Cameron 00:06
WelÂcome back to QAV, TK. Episode 519. RecordÂing this TuesÂday the 17th of May, 2:10 pm, on a slightÂly sunÂny day here in BrisÂbane. Whatâs the weathÂer like down in SydÂney?
Tony 00:26
Well itâs not âshitÂneyâ today, itâs beauÂtiÂful and âshunÂnyâ.
Cameron 00:29
âShunÂny ShydÂney.â
Tony 00:30
âShunÂny ShydÂney.â
Cameron 00:31
And how are you doing, TK?
Tony 00:33
Oh, not so well, Cam. Jenâs got COVID, Iâm tryÂing to dodge it but I think I may have had it because Iâve been fairÂly sick lateÂly.
Cameron 00:41
Four months in Cape Schanck to avoid COVID. You come home, two days latÂer youâve got COVID.
Tony 00:47
Not two days latÂer. Well, we did go to WagÂga last weekÂend, so it could be that. Lots of socialÂiÂsaÂtion and no masks. But, I was talkÂing to someÂone in the buildÂing, letÂting them know that weâve got COVID, and they went âoh yeah, every secÂond place in the buildÂingâs got COVID.â So, itâs just out there and about.
Cameron 01:02
Well, sucÂcessÂfulÂly dodged it for two- and aâbit years. Two years⊠two and a bit.
Tony 01:07
Tell you itâs tough. I mean, well, offiÂcialÂly Iâve had a sinus infecÂtion. So, if anyÂone out there has bad sinusÂes, theyâll know what thatâs like, but it shared all the sympÂtoms with COVID. Iâd been testÂing negÂaÂtive but then Jen came down with COVID and testÂed posÂiÂtive, so I susÂpect I may have had it and givÂen her but I just donât know. And yeah, itâs been tough. I strugÂgle. Lots of coughÂing, difÂfiÂculÂty breathÂing. Been in bed, well not in bed, but restÂing for a couÂple of days. Yeah, tough.
Cameron 01:34
You havenât been bitÂten by the HepÂtothiliÂdi, have you?
Tony 01:35
No. Well, posÂsiÂbly. I donât know whatâs going on.
Cameron 01:44
âAnd this friendÂly litÂtle devÂil is the HepÂtothiliÂdi, unforÂtuÂnateÂly harmÂless. Next to him the nasty LycosaraÂpÂtoÂria, his tiny fangs cause creepÂing ulcerÂaÂtions of the skin. And here, my prize, the preÂcious Black WidÂow. Isnât she loveÂly and so deadÂly? Her tiny fangs cause,â no, âher kissâ⊠oh, god dammit.
Tony 02:09
Is that VinÂcent Price?
Cameron 02:10
Yeah, nice one. âYes, Black WidÂow. Isnât she loveÂly, and so deadÂly? Her kiss is fifÂteen times as poiÂsoÂnous as that of the ratÂtlesnake. You see, her venÂom is highÂly neuÂroÂtoxÂic, which is to say that it causÂes intense pain, proÂfuse sweatÂing, difÂfiÂculÂty in breathÂing, loss of conÂsciousÂness, vioÂlent conÂvulÂsions and finalÂly, er, death. You know, I think what I love the most about her is her inborn need to domÂiÂnate, posÂsess. In fact, immeÂdiÂateÂly after the conÂsumÂmaÂtion of her marÂriage to the smallÂer and weakÂer male of the species, she kills and eats him. Oh, she is deliÂcious. And I hope he was.â There you go. Thatâs from the introÂducÂtion to âBlack WidÂowâ, Alice CoopÂerâs âWelÂcome to My NightÂmareâ 1975, done by VinÂcent Price. Burned, not as well as I thought, but seared it into my memÂoÂry since 1983 when I disÂcovÂered Alice CoopÂer.
Tony 03:11
Superduper Alice CoopÂer. And, a big golf fan too.
Cameron 03:15
And he lives in Phoenix, AriÂzona, where Iâm going to be in a month for a couÂple of weeks. And, for twenÂty years he ran CoopÂer town, his restauÂrant slash theme park, but it shut down durÂing COVID and itâs gone out of busiÂness. So, the one time I go to Phoenix AriÂzona to hang out with Alice CoopÂer his place has shut down. Iâm gonna have to go play golf now in order to meet Alice, is basiÂcalÂly what it comes down to.
