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Transcription
AU 835 AUDIO
Cameron: [00:00:00] Okay. Welcome to QAV Australia, episode 8 3 5 tk, how are you?
Tony Kynaston: Very well, thank you Cam. How are you?
Cameron: I. dunno, but we were just talking off air and my voice was down here and as soon as I turned the record on, my voice comes up here and I don’t know why it sort of does that. Hello?
Tony Kynaston: Maybe you sit, up straight when you start recording.
Cameron: Yeah, that’s what I should be doing too. My
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: Um, Tony, it, it has been the most volatile reporting season on record, according to Richard. Shell bark an equities market strategist at UBS who said that in terms of share price moves on result day, there were outsized reactions. Um, so we’re not the only. that have been noticing how crazy that has been, um, in your 30 odd years of experience, uh, I I’m assuming you think it’s sort of unusual.
Do you have any theories on [00:01:00] why there are some in this financial review article that I, uh, got that quote from?
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, well the article talks about, uh, the fact there’s much more index investing and passive investing around and less fund managers doing what they call price discovery. So reacting to the new numbers when they come out. Um, that’s probably part of it. Uh, I dunno if it’s the most volatile reporting season.
I’ve seen, I’ve certainly seen reporting seasons that move where stocks move 20%, which is about what they have this time. But I, I squarely put it down to the fact that we had almost, uh, we had radio silence during confession season. I didn’t hear much at all come out from people saying, uh, hey, we’re, uh, you know, we’re putting our numbers together now and it’s not looking like we guided, um, or this is, this is gonna be unusual.
Let’s get it out there. Uh, I, I think that’s the reason. Um, you can’t tell me. Like, I think the article refers to stocks like CSL, so big stocks which have moved when their reports came [00:02:00] out. But you can’t tell me. CSL didn’t know what was coming a month beforehand. Um, I’m picking on them. They might have their reasons, but, uh, but yeah, I think it’s been a complete failure of confession and the complete failure of the ASX to be effective at holding these companies to continuous disclosure.
Cameron: I do have to give a. Sort of golf clap uh, Lachlan Holloway from Morningstar. He’s an equity strategist at Morningstar. In the financial review article, he said, these are once in a generation moves the animal, spirits of the market are fickle, and when the winds change, it can be brutal. I just like that, like normally I’m reading the financial review sort of yawning, but I love it when somebody, somebody can throw in a little bit of poetic, uh, terminology the animal spirits of the market of fickle.
It reminds me of that. It me of that Seinfeld episode when George goes out s pretending [00:03:00] to, uh, Marissa Tome, I think he was a marine biologist, uh, the golf ball is stuck in the blow hole. The, the sea was angry that day. My friends like an old man trying to take back soup at the deli. Um, uh,
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: went on earnings beats and misses are generally met with a similar move in the share price.
It’s perhaps a little myopic as to justify a 10% fall in intrinsic value. You must assume not only that next year’s earnings in our 10% lower but in effect, so too every year into perpetuity. In many cases, this is untrue, but it’s often how Mr. Market works.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, and that’s another point which I didn’t make. It is how Mr. Market works. It was a good analysis, but, um, you know, I think I’ve spoken before about my experiences and when I used to turn up to earnings results announcements many years ago, and you’d see the same harried analysts in suits with their ties slightly [00:04:00] undone because they’d been running all over town, running upstairs to get to the next meeting, and then they’d flip their laptop open and put in their orders based on the results, trying to, you know, get in there before the stock dropped or get in there before the stock rose.
Um. Yeah, it was 2000 stocks reporting within four weeks. It’s, uh, yeah, it’s, um, it’s a shoot first a ask questions later type approach to analysis. And that’s another reason I think that you see volatility and, and we’ll see in the, in the, in September, you sometimes these stocks start to revert back to their mean quite quickly because people, after they digested the results properly, will change their opinion.
Cameron: I often, and I know lots of our members go through this process as well, when we see a share price drop by 10, 15, 20% on the day the report comes out and we read the report and we go, well, it was pretty [00:05:00] good, really.
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
Cameron: then we think, did the market overreact? Yes. But it trips one of our cell triggers. And we’re often like, well, should we just ignore that?
Tony Kynaston: I.
Cameron: wait till the market calms the hell down and, and, uh, it, it comes back again. I mean, there should there be a, a caveat on a cell, on a cell triggers that be ignored with, you know, if it, if the trips one within like, 48 hours of, uh, report coming out, I don’t know because then sometimes the reports are, do justify the drop and it
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Yeah. It, it’s a hard, that’s a hard one to answer. I’m, I’m not averse to giving it a day’s gross, but you’re on the risk of it dropping further. Um, yeah. So it’s a, that’s a hard one to call, um, rules, or rules I guess. Uh, but yeah, I, I take your point. It’s, um, reporting season is volatile and it can be volatile, not [00:06:00] because the business underneath is volatile.
It could just be that there’s been an earnings mess, you know, so, like you said. We’ll look at the, I’ll look at the report and think, yeah, those numbers are pretty good, but if they’re slightly below what the market thought they were gonna be, it can be a sell off. Um, which, you know, makes little sense to me.
Cameron: Well, let’s move on to, uh, some news of the week. Our portfolio, dummy portfolio in the last 30 days is up nearly 12% in 30 days.
Tony Kynaston: Well, we know that earning season often is the biggest mover for our portfolios.
Cameron: Let’s just sell and go home for the rest of the
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: Uh, that’s versus the SPDR 200, which is up 3.4% in the last 30 days. So. It’s been a good month for us, by the way. Uh, according to Navexa, 11% of our return is capital [00:07:00] gain and for that period, and the other half to 1% is income return over the last, uh, well we do year to date, current calendar year.
Yeah, sure. Why not? Our current Calen, oh my God. Let’s go home. Our current calendar year, we’re up
Tony Kynaston: We are at home.
Cameron: We’re up. Oh yeah. We’re up 23% for the current calendar year versus just under 12% for the index. So we’re doing double the index for the year. Uh, 17.4% of our return is capital gain. The other 6% is income return.
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: Um, last five years, uh, becomes a little bit more reasonable. We’re up 18%, uh, per year, over five years versus 12% for the index. [00:08:00] So, um, yeah. Doing all right. It’s doing okay.
Tony Kynaston: It is working and, and it, you know, it’s, um, well, I dunno how to put this without sounding like shade and Freud. So I’ll say it’s validating when I see stocks like CSL and Woolworths dropping by large amounts when their results come out. Um, and I find it validating because I’ve, I, you know, there are plenty of stocks which are held in portfolios because they’re in the index or because they’ve had good, you know, good runs in the past, but they’re hard to justify on current valuations, but people keep holding them.
Um, yeah, and we don’t, and I think that’s one of the reasons. I mean, as, as we said in way back in probably episode one or one of the earliest ones, it’s the way to beat the index is to take out the bad stocks. And, um, CSL and Woolworths aren’t bad stocks, but it’s, um, you know, they’re, um, yeah. Uh, [00:09:00] it’s not stocks that we wanna hold.
Cameron: Well, I said that the dummy portfolio is up 12% for the last 30 days versus about 3% for the index. That’s the Australian portfolio, but when I flip over to the US portfolio for the last 30 days. Our portfolio is up about 12% versus the index up about 3%, so it’s exactly the
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: slightly
Tony Kynaston: Uh,
Cameron: percent were up versus three point a half for the index, but it’s, it’s a mirror, which is crazy.
Tony Kynaston: it is, isn’t it? Yeah.
Cameron: we’ve seen that a couple of times lately where the US portfolio is just mapping the Australian portfolio for the last, well, for the year to date though not as good, portfolio is up 23%. The US portfolio is down 7.5% versus the index up 10. But as I keep pointing out, that’s because at the end of last year, our US portfolio was up [00:10:00] about 85%. the index up about 30. then Trump had liberation debate and our stocks came back quite a lot. So
Tony Kynaston: Right.
Cameron: were, they were, right and hot and high before Trump decided to fix the American economy by creating chaos everywhere. Actually, it’s funny. In our US show today I’m gonna be doing a pul pork on a really interesting company a Brazilian eucalyptus pulp and paper manufacturer.
