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Transcription
Full AU AUDIO 832
[00:00:00]
Cameron: Welcome back to QAV Australia, Tony Kynaston. This is episode 8 3 2. The date is the 12th of August, 2025, just after 1:00 PM East Coast time. RBA is uh, gonna come out with something to Tony. You’re excited. What’s your prognostication this time? You got it wrong. Last month. What’s your prognostication this time?
Tony Kynaston: Well, since I’m wrong, I’m gonna say they’re gonna keep braces on. Hold in, in the hope that they’ll define me and, and cut them. Uh, it’s, it was interesting, the last, last meeting and all the back. Backwash after that. And uh, you know, after thinking about it, I think the RBA is just stamping its authority on the bond market.
It’s like you don’t tell us what to do, we tell you what to do. So, uh, you know, like you do it again. Who knows? We’ll wait and see.
Cameron: Well, I guess we’ll have to tell people next [00:01:00] week what happened with the RBA, but um.
Tony Kynaston: We might get it one, one, usually about two 30. I.
Cameron: Well, let’s, uh, move on with some of the, uh, stories, new stories for this week, Tony. Um. You’ve got the wrong TPG is the headline in the article that I saw. ASX shares plummet after embarrassing stuff ups. you’ve had a field day fun of, uh, the ASX over the last couple of years looks like their woes are not behind them. article from the 7th of August shares in stock market operator ASX Limited, have taken a beating after it said it will cop extra costs of up to. $35 million with the bad news coming on the heels of an of an embarrassing $400 million mistake involving TPG Telecom and the Labor government government opening the door for a challenger to [00:02:00] set up shop. So the TPG story is that a private equity firm called uh, TPG Capital. Was, uh, involved in some story last week, uh, and it mistakenly, the ASX linked the news to TPG Telecom, completely different company, uh, the shares for TPG Telecom crashed as a result. This issue arose from an inadvertent human error and I recognize that it has caused disruption for TPG Telecom and its investors.
Upon discovery of the error, it was escalated to me and I will be apologizing directly to the team. At TPG Telecom said a SS Chief Executive, no ASX group, executive Markets and Listings. Darren Yip. [00:03:00] So look, mistakes happen, but it’s a pretty bad mistake for,
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: person who runs the stock market to make. So this news about,
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: government bringing in a, uh, competitive platform, American Giant, CBOE, is it, do, do Bowie? Is that how they print out? Do you know? What is it? The Coke, Coke.
Tony Kynaston: I dunno how it’s pronounced.
Cameron: Kibo Chibo.
Tony Kynaston: No dunno. Yeah. There, there is a competitors for the ASX already. Um, there’s a second exchange for generally smaller cap companies. Um, yeah. So there’s nothing it, it’s. There’s nothing stopping another one coming in except for the government approvals required, you know, to make sure that they’ve got the right, uh, the right, uh, ability to run a, an orderly market.
But given that the ASX can’t do that, um, it’s probably, it’s probably a low [00:04:00] barrier at the moment. And look, I feel, I feel sorry for the ASX now they’re being battered on law fronts. They came out and said that. I think the amount was like $21 million or $25 million was the cost of now com complying with government, uh, inquiries into, uh, their, uh, their ability to run the market.
So it’s costing them in the, in the profit department as well. I feel sorry for the probably very junior staff member who pushed the button on the wrong TPG. Uh. Article, um, announcement. I think the, I think the background was that TPG capital were buying something, and then, uh, when it was attributed to TPG Telecom, the market went to a frenzy saying, why are you buying this for, why are you spending our money doing that?
And the shares came down, uh, and the ASX made good. They unw all the shares, reversed, all the shares, paid back the money. So, um, it’s, you know, been cleared up. But, uh, look. I think it all stems from [00:05:00] the chest replacement system debacle, which we’ve spoken about at length when, uh, a prior CEO wanted to bring in blockchain as the basis for recording.
Yes, are recording transactions between shareholders, uh, on the ASX. That still hasn’t happened. There were write downs. There were, um, the, the stockbrokers wouldn’t, didn’t really want to be involved in it. Um, it, it, you know, when it’s, I think it’s a finely been scrapped or it’s been, um. I amended dramatically, but it still hasn’t happened.