Tony 03:39
And look for VinÂcent FurÂnace on the bookÂing sheet, not Alice CoopÂer.
Cameron 03:42
Yeah, Furnier.
Tony 03:45
I thought you were gonna break out âThe Ravenâ for us.
Cameron 03:49
I could do that, too. âOnce upon a midÂnight dreaÂry while I ponÂdered weak and weary over many a quaint and curiÂous volÂume of forÂgotÂten law, whileâŠâ AnyÂway, donât get me startÂed. We should talk about investÂing, Tony. I want to start off by sayÂing that one of our lisÂtenÂers, Michael, has asked us to give BitÂcoin and active fund manÂagers a total miss for at least the next few episodes. He says itâs getÂting monotÂoÂnous, that weâre beatÂing up on them too much. He said, âyouâre betÂter than that.â And I replied, âwell, obviÂousÂly weâre not because we keep doing it. Itâs too much fun and theyâre an easy tarÂget.â But you know, what are you gonna do?
Tony 04:25
Well, Michael, letâs talk about AfterÂpay instead.
Cameron 04:29
No, he wouldÂnât like that either. Donât beat up on the tech stocks. Well, I said weâll do our best. I went out to lunch with ChairÂman Mabb and Lee from the ASA for lunch yesÂterÂday, thank you to them. And I do want to give a plug for the upcomÂing ASA ConÂferÂence and the speÂcial deal that they did for us. So, if you want to get a speÂcial ASA memÂberÂship, I think itâs free for the first year for QAV club memÂbers. Take us up on that. If you didÂnât see the link that I postÂed a couÂple of weeks ago, email me and Iâll shoot that out to you. But we were talkÂing about, you know, perÂforÂmance of all of these things yesÂterÂday and funds, etc., etc. A lot of good stuff I got from them that I would love to have talked about today on the show, but not allowed to. Michael has put the kibosh on it, so weâll have to save it.
Tony 05:19
Michael?
Cameron 05:20
Yeah, Michael was the guy that comÂplains, the lisÂtenÂer who comÂplained. So, weâll have to wait a month.
Tony 05:26
Michael, curse you, Michael. I want to hear the gosÂsip from lunch.
Cameron 05:30
I want to thank Mark, who shared his âcheckÂlist checkÂlistâ with us recentÂly for QAV club memÂbers. So, Mark like myself and I think many of us has found that when it comes time to buy and sell someÂthing, someÂtimes we get so excitÂed we forÂget to check some things; like divÂiÂdends that Iâve talked about before, etc., etc. So, he came up with a checkÂlist for the checkÂlist. So, you get your buy list, but before you buy heâs got a checkÂlist. We pubÂlished that, I think thatâs a great idea. I would like to say that Iâve been using it for the last week, but Iâve been so franÂtiÂcalÂly sellÂing and buyÂing things that I havenât had time to use the checkÂlist for the checkÂlist. But, I think itâs a realÂly good idea. So, well done, Mark, and thank you for sharÂing that with all of us. That was nice of you.
Tony 06:13
I thought that was a typo in the show notes, a âcheckÂlist checkÂlistâ.
Cameron 06:17
Itâs a checkÂlist squared. I wantÂed to tell you the stoÂry about Foxâs birthÂday monÂey. So, Fox had his birthÂday parÂty on SunÂday, didÂnât have it on his actuÂal birthÂday because it was MothÂerâs Day and no one could turn up. So, we did his parÂty and he got a lot of cash â you know, peoÂple gave him cards with cash. And, litÂerÂalÂly soon as we got home and he was openÂing all the cards, he came to me with a pile of cash and a gift card, and he said âthis is worth $130.â I said, âoh, thatâs great. What are you going to do with it?â He goes, âcan you invest it in QAV for me?â I said âyes I can, budÂdy.â And so, you may recall two years ago for his birthÂday he got $100, and I set up a QAV⊠he wantÂed to invest it in QAV, and I set up what I call his QAV fund, but itâs realÂly just a spreadÂsheet where I put the monÂey in. And I said I would pay him $1 a day for every day he left that $100 in there, thinkÂing heâd leave it in there for a week and then heâd want to spend it on PokĂ©Âmon cards or someÂthing. Heâs left it in there for two years. Heâs takÂen bits out, heâs takÂen a litÂtle bit out to buy my secÂond hand iPad when he broke his iPad and he wantÂed to buy my old one, I made him pay for it out of that monÂey. But, heâs also been putting monÂey back in, like pockÂet monÂey and birthÂday monÂey and ChristÂmas monÂey and all that kind of stuff.