The largest, the largest eucalyptus pulp and paper operation in the world. And, uh, just sort of reading from their CEO, the turmoil that Trump’s tariffs have thrown their business into, both in terms of the US as a market and China as a market. yeah, it’s must be a nightmare running any of those businesses right now. Any who, [00:11:00] uh, what else have I got? Um,
Tony Kynaston: You are gonna talk about tariffs, aren’t you?
Cameron: I was, uh,
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: President Trump’s tariffs have been declared illegal for the second time by a federal court, a
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: is in CNBC. A few days ago, federal Appeals court ruled that most of President Donald Trump’s global tariffs are illegal, striking a massive blow to the core of his aggressive trade policy. ruling is the Trump administration’s second straight loss in the make or break case known as VOS selections versus Trump. Trump attacked the appeals court as highly partisan and asserted that the Supreme Court, which isn’t highly partisan, will rule in his favor. I added the last bit in there. Um, so he is doing illegal tariffs because only Congress, as I understand it, has the ability to create tariffs. the
Tony Kynaston: That’s,[00:12:00]
that’s the
cr,
isn’t that the crux of it? That the executive can do it in the cases of an emergency, so they’re fighting over what the term emergency means.
Cameron: I dunno. Um,
Tony Kynaston: something like that.
Cameron: Court of Appeals for the federal circuit held in the seven four ruling that the law trump invoked when he granted his most expansive tariffs, including his reciprocal in quotes, tariffs does not actually grant him the power to impose those tariffs. Um, so there you go. Doesn’t get into the legal, the, the justification of it.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Right.
Cameron: Oh, yes. The Trump administration has argued that the IE EPA A empowers the president to effectively impose country specific tariffs at any level. If he deems them necessary to address a national emergency. What’s the national emergency Trump’s.
Tony Kynaston: Trump got [00:13:00] elected.
Cameron: I’ve been loving. So there’s, I dunno if you’ve been following this, but there’s the rumor mills in online over the last week that he’s actually or sick. Hasn’t been s, hasn’t been seen in public, you know, wasn’t, uh, tweeting or truth socialing, you know, wasn’t giving random speeches at golf courses and stuff. So, yes, the, uh, rumor mills are running wild about him at the moment.
Tony Kynaston: I’ve seen the photographs of an enlarged hand and bruising on the ankles, et cetera. But, um, I don’t, it’s, I would think those photographs are very easy to fake. Um, who knows,
Cameron: photos are real. The, um, the
Tony Kynaston: right? You,
you took them, you know?
Cameron: The White House has come out and confirmed that he’s
Tony Kynaston: Um, okay.
Cameron: that doctors are
Tony Kynaston: Right.
Cameron: But there’s a lot of conspiracy theories around what the real condition is and, you know, [00:14:00] um, et cetera, et cetera.
So we’ll see. So, um, like the whole, like if it goes to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court that the tariffs are illegal and he doesn’t have the authority, I imagine he does, he wouldn’t have too much trouble getting Congress to approve them. It might tie them up for a while, but he, at, at the moment, he controls
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: he should be able to get that push through.
But,
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Kind of surprising he hasn’t done that already. I guess the, the, I guess he could draft legislation to cater for the fact that the tariffs are fairly variable, but without going to Congress, he’s not locking in amounts into law. He’s got a lot of free room to change the rates all the time, so maybe that’s why he hasn’t gone through Congress yet.
Cameron: Then of course the Shanghai Cooperation Organization has been meeting the [00:15:00] last few days, Putin she and Modi among others. Uh, heads of governments representing nearly 50% of the world’s population. together and having a chat about what to do against America is
Tony Kynaston: It, it’s, it’s more than fascinating. I, you give Modi and Xi Jin Pink and formal legitimate alliance and put their set aside, their differences, it’s probably game over.
Really? Mm-hmm. I,
Cameron: Fascinating. Just to watch it all play out in real time, these sorts of.
Tony Kynaston: yeah. I.
Cameron: um, in the negative sense of the word from the US sliding down landslide normally for some reason. Why is, why is a landslide got a positive connotation? Oh, they won in a landslide. Landslides are never a good thing.
Really?
Tony Kynaston: No.
Cameron: gets wiped out if you’re in a landslide. I dunno how that took [00:16:00] on a positive connotation. But anyway, yes. Which the US just sort of crumbling. I had a, I had one of my long term listeners, a guy who runs a biopharmaceutical company outta Boston. Doug, shout out to Doug. I don’t think he listens to this, but, uh, he’s got a facility in Brisbane that he comes out once a year to visit. They’re doing cancer research and, uh, the last time he was here was, a year ago, so just in the run up to the election. And he was very confident that, uh, Kamala was gonna win. And now he’s just kind of like,
Tony Kynaston: Yes.
Cameron: he said it’s like just living in a nightmare over there. He’s a, he’s a Democrat, obviously, but, um, yeah, he’s like, it’s just, it’s just a ongoing train wreck, like living in the middle of a train wreck.
Can’t believe it. Any who?
Tony Kynaston: As, as you said, for a long time, there’s certain, certainly starting to look like a big divide, if not a civil War developing. Um, I’m just judging that based on a lot of the [00:17:00] things that David Markham passed posts on Facebook. He doesn’t realize it, but a lot of it is pointing towards a civil war. Um, you know, latest when I saw was the blue states refusing to collect taxes for the federal government and pass them on.
You know, so when things like that start to happen, it’s, it’s not too far away from some kind of conflict perhaps armed. Yep. Who knows?
Cameron: On the bullshit filter. Last week I started a new series on fascism and it was something I’ve been threatening to do for six months. Um, going through the history of fascism and looking at the different, uh. Variations of it in the 20th century. And then with the intent of moving on to looking at going on in the US today and asking the question, well, is it, or is it, I mean, it’s a word that gets bandied around a lot,
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: you know, what is fascism?
How do you [00:18:00] define it? And as it turns out, it’s incredibly difficult really, because it took so many different forms, even in the early 20th century. But there are, there are a number of scholars and historians have written books on it that I’ve been reading. And um, you know, it’s one of those things that if it walks like a duck and it quacks like a duck, then it probably has duck like qualities, you know?
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, and it’s, and it’s
probably perhaps the word fascism. It can be substituted by author authoritarianism, which kind of removes it from just, I think, I think when I hear fascism, I think of Hitler, Germany, and um, of course that’s not the only definition of fascism. It’s been around a lot longer before that.
Um, and you know, Trump doesn’t, probably won’t look like the model that Hitler had in Germany. It doesn’t mean he’s not an authoritarian. Um, and there aren’t elements of fascism in what he does. Um, but you know, you [00:19:00] could say that about other right wing leaders in the past as well.
Cameron: wing, you have left wing authoritarians and
Tony Kynaston: Yeah,
Cameron: and
Tony Kynaston: for sure.
Cameron: is particularly right wing. You know, um, I, I’ve always gone back to Trotsky, ’cause Trotsky wrote a lot about fascism in the thirties and forties, you know, as a firsthand witness to it, examining it from a Marxist perspective.
Uh, but you know, he always. Said that fascism is what happens when wealthy elite feel like their usual control mechanisms of the proletariat, uh, aren’t working they need to crack down. So it’s a far right crackdown on society to bring it back into alignment with their goals and objectives. So, um, and essentially, I was talking to Doug about this, like when you think about 20th century fascism, you think about Germany and Italy and Spain in particular.
These were countries [00:20:00] that had been through War One devastated civil war. In Spain’s case, they were, um, economically very, very hampered. They were Germany and Italy very late to the great expansion game of the 18th and 19th centuries. ’cause they didn’t unify until late in the 19th century. So they missed out on getting access to the goods and resources and they were feeling locked in and hampered by the other major colonial powers economically. Um, and so the people were poor and desperate and right for to come along and say, Hey, I can lead you to the promised land. The US on the other hand, richest, most powerful country in human history should be a land of milk and honey for everybody. Uh, doesn’t really fit that archetype. Uh, so
Tony Kynaston: Well, it kind of,
Cameron: Hmm,
Tony Kynaston: I’m sorry, I didn’t [00:21:00] mean to interrupt. You didn’t mean to be fascist. Um, no, I was gonna say it kind of does, uh, ’cause whatever the reasons for it, it, it’s, it’s often. Presage by a breakdown in, uh, well, people call it equality here or egalitarianism here, but I think it’s more than that. I think it’s, I think it’s, once the majority of the population doesn’t feel safe, doesn’t feel like they’re progressing, doesn’t feel like they’re comfortable, um, then things break down and it just becomes a, you know, a numbers game.
