-term investor until they have a bad year.
So, uh, be,
Scott Meehan: 50%.
Cameron: yeah, not financial advice, but just be aware that there will be bad years. And that’s part of it, you know, that’s just how the market goes in cycles and you just stick with it, wait it out, and wait for the [00:59:00] next good year, you know.
Scott Meehan: Excellent. Thanks Cam. Merry
Cameron: Thanks, Scott.
Scott Meehan: the family.
Cameron: Merry Christmas.
Scott Meehan: Uh, all your other listeners out there, you should volunteer to come on. He doesn’t bite.
Cameron: Yeah, I was saying to Scott off air, he’s the only person that’s, uh, taken up my offer to come on, which is not surprising to me after the years. ’cause I always send out invites and no one ever takes me up at it. Very few people take me up on it. But, uh,
Scott Meehan: more
Cameron: come on. Share your stories. Yeah, we’d love to have more people on the show.
Take care of yourself, Scott. Have a good one.
Bernard: Q A V is a checklist-based system of value investing developed by Tony Khyneston. over 25 years. To learn more about how it works and how you can learn the system, visit our website, Q A V Podcast dot com dot A U.
This podcast is an information provider and in giving you product information we are not making any suggestion or recommendation about a particular product. The [01:00:00] information has been prepared without taking into account your individual investment objectives, financial circumstances or needs. Before you decide whether or not to acquire a particular financial product you should assess whether it is appropriate for you in the light of your own personal circumstances, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation and needs. You may wish to obtain financial advice from a suitably qualified adviser before making any decision to acquire a financial product. Please note that all information about performance returns is historical. Past performance should not be relied upon as an indicator of future performance; unit prices and the value of your investment may fall as well as rise. The results are general advice only and not personal product advice.
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Quote of the day: “An insult is like a drink; it affects one only if accepted. And pride is too heavy baggage for my journey; I have none.”
Glory Road
Robert A. Heinlein

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