So we’re still getting through the snail mail updates on paper of our shareholdings. Um, which, you know, for me, and perhaps you doesn’t mean much ’cause we don’t trade much, but, you know, if I was a big fund manager once a once a quarter to getting a listing of, uh, all the trades I’d made, it’d be a real headache, whereas it should be done electronically.
Um, but ASX hasn’t seemed to have been able to manage that, and because of that, they seem to be focused [00:06:00] on. Getting outta that hole and not digging any deeper. And then some of the basic stuff, there’s bit gets, gets left behind. There was an outage in the market last year, um, and that sort of stuff just shouldn’t really happen, uh, these days.
Um, if you think about the networks out there which operate online real time. 24 7 like ATMs and other banking systems. Sure they have the occasional outage, but, uh, it’s doesn’t seem to be that disruptive to my life. But, um, good old A CX operates between 10 and four and, uh, still has outages, which shut the business for a while.
So, um, yeah, it’s, it’s. I dunno what the answer is besides, you know, cutting out some slack and letting them raise some capital to replace chess quickly and then get back to managing the market the way they should. We spoke at length last reporting season about them not, uh, keeping their eye on disclosures because stocks moved dramatically once they.
Release their announcements more so than I’ve [00:07:00] ever seen. Um, we’ll see what happens this reporting season. There’s certainly been a couple that we’ll talk about already that have reported. Uh, but yeah, the ASX just, just on all fronts seems to be dropping the ball.
Cameron: And their own share price dropped about 10%. Uh,
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: happens. So that’s not good. But that aside, the market is booming. Markets here and in the US are booming pretty much at or near record highs. market came back a little bit last night, but it’s still up there around record highs. portfolio is, uh, having a great month.
The dummy portfolio is up nearly 7% in the last 30 days versus the benchmark, the SPDR 200, which is up about 3%. And, um, let’s see, over the last one year, the dummy portfolio is up 27%. [00:08:00] Versus the benchmark up 18 and a half, like good year for the market in general, we’re doing quite a bit better. Um, and, uh, yeah, that’s, that’s that.
Now, Tony, last week the show, you some commentary on negative gearing. Someone on TikTok, uh, by the name of user, 5 3 2 4 6 3 5 9 8 3 5 0 2. I dunno if you know them personally or not.
Tony Kynaston: What, what pronoun do they use? I.
Cameron: Ada, I think is, uh, what they use. You have missed the point entirely. Getting rid of negative gearing is supposed to disincentivize people using housing as an investment. Housing should first and foremost be about housing, not a way for you or anyone else to make money. If you wanna make money, invest in shares or start a business, don’t expect the taxpayers to [00:09:00] subsidize the most lazy form of investment known to mankind. I thought that was Bitcoin, but okay. Moving right along. Do not use an, an essential resource that people need to live for your wealth creation. It’s disgusting rebuttal,
Tony Kynaston: Oh yeah, dear. Disgusted. Um, yeah, so, uh, couple, well, a whole number of points on this. Um, uh, I don’t think, you know, straight outta the gate, I don’t think any government’s gonna remove negative gearing in Australia. Full stop. Bill Shorten. Ran a campaign, uh, which, uh, he lost when he ran for Prime Minister last time.
Um, should have probably, should have been a bit of a lay down Mabb air to, um, to defeat, uh, the Scott Morrison government. But he, um, he didn’t, and he said he was going to remove negative gearing. And the fact is it’s just too entrenched in the market now that, uh, that the voters will never allow it, I don’t think.
Um, not [00:10:00] saying we shouldn’t examine it and change it if, if, um. User 5 3 2 4 6, 5 11 or whatever has an idea, but to, to fully remove it, um, I think has a negative consequence of, uh, pretty much well decimating the rental market. I would’ve thought, uh, there would certainly be some people out there who will rent out a property, um, if there’s no negative gearing, because circumstances mean that’s probably the best option for them.
But, um, you know, the whole. Basis behind negative, negative gearing is that you or I buy a property or someone buys a property. The yield in Australia’s on rentals is about 3%, if you’re lucky. And, uh, it’s higher in the country areas, but in the cities it’s around three or lower. And, uh. Which means that if you have a mortgage, which is currently six plus something percent, or around 6%, you are underwater from the rental.