Then whatever, whoever can whip them into the greatest frenzy gets all the might. And whether that’s because of, you said historical reasons or whether it’s just like in the US’ case right now that, you know, their birth rate’s declining, the life expectancy’s declining, people can’t get access to medicine, they can’t afford education, don’t [00:22:00] get sued, you can’t afford to defend yourself.
All those kinds of things are just, you know, breaking the social contract. I mean, I, I’ve always been amazed at how smart. You, I, you know, your regular person is, I’ll use a term I don’t like, but your average person is, they understand what’s going on. They also understand that they don’t wanna get involved.
As long as I’m, as long as I’ve got a job, as long as I can put food in the table, as long as my kids are okay, as long as my health’s okay, as long as I’m, you know, gonna live a long, happy life. I don’t really care what Bezos does in space or Elon does with drugs or how many kids he saws or what Trump does in the White House.
But that’s breaking down now. ’cause it’s, it’s, it’s, you know, classically it’s like it’s the reverse of what’s happening in China. China doesn’t really care. Chinese people don’t really care whether it’s the CCP in power or anybody else in power. As long as they, they’re safe, they’ve got a job, they’re happy, their family’s not, life is getting better.
Yeah. But that’s what’s breaking down in the [00:23:00] US and that’s what I think is causing, um, a swing to someone who can appeal to the masses and to look like they’re giving legitimacy to their gripes.
Cameron: But that’s my point. Life should be getting better
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, it should be.
Absolutely.
Cameron: global superpower for 70 years
Tony Kynaston: Absolutely. Yeah. It’s just had too much capitalism, too much. Um, corporate power, the military industrial complex. I,
Cameron: Indeed. All right. What do you got on your list of non uh, fascist talking points for this week? Tony?
Tony Kynaston: well back with some happy news cam. It’s actually been a reasonably good reporting season for QAV stocks and first, first plane off the rank, first cab off the rank is Qantas. Um, and I think our, our. Don’t wanna put words in your mouth, but I recall back when we added it to one of the portfolios, you said it’s already at 10 bucks.
Is it really gonna get any higher? It’s, it’s kind of at its high peak from before [00:24:00] anyway, it, it looks like it has or definitely has. And, um, the profits seem to be bolstered. According to the Fin Review, by the arrival of more than a dozen next generation aircraft, which has helped Qantas deliver record margins at Jetstar and led to a $2.39 billion profit at Qantas well ahead of expectations.
And the second highest in the airline’s history, the full year result, which included a special one 50 million payment to shareholders, sent shares surging 9%, and was a welcome change for Chief Executive Vanessa Hudson, who has faced questions about whether the airlines and workplace culture has improved after several tough years.
So, you know, share price has gone up. Um, good result. Bear in mind the backdrop, uh, I think that was the result, came quickly on the heels of a record fine for, um, uh, Qantas Outsourcing, its baggage handling division during COVID. Um, so it, I mean, the market’s had a long time, a [00:25:00] long time to digest that fine as it was pending and taken through the courts.
Um, uh. But you know, you, you’d expect when the fine came down like that, the share price would go down. It didn’t. And then the results came out and it went up and it’s pretty close to its record high. And it’s also interesting that it’s on the back of new planes. And I think I did the pulled pork on Qantas last year where I said it’s all gonna come down to how quickly they can refresh their, refresh their fleet.
Um, and, um, the new CEO seems to, uh, be going a long way to doing that efficiently and quickly and boosting margins by doing it.
Cameron: Yeah, I hold QAs in a number of portfolios, including my super. It’s in some light portfolios. It’s in the dummy portfolio. In, uh, one of the light portfolios. I bought it in September last year at $6 83, so it’s up 70% since then. The other portfolio’s, November 24 at about [00:26:00] $8 59 bucks. It’s up 30, 35%. oh, my super was one of those, November last year it’s up 30% in my super, same time I put it in the dp. yeah, it’s done well. But it is one of those stocks that, you know, you, you look at the chart and you think, ooh, it’s, it’s, looking like it’s peaking. But, know, follow the system.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: be the smart guy in the room, not me.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, I was gonna say if charts made money, mapmakers would be king, but that’s not the case.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: yeah. Um. Look it. I, I agree. It’s an airline. Warren Buffet famously said, you know, if he, if he had use of a time machine, he’d fly back to Kitty Hawke in 1903 and shoot Wilburn or Wilbur and Orville. So it’s like he’s, he, he believes airlines are wealth, wealth destroys.
Um, uh, I, I have no doubt that QAs one day again, will turn bad, but, uh, we’ll just, [00:27:00] you know, let the process guide us on that one.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Uh, another one that, um, another one that’s done well is Motorcycle Holdings. MTO,
Cameron: Mm-hmm.
Tony Kynaston: again, a pulled pork that I did, and, uh, it’s come out with good results. At the same time, the, um, one of the, I think it was the founder, but certainly the, the, uh, retiring, uh, CEO who stepped down, uh, sold a lot of shares, um, a.
Uh, and that, again, that should have been a, you know, a reason to sell off for the share price, but it hasn’t. So, um, last week motorcycle holdings announced $650 million in record sales revenue and a 12.8% increase in earnings before interest tax depreciation, and amortization and net profit rose 27.7% and the stock’s gone up from there.
Cameron: Yeah, it’s been another nice [00:28:00] one for us. I’ve had it in a light portfolio since December last year. It’s up 96%. It’s not bad for 10 months.
Tony Kynaston: Pretty good, isn’t it?
Cameron: I mean, it’s not Zep
Tony Kynaston: Okay.
Cameron: Zap
Tony Kynaston: I’d be happy with 96%.
Cameron: zap The, uh, listed in the New York Stock Exchange Chinese smartwatch stock that I covered on QAV America five or six weeks ago is up 1400% now since I covered it.
Tony Kynaston: Uh,
yeah. Uh, so yeah, so a couple of, um, couple of good results for us. Uh, interesting chart that caught my eye over the weekend. Uh, the chart, uh, originates from Morningstar. I think I saw it, Alan Kohler’s weekly, uh, report. But, um, it’s a chart of the number of US listed companies, which is a little bit over 4,000.
And the number of [00:29:00] US listed ETFs, which is now slightly more than four, the number of listed companies. So there are now, there are now more ETFs in the US tracking the companies than there are companies underlying, I guess they also track commodities and currencies as well. But, um, I think that’s crazy.
Yeah.
Cameron: it? Oh my God. Why do you need that many ETFs? They’re just like
Tony Kynaston: You don’t?
Cameron: you know, how to, you know, we only invest in companies that are run by people with one leg and
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
Cameron: the name of Bob. Like, if that’s your thing, it’s like porn. like porn. There’s, there’s, there’s a
Tony Kynaston: Oh, right,
Cameron: No matter how niche.
Tony Kynaston: right. Yeah.
Cameron: a,
Tony Kynaston: Uh,
Cameron: it’s like rule
Tony Kynaston: what, what’s that?
Cameron: Uh, if, if no matter how, no matter how, uh, extreme the niche is, there’s porn built around or something like that
be
Tony Kynaston: Okay. [00:30:00] Uh,
Cameron: one of
Tony Kynaston: well, I think the reason is, you know, again, going back to a Charlie quote, um, show me the incentives and I’ll show you the result. So. People are making money out of ETFs and they don’t, you know, they don’t make money by starting one, and that’s it. They keep issuing new ones to attract more trade towards their fees purely and simply what it is.
Cameron: it’s Rule
Tony Kynaston: you know, the bit of,
I think, I think it’s also a fallacy too because as we know from, um, watching it over the years that in the majority of, uh, actively managed funds don’t beat the index. And that’s, um, that’s pretty much a truism. It’s been proven that many times. Uh, and that was what, uh, originally launched index funds, which became ETFs, uh.