Tony 07:29
Wow.
Cameron 07:29
So, heâs got about 750 bucks in there. So, I was out at lunch with Steven and Lee yesÂterÂday, and we were talkÂing about kids and investÂing, and Steven said what heâs done with I think his youngest is heâs creÂatÂed an account for them and theyâre buyÂing an ETF â or, a couÂple of ETFs, I think â he doesÂnât have a lot of monÂey. But you know, buyÂing I think like an emergÂing marÂkets ETF and a NASDAQ ETF and an AusÂtralian ETF. And I was like, âyeah, thatâs realÂly good. Because, you know, he actuÂalÂly has someÂthing and he can keep that for the rest of his life, and it wonât cost me $1 a day.â So, last night I said to Fox, âoh, by the way, I was out with these guys and we were talkÂing about this, and what Iâm going to do instead of the what we have been doing is Iâm going to put it in an ETF.â He goes âokay, so if I leave it in there for one year, how much monÂey will I get out of it?â And I said, âwell, an ETF will probÂaÂbly over the long-haul bring about 10% a year.â And he goes âwhatâs that?â And I said, âwell, if you put $750 in, 10% is $75.â He goes, âhold on a secÂond. How much will I get if I just leave it where it is?â And I said, âwell, itâs $1 a day.â He goes, âso thatâs $365 Iâll have at the end of the year.â I said âyeah,â he goes, âIâll just leave it where it is, thanks.â
Tony 08:47
FanÂtasÂtic.
Cameron 08:48
Heâs eight and heâs outÂsmartÂing me!
Tony 08:51
And heâs comÂparÂing ROEs. Thatâs great.
Cameron 08:53
Yeah. Iâm screwed, Tony. Iâm totalÂly screwed. Heâs smarter than me, and heâs eight.
Tony 09:02
Wait until I come up there in two weeksâ time and tell him about inflaÂtion and how the dolÂlar grows to $1.50 a day next year.
Cameron 09:07
Oh yeah, thanks a lot. Letâs talk about comÂmodiÂties. Whatâs a sell, whatâs not a sell and why not, Tony? So, I think as of yesÂterÂday when we looked at the comÂmodÂiÂty charts, aluÂminiÂum, copÂper, platÂinum, all still sells. Gold we decidÂed not to sell. If you look at the US dolÂlar, itâs a sell, if you look at the Aussie dolÂlar, itâs not a sell. So, weâre holdÂing on to that for a while. Iron ore: you said last week you were thinkÂing about whether or not to fudge iron ore again, youâve decidÂed no for the time being?
Tony 09:43
No, I decidÂed to fudge.
Cameron 09:45
Oh, you are fudgÂing?
Tony 09:46
Yeah. So, itâs a three-year graph. So, if youâre using Stock DocÂtor you can graph that. And the reaÂson for that is my origÂiÂnal thinkÂing on the first batch last year was that the iron ore cycle seems to be a two-year cycle. So, I used two years origÂiÂnalÂly, but I found an L1, couldÂnât find an L2, thereâs only one big trough in that periÂod. So, went back to three years and I can find an L1 and an L2, and gives a fudged sell price of $98.50 for iron ore.
Cameron 10:13
And what is it at the moment?
Tony 10:15
135/130, someÂthing like that.
Cameron 10:18
Ah, okay, so itâs not a sell. Itâd be 127. So, itâs not a sell yet, even with the fudge.
Tony 10:25
CorÂrect.
Cameron 10:27
Okay, thatâs good. So, fudge line on iron ore, good to know. AnyÂthing else on comÂmodiÂties that we should talk about?