Um, so you’re, you know, you just like a business, if it, [00:11:00] um, has a cost, it can deduct it. The government says, well, you are in the business of renting out so you can deduct it too. And that’s. So that’s the first thing. So I think point number one, take away negative gearing. Really reduce the number of properties in Australia available for rental.
Point number two is that if you reduce negative gearing and people still want to rent out, um, in a market which offers a 3% yield, uh, then they’re probably gonna change the structure in which they do it. They’ll start owning houses in businesses, buy it in a business name, um, which is not a bad idea because, uh, rental properties.
When they’re sold, uh, charge capital gains tax. And if you’re running a small business, that rate is lower than the rate it would be in your own personal name. Um, even though there’s a 25%, uh, 50% discount for more being held more than a year, it’s still, you know, depending on the corporate structures. I think corporate tax rates are small, businesses now are about 25%.
Um, if you’re on the top marginal rate, then yeah, it’s, [00:12:00] it’s line balls to whether you should do it in the business. But if you do it in the business, you can claim the loss as a tax deduction and then off offset it. So, um. Remove negative gearing, open up other structures that to buy houses and rent them out.
Um, and that’s what I saw in New Zealand when I lived there. They didn’t have negative gearing in the same way we did, but they had some kind of loophole and I forget what the exact details were around truss. So a lot of the people I knew there rented their own were renting the house they lived in because their trust owned another property they were renting out to somebody else.
And that was the most tax effective way of doing things in New Zealand. So. It’s, it’s sometimes difficult to try and change a market, um, because you do, um, have secondary consequences which aren’t planned. So that’s, that’s another argument against it. Um, but, you know, turn this, turn it round and say, okay, let’s, let’s remove it.
What will probably happen apart from the rental side of things going down is housing will, will drop in [00:13:00] value because there’s less people trying to buy houses, uh, and other, and there are modeling out there as to say what the effect would be and. I’m gonna pick a number outta the air and say, let’s say it drops 20 to 30% in terms of house prices across the board.
Uh, that makes housing more affordable, which means more people start to buy again. And so house prices go up. So it’s not going to stop at 30%. We’ll probably settle somewhere in between. So let’s say houses drop 15 to 20%. That’s not. It’s a reduction for sure, but it’s not, it’s not gonna open the floodgates for young people being able to buy property.
If a property drops from 700,000 to 600,000 or from a million to 800,000, there’s still the same problems now that people have saving up for a deposit, being able to afford the mortgage, et cetera. So I don’t see removing negative gearing as the solution. To this, and the whole point of my comments last week, which were I guess addressed at the productivity round [00:14:00] table that’s coming up is I don’t, I think it’s never a good thing if we’re in the chop of the pool, the ladder up.
And what I mean by that is, you know, I got my establishment. By buying properties and negatively gearing them, um, way back when I was a young person, uh, before I even invested in the stock market. And it’s a good way for young people to get into the market because it costs them a heck of a lot less than not being able to deduct the mortgage, um, against the in.
Uh, so I think it’s a mistake to take away the ladders that are used and that people of my age have used to establish themselves in the market. Uh, just makes it harder for younger people to get to where we are in the same timeframe. Uh, that’s my overriding risk, overriding point.
Cameron: I was thinking about that after our show last week. It doesn’t have to be either or though, right? You could have negative gearing for people, for younger people, or say people under a certain total net wealth. [00:15:00] Um, under a certain threshold who are trying to build their wealth, leave it for them.
And for the people with a certain level of net wealth where they’ve already established themselves, they can’t take advantage of negative gearing. So if you net wealth is over a few million bucks, you don’t get to negative gear properties. But if you’re that, then you do get to do it. There are ways of engineering it so younger people can leverage it and, uh, wealthier people can’t.
Tony Kynaston: Um, yeah, and perhaps that’s the solution cam. Again, those kinds of rules will eventually be gotten round as well. And you know, like for example, superannuation. Was set up for people to save for their retirement, but now there’s people there with $500 million balances getting it tax free. So, um, but you know, I, I’m not saying don’t look at the negative gearing rules and maybe tweak them.
That’s, that’s fine. Yeah. Bear in mind that the, every time a law gets written in Canberra, there are 50 lawyers who try to pull it apart. So, um, they’ve [00:16:00] probably begotten around. The other point I wanted to make too was I think. From my ex own personal experience, negative gearing is good, up to a point. So, uh, it was good when I was buying my first property, it allowed me to get into the market quicker and, um, helped save for the second property, which I then lived in.
