
In this episode of the QAV value investing podcast, Tony digs into Pepper Money (PPM), dissecting its operations as a non-bank lender, securitisation of mortgages, and attracting investors. Covering its history, IPO, and recent product innovations like the SMSF mortgage, key financial metrics including profits, assets under management, loan losses, dividend trends, and share buybacks, its stock value relative to market metrics and Stockopedia rankings, cautioning about risks such as interest rate sensitivity and potential asset finance fraud while highlighting growth prospects in the non-conforming lending market.
Transcription
QAV 742 Club
[00:00:00] TK: Mr. Bond, I’m not gonna hurt you, I’m going to kill you!
[00:00:13] CR: This is Tony doing his best Elon Musk as Bond villain impersonation. Welcome to QAV 7 742,
[00:00:21] TK: That’s it. Musk is the new Goldfinger.
[00:00:24] CR: Yes.
[00:00:26] TK: Yeah.
[00:00:27] CR: I like golllllld.
[00:00:31] TK: Welcome to Amsterdam,
[00:00:32] TK: Mr. Bond.
[00:00:35] CR: and I think we’ve talked about this before, but you know that if the Bond producers, the Broccoli’s, approached Musk and said, we want you to be the Bond villain in the next Bond film, you know, he would do it. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:00:50] TK: dollars.
[00:00:51] CR: Tony’s doing visual jokes on a podcast here. How’s your week been, TK?
[00:00:59] TK: Good? Yep. Um, yeah, it’s been, yeah, been really good. Had a couple of horses run on the weekend, didn’t do so well, but that’s okay. Uh, just trying to catch up on things because I’ve been away so often lately, so it’s been reasonably quiet.
[00:01:15] CR: With your second wife.
[00:01:17] TK: With my second wife, yes. How was your week? Now, I was reading in the Fin Review on the front page today that, uh, uh, what’s her name?
[00:01:25] TK: Sally McManus has two black belts. One of them is in Kung Fu.
[00:01:30] CR: Who’s Sally McManus?
[00:01:32] TK: ahead of the ACTU.
[00:01:35] CR: Oh,
[00:01:36] TK: There was an article about how, um, well, yeah, there was an article about how she had to beef up security because of the CFMEU, um, bikey gang infiltration. Allegedly. Yeah. So I thought, wow, she’s got two black belts.
[00:01:54] CR: Yeah, well, she’s ahead of
[00:01:55] TK: is there a black belt, is there a black belt arbitrage? Like if you get one in Kung Fu, do you then go and talk to the Taekwondo people and get an in on your second?
[00:02:04] CR: I’ve already got one, just, you know, give me another one. That’s a, it’s a thing. There’s lots of people in our Kung Fu school that have got black belts and other, you know, Taekwondo or BJJ or something like that. So, uh,
[00:02:19] TK: Hang on. You’re going to have to explain that
[00:02:21] TK: one.
[00:02:22] CR: Brazilian Jiu Jitsu. Lots of, lots of tackling. Uh,
[00:02:27] CR: grappling and tackling stuff and BJJ. Yeah. Um, let’s not, let’s not take the easy jokes. Um, yeah, it’s a lot of people get a black belt in one discipline and then they want to go do another one and another one and add to their skillset. Cause they’re all
[00:02:42] CR: slightly different, but, um, I think I’ll stick to this one for the time being. So our grading is this Friday, our
[00:02:50] TK: hmm. Ah, good
[00:02:51] CR: brown belt grading.
[00:02:52] CR: I’m getting my
[00:02:53] CR: back put back. Bye. Hit put back in again tomorrow. I got it back in last Wednesday. I got to get it put back in tomorrow. Hopefully, just hoping I don’t, uh, injure myself. I did something on Saturday. I was training with one of the black belts on Saturday. We, one of the things I have to do in my grading is a, what we call a bear hug defense.
[00:03:12] CR: So somebody comes up from behind you, grabs you around, you know, The arms, pins your arms in, pulls you really hard and you’ve got to get out. And we’ve got a couple of techniques for getting out. And there’s this black belt there. No, he’s not a black belt, he’s a brown belt, but he’s been there for like 10 years and he’s this short guy, built like a wombat, what we call wombat strength, you know, so he’s just all muscle.
[00:03:35] CR: And he grabbed me so hard that I think he bruised my, the little bone, the xiphoid. That’s just where your solar plexus is at the bottom of your ribcage. It’s bruised and it really hurt over the weekend. I was like, Oh my God, I’m just getting over my, uh, back issue. And now I’ve got a bruised solar plexus.
[00:03:58] CR: So anywho, trying to take it easy
[00:04:01] TK: know, I’m learning lots here about how to get away from someone who grabs me from behind, and what a Zipfian is. That’s very educational.
[00:04:10] CR: Yeah. Well, come along to Kung Fu and I’ll show you some stuff one of these days.
[00:04:14] TK: Well, I get all my moves from 80s action movies. If someone grabs you from behind, you lean forward and then run up backwards
[00:04:20] TK: against the wall and try and break out of it that way. Yeah.
[00:04:24] CR: Yeah. As long as there’s a wall in front of you, you’re
[00:04:26] CR: good.
[00:04:26] TK: Yeah.
[00:04:26] CR: If there’s no wall in front of you, you’re stuffed.
[00:04:30] TK: If you’re in an open field, yeah, right.
[00:04:32] CR: Yeah. Um, well it’s, uh, Mark, it’s been ticking along. What did you say last week? Boringly happy,
[00:04:40] TK: Boringly happy, yeah.
[00:04:42] CR: of last week’s title. It’s been more of
[00:04:43] TK: I like that
[00:04:44] CR: week. Um, I was going to talk to you about Pepper Money Limited, cause it was at the top of our buy list this week, and I’d never really heard of them before.
[00:04:54] CR: And I was looking at them last night and the PropCaf was like 0. 5. They’re a non bank lender. And then I saw in your notes, you’re going to do them as a pulled pork anyway.
[00:05:01] TK: Yeah.
[00:05:02] CR: you’re going to do a PP on PPM.
[00:05:05] CR: It’s the PPPP. P. M. today.
[00:05:09] TK: Correct. Prior planning prevents piss poor
[00:05:13] TK: performance. Used to be the saying.
[00:05:15] TK: Oh,
[00:05:19] CR: that they’re doing a share buyback and then I was looking at the other stocks in the top of the buy list. Boom Logistics doing a share buyback, Perenti doing a share buyback. Lots of share buybacks going on. Uh, and I know we’ve, we’ve talked about share buybacks a bit, whether or not it’s a sign of, um, value or that it’s a good stock.
[00:05:42] CR: Uh, remind me what you would derive from the fact that a lot of the companies at the top of our buy list are in the process of doing share buybacks.
[00:05:54] TK: I think I derive a lot. I’m seriously thinking about putting it into the checklist. Again, you’re reading my mind because I was going to talk about it today on the on the show on the what’s what works on Wall Street section. Uh, but I decided to break it up to do dividends this week and buybacks next week.
[00:06:12] TK: But in a nutshell, uh, O’Shaughnessy thinks buybacks are good. And if you buy shares that are doing buybacks, you outperform the market. So, um, I’ll cover it on next week’s show. And then I think once I can work out how to rate it, how to put it in the checklist and how to gather the
[00:06:30] TK: data, I’ll try and put it in the checklist, I think.
Um, alright, well, the other one that I saw, uh, mentioned this morning I was looking up was Emeco,
[00:06:42] TK: Mm hmm.
[00:06:43] CR: uh, I think you did a Pulled Pork on back in, like, May. That was the blog post that broke the website this morning was the one where you did the pulled pork, Emeco. Um, I
[00:06:54] TK: Is that, was that because it was so popular it brought
[00:06:57] TK: down the website?
[00:06:58] CR: yeah, that was it.
[00:06:59] TK: Yeah. Okay.
[00:07:00] CR: I looked, I was going back to look at the transcript to see if you’d mentioned this and I don’t think you did. By the way, it’s, uh, how’s it done since May? Terrible. It, uh, it was trading at, uh, 40, 43 cents in May, and then it went down to 14 cents.
[00:07:23] TK: Wow.
[00:07:23] CR: September, it’s back up to 17. Oh no, hold on, that’s European Metal Holdings, my bad.
[00:07:29] CR: What’s the share code for Amico? It’s not EMH apparently.
[00:07:32] TK: I think it’s EHL,
[00:07:33] TK: isn’t it?
[00:07:33] CR: Oh, okay. Maybe I should look at the right. There you go. Oh, it’s done. Right. Oh, the opposite of pulled pork curse. Middle of May, it was 77 cents. It dropped down to 70. Then it went up to 83, came back to 73. It’s now trading about 80. So it’s done a little bit.
[00:07:52] CR: Done okay. But, um,
[00:07:53] TK: Okay. That’s great. Since May.
[00:07:56] CR: 77 to 80. It’s not that
[00:07:58] TK: Okay.
[00:07:59] CR: Good. But, um, I noticed a story in Yahoo Finance this morning that private equity firms own 39 percent and individual investors hold only 30%. This article, which is, you know, simply Wall Street, so they’re trying to sell a
[00:08:18] CR: research report, but they say every investor in Amico Holdings should be aware of the most powerful shareholder groups. The group holding the most number of shares in the company, around 39 percent to be precise, is private equity firms. In other words, the group stands to gain the most or lose the most from their investment into the company.
[00:08:34] CR: Meanwhile, individual investors make up 30 percent of the company’s shareholders. They talk about institutional investors and blah, blah, blah. We’ve talked a bit in the past about, um, you know, uh, index funds having to own, you Top 200 and that kind of stuff. And I was wondering, like, when you see a situation like this, private equity firms are owning nearly 40 percent of a stock like this.
[00:08:58] CR: I’m not, is it a, is it a good thing or a bad thing or a neutral thing in your view?
[00:09:03] TK: I think it’s a neutral thing. It’s just another big shareholder, as far as I can tell. It wouldn’t surprise me if they launch some kind of corporate action. You know, they’ve got a large shareholding, and I guess when the time’s right, they might launch a takeover, which is happening with one of the other companies we’re going to talk about, GTN.
[00:09:24] TK: Um I guess the only, the only direct issue for me is it affects ADT because there’s less of the float traded because the cornerstone shareholder isn’t going to take much out of it. Um, but no, it doesn’t, it’s not something I factor
[00:09:38] TK: into the checklist at all.
[00:09:41] CR: Right. And private equity firms would tend to just buy and hold and try and build it. They wouldn’t be trading their equity on the public market usually,
[00:09:51] TK: Well, they might, but it’s a big, that’s a big chunk to trade. So they’ll face the problem of, you know, swamping the market and dropping it. I’ll have to sell the discount if they try and trade it all at
[00:10:00] TK: once. Because the ADT is so
[00:10:02] TK: small.
[00:10:03] CR: Right. But it’s, it’s similar to Berkshire Hathaway owning a big chunk of a company. Right. And they, they do trade stuff from time to time, but they have to be
[00:10:12] CR: careful about how they do that, I guess.
[00:10:14] TK: Yeah, but Berkshire Hathaway, I mean, if you look at what Berkshire Hathaway does when it trades, it’s usually in very big companies like Apple or Airlines or Bank of America or something like that. So I dare say, I’ve never heard Warren talk about it, but I dare say he’s well aware of market depth when he’s doing his trades.
[00:10:31] CR: of course. Yeah. I’m just looking at the ADT. So 243, 000 is the ADT for EHL. So it’s tiny.
[00:10:39] TK: Yeah, uh, so what’s, what’s likely? I mean, who knows, but it could just be that the private equity thought it was a good investment. But to take a big shareholding like that is, um, could be a precursor to a takeover, could be a precursor to an amalgamation if they’ve got stakes in similar companies, um, even worldwide.