Tony 10:34
No, not that I can think of. I mean, I think itâs cerÂtainÂly a strange periÂod. Iron oreâs been driÂven by ChiÂna and they just dropped their interÂest rates again today, so that iron ore price may pick up again. But as long as ShangÂhai remains in lockÂdown and parts of BeiÂjing, and theyâre tryÂing to go for a zero tolÂerÂance to COVID, the ChiÂnese econÂoÂmy is going to sufÂfer which means iron oreâs not going to be strong. That wonât last forÂevÂer, I donât think. Iâm sure it wonât. So, iron ore will probÂaÂbly turn around again. Oil and gas are going strong givÂen the probÂlems in Europe. Weâll talk about the gold quesÂtion, I think thereâs a quesÂtion latÂer on about US dolÂlarâs gold verÂsus AusÂtralian dolÂlar gold. We can talk about it then, but one of the reaÂsons for huntÂing up the AUD price is that in an inflaÂtionÂary enviÂronÂment you would expect gold to do well as it traÂdiÂtionÂalÂly does. Itâs like an equivÂaÂlent to cash, realÂly. So, peoÂple will often buy gold durÂing periÂods of inflaÂtion to mainÂtain their wealth as a store of wealth, and the gold price genÂerÂalÂly goes up. So, surÂprisÂing US dolÂlar price has gone down, but I think thatâs probÂaÂbly because of the US dolÂlar â and we could do a whole episode on whatâs hapÂpenÂing with the US dolÂlar. But, up until now for a cenÂtuÂry or so the US dolÂlar has been the default conÂtract for world trade, and thatâs startÂing to break down now with ChiÂna in parÂticÂuÂlar â and RusÂsia, of course. So, thereâs less demand out there to buy US dolÂlars and the US dolÂlar is sinkÂing, which I think is the reaÂson why the US dolÂlar gold price is going down. And the AusÂtralian oneâs going out because our dolÂlar isnât sinkÂing as well. Yeah. So, all in all, I expectÂed comÂmodiÂties to hold. I donât know about aluÂminiÂum and the othÂer ones we spoke about that are in sell posiÂtions. The othÂer comÂpliÂcatÂing facÂtor is world growth and with inflaÂtion going up, with Ukraine and ChiÂna where they are, that probÂaÂbly wonât be strong and that may affect comÂmodiÂties going forÂward. But, itâs all specÂuÂlaÂtion, and we just watch the graphs.
Cameron 12:25
Yeah. âChiÂna, ChiÂna, ChiÂna.â Well, I had a look at our dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio this mornÂing, as you would expect for the finanÂcial year itâs dropped quite a lot recentÂly. But, comÂpared to the SPDR200, not doing too bad. Weâre about 4% for the finanÂcial year verÂsus a litÂtle bit less than 3% for the 200. So, weâre 30% above the index, not our usuÂal 100% but thatâs okay. But, since incepÂtion, still doing great. Weâre up 23% roughÂly since incepÂtion verÂsus the All Ords or the 200 up 7%. So, three times over that periÂod of time which is great. So, thatâs what matÂters.
Tony 13:17
Yeah. And itâs been, like the marÂkets clearÂly movÂing sideÂways. Itâs up 3% for the finanÂcial year and itâs tryÂing to find its footÂing. Itâs tryÂing to decide what to do, espeÂcialÂly with whatâs going on in the world, plus inflaÂtion, plus interÂest rates risÂing. Itâll take a while. GenÂerÂalÂly, these kinds of periÂods will evenÂtuÂalÂly shake out either up or down and then conÂtinÂue on with that trend. My gut says it will go up, but who knows. And the reaÂson why I say that is because Iâm not sure inflaÂtion is going to be perÂsisÂtent. I think once the COVID effect washÂes through, and youâd have to think that things hapÂpenÂing in Europe will evenÂtuÂalÂly resolve themÂselves, and same with COVID in ChiÂna. But thereâll be a whole set of new cirÂcumÂstances to deal with when those things get resolved, so who knows? Thatâs whatâs hapÂpenÂing in the marÂket, its findÂing its feet; parÂticÂuÂlarÂly with risÂing interÂest rates, I think is probÂaÂbly the biggest unknown for it at the moment. Is it short term, is it long term, and how high will they go?
Cameron 14:11
Itâs been an interÂestÂing day today on the marÂket. Itâs up, and, like, some of the stocks have had a great day: Beach EnerÂgy up 5% today.
Tony 14:20
Yeah, you beauÂty.