Um, but eventually, you know, I stop negative gearing properties because it’s, it’s not a great investment. Um, well, I, I should say that in the, in a different way. Being invested in the stock market is a better investment. So, um, you know, properties go up maybe 10% a year. Um, you can negative gear to, to sort of leverage into it.
You can regear and put it into the stock market, which is not a bad idea. Um, but eventually the hassles of renting out property just became too much for me. The fact that it all, the maintenance costs, all the taxes that went with it. The rates, um, paying, you know, [00:17:00] paying property managers to look after the place.
Um, being, you know, you know, I had a, I had some tenants in a, um. Well, I thought it was a really nice property in Clifton Hill that crashed the place. And then trying to get them out, required visits to VCAT and all kinds of rigmarole you just don’t get when you’re in the share market. Um, not withstanding the fact that if I want, if I don’t wanna be invested in the share market, I can sell everything today.
Within two days I had my money. You can’t do that with a, um, a property portfolio. It can take, uh, you know, um. 60 to 90 days to list and yet, and then it can take, you know, six months to settle or whatever. So, um, or at least three months to settle so it’s not liquid. So, yeah, so there are constraints from being in the property market.
So I, you know, you do hear stories of people owning 10 properties and 20 properties and how they’ve done it well. Um, but they’re pretty rare. I think most people after a while, as they amass wealth, will, will find other ways to use it.
Cameron: [00:18:00] All right. Well, moving right along, Tony, what else have you got on your list of news items to talk about this week before we get
Tony Kynaston: I have a few.
Cameron: In a Paul pork?
Tony Kynaston: We are getting into company reporting season. So first cab off off the rank to talk about, which is usually first cab off the rank is, is credit court. For some reason they always like to get in early. Uh, not a bad strategy actually. ’cause reporting season in the middle can be just full of.
This news coming out on the same day, but, um, they’re not in the buy list anymore, but you know, they have been in the past and they have been a perennial favor. Management’s been a perennial favorite of mine. Uh, but they were up 17% on their results announcement, so I just, so they’d throw that one in. Um, they’re kind of rebounding.
They went down a lot. I think we sold them out of the, out of our portfolios, but, uh, they’re back.
Cameron: And I think I tried really hard to avoid selling them because the way we know that they, uh, usually understate things and go down and come back up [00:19:00] and seeing
Tony Kynaston: Rick,
Cameron: them last. I sold them last in December last year. Ran about 18 bucks. What are they now? 1742. So, you know,
Tony Kynaston: get back in if you want.
Cameron: uh, we did it. Hold on.
No, I bought ’em around 18 bucks. I sold ’em at 16 bucks. So they’re up a little bit since
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: ’ em eight, nine months ago. But not a great deal.
Tony Kynaston: Yep. And they’re not on the buy list now. I just, I just, uh, follow them out of a bit of nostalgia for the company. Um, another one that, uh, I don’t think is on the buy list anymore, but has been in the past was Austal ASB’s the ticker code.
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Uh, and, um. I think they were around the sort of two to $3 range when they were, when I owned them myself a few years ago.
They’re now $7 37, uh, as of last, uh, last week when I had a look at them. And, um, I [00:20:00] sort of was reminded of them by a couple of articles in the AFR last week. Uh. The first one was headlined. The ASX small defense sector is on file. Investors have never seen anything like it. Well, it’s a bit of hyperbole from the AFR and I think we have seen things like it.
But anyway, uh, the article goes on. The ASX is hottest cap, large cap this year, defense stock Austal the ship builder. And that was Shun to Clear, uh, August 5th, and then in another, uh, article, uh, they go on to say Austal has landed billions of dollars in work, including the construction of dozens of new vessels for the defense department with the federal government designating the country’s only listed ship builder as a strategic asset and making it more d.
To takeover Target for overseas buyers in a deal announced to investors on Tuesday. That’s Tuesday Last week, the company said it would establish a new subsidiary known as Austal Defense Australia, and hand the government a single [00:21:00] so-called sovereign share. If a takeover bid was made for Austal, the agreement would give the government the option of acquiring the entire subsidiary.