I dunno when 20, 30 years ago, I think Charles Schwab pioneered that business from memory. Um, but it’s just become perverse now because, uh, [00:31:00] you know, that one key fact that actively traded managers underperformed the index on average, on mass, um, has now morphed into ETFs being effectively actively managed.
Because, you know, like as you say, you, you can buy a gold ETF, you can buy a US dollar ETF, you can buy a value ETF or whatever. You basically, you know, doing the same thing as before an ETF and another, a managed fund with a fund manager actively managing it. So, um, a lot of those ETFs will also underperform the index.
Cameron: Rule 34 is an internet meme, which claims that some form of pornography exists concerning every possible topic. The phrase Rule 34 was coined from an August 13th, 2003 web comic captured Rule 34. There is porn of it, no exceptions. Um, the comic was drawn by Tango Starry to depict his shock at seeing Calvin and Hobbes parody porn. [00:32:00] Although the comic faded into obscurity, the caption instantly became popular on the internet. Since then, the phrase has been adapted into different syntactic versions and has been used as a verb, a list of rules of the internet created on the website. Four chan includes Rule 34 with a list of similar tongue in cheek cheek maxims.
So I think we need one for an ETF. Now, there needs to be a rule for ETFs
Tony Kynaston: Well, there’s a, there’s a,
there’s an ETF called sin, SIM, which looks after invest in companies which are not scoring well on the ECG scale. Um, maybe we could take it over.
Cameron: well we just need a QAV ETF. Yeah. Uh, alright, so what else you got?
Tony Kynaston: What else have I got? I’ve got a pulled pork to do, which I can do now. We can do questions.[00:33:00]
Cameron: Let’s do questions.
Tony Kynaston: Yep.
Cameron: I think is the first one. Hi Cam. Screenshot below is from CMC Markets for PRN, which does not stand for porn, although it’s fresh in my head now. Porn Parenti up until 15 minutes ago, whenever he sent me this and before they released what looks like excellent results, the high bid price was about $2 32.
Then it has gone nuts as you can see below. Think the price had gone up to sort of $2 50 or something. It may be an obvious answer, but why would someone put a bid in at 7% or 17 cents higher than the highest offer price? So the screenshot that he sent me shows somebody had put in an order for 1,099 shares at a price of $2 50 the shares were trading at $2 32. Uh, [00:34:00] we’ve covered this before, but I couldn’t remember the answer. What would, do you have a theory on this, Tony?
Tony Kynaston: Oh, it’s hard to say. Um, it’s a small, very small parcel of shares. So it could be fat fingers. They could have meant $2 30, who knows? But, um. My suspicion is that someone trying to manipulate the market price. Um, and, and I’m, it’s a hunch that’s all it is. I’ve got no overwhelming evidence for this, but I see it more and more these days is that there are low parcels traded, um, typically in the very late dying stages of the market before it closes, which will then set the closing price either a lot higher or a lot lower than what the stock has traded at beforehand.
Um, and. Uh, again, my hunch is that’s, uh, either someone trying to gain the algorithm traders, al algorithmic traders who might look for share price [00:35:00] movements to, um, before they put an order in. Or it’s also an algorithmic trader who, um, is, uh, either trying to manipulate the price or, or, um, you know, um, just buying small parcels of shares at, at a price above the or below the current price and wants to make sure the order gets, gets picked up.
Um, the other, the other thing I did sort of tinker with is that the person who put it on $2 50 may well have expected the market to react strongly to the results announcement and to, for it to roar through two 50. And they wanted to get an order in that, um, would be accepted, but you know, why wouldn’t have been two 40?
Same sort of outcome. I, I just don’t know.
Yeah.
A strange one.
Cameron: I did ask GPT its theories. Um, didn’t really have anything either. Nothing that made sense. So, yeah, good question Scott.
Tony Kynaston: I,
Cameron: uh, one of our [00:36:00] listeners out there will have another theory.
Tony Kynaston: mm.
Cameron: question is from Dave. I have received two emails recently regarding joining class actions, one for BPT Beach Energy.
I bought as a QAV stock and one for a two MA two milk. I bought when I was playing the field before fully committing to QAV Dave
Tony Kynaston: Monogamies, you gotta stick with it.
Yeah.
Cameron: Hussie Dave not expecting Tony to research either in detail or provide financial advice, but could he talk to any prior experience or knowledge he has? Seems a lay down mazzer to join and take whatever dollars may get won with no downside if they lose.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, I’ve certainly joined a couple of these in the past, over the years. Um, and I, you know, I feel like these class action lawsuits have really picking up the slack for what the ASX should be doing. ’cause they generally, um, they’re, they’re [00:37:00] using the courts to, to prosecute the case that the company made, um, or didn’t make the appropriate announcements.
And people were buying shares in a period when the company knew something which they didn’t disclose, but the shareholder purchasing didn’t. And therefore the shareholder has lost money. Um, I don’t know the ins and outs of beach or, uh, the other one that, um, Dave was talking about. So I can’t comment on those and I’m not a party to those.
Uh, look, it’s an imperfect way to get some kind of recompense because the one or two where I have been paid out, uh, a take a long period of time that can, you know, sort of drag on for three to five years through the courts and while they prepare their cases, um, and gather shareholders to the class action, uh, it’s getting better.
But in the past you were receiving a lot less than the amount that was paid out and the lawyers were taking a, a large stake of the pie. And I guess that’s fair ’cause they, they’re not charging you a fee, so they take the [00:38:00] risk. Um, but there has been some, I dunno if it’s legislation or at least rules imposed by the court now.
Which limits, um. The caps, the amount that the lawyers can take on a fee for no service class action. So it’s getting slightly better, but you won’t, like, you know, if you see a banner headline that this class action resulted in a $200 million payment, it can be a lot less than that. That goes to the shareholders who are in the class action.
Um, a lot, in a lot going to the, the lawyers, uh, it’s, it’s had a bit of a distorting effect on companies because it means insurance. Um, indemnity insurance has to go up for all companies really, because all of these, um, court cases can result in a claim being made on their insurance to, um, to pay for the fact that they thought, the board thought it was doing the right thing, but it wasn’t.
Um, and it’s now been proved by the quarter that wasn’t, so the insurance can get paid out. Um, so that’s kind of seen dramatic rises in p and i insurance premiums over the years, which is a [00:39:00] drag on business to some extent. Um, so, you know, it’s not the perfect system, but if the ASX. Again, did its job properly and nip these things in the bud, there’d be a lot less of them.
So, uh, yes, Dave? In short, yes, I’ve signed up for them. Um, you know, even with large shareholdings, the payouts can be minuscule compared to the shareholding, but you’re still getting something back for the pain of having, um, having potentially and allegedly been misled by the, by the company when you are buying the shares.
Cameron: Yeah. I’ve got a late question that came in from Andrew. no prep on this one, but, let’s wing it. He says, cam haven’t seen any chatter on waf, west African Resources. WAF pick some up when it was on the buy list in mid 2021 for 99 cents. I was a naughty boy and didn’t sell it when it went south, but with gold booming, it has been having a [00:40:00] tear.
It’s up over $3 at the moment. Cash generating machine, was until trading halt on Friday as the Bakina Faso government wanted 35% more of their latest mine. company didn’t update the market before open on. Monday so shares are now suspended. I was aware of the risk of West Africa and was getting a good discount to buy this. What to do now. Need to wait until there is an agreement between government and company and then hopefully shares don’t tank too drastically. I also hold PRU thinking about selling while up a hundred percent to reduce my exposure to West Africa. What does the great man TK think about this situation?
He’s spoken about country risk in West Africa in particular before would be good to hear his thoughts. it RRL that I got burnt by?
Tony Kynaston: It was the one whose CEO was held by the government, which I think was, was it? I’m not sure. Regal or Resolute?
Cameron: [00:41:00] Regis,
Tony Kynaston: Regis, perhaps. Yep.
Cameron: maybe.
Tony Kynaston: I own Perseus and I haven’t sold any, so, um, I can’t comment on West African resources ’cause this is the first I’ve heard of the current issue in the trading hole. I’ve owned them in the past.