Cameron 14:22
ECX is up 3 today. It always amusÂes me when, you know, thereâs been all this doom and gloom and all of a sudÂden everyÂthing is going up in leaps and bounds the next day. Youâre like, âWell, why were you sellÂing two days ago but youâre buyÂing today? Like, whatâs hapÂpened in the last two days thatâs changed your outÂlook that draÂmatÂiÂcalÂly.â
Tony 14:40
I mean, itâs an interÂestÂing study in marÂket psyÂcholÂoÂgy. Again, thereâs a lot of peoÂple who are sayÂing â even for things like crypÂto, sorÂry, Michael â that, you know, should we be buyÂing the drop, buyÂing the dip? And I think, you know, because the marÂkets been chopÂpy for the last six months or so, I think peoÂple are conÂdiÂtioned to say letâs just see where it finÂishÂes up after a couÂple of days and then start buyÂing again. Theyâre buyÂing in the dip all the time. But, one of the things youâve always got to be wary of in the share marÂket is the dead cat bounce, and thatâs when the marÂkets drop and then they have a litÂtle ralÂly, and then they just drop furÂther just like a suckÂerâs ralÂly. And thatâs why, you know, even though itâs been a bit of work and itâs been chopÂpy, and Iâve been sellÂing and re-buyÂing and sellÂing and buyÂing, and that might seem like a self-defeatÂing type exerÂcise, but itâs realÂly there as insurÂance against things like dead cat bounces and furÂther drops. Iâm quite hapÂpy to pay that litÂtle bit of insurÂance for the sake of avoidÂing the big fall when it comes.
Cameron 15:37
And, of course as Iâve been remindÂing peoÂple lateÂly, you know, one of your mantras is always be investÂed because we donât know when itâs going to turn around. And quite often, and Iâve seen this just in the last few years weâve been doing this, quite often when it turns around, it turns around quickÂly and feroÂciousÂly. And even if you miss out on the first week of that, you could quite easÂiÂly miss out on 5 or 10% of growth.
Tony 16:08
As you said, stocks are risÂing 5% today. So, yeah, you can miss out on that. InterÂestÂing, sort of, thought game I was playÂing last week; someÂone asked when peoÂple sell their shares, where does the monÂey go? I guess what they were meanÂing was do they put it under the matÂtress? Does it go to the bank? Does it sit in cash until someÂthing hapÂpens? What, when they re-enter the marÂket, what do they do with it? And what hapÂpens is, the peoÂple who are â it realÂly goes, even though the perÂson who sold may be holdÂing on to the cash, the asset still stays with the peoÂple who stayed in. Thatâs where the monÂey goes. Because when that asset goes up, which it has long-term for the last hunÂdred and fifty years or longer, our wealth goes up. The perÂson who sold, unless they reinÂvestÂed in the share marÂket, their wealth may go up but at a much slowÂer rate. It goes under the matÂtress, it doesÂnât go up at all. So, I always stay investÂed for that reaÂson. I guess the caveat is, I know last week I sold a numÂber of shares and then reinÂvestÂed all but one of the proÂceeds from that sale, which Iâm redoÂing again now. So, the process is designed to go to cash when everyÂthing looks realÂly bad, and things are slidÂing even furÂther like it did durÂing the COVID cough. So, there are periÂods when we do go to cash. I think even at the height of the COVID cough we were still only about 50 or 60% in cash, so not comÂpleteÂly, and we were buyÂing back in soon after. But yeah, genÂerÂalÂly I want to be 100% investÂed.
Cameron 17:30
Let me ask you a quesÂtion, though. So, I was doing a bit of analyÂsis on our portÂfoÂlio, the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio, this mornÂing for the club newsletÂter. In the last week we sold BOL and TGA and bought EVO, REG and NHC because we had a litÂtle bit of cash left over from anothÂer sale. But in the last thirÂty days, weâve only had to sell four stocks out of the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio. With all the turÂmoil and doom and gloom, itâs been estabÂlished low enough that weâve only had to sell four, and that doesÂnât seem to be parÂticÂuÂlarÂly unusuÂal. LookÂing back over the last year through the dumÂmy portÂfoÂlio, Iâve had to sell about two to four stocks a month, usuÂalÂly. And, I know that youâve said that you usuÂalÂly only turnover about 60% of your portÂfoÂlio every year.
Tony 18:17
That sounds about right, yeah.
Cameron 18:18
But, if Iâm sellÂing two to four stocks a month on averÂage, out of a portÂfoÂlio of twenÂty stocks, thatâs more than 100%. I know there have been periÂods last year â like, I went back and looked at May last year and I donât think I sold anyÂthing in May last year. So, there have been periÂods of a couÂple of months where we didÂnât sell anyÂthing for a few months. So, maybe it does averÂage out. I donât know. I just wonÂdered if that soundÂed a litÂtle bit high, the amount that Iâve been sellÂing?