Shipyard in Perth. And that’s interesting because I think when I did a pulled pork on this company a year or so ago, it was when, uh, a South Korean company called another ship builder, uh, proposed, uh, a takeover of Austal. They, they had acquired 9.9% of the company in March of last year. At the time it said it had no intention of submitting a control proposal or making a takeover bid for the company at this time.
But. Asked for foreign investment review board approval to lift their state to 19.9%. That would require the green light, but only from FIRB, but from treasurer Jim Chalmers, who has indicated he will decide next month. Chalmers had previously described the approval as significant and sensitive, and that was by Luke Kinsella, August the fifth last week.
So defense stocks were on the tear, was on the buy list, and now it’s [00:22:00] shooting the lights out.
Cameron: Last sold them out of our portfolio around, uh, August last year, about a year ago, $2 37. They’re now just, just south of seven bucks today.
Tony Kynaston: Okay,
Cameron: So that’s
Tony Kynaston: well timing.
Cameron: a
Tony Kynaston: Timing is everything.
Cameron: lose some.
Tony Kynaston: Yep. Both the time. We didn’t see prop coming and uh. Pressure to increase, improve. Well, you should have boil a pressure to improve defense spending anyway.
Cameron: the rules, Tony.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: trend line sell,
Tony Kynaston: Yep, I did too.
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Correct. Uh, last week’s Pulled pork was on a company called Vault, which was a, um, a gold miner from memory.
And, uh, there were a couple of, uh, articles about it last week. And the AFR again, uh, one around the upcoming rebalancing of the. Index and that that’s [00:23:00] due to be announced on September five. So that’s always a bit of a date that people focus on, uh, the article said last week, the ASX 200 is most widely followed when rebalances take place each quarter.
Given that most passive flows are benchmarked to that index, since 2007 companies that have been added to the ASX 200 have produced positive returns on the day the rebalance is announced, and between the announcement and implementation and an analysts by Morgan Stanley showed. Returns were best for the period from 20 days prior to announcement up to implementation, said Morgan Stanley, equity strategist Anthony Conte.
After implementation, the alpha generated from additions falls, but opportunities rise from companies removed from the index. Morgan Stanley assigned a higher probability that pharmaceutical distributor, Ebos group and infrastructure company, Del Rimple Bay, would join the ASX 200 and a lower [00:24:00] probability to Gold Producer, catalyst, metals and Mining Services Company, Parenti.
They also talked about in the articles thinking that Vault, um, could possibly be, uh, added to the, uh, ASX 200 as well. Um, and then separately, uh. In the same day, August 5th, another article about the Digger and Dealers Conference, the big mining conference in Kalgoorlie reports Bellevue Gold and Vault Minerals gained over 6%.
Both have been noted as potential takeover targets with rail finlays, ands, Genesis Minerals, rumored to have its eye on vault that says, mark, we in the AFR last week. So watch the space for Vault, um, and Parenti, I guess if it goes into the ASX 200. Perenti has certainly been going up to stock I own.
Cameron: Yeah, Perenti’s been a winner for lots of us up 80, 90%, some of our portfolios.
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Another one from company reporting [00:25:00] season erode, small company that’s been on the buy list. I think I did a pulled pork on it a year or two ago. Um, but I, it, uh, it picked my interest again recently. ’cause, um, even just yesterday I was hearing noise again about, uh.
Bringing a road user charge into Australia. And this is around the fact that at the moment, people who fuel their cars with petrol, um, uh. A what’s called the petrol excise tax, and that goes into road maintenance and road building in Australia. Uh, and, uh, now that the EV fleet is getting bigger, they’re not paying any petrol excise.
And so, um, the governments are starting to think about an alternative way of raising that revenue to fix roads on a, on a e, uh, equal basis. Uh, and as is often the case, New Zealand has beat us to it. So, um. Uh, erode released on the 6th of August that they welcome the [00:26:00] Transport Minister of New Zealand.
Chris Bishop’s announcement at the Infrastructure New Zealand conference where he unveiled the government’s plan to transition all New Zealand vehicles to electronic road user charging. Or ROC for sure. The move to ROC represents a smarter, fairer, and more sustainable approach to road funding. And Eero believes that it’s a system already well used by commercial fleets and the right approach for New Zealand to take.