[00:11:00] TK: Uh, it’s, it’s hard to say.
[00:11:02] CR: Right.
[00:11:04] TK: Looks like, and it’s called, the company’s called Black Diamond, so I don’t know much about them. They’re an overseas, um, company. The US based private
[00:11:12] TK: equity company.
[00:11:13] CR: that a KISS song? Black Diamond! Pretty sure. I’m
[00:11:19] TK: Okay.
[00:11:20] CR: looking it up now. Yeah. Yeah, Black Diamond, KISS song, uh,
[00:11:25] TK: maybe kiss on a bit of Amico.
[00:11:28] TK: Maybe they’re into their earth moving.
[00:11:29] CR: it’s Gene Simmons Investment Company. 1974 on the album KISS, which if I’m not mistaken was their first album. The debut studio album, Black Diamond. Yes, love a bit. Do you like Kiss, Tony?
[00:11:45] TK: I did when I was like about 13 or 14. Yeah. And I actually heard a really good podcast about them too. You’ve reminded me of, um, there’s a Canadian podcast called Under the Influence, which I’d recommend to any marketers out there. Very, very good. And he covered Kiss is a Case Story about how they, um, almost went, went about their career in a corporate way.
[00:12:08] TK: So they made their, made their, uh, Or they start in the, in the rock and roll industry by going and playing different colleges and just kept going back to them around the US and, you know, would do anything for the people who came out to them, play at football matches, all that kind of thing, until it just got a bigger and bigger audience based on
[00:12:26] TK: loyalty.
[00:12:27] TK: Yeah. Yeah. Oh,
[00:12:28] CR: I think that’s the way they all did it. I mean, it’s the way Van Halen did it back, like Backyard, Van Halen got started doing backyard parties in Pasadena. Like just, you know, drunken parties, and I’ve heard like recordings of them playing high school dances and venues like that, you know, in the early days.
[00:12:46] CR: I think that was the way that you did it back in the day. Back in the seventies. Um, I, the thing that I’ve always admired about Kiss is just the branding. I mean, the logo and the makeup, like, you know, you think you see, um, a little Charlie Chaplin moustache, you know, it’s Charlie Chaplin or Hitler. You see the bicorn hat, you know, it’s Napoleon.
[00:13:12] CR: You see a fat dude with a cigar outline and it’s either Churchill or, um, uh, who is the, the. The Director in the 60s, Rear Window, Hitchcock, Hitchcock. Like these people with really definitive things, but you see, you know, just an outline of Gene Simmons or Paul Stanley’s. Makeup, and you know who it is. It’s like, or Alice Cooper’s the same, or Bowie’s Lightning Bolt, that kind of stuff.
[00:13:40] CR: Like just brilliant branding that they had from the get go. I think Ace Frehley came up with the KISS logo originally, and then Paul Stanley, um, sort of tightened it up. I think they were both like graphic designers or something in their spare time. Yeah. Right.
[00:13:57] TK: an interview with Gene Simmons who said that he had this really wild meeting with the bank. He got dressed up in a suit and took his briefcase into a bank to ask for money so they can invest in KISS with the makeup and the light show and the pyrotechnics. And he had to show them the photograph, pictures of them in makeup and everything.
[00:14:13] TK: So that was a really, it was a
[00:14:14] TK: really wild meeting.
[00:14:18] CR: Anywho, private equity firms back to that. Black Diamond. We don’t know who Black Diamond are.
[00:14:23] TK: No, and nor do I
[00:14:25] TK: care, really, to be honest.
[00:14:27] CR: You don’t care. Okay.
[00:14:28] TK: No.
[00:14:29] CR: US dummy portfolio update. Tony, uh, last week it was up 66%. It’s, uh, today it’s up 79%.
[00:14:40] TK: Uh, what are we doing talking here? We should just go and put our houses into the U. S. dummy portfolio stocks.
[00:14:45] CR: It’s like, you know, I’d like to say that, uh, I’m a genius, but,
[00:14:51] TK: huh. Oh, look, you can say it.
[00:14:54] CR: using your system, but it,
[00:14:56] CR: uh, like the market over there is just, yeah. It’s insanity right now. I mean, this is against the S& P, which is up 35%, so we’re doing better than double the S& P in the US. But even that, up 35 percent the S& P in a year, I mean, that’s
[00:15:15] TK: I know, it’s incredible.
[00:15:17] CR: historically crazy, right?
[00:15:19] CR: I
[00:15:19] CR: mean, I’m sure it has done that during different boom periods in the past, maybe in the dot com boom and places like that, but still, the S& P up 35 percent since September last year. It’s a bit over a year now we’ve been running it, just a little over a year, but that’s crazy. Anyway, there you go. Geoff, uh, contacted me last week, um, we were talking a week or so ago about VUK,
[00:15:42] TK: Mm hmm.
[00:15:43] CR: well and truly vucked now, and that, uh, if you missed the, whatever it is, a takeover, you might be in sticky waters.
[00:15:54] CR: Jeff called me, he did miss it, he owned it, and hadn’t been paying attention. And called me up and said, uh, you know, what do you think I should do? And I said, disclaimer, don’t take any financial advice from me, but you just call NABTRADE and ask them, they’re his broker, ask him what the situation is. He emailed me and said he did do that and they said the funds will be returned to him tomorrow.
[00:16:19] CR: So.
[00:16:20] TK: Oh, good.
[00:16:21] CR: Yeah, happy, happy ending there for Jeff
[00:16:23] CR: being stuck in VUK. So just wanted to mention that. Thank you to Jeff for reporting back and anyone else if you have found yourself holding VUK, reach out to your broker or computer share and hopefully it’ll get sorted out.
[00:16:40] TK: Yeah, because it was, it was under takeover for a long time, traded like about one cent below the takeover price for most of this year, and finally got delisted last week. So, um, you should have really sold out. And put the money somewhere else earlier on, but good on Jeff for getting his money
[00:16:55] TK: out quickly once de listed.
[00:16:57] CR: Yeah, I got a quote from Lefevre’s, uh, Reminiscences of a Stock Broker, uh, this is towards the end of the book, I thought it was a good one. The public always wants to be told. That is what makes tip giving and tip taking universal practices. It is proper.
[00:17:30] CR: Today’s earnings do not justify brokers in advising their customers to buy stocks unless there is some assurance that six or nine months from today, the business outlook will warrant the belief that the same rate of earnings will be maintained. If, on looking that far ahead, you can see reasonably clearly the conditions are developing which will change the present actual power, the argument about stocks being cheap today will disappear.
[00:17:56] CR: The trader must look far ahead. But the broker is concerned with getting commissions now. Hence the inescapable fallacy of the average market letter. Brokers make their living out of commissions from the public, yet they will try to induce the public through their market letters or by word of mouth to buy the same stocks in which they have received selling orders from insiders or manipulators.
[00:18:23] TK: Oh, that’s very cynical.
[00:18:25] CR: Isn’t it?
[00:18:26] TK: Yeah.
[00:18:28] CR: Yeah, do you think much has changed in a hundred years, Tony?
[00:18:31] TK: Uh, I think it’s a bit more regulated these days, but there are probably ways around it. For sure. You just have to look at broker recommendations, right? There’s something like about 80 percent of broker recommendations are buy, buy or hold, and a very small number are sell, because like, the broker wants further work from the company, so why would he say, or she say,
[00:18:50] TK: sell the stock?
[00:18:51] TK: Mm. Mm hmm.
[00:18:53] CR: but I, and I think the key point though, I took away from this is just that reminder that brokers are in the business of getting you to trade. That’s how they make money at the end of the day is
[00:19:07] TK: Mm hmm.
[00:19:08] CR: trade. And so you got to
[00:19:11] CR: keep that in mind if you’re talking to brokers and I guess, you know, people that put out newsletters, us aside, uh,
[00:19:22] TK: Because we’re gentlemen.
[00:19:27] CR: Well, we’re always telling people to do your own research and, you know, work it out for yourself. We’re teaching a system. We’re not telling you what to buy or what to sell.
[00:19:36] TK: we make nothing out of trades. Maybe
[00:19:38] TK: we should.
[00:19:41] CR: trying to teach people how to think about investing, not telling them what to buy or to sell. Anyway, I think it never hurts to remind ourselves that the, most of the financial services industry is a con. It’s. People on all sides who make money out of convincing people to do things, uh, buy, sell, or read the newspaper, watch the TV show, cause they’re making money off of advertising, or you know, subscriptions, or something like that.
[00:20:19] CR: It’s a, it’s, it’s the old saying, if, if you don’t know, if you don’t know what product you’re being sold, then you’re the product, something like that.
[00:20:32] TK: Yeah. That’s right. And, um, or similar to the Buffett saying, if you’re playing poker and you’re sitting at the table and don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.
[00:20:40] CR: You’re the fancy. Yeah,
[00:20:44] TK: Yeah.
[00:20:45] CR: but I think it’s
[00:20:45] TK: Or, and the other, and the other Buffett saying, if you never ask the barber for a haircut, it’s like, if you, if you suddenly inherit a million dollars, don’t ring up your stockbroker and
[00:20:55] TK: say, what should I do with it?
[00:20:59] CR: So you shouldn’t ask your hairdresser for a haircut, really?
[00:21:02] TK: if you
[00:21:03] TK: know, you shouldn’t ask your barber if you need a haircut.
[00:21:05] CR: Oh, if you need a haircut, yes. Right. Yeah. The answer’s always gonna be yes. My barber doesn’t like me very much right now because I, I only see him like once a year. You used to see him every six weeks and now I was like once a year and he is like, you just looks at me, says I can make you look better, mate.
[00:21:26] CR: Yeah. He said If a guy, Richie, film my hairdresser, he goes, there’s shit messy and there’s good, messy Yeah. Your hair looks shit messy, so I’m gonna make it look good messy. It can still look messy, but we’ll make it look good messy. Just come back and see me, I’ll keep it looking good messy, yeah? Hey, Governor. Alright, that’s all my notes. What do you got?
[00:21:46] TK: I’ve got a pulled pork to do and I’ve got a What Works on Wall Street
[00:21:52] TK: quote to go through as well. So which would you
[00:21:55] CR: AIT Oh, AITK. You listen to
[00:21:58] TK: Yeah, so I’ll listen to the show.
[00:22:02] CR: I was wondering if you’d pick that up.
[00:22:04] TK: Now I know how Scarlett Johansson feels,
[00:22:07] CR: Yeah. Oh, you do, you?
[00:22:10] TK: yeah.
[00:22:11] CR: I thought you meant you’d
[00:22:12] CR: felt up Scarlett Johansson. Um, yeah, I’ve gotcha. I thought you’d be happy about that. Yeah. We don’t even know if this is really you on the show now. It could just be an AI version of you.
[00:22:26] TK: Yeah, so let’s swap the roles. You can use AI to do all the pull books and quotes and answer
[00:22:32] TK: questions and I’ll just come on and if there’s an editing
[00:22:35] TK: mistake and I need to go in and dub, yeah, I’ll just do
[00:22:38] TK: the overdubs.
[00:22:39] CR: the funny thing was when I, when I was, so for people who didn’t pick it up in last week’s show, um, I think we were talking about, um, I can’t remember what it was. Oh, somebody who was dead. You said someone was dead.
[00:22:51] TK: Yeah, so you were doing a Yoda impersonation and I said I thought
[00:22:54] TK: Frank Oz was dead. It’s the other guy who’s dead, Jim Henson.
[00:22:58] CR: Jim Henson. Right. So I looked up
[00:22:59] CR: Frank Oz, noticed he wasn’t dead. And I thought I could get my microphone out and I didn’t want to scare people. Cause you know, I’m sure everyone cares about Frank Oz’s wellbeing. And then I realized with my editing tool, I can actually put an AI voice in there. So I tried to put my voice in there, but it did your voice by mistake.