I don’t owe them now. Um, when we went through this before, when we, with, with the other gold miner in Africa, whether it was Regis or Regal or whoever, um, you know, I, I said, well, I’m just going to apply the rules and see what happens. Um. I, I did note today with Percys that, uh, their results came out. I haven’t had a chance to go through them.
They, on the first blush, they don’t look that great, but the share price hasn’t dropped, so I’m not selling. Um, I, I did see that Stock Doctor had, uh, removed them from their star stock status, so that may have an impact, um, on them. But, um, yeah, uh, again, I’ll just keep applying the rules that, [00:42:00] uh, that I apply.
So I can’t really give you much more than that. You, you can’t do much now if the stock’s been suspended. Um, and if it comes up and it’s gone down a lot, well, you’ve still made a lot of money. So, um, yeah. See, see what happens.
Cameron: It’s unlikely to go back to 99 cents,
but
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: come down quite a bit. Yeah, I, I mean, I hold Perseus in a bunch of portfolios too. My super included some light portfolios. It’s up somewhere between 40 and 80% depending on when I added it. So again, it has, even if it comes back a bit, we’ve got a lot of, uh, profit to take there.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. And you know, again, this comes back to this, um, musing I had a couple of weeks ago about whether if a, a stock gets to twice sell price, whether we shouldn’t take some profits and West African resource is right there at the moment. It sell price is a dollar 51 and its share price before it was put into a hold is $3 and 4 cents.
[00:43:00] And, um, Percys is fairly similar in terms of being double its sell price. So, uh, yeah, maybe that’s a trading rule that we need to investigate further. I I, and maybe it’s a rule where you sell some and not all, um, just as insurance. Uh, but when I did some research on it, it seemed like there were just as many cases where the.
Share price kept going up as there were, that the share price came down. So I couldn’t really formulate a rule around it. But, you know, hey, look, you know, if you, if you’re worried about it, then yeah, sell some, um, you’ve made some money. Uh, you don’t have to apply the rules slavishly if it’s worrying you.
Cameron: Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: and there are other things to buy, so, you know, I’m not, I’m not gonna, I’m not holding a gun to anyone’s head saying, Hey, come on, this is QAV buddy. Total line,
Cameron: unlike the government of Bea Faso,
not
holding a gun there.
Tony Kynaston: Uh, yeah. [00:44:00] But yeah, so, uh, that’s all I can say really without knowing anything more about the circumstances.
Cameron: I think Bea Faso’s been, um, taking tips from President Trump. Uh, well, if you wanna do business here, you gotta gimme 10% of the company.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. That’s amazing, isn’t it?
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: Uh, that’s, yeah, I, I can’t think of a government in the past which has done that in that kind of way. Um, Australian governments, you know, take, put equity into companies and think the latest example is the smelter in south, in South Australia. But, uh, it generally does it to keep the thing going so you can, um, the, the, the staff can keep their jobs and the local area keeps its economy.
Um, and there’s pitfalls with that as well. ’cause that could just be burning taxpayers money. But
Cameron: Hmm.
Tony Kynaston: for,
it to happen in the US and the way it has is very unusual.
Cameron: Hmm, indeed. All right. There you go, Andrew. Good luck with that. Let us know [00:45:00] how I don’t hold West Africa and resources anymore. I sold it when it became a rule one. Um, so I won’t be keeping an eye on it, but us in the loop on that. Let us know how it plays out. I tell you, I did have to sell something though this week, Tony.
Um, I did have to sell EVO Embark, um, early education. They became a three point sell this week.
Tony Kynaston: Is that the code?
Cameron: EVO? Yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Okay. What’s the code for evolution mining then?
Cameron: Uh, don’t know, but it’s not
Tony Kynaston: Oh, you are,
no, you’re right. Views and bark. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Yeah. Well, the education, the childhood education sector is still, still, um, cavitating after the problems with one of its staff members, [00:46:00] um, doing things they shouldn’t do, the children, which is really sad. Uh,
so, um, I can, I can see why you’d have to sell it.
Cameron: Yeah. Alright. You wanna do your Paul pork? Who are you doing
Tony Kynaston: I do
Cameron: Tk.
Tony Kynaston: well, a, a new stock on the, um, buy list, which I was pleasantly surprised to see turn up this week. ’cause we don’t normally get fintechs or too many fintechs. This is Tyro payments. TYRI shouldn’t say we get, we don’t get fintechs. We do pepper. Money’s still still shooting the lights out and still on the top of our, our buy list.
But, um, yeah, I mean originally these kinds of stocks were put in the growth basket. And this is another example of a stock that floated and has come down a long way from its initial public offering price and is now getting back towards value parameters. Um. Stock, the new results are in Stock, [00:47:00] Doctor, so we can use the, the latest results, which is good to do our analysis.
And I wanted to do it as well, even though it’s not at the top of our buy list, but it has an a DT of 1.88 odd million dollars. So, um, it’s a large a DT stock, which should suit, uh, our listeners to, um, to invest in. If, if they’re worried about liquidity, uh, who are they? Well. This is according to Stock.
Doctor Taro Payments is an Australian financial technology company specializing in merchant payment solutions. Founded in 2003 and listed on the ASX in 2019, Tara has grown into one of the largest non-bank merchant acquirers in Australia. The company provides F os terminals integrated payment solutions and banking products tailored to small and medium sized enterprises, particularly in the retail, hospitality, and health sectors.
Uh, earnings are primarily, primarily driven by merchant transaction volumes, fees, and interest [00:48:00] income from banking services. Uh, while the structural trend toward electronic payments supports long-term demand, profitability has historically been constrained by high competition, investment required in technology and pricing pressures from larger incumbents.
So that’s. That’s a summary of, of Tyro. Uh, they claim on their website to have 76,000 merchants across Australia. So they’re, they’re pretty widely entrenched to, to go through their history. They were founded in 2003 by Paul Wood, Peter Hague, and Andrew Roth Rothwell. And interestingly enough, none of those people are around today on the register, or at least on the board.
Um, which I is a bit unusual for this kind of company. Typically, you’ll, you’ll see it get a score for having an owner, founder, uh. In 2005, Tyro processed its first live transaction, 2009. It was the first company to launch integrated fpos Medicare rebates, which is why it’s got a, [00:49:00] a big footprint in the health sector.
2010 was the first to launch nonstop acquiring services so that if people aren’t familiar with banks, they often, um, use what’s called, uh, OLTP computers. So they have complete mirroring. So if one computer goes down, the, that seamlessly transfers to the second one, which keeps things like, um, uh, FPOS machines, banking systems, um, ATMs or linked into the, to the mainframes without, uh, falling over.
Uh, 2016, uh, they launched their first banking product, the Tyro Bank account, and they were the first technology company to obtain a full Australian banking license and operate as an authorized deposit taking institution. Not a, not a mean feat too. That’s a very hard thing. To get with lots of regulations, and it also can constrain a company because of the, uh, a PR, the financial regulator requires the banks to hold a certain amount of tier one capital.
So you’ve always got, [00:50:00] uh, capital sitting on your balance sheet that isn’t being invested or at least invested in anything. But, um, liquid, uh, highly rated things like government bonds. Uh, in 2020, the largest, they were the largest IPA by market cap on the ASX In 2019. In 2021, Tyre became Bendigo Bank’s exclusive merchant acquiring partner, and they also acquired a digital.
Health payments business called Mepa Solutions. So that’s the history of the company in a, in a nutshell, latest results were interesting, and I didn’t think they were that good. So transaction volumes were largely flat. They were up 0.2%. Gross profit was up 4.4% and operating costs were down 2.2%. So reasonably good news.
But then going down further, NPA was down 30%, so not great. Uh, they did have a couple of things to say about, um, going forward in the, in the, uh, results announcement. And the CEO said that [00:51:00] active banking users grew 43% with one in three new merchants now opening a ADE bank account. So their foray into banking is getting traction.
And in FY 25, the CEO said that they built the foundations that will see us launch into new underserved industries where they can create a strong competitive advantage. The industries include pet insurance, aged care, unattended payments, and automotive sales and servicing. So, uh, they’ve traditionally been in retail, hospitality, and healthcare, and they’re expanding into other, into other markets now.