So as New Zealand transitions away from fuel excise taxes, ER offers a future ready and proven solution that reflects how we actually use our roads at Martini Co CEO of Eero. It’s a system that not only. Is more equitable, but also more efficient and better aligned with our climate and infrastructure goals. So that was, uh, from an erode release on the sixth of the eighth. Uh, so. I, I think it’s probably only a matter of time that something similar comes in here. people might remember, E Road puts like e tags in cars, but, um, not [00:27:00] just to pay tolls, but also to track their movements. To allow fleet managers to the efficiency of their drivers, um, also to enable some. User charges in New Zealand, uh, where they charge heavy vehicles for using roads already. They’re now gonna move. Looks like they’re charging all vehicles. So they, uh, elsewhere. The government in New Zealand have said that they’re open to using private, uh. Companies to facilitate the of, um, And so, uh, it’s possible it could come in here as well, which would be a big boost for, um, uh, Eero if they pick up that contract eventually. But also too, in, um, the last, a little while, so the 26th of May, Eero announced, uh, their. results and they’re all very good. So, um, improvement in free cash flow rose to 16 million compared with one, uh, 1.3 million in FY 2024. Uh, what else? Uh, [00:28:00] revenue climbed, um, to one 94 million from one 82 million. and. Impact increased, uh, by 2.2 million, uh, from a negative $800,000 in FY 2024. So since then the end of May, the stock price has more than doubled. So, um, Eros are doing well for anyone who still owns it.
Cameron: I added them to a couple of our portfolios on the 31st of July, so 12 days ago, and they’re up, they’re up 34% since then.
Tony Kynaston: I
Cameron: Wow.
Tony Kynaston: on the, um, the E road or the, uh, ER announcements in New Zealand. Then, uh, the last company I wanted to
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Korvest. I think, um, you’ve had this for a while, but, uh, they’ve,
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: they’ve announced their results as well and they continue the climb. It’s a magnificent share graft to look at Corvee.
Um. Uh, five year graph. But, [00:29:00] um, just to summarize, uh, sales, uh, for June, this is June 25 compared to June 24, million versus 102 million ebit, 18.9 million versus 15.8 npa, 13 million versus 11. Cash flow operating cash flow 18.6 versus 10.3. per share, a dollar 12 versus nine 94 cents and dividends 75 cents versus 65 cents.
So, uh, more upside from Korvest.
Cameron: Who are a manufacturer of cables and pipes and galvanized steel products. Uh, and I’ve had them in our dummy portfolio since. April, 2020 ’cause a COVID buy as the market started to stabilize. I think early COVID, they’re up 305%. [00:30:00] Since then, also have them in a light portfolio since November 23. There are only up 77% since then.
But, uh, yeah, I, I see that one. You know, we, we’ve had these questions from time to time from people about should you sell something when it, you know, you get a hundred percent gain from it. Should you rebalance your portfolio? And you always say,
Tony Kynaston: be
Cameron: why would you bench Michael Jordan? So, yeah, core Vest is a Michael Jordan.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, I did do some research after last week’s musing about, um, if a, if a stock or a commodity got to be than a hundred percent of the sell price and I could find cases for and against, so. I’m not going to use
Cameron: Right.
Tony Kynaston: seem to be
Cameron: Right.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Okay. Yeah. Well that’s great. Great job, Korvest. They’re on a winner.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. So
Cameron: I.
Tony Kynaston: me. Um, back to your questions, I guess.
Cameron: I got a few good questions this week. [00:31:00] First one’s from Scott. A couple of people sent, uh, this one in actually. Any thoughts on Inghams? The a TO has accused high profile poultry producer Inghams. Of short changing taxpayers as a long running dispute over research and development tax offset stretches into its sixth year.
At the heart of the standoff is more than $50 million in r and d claims. The company’s financial accounts remain under review, but EMS insists it has done nothing wrong and says it will vigorously defend its position. As a shareholder, what would you think about that? We do own Inghams, I should say, in a couple of portfolios.
Um. Since April. I’ve had it in one of the live portfolios, but it’s only up like 4%, so, yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, so Ham was the, the chicken makers, um, or Chicken, chicken farmers, uh, interesting article and tried to do some research on this. I could only find the article [00:32:00] mentioned once or the, uh, the news story mentioned in the a PC. An
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Couldn’t find it in the AFR, couldn’t find it, um, anywhere else, which is, you know, could be just my bad research.