[00:23:19] AITK: oh yeah.. sure it was a mistake… welcome to the matrix…
[00:23:22] CR: And I thought, well, that’s even better. I’ll just use Tony’s voice. I didn’t even know it could do your voice. Um, I didn’t know I’d done the, I must’ve done the training cause you have to do the training thing. I must’ve done the training thing with you at some point. Or it just says no, cause I did it with Ray a long time ago, but, um, there’s like a script that you have to read and then it, um, right.
[00:23:47] TK: done that.
[00:23:48] CR: well, I don’t know how it ended up. Knowing how to simulate your voice, but it just did. So I thought that, I thought it was pretty good. Like it
[00:23:55] TK: It was
[00:23:56] CR: it was a little bit off, but it was pretty good.
[00:23:58] AITK: Watch it, puny human.
[00:24:00] AITK: I think I’m pretty close to the real thing… even better in some ways…
[00:24:04] TK: Yeah.
[00:24:05] CR: So how about that? Yeah, now wait till I get it to call up your bank and get them to transfer all of your funds into my bank account.
[00:24:13] TK: wonder how the banks will handle that.
[00:24:15] TK: If you ring up and say, uh, I never
[00:24:17] TK: called you. Because
[00:24:20] CR: the ABC actually this morning, um, which I’m also going to talk about on the bullshit filter, about the fact that there is no legislation in Australia that forbids false political advertising, uh, false advertising in politics. Um,
[00:24:41] TK: that would just be the end of advertising
[00:24:43] TK: in politics.
[00:24:45] CR: outside of South Australia, apparently South Australia’s had it for a long time, um, you can’t lie, in a political ad in South Australia, but federally and in all the other states, it’s carte blanche.
[00:24:57] CR: You can do whatever you want. There’s no law against it. And several governments have tried to bring it in, um, federally, but it’s always been shot down. And the AEC wants to have it, but doesn’t want to run it. They want another body to be set up to actually be the judiciary on it. But they’re talking about What’s going to happen when all of a sudden we’re producing AI ads?
[00:25:24] CR: And there’s one guy who’s been doing this a
[00:25:26] TK: probably already happening.
[00:25:27] CR: to prove the point. Yeah, you, he built a thing where he had Albo and, uh, Potato Head, um, talking about some policy issue and just had it all AI generated and saying, you know. We’re, we’re entering a world where there’s just going to be this absolute swamp of fake videos of politicians saying things that they’ve never said, being produced by opposition parties and there’s no law stopping it in this country.
[00:26:00] CR: We don’t have any legislation in place to say you can’t do that. So
[00:26:04] TK: Yeah. And we have a distribution network which doesn’t care what
[00:26:07] TK: it publishes or is held to account for what
[00:26:09] TK: it publishes. So, yeah, it’s the wild west.
[00:26:13] CR: well, who are you talking about, Murdoch or Twitter? Facebook. All of the above. Yeah.
[00:26:18] TK: All of
[00:26:18] TK: the above, yeah.
[00:26:19] CR: Yeah. Yeah. So anywho, yes, AITK. That
[00:26:24] TK: Well, I’m gonna, I’m gonna, uh, yeah, I’m gonna use it as my out from now one, so when Pippa Money
[00:26:32] TK: goes down in
[00:26:33] TK: share price after I do this analysis of it, I’ll just blame AI and say it wasn’t me. I wasn’t
[00:26:38] TK: here.
[00:26:39] CR: Yeah. No. Prove, prove, prove, prove it wasn’t AI. Yeah.
[00:26:43] TK: Yeah. I just think it’s the first step of you doing a show without me and, uh, branching off, so.
[00:26:50] CR: I’m absolutely, You know,
[00:26:51] CR: prepared for that. You
[00:26:53] TK: yeah, so I’ve got my AI to recognize your
[00:26:56] TK: voice and I’ll go off on my
[00:26:58] TK: own to the
[00:27:00] CR: you want to do a show. I thought you’ve been.
[00:27:04] CR: You’ve been, you know, just waiting for me to be able to replace you with AI so you can just go and play golf all day, right?
[00:27:11] TK: Yeah, unfortunately AI’s got to get a lot smarter.
[00:27:15] CR: Give it six months.
[00:27:17] TK: I thought you’re gonna, I thought the title for last week’s show was going to be Mansplaining to AI rather than Happily
[00:27:23] TK: Boring.
[00:27:26] CR: All right, well, I’ll keep that one up by sleeve.
[00:27:29] TK: anyway,
[00:27:29] CR: first? Wow’s or PPM?
[00:27:32] TK: PPM. Alright, so Pepper Money. Pepper. Full book on Pepper Money. So it’s come on the buy list as a recent addition. Entered as number one with a bullet, as they say. If anyone doesn’t know who Pepper Money is, it’s a non bank lender. And they ask on their website, do you wonder exactly what a non bank lender is?
[00:27:59] TK: Put simply, we’re a finance provider that isn’t a bank.
[00:28:03] TK: This means that since
[00:28:04] TK: we aren’t, sorry.
[00:28:06] CR: Or the mob? Isn’t that just the mob? Non bank lender? Okay, sorry. I’ve watched too much Sopranos. Keep going. Podcasters.
[00:28:16] TK: aren’t a deposit taking institution, our loans aren’t funded by customer deposits. Instead, our loans are funded through debt capital markets, marketplaces for money invested in lending. Now, that’s a good summary, I thought, of what they do. Banks do this as well, but they also use deposits to back their mortgages.
[00:28:36] TK: You know, these, this company, uh, does what’s called securitization, so they will take a whole bundle of mortgages, put them together, go out and sell a bond, back to back with that. And then, um, make a margin on the difference. And there’s plenty of investors, like you spoke about before, the PE companies, uh, around the world who like to buy these kinds of bonds and, um, invest in them.
[00:29:00] TK: Um, they generally pay a little bit better than other corporate bonds. Um, these loans are generally retailed to customers, uh, at a little bit higher rate, uh, than, um, you can get from a mainstream bank. And the market for these mortgages is often, uh, people who can’t get a mortgage somewhere else. Um, so they don’t hold a steady job, or they’re in a small business, or, uh, whatever.
[00:29:26] TK: Yeah, podcasters, well they haven’t been in the job long enough to have a credit history or whatever. So yeah, um, History of Pepper began life in 2000. So it’s been around for nearly 25 years. Some of the milestones, they bought GE Capitals, home lending business in Australia and New Zealand in 2011, GE Capitals now called Latitude Finance in Australia.
[00:29:49] TK: Uh, 2012, they acquired an auto loan book for 150 million and they now offer auto loans. 2014, they launched an equipment and asset finance business. 2016, launched a personal loan product. 2018, commenced commercial real estate lending. 2019 entered the New Zealand mortgage market, and in 2021 they IPO’d on the ASX.
[00:30:13] TK: In 2023 they launched an SMSF mortgage product. So basically they’ve been expanding by doing what the major banks do. Personal loans, car loans, equipment financing, etc. So it’s pretty much now a bank, but it doesn’t take deposits. And there’s some benefits to that too, because they’re not at a, uh, what’s called an ADI, Authorized Deposit Taking, or ADT.
[00:30:39] TK: ADI, Authorized Deposit Taking Institution. And so there’s different regulations about them. So, uh, it gives them a slight advantage. Uh, 2024 results, um, for the half. It was a little bit difficult to go through their results because, um, there’s a lot of, uh, pro formas in there. Um, a lot of normalized. Profit type things, and I guess the reason for that is timing issues on when these bonds are issued compared to when the mortgages are written, so there’s a bit of smoothing I guess they do on there, but the profit was up 13 percent on the PCP, and they call that profit pre revision.
[00:31:21] TK: However, the MPAT was down 4 percent on PCP. So I’m going to look at the MPAT, which is the statutory number. Uh, total, uh, assets under management is now 19. 3 billion, and that was up 2 percent on PCP. So they’ve got, they’ve got a fairly large, uh, lending base out there. Total net interest margin, which is their margin between, um, Borrowing and lending is 1.
[00:31:47] TK: 92 percent and that’s up 11 basis points. So that’s good. Um, one thing that caught my eye was loan losses as a percentage of lending rose from 0. 28 percent to 0. 45%. So that’s small, but it’s something to watch because it’s increasing. So that’s, uh, when we spoke about that, we, we’ve covered this kind of sector a little bit in the last month or so.
[00:32:08] TK: We had Judo
[00:32:09] CR: JDO. Yeah,
[00:32:12] TK: um, I think there’s been another one too, it escapes me, but, um, it’s obviously, uh, coming of age, I guess it’s getting onto our buy list, um, it’s a sector that’s, uh, becoming attractive, uh, but one of the things I do watch with banks is their provisioning for bad and doubtful debts, and that is going up for this company, however, total expenses were down 2%, Um, on the prior period, uh, Interim Fully Franked Dividend is 5 cents, which was up 1.
[00:32:38] TK: 5 cents per share, so that’s good too. So, kind of, um, across the board, not a bad result, not a great result, but, but not bad. Uh, I do, did note that Stock Doctor is forecasting earnings per share to drop this half again, so, um, It’s, it’s, it’s, it’s a growing company, but the profit seems to be falling a little bit, so something to watch.
[00:33:04] TK: Um, but during the year, they completed the acquisition of a company called Stratton Finance, which they had already owned a large tranche of. Um, but it meant that they had capital. Uh, freed up after they bought the rest of that, and they’re now undertaking a share buyback, as you said before. So they’re buying back a large chunk, approximately 10% of their shares on market this year.
[00:33:25] TK: So that’s, that’s quite a, uh, extensive, um, buyback. The QAV numbers, um, share price used in the analysis is a dollar 41, and that’s 10% below consensus target, but it’s greater than IV one of. 1. 20 and intrinsic value 2 of it’s less than intrinsic value 93. So it’s, it’s kind of in the value range. Uh, interestingly enough, both Stock Doctor and Stockopedia can’t rate the financial health and trend for this kind of company.
[00:33:55] TK: And we’ve seen that before with, with, with these kinds of, uh, non bank lenders, uh, because they have different, um, different finances to industrial companies. But I did note that Stockopedia Does have a, an F score of 6 out of 9, uh, for its health trends, so that’s pretty good. So, the, um, Piotrowski score was good for this company.
[00:34:18] TK: ADT is approximately 300, 000, so it’s, uh, a reasonable size. Uh, PE is 6 times, which is the highest in the last 3 years, so we give it a negative 1 on the checklist for that. Yield is 7. 1 percent which is strong and scores for us being above the average mortgage rate. And, uh, something I also like about this kind of company is the yield is also greater than the PE ratio.
[00:34:42] TK: So it scores for that. That’s a, um, long, long been used by myself as a good, um, shortcut indicator of value. But the big, big indicator of value is the PropCaf, which is only 0. 5 times, so you’re, it’s, you’re paying six months cash flow per share for this company, which seems to be amazing. Um, however, I did note the operating cash flow for this company is, is different to what we’d normally, normally pay.
[00:35:11] TK: look at property and cash flow. And I think it’s being boosted at the moment by the timing between issuing the bonds, um, to raise money and then loaning it out. So there’s, there’s, there’s always something in the cash flow statement called, um, what’s it called? Sale of, sale of assets, I think it is. Um, I’ll get the term in a minute.
[00:35:31] TK: Uh, but, um, I think it’s a timing issue. So the last couple of halves have had strong PropCaf. Um, Prior years haven’t, uh, I suspect if this is a timing issue that PropCaf may go down in the future. It does have a sort of regular PropCaf, which is the margin between the bonds and the, and the mortgages. Um, uh, and that’s kind of smoothed over time, but there is a bit of a regularity in the cashflow.