And I guess the issue there is that, um, they’ve been very good about, uh, linking their me. Acquiring fpos into, um, host, uh, PO point of sale systems and back office systems like Xero. Um, and there are lots of those on the market, uh, particularly point of sale systems. They often get tailored for an industry, and I know that, um, you know, when I was, uh, working in Shell, the automotive, um, sales and [00:52:00] servicing industry had its own special point of sale system, which looked at, you know, parts markups and labor ratios and things like that.
So, um, this company’s been very good at, uh, linking their FOS into those kinds of point of sale systems and making the transactions and payments a seamless part of the, the point of sale system. Um, however, shares fell as much as 12.5% on the day of the results announcement, and that was back on August 13.
And, uh, where are we? Um. Shares of Australia’s tarot payments gained as much as 12.8% to a dollar 21, hitting their higher since late February, 2024, this was on, uh. This was before the results announcement, I think. And, um, that was because, and this is big news for the company payments platform. Tyro said that, uh, payments platform operator, Tyro says it has received a takeover [00:53:00] approach from multiple parties in recent months.
Uh, the comments came after its shares gained more than 10% and were put into a halt by the ASX. The company does not disclose name of parties or offer price and stocked reported the stock was up 41.7% year to date. So it’s been going up and down a lot. Um, something else news base that drove the volatility was the fact that the CEO announced he was leaving.
And, uh, to date there’s been no replacement announced. So, um. Capital Brief said Taro, CEO, managing director John Davey resigned on June 5th, 2025 to take a new CEO role at a private equity backed company outside the financial services sector. Davey will remain with Tarro for up to six months to ensure a smooth leadership transition, or the company conducts an executive search for his successor.
He joined Tyro in 2021 and was reported C appointed CEO in September, 2022. Uh, Tyro shares on that news were down [00:54:00] 10.4%. Um, so there’s been a lot of volatility and I guess it was summed up in a AFR. Article last week, the headline was Take Over Target Tyro Reports Profits, but transactions are going nowhere.
Weaker activity under a long standing deal with Bendigo and Adelaide Bank has the total transactions processed by Taro, almost unchanged over the past year. The company is Al already facing investor I after it. Bel blatantly confirmed that it had been approached by potential suitors this month. Tyro whose chief executive John Davey is leaving the business even though it has not announced the replacement, has refused to detail the takeover offers.
Uh. I will just skip through the, um, the announcement, uh, and David acknowledging the declining value of the Bendigo transaction, but downplayed its significance in the company’s returns from a contribution perspective, [00:55:00] Bendigo is pretty small now, $4.2 billion out of the $43 billion total. So while it is something we are focused on, we think we are seeing some good traction with the Bendigo team.
He said Tim Piper, an analyst at UBS, said there were positive signs in tyro’s accounts, including improving transaction volumes in the third quarter of the year, and underlying earnings roughly in line with the guidance, it’s positive to see signs of a turning point in transaction volume. Piper said, uh, Toro was the largest float of 2019, surging to a $1.4 billion valuation at the time.
It was backed by Atlassian billionaire, Mike Cannon Brooks. Since then, the company’s valuation has slipped to 592 million. Uh, shares fell another 5%. Um, after the profit announcement, uh, shareholders had been urging the board to finalize a takeover deal. Even as the company described the unsolicited, the proposals was too cheap.
Earlier this year, the Australian Financial Review Street talk column revealed American [00:56:00] payment, joint stripe had initiated takeover talks with Tyro. So that was in the AFR on August 26th. So what’s happening with this company, and I suspect the share price, even though it’s gone down a couple of times on bad news, is up, uh, largely on the belief that, uh, it’s a takeover target.
And as we’ve seen seen before, many times when we see something on the buy list, we can see value in it. We’re not alone and it’s often, uh, snapped up or sometimes snapped up by a, a acquisitive larger company looking at the numbers, and I’m doing the analysis of the price of a dollar 25. Point five, uh, which is 89% below consensus target, but way above iv one of 19 cents an iv, two of 40 cents.
Uh, the company has no dividend, so we can’t score it for that Stock Doctor. Financial health and trend is strong and recovering, so it gets a two for recovering a one for strong. [00:57:00] Wikipedia has a quality rank of 84, which isn’t too bad, but, um, I’d like to see it a bit higher. F score is five eight of nine, which is again good, but.
You know, probably in the average range, overall stock rank of 87, which isn’t too bad, um, it does trade on a PE of 33 times, which is not the highest or the lowest, but certainly, um, expensive. However, even though that’s high, the prop calf it’s trading on is only 4.77 times. So plenty of cash being generated by this company, but it’s obviously spending a fair bit of that.
And I would expect that that’s going into technology development. Um, and perhaps acquisitions, uh, net equity per share is 43 cents. Uh, so we can’t buy it for anywhere near book value. Um, and that’s 43 cents is higher than the net tangible assets, um, which reflects the fact that they’ve made acquisitions over the years.
Earnings per share growth is forecast at 6%, so we can’t give it a score for growth over pe, [00:58:00] which is quite low, doesn’t have an owner, founder, and directors are only holding 1% of the stock according to Stock Doctor. So, um, found that a bit surprising. Um, I didn’t do enough research to know whether the founders perhaps, you know, exited the company at the float, um, or soon after, or when they exactly exited and for what reason.
But, um, yeah, often surprising to see the, the founding comp, the founders of the company not stick around. Uh, the company does possess consistently increasing equity, which is a good sign overall. The quality that I give this company is, uh, 60%, uh, nine outta 15, and the QAV score is 0.13. So it’s, um, just above our threshold cutoff of 0.1, uh, risk.
There’s a, there’s a fair bit of, um. I will say industry pressure on this company, or it’s a very competitive industry. Um, certainly the, um, the biggest risk is that the takeover that’s been talked about doesn’t [00:59:00] progress. Uh, I expect to see the share price reduce, um, if that happens. Uh, another risk is the CEO replacement and they’ll find it hard to replace the CEO if as well as, uh, uh, while there is takeover speculation around the stock because it could be a very short tenure tenure for someone coming in.
So, um, if the takeover goes ahead, happy days. If it doesn’t, then the share price will retreat and they’ve gotta find a CEO. So, um, bit of pressure on them there. Uh, they, they face intense competition from not only the major banks in Australia, but other fintechs and also other global payments players, including Stripe.
So it’s a fairly competitive industry. Uh. What else can I say? Um, the risks are that, uh, they do suffer outages. Even though they do run, uh, these online transaction processing systems with, um, duplication in them, they can, they can still be, uh, they can still have, um, uh, outages for whatever [01:00:00] reason aside from the mainframe.
Um, and that that can risk reputation. And, you know, if you’re a small coffee shop and your merchant terminal goes down too many times, you’re gonna probably change providers. There’s a regulatory risk in this, um, in this industry. And, and the first thing I thought of when I read a, you know, saw Tara on the bowlers, ’cause what’s gonna happen with the RBA proposal to ban card payment surcharges, which comes in for July, 2026, um, I would’ve thought that would affect their, um, their turnover.
But, uh, they seem to be fairly, fairly sang sangwe about it. Um, perhaps it’s because they expect that the card volumes will continue, but it’s just the merchant’s going to reduce their surcharge by 1% or one and a half percent, whatever they, they pass on to customers for using credit cards, for example,
uh,
Cameron: that’s
Tony Kynaston: find, sorry.
Cameron: that’s being banned? Credit
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. [01:01:00] Yep. RBA bans them from the middle of next year, July, 2026.
Cameron: Wow.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Big impacts on bank loyalty programs because that’s generally there’s their, um, their service fees, uh, are inflated and the, the margins used to offer those. And this came into effect in Europe, um, I think last year, certainly recently.
And yeah, certainly loyalty programs over there took a hit and became less attractive to customers. So there’s that dimension to it. But, um, yeah, I mean, it, it should mean that people pay less for their cup of coffee by 1% or so when it comes in.
Cameron: everything
Tony Kynaston: And everything. Yeah.
Cameron: card. Right? That’s a
Tony Kynaston: Correct.
Yeah,
Cameron: Interesting. And do you know why, what the rationale is from the RBA?