But, uh, that was an interesting, um, thing in itself that wasn’t receiving much wider attention. I dunno what that means, but, um, I’ll just throw it out there. Um. does note elsewhere in the article that, uh, the, claim goes back to the start of this r and d program. Um, and Ingham put, put in three years worth of claims and then stopped doing it when the a TO started questioning them. Uh, Inghams are saying they’ve still got more claims to submit for subsequent years, but they’re not doing it until the a TO resolves whatever’s going on. This just seems really strange to me. I mean, it’s now five or six years since. Ingham’s put their first claim in, and the a TO still hasn’t a determination one way or the other. [00:33:00] Um, know, that’s again, one for the productivity commission. Um, the government should get its own act order. You, you can’t have companies in limbo like this for five or six years because the a TA dither around this is a legitimate claim or not, just tell them. And if, if Ingham’s. Fight you and court them, fight them. Just, just, you know, sitting on their accounts for five or six years, I think is, um, well, I think it’s reprehensible myself. and without knowing all the facts, uh, but it does seem strange. The other thing which I pulled outta this article as an aside, is that quoted the OECD country spends on research as a percentage of GDP and the average is 2.7%, um, spent of, uh, GDP on research. only at 1.7%. So, you know, to have an r and d. Grant [00:34:00] program or tax rebate program, which is causing companies not to know whether they’ve the grants or not. It’s not really a facilitator of productivity. Um, uh. The US spends 3.5%, for example, on r and d. So again, one for the productivity roundtable, this is woeful absolutely atrocious that we spend, know, half of what the US does on r and d and that the a TO can’t get us act into gear to, uh, make a decision on whether something’s a legitimate claim or not in a reasonable timeframe. Um, so they’re, they’re the things I’ve noticed about it. I couldn’t see whether ING had taken a provision. In case they, um, can’t claim this. So I would expect that they would have somewhere raised the provision in case they can’t claim the $50 million um, Uh, so yeah, so, if they were smart, they’ve done that, which means if they don’t get it and there aren’t. Punitive damages, and I wouldn’t expect that they would, if they’ve made a submission in good [00:35:00] faith, uh, then it will have almost no effect on, in Ingham’s bottom blind or just simply transfer out of provisions and they’ll pay the tax office back the taxes they’ve claimed. Um, and, you know, my, my interface with the scheme year or two ago. Uh, when I was hiring people and incurring expenses to do research for QAV, I, um, put a submission in myself to claim this is a tax, uh, um, offset. And, uh, say, you know, positively that, um. The process was reasonably quick. Um, they actually have some kind of panel of people who are experts in this area who vet your submission and, um, give it the thumbs down in my case, which I was a bit surprised at.
But there are, you know, there are blanket carve outs in terms of doing, I don’t think they’ll allow r and d expenses by financial services company, which is what, um, killed me. uh, but I did speak to a couple of lawyers about it and they said, look, the whole. Um, r and d [00:36:00] provision has been pretty much a cut and paste of the patents process, and therefore you’ve gotta have something extremely unique, to, it would be patentable would also receive an r and d, um, likely to receive an r and d grant from the government.
So I’ll just put some context around how difficult I found it to be, to receive, um, a, a tax, uh, um, rebate on this, uh, on this item.
Cameron: You should have been innovating in chickens. Tony, there’s so much upside. You should see these chickens they’re pushing out at Inghams. Man, you would not believe these chickens. They’re the greatest chickens you’ve ever seen.
Tony Kynaston: Well,
Cameron: Amazing chickens. Beautiful, beautiful chickens.
Tony Kynaston: everybody says, so I think the, um, I, I think that, do they have tiny hands? I think the, um, tiny wings, I think the, uh, r and d they were claiming was in some kind of unique feed that they were producing to, uh, uh, make the chickens, um, grow fast or something, which sounds legitimate to
Cameron: I [00:37:00] looked it.
Tony Kynaston: more detail.
Cameron: I looked it up. Ingham’s registered activities include optimizing shed cleaning processes. Running poultry feed trials and testing water quality protocols and the a TO has ruled that these activities weren’t experimental enough. You just got Jimmy from out the back to dip his mop in v vinegar instead of bleach.
That’s not, no, you can’t do that. I dunno what they did.
Tony Kynaston: So, if I got it wrong, had the a TO already ruled?