[00:35:58] TK: So this, this could go away from the buy list next half, but for the moment, they’re, they’ve got a bit of cash to throw at the business. Um, company, uh, what else have I got? Um, equity per share is 1. 95, so we are also buying this company at less than book value. So that’s another compelling value screen for me, um, regardless of what’s happening with PropCaf, it is, we are buying it for less than book.
[00:36:26] TK: Stockopedia give it a ranking of 91. which is reasonably high up on their score, with a 98 ranking for value. So they see this being a value share as well. I did mention before, earnings per share is forecast to decline by 15%, so it gets a minus one on the PEG ratio for us because it’s going down. Um, doesn’t, the company doesn’t have an owner founder.
[00:36:49] TK: It did up until the start of this year. The, uh, the chair, He was one of the founders, a chap by the name of Michael Colhane, and it appears as if he’s retired for health reasons. So he founded Pepper, acted as the CEO, and then took it to the ASX boards and became the chair. He stepped down earlier this year.
[00:37:14] TK: It’s a good time for me to mention a bit like the company we spoke about before, Amico, Pepper has an unusual ownership structure and 60 percent of it is owned by a company called the Pepper Holdco ANZ. It was just called Holdco for short. I know Cole Hayne was also involved on the board of that company and it’s unclear if he stepped down from the Holdco board, um, but I’ve scored it, uh, A zero for owning a founder, because even if he’s on the board of Holdco, he’s not directly involved day to day.
[00:37:47] TK: Holdco is interesting. It appears to be a joint venture between the founder and KKR and some other investors. Um, um, And when I tried to dig down as to what it was, what was going on here, it looks like, uh, when they listed on the ASX, they had to do some kind of restructuring of the company. I’m not sure why, either for tax reasons, because the, the ultimate owner of the company of the shareholding in the company is based in, uh, the Jersey islands.
[00:38:17] TK: Um, but it could also be that they had to do something about some of the overseas branches of Pepper, um, something to do with the rules on the ASX, which sometimes occurs, um, the, the. Annual report says that the ultimate parent entity of Pepper Money Limited is Pepper Global TopCo Limited, or TopCo for short, an entity incorporated in Jersey.
[00:38:39] TK: TopCo owns 100 percent of the shares in Pepper Global MidCo, which in turn owns 100 percent of the shares in Pepper Group ANZ HoldCo. HoldCo owns 60. 55 percent of the shares of Pepper Money Limited and its controlled entities. I did a bit more googling and came up with something that said, After completing a corporate restructure to demerge the Australian, New Zealand and Manila operations from the rest of Pepper Global Group, Pepper Money converted to a public 1, 000 company and listed on the ASX on the 21st of May, uh, 25th of May 2021.
[00:39:13] TK: Pepper Group, ANZ, Holco, Part of Pepper Global Group retained 60. 6 percent of the share capital of Pepper Money. So, not sure what to make of that. Again, it’s a, it’s a large, uh, cornerstone holding. Um, obviously put together by the founder. So, uh. May lead to nothing and it may be for tax reasons or it may be for listing reasons when it listed.
[00:39:39] TK: But I couldn’t find much else about that. KKR are involved, so they may want to do something with that holding company. But again, the only, the only, um, The only impact I can see on my thinking about this particular holding is it lowers the ADT because there’s less, you know, 60 percent of the stock is tied up with one company.
[00:40:02] TK: So it’s more liquid than it should be. But we take ADT into account, so it’s not going to bother us too much. What else can I say? There’s a, it’s a new three point upturn, scores for that. It doesn’t have consistently increasing equity, so I can’t score it for that. Uh, all in all, quality’s not great. It’s 9 out of 17, or 53%, um, possibly marked down because of the fact it’s a financial and we can’t get, um, scores for financial health or trend.
[00:40:33] TK: Um, but by the by, the QAV score is 1. 05, which is dramatically high, which is driven by the PropCaf. So, what are the risks? Um, PropCaf is driven by the net interest. Oh, here we go. The term in the operating cash flow statement is proceeds from sale of loan portfolios. And that’s the line item which has ramped up recently, so it could reverse or go down in the future.
[00:40:59] TK: So, um, if you just relied on the underlying interest cash flow, that would reduce the PropCaf quite a lot. Um, but it’s a PE of 6, so it’s still not going to be, um, horrible if that sort of one off, um, Cash injection goes away. Um, there’s all the sort of normal lending risks associated with this kind of company.
[00:41:18] TK: Interest rate moves will affect it, as will any downturns in the economies, which might lead to slower repayments or delinquencies. And the other one I called out, they’re in the asset finance business and there has been a couple of cases of fraud in that industry in the last 12 months that I know of.
[00:41:38] TK: So, I’m assuming they’ve got the right checks and balances, but it’s a potential risk as well. Opportunities though, is that this lending market is a growing market. As the banks are more regulated, the major banks are more regulated, they can lend less to less people. And so the non conforming market is a growing market.
[00:42:00] TK: And Pepper has plenty of headroom to grow share. It’s only got a small part of that market at the moment. So plenty of upside, plenty of cash flow, uh, I think it’s, you know, justifiable to look at it, um, at this stage, bearing in mind that the PropCaf might, might not be the best thing to base it on, but certainly you’re buying it for less than book, and a PE of 6, it’s
[00:42:23] TK: still, you know, quite cheap anyway.
[00:42:25] CR: Hmm. Yeah, that, the PropCaf situation sort of spooked me when I looked at it last night because it doesn’t seem, I mean, I’m sure, we know that PropCaf plays a big chunk of our scoring and it’s kind of hard to assess with these sort of non bank lending players with the way the money works.
[00:42:48] TK: yeah, there’s a few sort of industries where PropCaf gets distorted. This one, um, I think we had another one on the buy list. I think it was called, uh, was it Data Advantage? The Brisbane company that resold computing. So it’s PropCaf had a timing issue about when it Bought from wholesalers and sold to retailers, that kind of thing.
[00:43:07] TK: So yeah,
[00:43:08] CR: Mm. Mm.
[00:43:09] TK: can get skewed from time to time.
[00:43:12] CR: But the other fundamentals you, think are pretty good.
[00:43:14] TK: Yeah. Yeah, I do. Hmm.
[00:43:17] CR: Tony. Pepper Pig. Pepper Pig’s Bank. Okay. WWOWS.
[00:43:27] TK: Well, wow.
[00:43:28] CR: us?
[00:43:29] TK: What works on Wall Street. So I was going to do a comparison between O’Shaughnessy’s Research into dividends and buybacks, but it became quite lengthy, so I’m just going to break it up. So, I’ll cover dividends this week and then I’ll cover buybacks next week. Uh, so this is Chapter 11 from what works on Wall Street.
[00:43:49] TK: Uh, and he talks, the introductory, I love his introductory quotes, he’s found some great quotes. This one goes, October. This is one of the peculiarly dangerous months to speculate in stocks. The others are July, January, September, April, November, May, March, June, December, August, and February. Which is a quote from Mark Twain. then O’Shaughnessy goes on to say, Investors who find all months peculiarly dangerous often seek redemption in stocks with high dividend yields. Since dividends have historically accounted for more than half a stock’s total return, investors think it wise to concentrate on stocks paying high dividends.
[00:44:31] TK: What’s more, it’s impossible to monkey with a dividend yield since the company must pay, defer, or cancel it. So his research shows that A 10, 000 investment in the decile of the highest yielding stocks on December 31, 1926 was worth 102 million at the end of 2009, an average compound return of 11. 77%. And that’s more than investing in the all stocks universe, so the index, where the average compound return was 10.
[00:45:05] TK: 46%. So, not much extra alpha over the index, um, what is it, uh, 1%, basically, and O’Shaughnessy agrees. He says, high dividend yields alone do not provide a constant panacea for investments in broader indexes or a more specific strategy that includes other factors. In other words, you’re not going to rely just on dividend yield to make your investment choice. O’Shaughnessy then goes on to look at stocks that cut their dividends and found that better returns were found in companies that were in the middle of the pack for payout ratios, but this wasn’t an overly compelling outperformance of the index either. Uh, so I probably put two things together there. He, he looked at companies, uh, first of all, that had high payout ratios and those that had low payout ratios, and he found that the best returns came from those in the middle, and then he looked, he did some research on stocks that cut their dividends.
[00:46:04] TK: His research found that cutting a dividend had a detrimental effect. Uh, not much if the dividend cut was less than 50%, but, to quote, In the 801 instances when a company cut the dividend 50 to 100%, the stocks lost to their benchmarks by an average of 3. 6 percent in the following year. The worst returns came from companies that suspended their dividends altogether.
[00:46:27] TK: There were 3, 329 instances when this occurred and the stocks lost an average 5. 1 percent to their benchmark. On the other hand, stocks that increased their dividends, over the course of our study, there were 46, 000 instances where this occurred. Those stocks beat their benchmark by an average 4. 5 percent in the following year.
[00:46:49] TK: The biggest winners were stocks that had paid no dividend but then started to pay one. In the 6, 000 observations in which a firm initiated a dividend, the stocks on average went on to beat their benchmarks by 9. 2 percent in the following year. These data suggest that dividend investors should sell any of their holdings where the dividend is cut by more than 50%, and or if it is suspended, and replace the stock with another high dividend yield company.
[00:47:17] TK: So,
[00:47:18] CR: So,
[00:47:19] TK: interesting research. That’s led me to think that we, I might tweak the, the buy list to rather than, uh, Um, or as well as look at stocks that yield more than the mortgage rate to also, uh, look at stocks which cut their dividends or restart their dividends or start their dividends. And, um, certainly that second one seems to be, uh, a high scoring
[00:47:40] TK: against the index, um, type investment.
[00:47:43] TK: Uh, so again, I’ll have to work out a way of trying to
[00:47:46] TK: automate that somehow, but, um, I’ll have a look at it.
[00:47:49] CR: so penalize them if they cut their dividend and reward them if they restart a dividend.
[00:47:55] TK: correct. Yeah,
[00:47:57] CR: Good stuff.
[00:48:01] CR: Uh, well, should I move on? I’ve got a couple of questions. I’ve got a late question. Question for you too. So the first one came from Jordan.
[00:48:12] CR: He said, I did a download today and noticed GTN is currently under a takeover offer.
[00:48:17] CR: However, the board has recommended the offer be rejected by shareholders as it doesn’t represent value for shareholders. In cases like this where a stock is on the buy list, but under a takeover offer, would Tony just move on or would he look to try and use the takeover situation to make short term
[00:48:38] TK: Nothing wrong with short term profit. That’s, that’s a good term. Uh, well, it’s regardless of whether it’s short term or long term, it’s a case by case situation, I think. So again, in what’s, what’s, what works on Wall Street, O’Shaughnessy said that, uh, he researched and found that, um, if a share price was Greater than or equal to 95 percent of the bid, it was time to move it on.
[00:49:04] TK: So that, uh, you know, is a pretty good rule of thumb. I think I had to look at GTN. It’s actually. trading above the bid price. So it’s kind of already blasted through that 95 percent rule. And that would indicate to me that the market expects the bid to be lifted. And a little bit of research would also, I think, back that up.
[00:49:27] TK: So this is a case where there was a cornerstone, uh, I think it’s a private equity firm, but certainly Cornerstone Company has an investment already in GTN, so a company called Viburnum, and they own 35. 6 percent of the shares in this company, and there are rules around, uh, share ownership and large share ownership, and so the, the rules is Generally known as the CREEP provision, means that they can’t buy any more shares on market other than 3 percent every 6 months.