Tony Kynaston: yeah,
Just for that very reason. It’s a, it’s a, it’s an impediment, um, on the economy. I,
Cameron: Hmm. Okay.
Tony Kynaston: so I’ll use [01:02:00] the buzzword productivity.
Cameron: it’s a wrought.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah. Pretty much.
Cameron: Yeah. right.
Tony Kynaston: Um, some of the other risks, the, this industry, the company has, um, this one in particular has a lot of small to medium enterprise merchants. As I said before, hospitality, medical practices, that kind of thing. Hotels, um, and coffee shops, retail, and they are, you know, they’re the most vulnerable if there is an economic downturn.
So as soon as, um, the economy comes off the boil and transactions go down, it will hurt this company. Um. They’re, um, it’s a continuous cycle of innovation, which is, which they seem to handle, but it’s gotta be a, a risk, um, that someone comes along with a much better way of doing things. Um, and I guess the last risk is, uh, potential data breaches, which have hit companies with transactions going across them, [01:03:00] um, which could impact the trust that that consumers have in this brand, or that, um, SMEs have in this brand, but it’s not all downside.
Um, on the plus side, uh, you know, there’s a takeover a foot, so they, you know, generally takeover premiums are 30%. So, um, some of that’s already in the share price, but, um, you may go up higher when the takeover is finalized. If it does get finalized. Uh, it is a positive for this company that it’s diversifying into other merchant categories, so it continues to expand its base and it does have a strong it.
Heritage and a strong r and d focus. So I think they’re all positives for the company, but yeah. Interesting that it’s on the buy list. Um, not the kind of company we not often see, uh, FinTech or capital like type company you could call it. Um, potentially, I’m not sure if that’s the case given all the merchant terminals they have out there.
So maybe it’s not a capital like company, but it’s um, it’s uh, not your sort of industrial or bank or [01:04:00] mining company that we often see or airline that we see on the buy list every day.
Cameron: Mm. And it’s named after one of my favorite little towns in Queensland, Tao
Tony Kynaston: Really?
Cameron: You ever
Tony Kynaston: Huh? No, I can’t say I have.
Cameron: In between Gimpy and Bundy and, uh, there’s a great little cafe there that we will often stop at and get a coffee when we’re driving up to visit my mom. And the guy that owns the cafe owns not one. But two, uh, what’s the car from Back to the Future? The
Tony Kynaston: Laureates.
Cameron: DeLoreans. He
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Right.
Cameron: collector. There’s often one of his DeLoreans parked at the front of his cafe, which is always fun to see.
Tony Kynaston: I saw recently that Back to the Future was gonna use a fridge as the time machine until, uh, someone pointed out that yeah. That kids might, uh, climb into fridges, be attracted to it because of the movie. Hmm,
Cameron: [01:05:00] Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Oh, good. Thank you for that, Tony. I, I’ve, uh, it is interesting to see a company like that on our buy list. We don’t see
Tony Kynaston: hmm.
Cameron: of tech companies like
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: with the numbers that work for us. Speaking of, uh, numbers that don’t work for us, bank of Queensland, I noticed while you were talking it’d become a three point sell. I own them in a number of portfolios, including my super, but they’ve edged back up. They’re now sitting on their cell line, $7 and 5 cents. They were down to 7.03. They’ve edged back up to 7.05. I
Tony Kynaston: how far away are they from a dividend as well?
Cameron: uh,
Tony Kynaston: to be careful of this these days.
Cameron: there’s nothing in Stock, Doctor. I checked that. I think the last one was May, so probably another
Tony Kynaston: Uh,
Cameron: think their annual report is due out in September.
Tony Kynaston: yeah. So are they a, are they a March, [01:06:00] September reporter as often the banks are?
Cameron: yes, I
Tony Kynaston: Right. Okay.
Cameron: hold on. They’re scheduled to release their financial results on the 15th of October, so there’ll probably be a dividend after that.
Tony Kynaston: Yeah.
Cameron: they did come out with a announcement, a strategy and trading update on the 28th of August, which is what seems to have. Caused an eight or 9% slide in their share price
Tony Kynaston: I won’t do that again. Good on them though, for continuous governance.
Cameron: yes. Your wife isn’t on the board of BOQ any longer, is she?
Tony Kynaston: No. She still has some shares, so I’ll talk to her about whether it’s time to sell them or not.
Cameron: There’s the Bank of Queensland has previously indicated its intent to optimize balance sheet efficiency and grow capital light revenue streams to improve return on equity. Recently, this has involved recycling capital from lower returning home lending into business lending. is [01:07:00] exploring a whole of loan sale process for up to $3.8 billion of its equipment finance portfolio. proposed transaction is aimed at enhancing capital flexibility, improving ROE, and supporting scaler customer growth through an off balance sheet, forward flow origination and servicing arrangement. Wow.
Tony Kynaston: It’s for the bank jargon there isn’t there.
Cameron: yeah.
Tony Kynaston: I did see that and as one of the analysts said, it’s a bank outsourcing a bank, it’s like, what’s, what’s the point? Um, yeah.
Cameron: it’s
Tony Kynaston: Uh,
Cameron: equipment finance portfolio to someone else, basically,
Tony Kynaston: well the financing for it, it looks like they’ll keep the customer relationships and clip the ticket, but someone else is gonna be the bank and provide the, the actual capital that’s sent out. And, and I kind of sympathize with it because they’re saying, well, we can get, you know, better income if we lend that money to banks rather than lending it to people to lease [01:08:00] cars or tractors or whatever they’re using it for.
Um, yeah. But, uh, that wasn’t received as good news by the market.
Cameron: although their projections for the term, the full year results, uh, that cash earnings will be up nine to 12% versus FY 24 cash, ROE up 50 to 70 basis points versus FY 24. There’s a few one-off adjustments, branch strategy costs, restructuring costs. Um, and they’re withdrawing some of their ROE and cost to income targets due to ongoing uncertainty in industry headwinds. But, uh, there you go. So keep an eye on that. I,
Tony Kynaston: I think just if I can, but in too, I think again, with the regulator
there, there has been, I dunno where it’s go, where it’s gone to, but there was a kite flown during the productivity summit that the, the regional bank should have some of their capital constraints [01:09:00] less well lightened. So at the moment, I think we spoke about this one to the pulled pork on Bank of Queensland regional banks, because they aren’t as big as the major banks have to hold more of their capital, um, as this tier one capital concept I spoke about before.
Um. Requires, and they have to hold more than the, the major banks do, which means that their margins are constrained when they have to compete against the major banks to wishing mortgages, um, which hits their bottom line. And, and, um, you know, it, it’s, it’s good from a regulatory point of view because it’s, you know, if there is a, ever a bank that goes broke, it’s gonna be a small one before it’s a big one, I would’ve thought.
Um, that’s conventional wisdom anyway. Uh, and, uh, but it’s bad from a competitive point of view because the small, nimble player never gets to compete on the level playing field with the larger player. So, um, if that comes to pass, I would’ve thought there’d be a rerating in shares of co companies like Bank of Queensland.
Cameron: Right.
Tony Kynaston: Very much. I watch [01:10:00] this space though.
Cameron: Right. Okay. Well, thank you tk. That’s all that I have. after hours. do you got?
Tony Kynaston: Well, while we were away, uh, net I think it was Netflix released, uh, Leon the Professional again.
And it,
it rocketed up to the, the up the list in terms of the most watched movies. And we watched it. The, I introduced it to Ruddy and Wall when we were up playing golf in Yarra Wonga one night and just loved it again.
Always, always have loved it. Um, but just holds up so well. I’ve got, um, you know, sort of uncomfortable scenes with a very young Natalie Portman
Cameron: yeah,
Tony Kynaston: and genre, no forming a relationship.
Um, nothing ever happens on that side of things, and John Ren knows very careful about it. But, uh, yeah, it’s a strange relationship, but just [01:11:00] a, it’s, I love Luke Basson.
I love, um, Gary Oldman does, he’s fan one of his best roles as the, as the head of the DEA, whatever town they’re in New York. It’s fantastic.