Cameron: Well, that was why they’ve been disputing it. The, the dispute is the a TO said, no, we don’t think that’s innovative enough. And I think Ingham was a push him back. And, uh, it’s sort of caught up in that kind of a backwards and forwards thing, I think.
Tony Kynaston: I take it to court ending. So [00:38:00] it’s, you can’t spend years tied up on these things.
Cameron: Hmm. Well, it’s an, the, uh, administrative Appeals Tribunal came down against Ingham’s. Uh, but it’s under review or something. Any who? Yeah. Chickens.
Tony Kynaston: Ens. All right. Well, so that’s, that’s my summary. I think, um, I think, uh, well, I, I couldn’t confirm whether they’ve taken a provision or not, but I suspect they have, would be my guess.
Cameron: So as an investor, if you owned Ingham’s, you know, how would this impact your thoughts about Ingham’s?
Tony Kynaston: Uh, it, it wouldn’t, and I
Cameron: Right.
Tony Kynaston: think they’re more creative than I would think a normal chicken farmer is, but, um, that’s gotta be a good thing.
Cameron: I. Do we want creative thinking in chicken farms? Tony,
Tony Kynaston: course we do. We want productivity.
Cameron: do we?
Tony Kynaston: innovation.
Cameron: Oh, do we?
Tony Kynaston: [00:39:00] We should be the
Cameron: Right.
Tony Kynaston: capital of chicken farms.
Cameron: Should we?
Tony Kynaston: We should be.
Cameron: Mm.
Tony Kynaston: be,
Cameron: Okay. Could be
Tony Kynaston: yeah.
Cameron: cutting edge
Tony Kynaston: used to ride in the sheep’s pack. There’s no reason they can’t ride on the chickens back.
Cameron: as tariff. Put. Has tariff, has Trump put tariffs on their chickens
Tony Kynaston: Ooh, well,
Cameron: or just their beef?
Tony Kynaston: we don’t have to sell ’em to the us. We could sell them to, uh,
Cameron: Uh,
Tony Kynaston: France, Asia.
Cameron: hmm.
Tony Kynaston: They, they like a
Cameron: Next question. Next question is from James. I’m not touching that. Uh, does anyone know what happened with IDA dropped by 50% Yesterday he asked on Facebook, Trent replied, capital return of 5 cents went x entitlement yesterday. That could have been it.
Tony Kynaston: I think it was so, um, Indiana Resources. I, I actually considered doing a pulled pork on it. Um, but, uh, I haven’t, and one of the reasons is it’s, it’s [00:40:00] probably a lot of work to work out where they are. But what’s, what’s the background to all this is that, um, uh, this company looks like had, uh, one of their minds taken over by the government. In, uh, was it tan And then, uh, a court ruled that, uh, that was illegal and the government had to pay them $90 million and hand the mine back, or I shouldn’t say that they may have had to pay them $90 million to keep the mine. And, um, that went through the legal process and eventually received some payments. Um. I think they got the whole 90 million. I could be wrong on that, but the last tranche was 30 million Uh, I think it was paid in that last tranche because the, the government in Tanzania was trying to charge them tax on the payout, which was 30%, roughly. So they were trying to keep the last tranche for themselves.
And I [00:41:00] think that they are either in the process of having that overturned or has been overturned. company received a, anyway, the upshot is this company received a large, Cash injection from the Tanzanian government, which they’re now returning to shareholders way of a capital return, which is why they got, uh, investors got 5 cents a share back. Bit like the stock we talked about last week. We did a capital return and it fell. The shock price and reflected that and went back through sell line. Uh, the money’s not received for a week or so. So, um, I’d be watching what happens to. The graph over the next week or perhaps even the end of the month, um, I think this capital return will either form a UL two, which will give this, which will reduce the cell line, uh, or it’ll keep dropping, in which case it’s a cell anyway.
So, um, least wait until the money gets into your pocket. Um. And then Toby. Is it Toby? Yeah. And then, um, [00:42:00] I’m not giving personal advice. What I would do is to watch the graph to see if a new cell line’s created by the capital return, then make a decision from there.
Cameron: Right. So just to be clear, when he says it dropped five 50%, it was trading around eight or 9 cents and dropped down to four. It’s still trading around there a few days later. So that’s why the 5 cent, 5 cent
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
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