[00:50:02] TK: So, it’ll take them a long time to take over the company buying on market. Um, and they’ve launched a, so they’ve launched a takeover bid. So they’ve amassed the cornerstone shareholding, they want to buy the company, they then have to make what’s called an off market takeover offer, so they’re not buying shares on market, they’re prevented from buying more than 3 percent every six months, so they’ve launched the bid and it goes directly to the shares, shareholders, who can then sell to buy Burnham.
[00:50:29] TK: The issue with this takeover offer is it’s only 0. 2 percent above the weighted average price that, um, The stock was at before the takeover, so bugger all premium for taking over the company. The rule of thumb in takeovers is you need to pay at least 20 percent premium to the stock price because you’re, um, you know, you won’t need to compensate the shareholders who are selling for future upside in the stock, um, and for the loss of control of business.
[00:50:59] TK: So, um, I suspect this is the start of a bidding war, um, I don’t know, who knows if anybody else will emerge to compete for this company, and perhaps that’s why Viburnum launched the takeover offer at about the share price prevailing. Because they’re wanting to flush somebody out. But, um, uh, yeah, I, I, the board have come out and said that they reject the takeover offer.
[00:51:26] TK: I think by Burnham to get any acceptances at the current price would be, um, wishful thinking. So they’ll probably have to increase by 10 or 20 percent at least their offer. So, um, and the share market thinks that because the price is trading above the bid price. So, Jordan, um, not financial advice, but what I would do is sit and wait.
[00:51:47] TK: Uh, I suspect there’ll be another, um, bid. Viburnum pull out in their, in their takeover offer that if they decide to pull the offer, the share price will go down. And whilst I think that’s true, um, it’s only going to drop back to the price before the offer, which was a couple of cents. So, I think your downside risk is minimal.
[00:52:08] TK: Um, the only, um, The bigger downside risk is if I, if I burn them, take their betting ball and go home and sell their 35 percent stake on the open market, which would crash the share price. But, um, why would they want to hurt themselves? By doing that, so, uh, yeah, I think it’s, it’s a waiting game, just to wait for a higher bid, wait for the board to accept it, and then wait for the share price to trade within 5 percent of that bid,
[00:52:32] TK: and then sell.
[00:52:33] CR: So when you, when you say wait, like if you don’t own it, I’m just looking at the buy list, it’s got a QAV score of 0. 29, but the average daily trade’s only 21, 000. So it’s pretty small as it is. It’s probably not going to suit most investors. Um, but when you say sit and wait, you, you, you, uh, wouldn’t consider buying it, assuming that you were buying a small
[00:53:00] TK: Oh, no, no, um, I think it’s, it’s worth, if you wanted to buy it, you can consider buying it, but knowing that it’s not going to be a long term hold, I, I think, you know, I think the way this will, who knows how it’ll play out, but the way I think it would normally play out is by Burnham have, have lobbed a bid at the share, current share price.
[00:53:17] TK: Uh, the board have rejected it. The share price is trading a bit higher than the bid was lobbed at. Uh, which would probably cause Viburnum to come in and offer some more. So, you know, you could make a short term gain. Um, Viburnum’s going to have to offer 10 or 20 percent to be realistic in attracting people to sell to them.
[00:53:38] TK: So, um, yeah, you could make 20 percent in a couple of weeks or a couple of months, which is attractive, but there’s no guarantee.
[00:53:46] CR: Okay. Thank you for that. Hope that helps, Jordan. Trent sent me an email with two questions. He said we can hold on to three questions. He said, you know, you can hold on to them, not urgent. One of them’s relatively, the first one’s pretty straightforward. I thought I’d, uh, throw it at you. Um, he said it’s, it’s been a while since we’ve had a good old fashioned three point trendline chat.
[00:54:11] CR: And he thought it was time that we did that. There was somebody else, a new listener from Denmark emailed me this morning, new subscriber from Denmark, and he was asking me questions about three point trendlines. And, um, he was looking at a blog post where I was explaining how to draw one from like April, 2020.
[00:54:30] CR: I said, it’s funny, you know, we used to get questions about them all the time until the Bread O Later came out. Now we never get questions about 3PTLs anymore because no one has to draw them.
[00:54:40] TK: Yeah.
[00:54:40] CR: Oh, by the way, somebody asked on the show a week or two ago, if there was any update on the Excel version of the Brettalator, which Gary had been working on, Gary has sent me an updated version of it, and I did some Cross testing between it and the Google version last night and they were mostly all the same.
[00:55:04] CR: There was one I think it was GRR that was a little bit different but the rest seemed to be okay. I asked Gary if he was happy for me to share it more broadly and so people can do their own testing. He said he is so I’m going to throw a link to that up on the Facebook group today and people can download it and have a play with it and do some comparisons between it and the Google version and see if we can figure out.
[00:55:25] CR: Uh, where it may differ from it, because we’re looking, because it’s using stock history pricing, which we know has gaps in it, um, from time to time, but so does Google Finance. And then I’ve got the Yahoo version as well that, uh, Matt built for me, which is pretty good as well. So we’ve got a couple of different versions of the bread later now.
[00:55:46] CR: Anyway, here’s, uh, Trent’s question. Macmillan Shakespeare, this one has been on the buy list for a while but it’s currently down 25 percent since it’s high earlier this year. Probably because you did a poor pork on it at some point, I think. Uh, he says, A,
[00:56:04] TK: And I own the share, so I’ll just
[00:56:06] CR: Oh, there you go.
[00:56:07] TK: Yeah.
[00:56:08] CR: It says you mentioned you were a current holder.
[00:56:10] CR: So any reflections on how this one has played out? Any of the alterations to the rules that have been discussed over the year have triggered earlier? I think at one point there was discussion on using doji candles. Doji candles?
[00:56:26] TK: Haha.
[00:56:26] CR: a sell signal, would this have helped?
[00:56:30] TK: Ooh, that’s a good question. No, it wasn’t, wasn’t Doji Candles, it was, uh, what was it now, the red and blue lines in, let me look it up, uh, Stock Doctor, um,
[00:56:41] TK: No, let me, I’m sorry, I’m having a mental block.
[00:56:47] CR: you still own it. It’s
[00:56:49] TK: I do own it, yeah. So it hasn’t made any of my sell signals, even though it is down. Um, it went ex dividend.
[00:56:55] TK: In the last little while, so, um, take that into account as well. It’s recovering since then. Uh, what was it called? Um,
[00:57:04] TK: oh
[00:57:06] CR: still a fair ways above its three point sell price too. It’s currently trading at 16. 36 and the sell price is 12. 98. So,
[00:57:15] TK: yeah,
[00:57:15] CR: drop by another like 30%.
[00:57:18] TK: was a Renko chart I was looking at and, um, had been doing a portfolio, which was like a dummy portfolio trade on Renko and it didn’t really add, uh, much to the, um, To the process side, I, um, yeah, didn’t, didn’t change the rules to add it.
[00:57:39] CR: That’s what I always think of Renko. It’s like, yes, master.
[00:57:42] TK: Oh, Renfro? What’s, no, what’s his name? Um,
[00:57:45] TK: yeah,
[00:57:47] CR: Whoever.
[00:57:48] TK: yeah.
[00:57:48] CR: And that leads, that leads me to think of Marty Feldman in
[00:57:51] CR: Young Frankenstein, where he says, walk this way. And I just discovered yesterday that his line, walk this way from that film is where the Aerosmith.
[00:58:04] TK: Oh, really?
[00:58:05] CR: title came from.
[00:58:06] CR: The band was in the studio
[00:58:08] CR: recording that album. They went to see the film and they all thought that line was hilarious. And so Steven Tyler wrote a song called Walk This Way, which as we know, if you’ve ever listened to the lyrics, has nothing to do with young Frankenstein and has more to do with having sex with young girls in the playground, but, uh, politically very incorrect.
[00:58:29] CR: But 1974, you could sing songs about that kind of stuff and get away with it.
[00:58:35] TK: no, the past is a
[00:58:35] TK: different country, isn’t it?
[00:58:39] CR: Particularly when you’re Steven Tyler. Anywho, um, yes. Back to MMS.
[00:58:44] TK: Yeah, so I just looked it up on Stock Doctor. It is a sell on using a Renko graph, but it’s way above the sell line, uh, with our three point trend line. Uh, it was still above my buy, price, so there’s no stop loss involved there. Um, and I’m, I’m a happy holder of the company. Uh, but the big drop happened.
[00:59:03] TK: Um, if I recall, it lost the, lost the big chunk of business. It had the SA government fleet business. If this is a fleet leasing company, it lost it to one of its competitors. And it’s sort of slowly been recovering from that, um, since then. And that’s what happens with these companies. There’s three or four major players in this industry.
[00:59:24] TK: And, uh, You know, they’re always bidding for different, uh, tendering for different contracts, and they, they seem to revolve around between the three.
[00:59:32] CR: think you were talking about owning all three.
[00:59:34] CR: of them at some point and just letting them arbitrage.
[00:59:37] TK: Yeah, I did some analysis on that, and, um, I, I didn’t do analysis on arbitrage, I just said buy all three, and it, uh, it did okay, but it wasn’t, um,
[00:59:46] TK: wasn’t index bidding enough to say it was a good strategy.
[00:59:50] CR: Well, the share prices dropped from, looks like, I don’t know, 20, 22 roughly down to 16, uh, since late February. But, uh, Trent goes on to say, I note that MMS is still on the buy list, so not selling may be a gift to allow the stock to continue its longer term trend. If you are currently looking at buying the stock, How would you draw your 3PTL that the Brettalator is currently using L1 back from June, 2020.
[01:00:23] CR: Uh, I actually think it’s April, 2020 by the looks of it. I’ve got the Brettalator open in front of me, but close enough, which in six months will fall off creating an even flat line. So it’s, it’s gonna be six months, even though it’s April, 2020. Uh, would you look at running a tighter three PTL fudge factor to 50%?
[01:00:47] CR: Sounds like something Captain Kirk would say. Mr. Scott! Budge factor to 50%! Oh, he’s not the one with the Scottish accent. That’s Mr. Scott, Fudge Factor 2, 50%. Aye, Cap’n! I’m not a magician, Cap’n! I’m a fake Scottish engineer!
[01:01:09] CR: Uh,
[01:01:10] TK: love how, didn’t he receive an honorary doctorate from MIT or something
[01:01:15] TK: for boosting enrolment in engineering
[01:01:18] TK: studies? I
[01:01:19] CR: No, really?
[01:01:20] TK: like that.
[01:01:20] CR: Not just for having a fake Scottish accent? He should have got
[01:01:23] TK: Well, maybe it was from Glasgow University.
[01:01:26] CR: Scottish tourism board or something. Which would then use June 2022 as an L1 point. I don’t know. Uh, Yeah, probably would be. So June, 2022 will probably, uh, no. So what’ll happen when April falls off? Can we do, can we do forward dates?
[01:01:54] CR: In, uh, the bread later,
[01:01:56] TK: I don’t think so. You can try it.
[01:01:59] CR: uh, so I’ll say the
[01:02:02] CR: 1 0 5 20 25. Yeah. I just broke the bread later and
[01:02:09] TK: Yeah,
[01:02:09] TK: well done.
[01:02:11] TK: Broke Google.
[01:02:12] CR: Yeah,
[01:02:14] TK: But
[01:02:14] CR: I think, I think what I’ll,
[01:02:16] TK: American government doesn’t have to run an antitrust case now. You’ve just broken Google.
[01:02:20] CR: I was actually using the Yahoo finance version. But
[01:02:23] TK: All right. Okay.
[01:02:24] CR: No, but when, when we get past April,
[01:02:26] CR: uh, Trent, the, the low point, the, the first L one will be actually September, 2020, had a close of $8 21. The L two will be the same L two it is now, which is June, 2022 at $9 73. So it will make it a slightly lower sell point.