Cameron: Period was like peak Gary Oldman in the
Tony Kynaston: It was,
Cameron: the fifth element, that True Romance where he was just pulling out his most drug, fierce characters. They were always great. I,
Tony Kynaston: yeah, really enjoyed it. And then the other one I watched during the week was the documentary on Devo, which, um, was fantastic as well.
Cameron: right. I haven’t
Tony Kynaston: Yeah, yeah. It’s, it’s just out in the last week or so. It’s really good. Um, always been a Devo fan. Saw them when they first toured Australia back in the late seventies, early eighties.
Um, great, great to see live. Um, always been kind of very iconoclastic, but, but the documentary goes right back into the philosophy behind Divo. You know, it’s, [01:12:00] there were song titles which you sort of looked at and scratched your head, but they actually have meaning from various books they’ve read. And the really surprising thing for me was that, um, uh, mothers Borough and I and Casals were students at Kent State during the Kent State massacre and the riots, and
that really shook their world and sent them down this, um, you know, rabbit hole of what’s wrong with America and de-evolution and all these kinds of things, which, which they took a long time to turn into sort of pop music, um, and went through lots of iterations and would do things like go and play in bars where they just play, you know, really out there.
You know, atonal music and almost confront the crowd and then get booed and off the stage and get into fights and all this kind of stuff. And then, uh, up to the time when the, you know, they had, [01:13:00] um, uncontrollable Urge, I think was their first big single and started to playing CBGBs with the Ramones and bands like that.
And they were just surprised that, you know, Jack Nicholson was in the crowd and John Lennon was in the crowd. And they just became sort of flavor of the month as the new thing that came along. And then sort of went on from there, always fighting with their record company, changing record companies, sort of balancing the record companies demand for a top 10 single with stuff that they wanted to do.
And continuously toured, continuously experimented with their videos like they were, it was funny ’cause they, I. When their, I think it was their second record came out, the record company wanted to put cutouts of Devo in all the stores and they said, wait, wait, wait, wait a minute. What’s that costing? And they said, $10,000.
And they said, can we take that and make a video? And the record company said, okay. ’cause music videos weren’t done then. And they made a, one of their videos, which happened to coincide with the launch of MTV. So Divo got high rotation and then sort of [01:14:00] six months later when the rest of the music industry caught up with it, they couldn’t get played on MTV anymore until, I think it was Whippet came along.
So yeah, just really interesting clash of this idea of we’re going through a de evolutionary cycle with commercial hits and touring and yeah, really interesting documentary.
Cameron: Oh, great. I’ll have to check it out. I mean, I don’t, I’ve never really gone deep, deep into depot. I mean, I’ve listened to them from time to time, but I’ve never really gone deep and I should part of that, like the CBGB sort of
Tony Kynaston: Mm
Cameron: I like, like all the artists that were big in there, that’s sort of, that’s my, it’s my jam.
Those guys
Tony Kynaston: mm
Cameron: they explain the flower pots on their heads.
Tony Kynaston: Uh oh. They probably do, but I’ve forgotten. But yeah, all these things get explained. Like they’re either on the back of a comic book or they’re in a book that, like a, a underground manifesto that someone read. Yeah. Like, I can’t tell you the [01:15:00] reason. And then they had the, they had the plastic Ronald Reagan haircuts they used to wear as well on their heads.
They sort of swept back side part black hair, um, until, uh, they, they got sick of telling people It’s Ronald Reagan. It’s not JFK.
Cameron: Right. Yeah. Very good. I don’t have much to report. Nothing really jumps out at me this week. Although I have been sort of obsessed with sh Leningrad Symphony a lot this week. Been listening to that on repeat, different recordings of it. Listened to, uh, an audio, well, started listening to an audio book about and the, uh. Circumstances under which it was composed and performed during the siege of Leningrad, which was his hometown. And, uh, they were performing, I think it was like a year, like the siege went for [01:16:00] 872 days. It was like millions of, you know, um, Soviet civilians died. And, um. It was cannibalism and all that kind of stuff.
They were talking about the, the orchestra, the Len Grad Symphony had been shipped out of the, got now as had Shastakovich a month or so into the siege. They weren’t there, so a conductor who was gonna put it on had to musicians they were pulling in musicians from the front line. Just anyone with any musical ability was being pulled in.
Even guys that, and women that hadn’t played in classical music, they were like jazz musicians or whatever. You can play an instrument. You get hauled in. And there was, they were all like starving. They were stick thin ’cause there was this famine. The city had been under siege for like a year, I think, at this time.
And if they turned up late for a rehearsal, they didn’t get their food ration card [01:17:00] for the day. And one guy, he had to bury his wife who had died of starvation that morning and then he was late for rehearsal and the conductor wouldn’t give him his food ration card. the most interesting part of the story was Germans were. Shelling the hell out of Len grad. And so to provide some quiet for the performance so the audience could hear the premier performance, there was this one particular artillery commander on the Russian side that bombed the crap out of the Nazi positions and hour before the performance, just to make sure they wouldn’t be able to do anything for that. Well, it’s the, it was like an hour and a half the symphony goes for, so they could buy an hour and a half of quiet time so the people could actually hear this thing performed. As, as it turns out, the performance was terrible because the musicians were all dying of famine and, and most of them weren’t classically trained, so it wasn’t a great [01:18:00] performance. uh, the, the, um, there’s a lot of firsthand testimony in this book. People were saying that the ole of Leningrad that were left went dressed in their best clothes to this thing you know, stick thin because of the famine. And for most of them, many of them anyway, it was the last time they ever got to put on their good clothes because they died.
You know, that, that, that was the last thing they got to do
to the
Tony Kynaston: Hmm.
Cameron: of the Leningrad, uh, symphony. I watched a documentary on YouTube about it, and the guy was saying, there’s probably never been a piece of music, uh, and performed under these circumstances. It was like the greatest conductor of the 20th century by many. Estimations conducting, uh, writing, uh, a piece about it, the, the defense of his home city, while it was under siege by the [01:19:00] Nazis performed, while it was under siege by the Nazis celebrated around the world at the time. There’s a, on YouTube, there’s a recording of the performance of it on NBC by the NBC Symphony Orchestra.
NBC had their own symphony orchestra apparently in 1942 when it finally got smuggled out of Russia on microfilm and was conducted by Toscanini. No, not this one wasn’t conducted by Toscanini, but he conducted the first performance of in the us. But um, yeah, just listening to the preamble, the, the on NBC of them explaining the importance of this, like it was a, a, symphony written about standing up to the Nazis. and it was a, yeah, anyway, it’s a great piece of music. You know, I love my kovich, so, um, I, it’s kind of been, been obsessed with that for the last week. That’s about it all I have to report. if people haven’t heard that, and listen to sh Kovich [01:20:00] seventh Symphony. Just, even if it’s just the first go, listen to the first five minutes of it.
You don’t need to listen to the whole 90 minutes. But even the first five minutes is, it’s pretty amazing opening to it. defiant opening to it. Well, that’s it. That, and fascism has been my week. Tony. Um, fittingly. Fittingly,
Tony Kynaston: Linen grad and fascism.
Cameron: yeah.
Tony Kynaston: Mm.
Cameron: Well, let’s go and talk about, uh, what, who did I say it was, uh, Soth.
Tony Kynaston: Brazilian Timber Company.
Cameron: Yes. Brazilian Eucalyptus. Uh. Farming slash uh, paper and we’ll talk about why is being grown in Brazil fascinates me when I go to the US
Tony Kynaston: Mm
Cameron: going to Nicaragua, uh, years ago for cigar thing and just eucalyptus trees everywhere as we were [01:21:00] driving down the road.
It’s very weird to see eucalyptus
Tony Kynaston: mm It isn’t it?
Cameron: anyway.
Tony Kynaston: Had the same feeling in San Fran when I was there once.
Cameron: Yeah, lining the streets in San Diego too. The eucalyptus trees everywhere. Remember the last time we were in San Diego?
Tony Kynaston: Mm-hmm.
All right, thanks. Happy as.
Bernard: Q A V is a checklist-based system of value investing developed by Tony Khighneston over 25 years. To learn more about how it works and how you can learn the system, visit our website, Q A V Podcast dot com dot A U.
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