[01:02:49] CR: Again, I think doing an imaginary ruler, you’re going to end up with a sell price that’s down sort of at 10 or 11 versus 13 where it is now. So, you know, the sell price is going to drop in six months. Um, And you know, that gives it more headroom to recover, I
[01:03:09] TK: Yeah, I agree.
[01:03:12] CR: I think
[01:03:12] TK: if you look at the,
[01:03:13] CR: safe.
[01:03:14] TK: if you look at the five year sort of chart, it’s really going from bottom left to top right. Admittedly, it’s very squiggly and volatile, but it is, I mean, I like a stock like this where you’ve got some room before the sell line, so you can ride out
[01:03:29] TK: the volatility for long term gain.
[01:03:32] CR: And as Trent pointed out, it is still on the buy list, a quality score of 82 percent and a QAV score of 0. 19, 3 million average daily trades. That’s a large cap stock. That’s a pretty good quality score, 82%. So according to our buy list, it’s pretty well run. It’s got good management metrics, um, and you know, my, my view with companies like this is just stay out of the way and let the, let the management do what they do, which is run the business and generate cash.
[01:04:09] CR: I don’t know what the PropCaf is on this one, but you
[01:04:13] TK: and I think it’s also yielding pretty high too, from memory. Yeah. The current yield is, well, Stock Doctor is saying 9. 7%, so that’s a huge yield. This is a, I think it’s an interesting industry because you’ve got fleet partners that doesn’t pay a dividend and it’s, it’s doing share buybacks. And that’s been, I think, a strong performer for the dummy portfolio.
[01:04:34] TK: And you’ve got Macmillan, which is now yielding nearly, what is it, 9 percent and not doing a buyback. So it’s a bit of a race to see who’s the better
[01:04:42] TK: strategy, isn’t it, in the same
[01:04:43] CR: The prop, the prop caf on this is 4. 35. It’s a four year payback. It’s got one and a half points for star stock, prices less than consensus IV, new three point uptrend, record low PEs, growth over PE is greater. Oh no, it’s not greater than 1. 5. It doesn’t score for that. Yield is greater than bank debt, good health rating, um, gets an owner founder score too.
[01:05:12] CR: You know, that doesn’t come much better than this. Large cap stock. with an 82 percent rating like that’s that’s that’s that’s money that’s Vince Vaughn would say that’s money baby that’s money your money baby your money
[01:05:29] TK: But do your own research. I own it, so I’m not going to pump it. Um, it’s, it’s, as pointed out, it is down this year. But, uh, I think it’s a long term, it’s a good long
[01:05:38] TK: term investment. Do
[01:05:42] CR: but good question Trent thank you I’m gonna save your other questions for uh Next week, cause I tend not to have any questions these days. So questions are money. They’re money, Trent, money.
[01:05:56] TK: you think, uh, ChatGPT is
[01:05:58] TK: putting us out of business? People are asking AI.
[01:06:02] CR: No, I think our like 500
[01:06:04] CR: episodes where we’ve answered every question ever is just meant that. You know, and the Bible and the course that I’ve done and the videos, you know, I think people have had all the questions answered. I don’t know. All right. Well, uh, that’s, that’s it today. Tony just got into After Hours and I’ve got some corkers for you this week.
[01:06:29] TK: Derek, we’ll go ahead.
[01:06:31] CR: Night Tide. Have you ever seen a 1961 film called Night Tide?
[01:06:38] TK: I have not.
[01:06:40] CR: Another Plex discovery for me this week. Um, it’s Dennis Hopper’s first starring role in a feature film, first lead role, 86 percent on Rotten Tomatoes, direct, directed by a guy called Curtis Harrington, who I’m not familiar with, but, um, this is a strange, strange film.
[01:07:09] CR: I think, um, uh, Robert, what’s his face, who we’ve been talking about lately, um, B movie director.
[01:07:20] TK: Roger Corman.
[01:07:22] CR: Sorry, Roger Corman. He was involved, I think, at some level. He might have produced it or something, but I think he bought the rights to it at some point. I haven’t really been able to piece it together. But it’s basically about, uh, a very young Dennis Hopper, like 25 when he made this, uh, black and white film.
[01:07:41] CR: He’s, uh, Navy guys on shore leave, I think it’s supposed to be Venice Beach, where I know Dennis Hopper lived late in life. I remember walking down Venice Beach looking for his house before he passed away
[01:07:52] TK: was meant
[01:07:52] TK: to be like a fortress to house his modern art collection, wasn’t it?
[01:07:56] CR: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, and, uh,
[01:08:02] TK: Although, sorry to interrupt, but you did get to see inside that during the episode in Entourage, where, uh,
[01:08:07] TK: he bets on football with, with Vincent.
[01:08:10] CR: with Vinny. Oh, right. Um, I told you about the story where I, I saw him in a restaurant in Sydney once. Have I told you
[01:08:17] TK: No, really?
[01:08:19] CR: My Microsoft days, I’m sitting in this little restaurant, like a little hole in the wall restaurant in Sydney with a couple of guys from Microsoft. And it’s like 10, 10, 15 tables in this place.
[01:08:29] CR: It’s quite small. It’s like 11 o’clock at night. We’re out. And I’m facing the door and I see Dennis Hopper walk in with a couple of guys. He was shooting the Sinatra film,
[01:08:40] TK: Oh, yeah. Yep. Yep.
[01:08:44] CR: No one in the fucking restaurant pays any attention. I’m eye to eye with Frank from Blue Velvet and he sees me look at him and we lock eyes and I’m waiting for him to go, and so I look away and I say to the guys I’m sitting with.
[01:09:04] CR: Dennis Hopper just walked in and they’re like, who? And I’m like, Dennis Hopper. And they’re like, who? I’m like, Oh, forget it. No, no, no, no. I thought he
[01:09:17] CR: would, thought he would stab me. He had that look in his, anyway, it was great. There’s exactly, that’s the, that’s the only interaction I need with Dennis Hopper is to be terrified.
[01:09:26] CR: Just looking at him,
[01:09:27] TK: Yeah,
[01:09:28] CR: Anyway.
[01:09:29] CR: And the, but the, the great, so he goes, he’s on shore leave, he meets this girl at a jazz club, and then there’s something really weird about her and some old woman is stalking her. And it turns out she may or may not be a mermaid. And people start warning him that all the other men that she’s dated have drowned under mysterious circumstances, but he’s infatuated with her.
[01:09:51] CR: But it’s really weird. Um, quite well done, beautifully shot. It’s been restored recently. Um, beautiful black and white, but the great thing about it is just seeing Hopper at that age and he’s playing it straight. Like he’s, he’s a normal guy, but he’s totally Dennis Hopper. Like he’s, like, I know I’ve seen him in, you know, the, the, Who was, um, kid died in his Porsche movies.
[01:10:23] TK: Yeah, yeah, so Giant was the You got before
[01:10:26] TK: Giant and after Giant with Dennis Hoffman. Yeah
[01:10:29] CR: Yeah. So, you know, I’ve seen him in other stuff when he’s young, but he’s always had small roles in this. This is, he’s, he’s, he’s the lead, but like he’s totally hopper. He’s got that look about him that, you know, you’re not quite, he’s got the frown and you’re not quite sure what’s going on. It’s beautiful.
[01:10:45] CR: Anyway, I loved it. And it’s trippy film, but I loved it just to see a young, Hasn’t. become the caricature of evil menace that Dennis Hopper became in Waterworld and, you know, Speed and things like that later on in life.
[01:11:03] CR: Yo Al, he’s just crazy. But then I was reading up on him and like reading up on his career.
[01:11:08] CR: So after this film, he didn’t work again for six or seven years. And we’ve read Peter Biskin, and by the way, I’m reading Peter Biskin’s TV book at the moment, so I wanted to talk to you about that. I just read the chapter on Deadwood, and um, David Milch, and all that kind of stuff.
[01:11:27] CR: But like, Hopper had this reputation already at this age for being difficult to work with, because he was really A bit like Val Kilmer got, uh, uh, in his heyday too.
[01:11:42] CR: He was just all about the work and demanding 80 takes on stuff because he could get it better and all this kind of stuff and no one would work with him, which is of course why he had to go and make Easy Rider and, but then I read this, he, he says that he, he, he took responsibility for the cocaine problem in America, uh, because, uh, you know, he sort of glorified the use of cocaine in Easy Rider and some of his films after that.
[01:12:09] CR: But anyway, this is just, yeah, check it out. It’s, it’s fantastic for a whole bunch of reasons.
[01:12:15] TK: will. have. you seen Mad Dog Morgan, the
[01:12:19] CR: I have. I
[01:12:20] TK: starring Dennis Hopper? And that would have been in the 70s, I think. But very, very similar thing.
[01:12:26] TK: He’s a straight actor. He’s not, not out of control. And,
[01:12:29] CR: He was out of control on that. What are you talking about? He was Mad Dog. That’s why they called him Mad Dog. He was Mad Dog Morgan, shot in Australia. He had to go to Australia to get jobs, you know, even at that point in his career, early 70s, B, C level Australian films, yeah.
[01:12:47] TK: But, but his level of acting in that was just such a level above. All the Australian actors who are in it. Because you know, Jack Thompson, who I admire, has that plummy British voice, which I can never work
[01:13:00] TK: out if he’s acting or whether that’s his actual voice.
[01:13:03] CR: And well, these days, he does the Southern American thing in all the Hollywood films. Um, what was the,
[01:13:11] CR: um, what was the great Australian Awake in Fright? Um, you’ve seen Wake and Fright, I’m sure.
[01:13:18] TK: Mm
[01:13:20] CR: Yeah, I mean, he was in that, um, that was a great performance by Jack Thompson, I thought. Um, Donald Pleasence, uh, as the scary, um, I saw Donald Pleasence in something recently, too, on Plex.
[01:13:36] CR: A very early Donald Pleasance film, um, that was, oh yeah, it was 1984. It was the 1954 version of 1984. I think I mentioned that to you. Did I mention that to you? I was telling the boys. I did. Yeah. He was one of the leads in that. Um, I think it was, no, he wasn’t playing Winston. He was playing somebody else.
[01:14:00] CR: Anyway. Um, been reading Peter Biskin’s book, which is great. Um, although. Big mistake to read it when I go to bed at midnight because then I’m lying in bed at 2am and I can’t sleep because it’s too good.
[01:14:13] TK: Mm.
[01:14:14] CR: But I’ve been reading Rick Rubin’s book on creativity and watching a long interview with him on Rick Beato’s YouTube channel.
[01:14:23] CR: Dude, Rick Rubin is my new hero. Rick Rubin is so the man right now. Have ever seen an interview with Rick Rubin?
[01:14:33] TK: oh, he pops up a lot on my feeds. Definitely.
[01:14:35] CR: Yeah, dude,
[01:14:37] TK: talking about the Beatles and how they
[01:14:38] TK: recorded and other things. Yeah.
[01:14:42] CR: you gotta watch the interview with him on Rick Beato, I know Rick’s got his own podcast on YouTube too now, which I haven’t checked out, but I’m reading his book on creativity. And he’s a, he’s a, like he’s a full enlightened guru, man, like the opening of the book says The universe is an illusion. There is no free will.
[01:15:00] CR: We’re just the universe expanding and unfolding. And he’s been meditating he’s been doing meditation, I saw him, uh, uh, being interviewed by, um, uh, one of the wellness guys that Chris is in, I can’t remember his name, but he talks about his, his routine is he gets up, he meditates every morning for an hour, and then he does stretching and he goes for a long walk.
[01:15:21] CR: All of the interviews I’ve seen with him, he’s wearing bare feet. He’s got the craziest hair and beard known to man. You know, he’s a total sort of, he’s never drunk, never, never touched booze, never done drugs. Um, and he’s, somebody asked him about that
[01:15:39] TK: Which you’d have to, you’d have to question that given the way
[01:15:42] TK: it presents.
[01:15:43] CR: Yeah. Like you, he totally looks like he’s a, you know, a hippie and he’s like, yeah, no,
[01:15:49] TK: all the guitarists from ZZ Top.
[01:15:51] CR: Yeah. He goes, I’ve never been interested in it. It’s never really been my thing. Um, but he’s been like in a transcendental meditation since he was like 14. And, but anyway, just listening to him talk about.
[01:16:03] CR: The early days of hip hop and, you know, um, discovering LL Cool J when he was 16 and the Beasties and Run DMC and, um, you know, getting Aerosmith in to do, convincing Run DMC to do Walk This Way. They didn’t want to do it. He said they were using the track. They’d been using the track. He said everyone used the track in the underground hip hop scene, but they would just do the
[01:16:31] TK: Yeah, right.
[01:16:32] CR: They just do the drum beat and maybe the beginning of the riff, but they’d cut out everything else and he wanted them to do a cover and they didn’t wanna do a cover.
[01:16:41] CR: They just wanted to do their own rapping. And he was No, no, no, no, no, no. And then he got Aerosmith in, and Aerosmith obviously, they, they, they were all in rehab. Their career was over in 1980. 586, whenever it was. And he got the, you know, convinced Steven Tyler and, and, um, Joe Perry to come in and do it. And, you know, just like I was saying to Chrissy, cause you know, she wasn’t around.
[01:17:01] CR: She’s born in 79. Like my friends and I, I was 15 in 85, right. And we were all into Van Halen and Black Sabbath and, you know, Def Leppard and Alice Cooper. We were metal guys, Aussie, heavy metal guys. And then like, it was Walk This Way, really, that got us into hip hop. I mean, when that came out, we were like, holy shit, what is this?
[01:17:28] CR: That and the Beastie Boys opened up hip hop for my generation
[01:17:34] TK: Oh, Grandmaster
[01:17:35] TK: Flash and the Furious Five, I thought was the, my
[01:17:38] CR: Well, yeah, I mean, that’s true. I love the message before that. I was into the message and Blondie doing. Rapture.
[01:17:47] CR: I never, no, I wasn’t really across the class. What did they do? What was, I
[01:17:51] TK: Magnificent Seven, which was their sort of long playing,
[01:17:55] TK: Crossover to hip hop.
[01:17:57] CR: don’t know, predicting the bubble of 2024, NASDAQ bubble?
[01:18:04] TK: No.
[01:18:04] CR: And as Ruben points out, like Steven Tyler was rapping on the original Walk This Way. Backstroke lover always hopped beneath the covers when I talked to my daddy, he say, Said you ain’t seen nothing till you’re down on the muffin and your shoulder, but you change your ways.
[01:18:17] CR: Like it was basically just scat sort of delivery, you know, anyway. Terrific, just like, just cannot get enough of watching, uh, Rick Rubin right now, it’s such a
[01:18:28] TK: Right. Okay.
[01:18:29] CR: Such a cool dude and so influential in, I guess, the music that I’ve listened to. And then, yeah, I haven’t even heard about the Johnny Cash albums
[01:18:36] TK: Mm-Hmm.
[01:18:37] CR: and all the other stuff that he’s produced.
[01:18:39] CR: Like just the guy who’s got a, and he said the reason he got into doing the hip hop stuff in the early days was he was going to the clubs as a uni student and then listening to the music that was coming out on records and he said it was, it wasn’t the same. The, like, because it was music producers. Who were trying to apply what they normally did and they were stuffing it up.
[01:19:07] CR: And he was like, I, he just wanted, he had no ambition other than he just wanted it to sound right. He goes, well, uh, like, uh, let me help you get this on record, cause I want to hear it on record, sound the way it sounds in the clubs. That was his only ambition. Like he had no, Oh, I’m going to make this, I’m going to make you famous, or we’re going to be, you know, we’re going to make a lot of money.
[01:19:30] CR: He just wanted to hear the music on the record, the way it sounded in the club. It was like a genuine sort of, you know, Artistic. He didn’t care about, he just wanted to make the music sound good. You know? So anyway, it’s terrific stuff.
[01:19:45] TK: I look into it. I’ve certainly seen quite a few interviews with him. Um, and there was, I think there was a series on the A, B, C. where they had Paul McCartney and him going through some of the Beatles tracks and the productions behind
[01:19:58] TK: that,
[01:19:59] CR: Right.
[01:19:59] TK: was good. Yeah.
[01:20:02] CR: Anywho, that’s my ranting for the day.
[01:20:05] TK: Oh, it was a good rant. Well done.
[01:20:10] TK: So I’ve been, have you
[01:20:11] TK: watched Slow Horses? The BBC show?
[01:20:14] CR: the Gary Oldman one. No, look, it’s one of those things I hear great things about and I keep meaning to get into it and haven’t yet.
[01:20:22] TK: Yeah. I’ve been watching it all week halfway through
[01:20:24] TK: the.
[01:20:24] TK: second season. I think they’ve just dropped the third. Um, I don’t know if you’ll like it. I love it. I love it. But it’s like a Len Dighton book. on, you know, on the screen. So it’s got that sort of, uh, it’s, it’s British secret service, but it’s, you know, completely dysfunctional.
[01:20:42] TK: Oldman has a great part in it where he just basically burps and farts his way through, um, putting everyone off, but, you know, he’s, he’s seriously the mastermind. Behind the scene, um, yeah, so it’s, it’s, I’m really enjoying it. Yeah, and it’s, the title reminded me of the horses
[01:21:01] TK: that ran on the weekend that I owned, so.
[01:21:05] CR: I’ve been a fan of Gary Oldman since Guildenstern and Rosencrantz are dead in the early eighties. You ever see that, him and Tim Roth?
[01:21:13] TK: I did, yeah.
[01:21:15] CR: Like, I’ve, he’s been one of those
[01:21:16] CR: guys whose career
[01:21:20] TK: first script.
[01:21:21] CR: yeah, right. And,
[01:21:24] CR: and he’s one of those guys who I loved in the eighties and the nineties. And then, You know, his career with his alcoholism and his relationship disasters has seemed to have gone up and down.
[01:21:36] CR: He’s done some terrible stuff, but he’s also done like some of the greatest
[01:21:42] TK: Mmm,
[01:21:43] CR: The Fifth Element and, um, Leon, The Professional, where he’s doing that whole turn,
[01:21:51] CR: like,
[01:21:52] TK: Yeah.
[01:21:53] CR: they’re both, um, whoever that French. Sid and Nancy, yeah, which, I mean, I have issues with that because of the depiction of Sid and the stuff that, you know, it’s obviously not very, uh, historical telling of Sid, but his performance is great.
[01:22:09] CR: Like, he’s just, he’s been one of those guys who’s had an amazing career, um, And I, I, I’m looking forward to seeing this just to see
[01:22:19] TK: Oh yeah, he’s great
[01:22:20] CR: good form, you know?
[01:22:21] TK: yeah, he’s fantastic in it. And Kristen Scott Thomas is in it too, who’s really good.
[01:22:25] CR: Oh, I haven’t seen her for years.
[01:22:27] TK: yeah. I bumped into her. You, you saw, um, what’s his, Dennis Hopper. I saw Kristen Scott Thomas. Oh, is it Heathrow Airport? Like around midnight one night. Came in on a flight from somewhere in Europe.
[01:22:41] TK: I was working for Shell and we were the last two people waiting for our bags and you know you don’t sort of notice who’s standing waiting for bags and I looked over and it was Kristen Scott Thomas and we locked eyes, big broad smile, she was
[01:22:53] TK: really happy and I was like, oh yeah, hi,
[01:22:56] CR: you?
[01:22:56] TK: no, I don’t know, no, the luggage finally turned up I think
[01:23:01] CR: Oh, right.
[01:23:02] TK: and I remember her luggage was bright red like and I thought, oh that’s how you do it, you, you know, you don’t want to lose your luggage, just buy a bright colour, it won’t get mixed up.
[01:23:11] TK: Yeah,
[01:23:12] CR: Good thinking.
[01:23:14] TK: yeah. No, I stared at my feet. I wasn’t going to
[01:23:16] TK: engage with Christian.
[01:23:20] CR: She scared you like Dennis Hoffa scared me.
[01:23:24] TK: I had this problem with intruding on celebrities. There’s a few that walk around our area. I bump into Laura Tingle in the supermarket every now and then. You just gotta let them go on their own.
[01:23:35] CR: a celebrity.
[01:23:36] TK: think so. I’m a big fan. And, uh, what’s his name? Don Walker, the keyboard player from Cold Chisel. He lives nearby.
[01:23:45] TK: I’ve seen him around.
[01:23:47] CR: Right.
[01:23:48] TK: And he’s really cool with it. Like, he sees, he sees if someone’s clocked
[01:23:50] TK: him, he just looks the other way, you know, keeps on walking.
[01:23:54] CR: Did he write Flame Trees?
[01:23:56] TK: probably.
[01:23:57] CR: I think he
[01:23:58] CR: did. Yeah. Uh, Steve Prestwich and Don Walker. Yeah. I mean, a drummer can’t write a song, so it had to be Don Walker. I think Flame Trees is one of the greatest songs
[01:24:10] TK: It is, I agree.
[01:24:11] CR: Like I, I’ve,
[01:24:14] CR: I’ve sung it a lot. I used to do it. I used to play it a lot. And, and, um, I can’t even sing it in the car without getting a little bit choked up
[01:24:23] TK: Yeah.
[01:24:24] CR: every time I sing it.
[01:24:25] CR: Like, it’s just,
[01:24:28] TK: It really evokes, evokes a situation, doesn’t it?
[01:24:32] CR: It does. Yeah.
[01:24:34] TK: Hanging out with your
[01:24:35] TK: friends, going over old friends.
[01:24:39] CR: But also, just the, like, the lyrics and the, and the, the story that it’s
[01:24:44] CR: telling. Can’t stop that long forgotten feeling of her and, uh, and then the key change, wondering if he’ll go or if he’ll stay. Do you remember? Nothing stopped us in the field in our day. Like it’s, it’s, uh, no, it’s, it’s, it, it gives me, gives me goosebumps every time I sing it, it’s masterful.
[01:25:05] CR: Well,
[01:25:06] TK: I agree.
[01:25:07] CR: brilliant song. Anywho.
[01:25:08] TK: Yeah. And the structure of a tune, number one is to find some friends to say you’re doing well.
[01:25:14] CR: Yeah. Cleverly written.
[01:25:17] TK: It is.
[01:25:17] TK: Yeah.
[01:25:18] CR: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
[01:25:21] TK: Yeah. So I’m,
[01:25:22] CR: of, Chrissy rolls her eyes every time it comes on.
[01:25:24] CR: Cause it’s one of
[01:25:25] TK: oh, really?
[01:25:26] CR: well, A, she’s not an Aussie, so it
[01:25:28] CR: doesn’t have that sort of
[01:25:30] TK: Yeah.
[01:25:32] CR: cultural connection. It’s like, you know, like a Springsteen song for a lot of Americans. It’s that, that sort of cultural thing.
[01:25:38] CR: And B, she just heard me sing it. At the top of my voice like a million times. And she’s like, that old bat out of hell comes on. She’s like, ah,
[01:25:49] TK: ha ha, ha ha,
[01:25:50] CR: pull the, car over and let me out. And I, I know what’s about to happen to my ear balls and I don’t want to, I don’t want to be part of it
[01:25:59] TK: I can’t remember who sung it, but I had one of the first Triple J Unearthed CDs, and the female singer covered it. It was such a great cover. I used to play it a lot. Yeah, I was Sarah Blasko or someone like that, but it was really It added an extra dimension being sung well by a female, I thought.
[01:26:17] CR: Right. All right. What else you got for me?
[01:26:23] TK: Uh, nothing much. I’m heading off to Victoria in the next few days. Um
[01:26:27] TK: Got a friend’s birthday party Saturday. Yeah, Poifect will run it. Yeah, I should. Poifect will run on Caulfield Cup Day, which is Saturday, so I’ll probably go along and see her run. Um, yeah, I’ll probably, I might stay down there for a while.
[01:26:45] TK: I’ll see, unless something drags me back to Sydney.
[01:26:48] TK: I’ve got a few things over the next three
[01:26:49] TK: weeks.
[01:26:51] CR: Which was the name of the episode of the podcast where we talked about Amico Holdings, it was the Poifect episode.
[01:26:57] TK: Poifect.
[01:26:58] CR: Yeah,
[01:26:59] TK: Gotta say it right. Poifect.
[01:27:01] CR: Poifect! Uh, alright, well, that’s the show for this week. Wish me luck on Friday night.
[01:27:11] TK: yeah.
[01:27:12] CR: I think the boys are going to come along and watch and make fun of me, no doubt, uh, as I get pummelled.
[01:27:19] TK: a bear hold.
[01:27:21] TK: Know where the sore rib is.
[01:27:23] CR: I’m going to have to do probably half an hour of sparring, black belts in a line coming at me, one at a time, minute at a time. One comes on, I do them for a minute, then they go off and another one comes on, then they go off and another one comes on, and half an hour of just fending off black belts trying to knock me out.
[01:27:47] TK: And the last two are Taylor and Hunter. I get the
[01:27:50] TK: last shot.
[01:27:52] CR: Oh, yeah. Uh, no, it’d
[01:27:54] TK: Well, good luck.
[01:27:56] CR: Thank
[01:27:56] TK: luck.
[01:27:58] CR: Yeah.
[01:27:59] TK: And happy belated birthday.
[01:28:00] TK: I’m sorry I didn’t call you on the day. I missed it.
[01:28:03] CR: It’s quite okay. But you know, I did a little Facebook post and it’s a thing. It’s a new thing for me. You know, I’ve tried to forget and ignore my birthdays for years, but this year was different because I kind of feel like I turned 54, but I’m at peak condition, which is a weird thing for me, you know, like feeling I’m at the lowest weight I’ve been at for 20 odd years.
[01:28:33] CR: My fitness is Probably better than it’s ever been since maybe my early 20s because of Kung Fu. I mean, like a year or so ago, I couldn’t do a single sit up. Now I can do sit ups and push ups all night long. Like, you know, I’ll do two or three hours of Kung Fu in a What are you laughing at?
[01:28:54] TK: That’s not what the night’s for, Cam. Sit up some push ups.
[01:28:59] TK: But go ahead.
[01:29:01] CR: Now, like my Sifu always says, because he’s 58 and he’s an absolute machine and, but he’s been doing Kung Fu for 35 years, you know, but whenever I used to turn up and he’d say, how are you doing? And I’m feeling old, he would always say, age is a mindset, you know. And I’m starting to come to that conclusion, is right.
[01:29:19] CR: Like I’m. Feeling fitter and stronger and more sort of, um, I don’t know, under control in control of my health than, um, I, I felt for, for decades. And it’s kind of good, so now I was sitting there telling the boys, like, now my goal is by each birthday to Step it up a notch. So to be fitter and stronger by the time I hit 55, and I’ll have to be, if I’m going for a black belt before I’m 60, I have to get fitter and harder every year in order to get to that level.
[01:30:00] CR: So it’s a, it’s a completely different way to approach getting older, you know, it’s to not go quietly into the night, but to go, no, no, I’m getting harder and stronger and. Faster, like the 6 million man. We can make him better,
[01:30:20] TK: I’d rather have the six million dollars. What’s that book you wrote, The Three Illusions? This might be the fourth one.
[01:30:26] TK: You wait until you’re 60, pal.
[01:30:29] CR: Hey, by the time I turn 60, which is six years from now, I’ll have a robot body that Elon will have built for me and a Neuralink chip in my head.
[01:30:39] TK: Yeah. And I’ll have Ozempic. What’s it called? Ozempic? Aussie? Ozempic, yeah. And I’ll go, Oh, I’m the lightest I’ve been in
[01:30:48] TK: 30 years as well.
[01:30:50] CR: Yeah. You were telling me that’s a big thing in Sydney. You haven’t, you
[01:30:53] TK: Oh, shit, yeah.
[01:30:54] CR: you haven’t given it a crack yet.
[01:30:56] TK: No, no. I’ll wait till all the side effects go. I don’t know if I want it, really. It’s like, it’s a cheat.
[01:31:04] CR: Yeah,
[01:31:04] TK: also, too, some of the people who are taking it, I’m sure lots of people don’t tell you they’re taking it, but they’re having issues, they’re having side
[01:31:12] TK: effects from it,
[01:31:13] CR: I’ve heard that there’s not good for your liver or your kidneys or
[01:31:16] CR: something
[01:31:16] TK: mmm, something,
[01:31:17] TK: yeah, yeah, but it’s interesting to, yeah, well, that’s the traditional way, isn’t it? Count your calories and do a bit of
[01:31:27] TK: exercise.
[01:31:29] CR: I was reading Norman Swan’s most recent book the other day, and he was saying, like, the only scientifically proven, it was his book on longevity, and he was saying
[01:31:37] TK: Oh, I’ve read that one
[01:31:38] TK: too. Yeah.
[01:31:41] CR: Have to restrict it more than I’m restricting it, though. Like, I, most days I’m down like 14, 1500 and, or lower, 13.
[01:31:50] CR: It’ll
[01:31:51] TK: That is so low.
[01:31:53] CR: It’ll get to 10 o’clock at night and I’ll
[01:31:55] CR: be like 1300 for the day. And I’ll like, I probably should eat something because this is probably, I’m not getting the nutrition that I need with the amount of work that I do. Just got some protein powder today. So I’m starting to take protein powder in my smoothies and frappes too.
[01:32:11] CR: But, um, I have to force myself to eat cause I’m just. Not hungry, you know, I’ve, it’s, I’ve got into that spot now where, I’ve always seen Chrissy be for, like Chrissy will forget to eat for the entire day and I’ll have to remind her, have you eaten? She’s like, no, I hadn’t thought about it. And I’m like, you really should eat something before we go to training.
[01:32:32] CR: Um, it’s crazy for me because, you know, I’ve gone from probably 3000 calories a day down to half that and don’t even notice it, you know, so,
[01:32:43] TK: That is amazing. And it’s pretty low too. I mean, that was the number you’re supposed to get to for longevity, but it was always,
[01:32:51] TK: you know, a bridge too far for me to get down that low.
[01:32:54] CR: I think he was saying like 800 to 1200. Um, but I don’t know if that’s every day or if that’s, um, like once a week or like if that’s on a fasting day or something like, uh,
[01:33:09] TK: 200 once a week. Oh, you mean do, do that one day a week, get down to 800. I think he was saying that actually from memory, yeah,
[01:33:18] CR: I have to keep
[01:33:19] TK: yeah, he was saying do a fasting day because he was, from memory he was looking at, I think it was the Greeks, maybe the Italians, and how they had a religious, you know. thing about um, having one day a week where they didn’t eat any meat
[01:33:34] CR: Yeah.
[01:33:36] TK: resulted in them having an 800 calorie day which was contributing to their longevity.
[01:33:40] CR: Hmm.
[01:33:41] TK: you know, who knows, I mean there was also that Harvard study which talked about the only factor which was they could find that led to longevity was a circle of friends you kept up with. Having a strong circle
[01:33:54] TK: of friends, kind of like, you know, keeping each other alive.
[01:33:57] CR: Yeah. The Blue Zones studies and that sort of stuff. Mediterranean diet, daily light. Exercise, like walking, like you do a lot of walking up and down hills, friends, having a purpose, something that you look forward to every day, you know, tending your garden or whatever it is.
[01:34:18] TK: yeah,
[01:34:19] CR: And, uh, I can’t remember what the fifth one is.
[01:34:22] CR: There’s a fifth one. Five things, I think.
[01:34:28] TK: yeah, but like I also wonder, you also wonder, I mean, research is a wonderful thing, but you know, is there something else that’s going on there as well, genetically or whatever? There’s got to be, they’re always like, you know, if you put people on a bell curve, there’s always got to be an outlier. Is that just genetically the case? Or the Do These Things Contribute. Because wasn’t there, um, was it Jared Diamond who also covered this and he found that the, one of the groups that lived longest were a tribe in Papua New Guinea, I think it was, or the Amazon, where they just ate, uh, sweet potato. The whole diet was yams. And it’s like, yeah, you can live longer.
[01:35:12] TK: It’s like, it’s like a devil’s trade, you know, you can live
[01:35:15] TK: longer, but all you can do is eat yams.
[01:35:18] CR: You don’t actually live longer.
[01:35:19] CR: It just feels like you are. Um, the blue zone factors are diet,
[01:35:24] CR: physical activity, social connections, stress management, and optimism.
[01:35:30] TK: Which is, what was her name, Elizabeth, um, Blackburn was the same thing she attributed to telomeres, if you wanted to, like there’s scientific evidence to say if you live in a stressful environment, your telomeres shorten, which is an indicator for a shorter life, and all those things were too. Yeah.
[01:35:50] CR: I don’t believe in stress. I don’t,
[01:35:53] TK: But does it believe in you? I’ll talk to you on Friday. I’ll talk to you on Friday. You’re stressing now about your brown belt grading.
[01:36:03] TK: Uh.
[01:36:05] CR: Somebody, people keep asking me, you know, are you excited about it? And I’m like, I’m not, I’m not, I’m just not thinking about it. Just stay chill, go into it. I’m gonna. I’m going to do what I do. It’s going to go how it goes. Going to take it a minute at a time. You know, if it doesn’t work, it doesn’t work.
[01:36:25] CR: If I fail it, then I fail it and I’ll do it again six months later, you know.
[01:36:30] TK: that’s very much how I approach things too, but I find that like I’ll be approaching something like that, but then my subconscious will take over in my sleep and I’ll start dreaming about it or dreaming about going wrong or whatever. Have all those normal dreams of failing the exam or turning up the wrong day, all
[01:36:46] TK: that kind of stuff.
[01:36:47] TK: Yeah.
[01:36:47] CR: turning up to the grading without any pants on. Um, I, yeah, sometimes, yeah, sometimes I’ll have the four, 4am, you know, nightmares where
[01:36:57] TK: Mm hmm.
[01:36:58] CR: brain will go, and I’ll be like, just shut up. You know, part
[01:37:00] TK: Yeah.
[01:37:01] CR: will be going stupid and the other part of my brain will be going, will you just shut
[01:37:04] CR: up?
[01:37:04] CR: Like,
[01:37:05] TK: Yeah.
[01:37:05] CR: I’m not listening. I’m not, I don’t care what you say. I’m not listening. I’m
[01:37:08] CR: not paying any attention to your monkey chatter. But, uh, yeah, if I had free will, I would stop that from happening, but
[01:37:16] TK: Yeah, but I’m the same, but like thinking of awake for hours telling your subconscious to fuck off.
[01:37:25] TK: So it wins anyway. It doesn’t matter. It wins, right? Because it keeps
[01:37:28] TK: you awake.
[01:37:29] CR: Chemistry wins at the end.
[01:37:31] TK: Yeah.
[01:37:32] CR: All right. Well, listen, it’s 30 degrees in my office and I’m sweating. So, uh, I’m going to go. Thank you, Tony. I’ll talk to you from Victoria next week. Have a good week, everyone.
[01:37:41] TK: you too. Happy ASX.
[01:37:43] AITK: And goodbye from AI TK, too.

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