Tony 18:48
Itâs defÂiÂniteÂly high, Cam. This is one of the chopÂpiÂest periÂods of the marÂket Iâve ever seen. Itâs going up, itâs comÂing back, itâs going up. Look at how many times the ASX has gone above 7000 and then back below 7000. Itâs almost like itâs tethÂered to that numÂber.
Cameron 19:00
Iâm not just talkÂing about this month, Iâm talkÂing about, like, in the last six months.
Tony 19:04
So am I.
Cameron 19:05
Okay, right. So, it has been parÂticÂuÂlarÂly chopÂpy in the last six months, all right.
Cameron 19:10
Hereâs a quesÂtion: TayÂlor, my son, TayÂlor, whoâs curÂrentÂly sleepÂing his way through LA and drinkÂing his way through LA by the sounds of it. He texted me the othÂer day and he goes, âI thought QAV was supÂposed to be counter cycliÂcal.â And I was like âwhat? Who told you that?â He goes, âyou did. Youâve been telling me for three years that itâs counter cycliÂcal. When stuff is falling we find the stuff that goes up.â I said, âno, I donât think youâve ever said that. Like, if the marÂkets down the stocks that we own are gonna go down. HopeÂfulÂly by not that much and we get out, we have stop lossÂes and all that kind of stuff. And then he said, âyou said that when the marÂkets down we try and find the stuff thatâs going up,â and I said, âwell, yeah, that is true.â We will only buy stuff thatâs going up. We canât othÂerÂwise itâs a Josephine, right? If stuffs going down, we donât buy it. So, we do look for stuff that is counter cycliÂcal; stuff thatâs going up when the marÂkets going down. We donât try and buy stuff thatâs going down when the marÂkets going up, though, so itâs not counter cycliÂcal in that respect.
Tony 19:10
Yes.
Tony 20:10
I think, is he conÂfusÂing counter cycliÂcal with conÂtrarÂiÂanÂism, perÂhaps?
Cameron 20:14
ProbÂaÂbly. And I may have conÂfused those in my terÂmiÂnolÂoÂgy with him before, too. But weâre defÂiÂniteÂly conÂtrarÂiÂan investors, but I donât think weâre counter cycliÂcal, realÂly. I mean, we go up when the marÂket goes up, we go down when the marÂket goes down. We just try and go up more than the marÂket does when itâs going up and down less when itâs going down.
Tony 20:33
Yeah, I mean, I think of the marÂket as, like, a crate of apples, and if we take out all the bad stocks the good ones are left, and the valÂue of the good apples that are left must be highÂer than the valÂue of the crate before we took all the bad ones out.
Cameron 20:45
Thatâs my theÂoÂry of marÂriage, too, Tony. Like, if I marÂry all of the bad women, get them out of the way, then I find the good one.
Tony 20:53
I hope ChrisÂsyâs the good one.
Cameron 20:55
Sheâs defÂiÂniteÂly the good one.
Tony 20:58
I always think of ourÂselves⊠weâre still investÂing in the share marÂket, so weâre going to be tethÂered to what the share marÂket does, but weâre just going to do a litÂtle bit betÂter than the share marÂket. If you think of a range above and below the share marÂket index over time, weâll be in the top half of that range above the share marÂket index. But, weâre still going to be tied to the index.
Cameron 21:17
I feel guilty now, there was nothÂing bad about my ex-wives. Itâs not their fault at all. I donât want any bad karÂma because I preÂtendÂed that I had bad ex-wives. It wasÂnât them, it was all me.
Tony 21:27
NegÂaÂtive waves.
Cameron 21:28
Not them. Yeah, no negÂaÂtive waves. SorÂry, I just had to get that out there. I felt guilty. That was harsh.
Tony 21:36
It was all your fault, anyÂway, Iâm sure.
Cameron 21:38
EveryÂthing is always all my fault, Tony.
Tony 21:42
Thatâs rule one to being a dad, isnât it?
Cameron 21:44
Thatâs just rule one for life. EveryÂthing is my fault. Rule numÂber two is thereâs no such thing as free will and its all just atoms, so that negates the first one, so⊠AnyÂway, none of that. What else have you got on your list of news to talk about this week, TK?
Tony 21:59
A few things. So, thereâs been a couÂple of comÂpaÂnies reportÂing recentÂly. So, these would be the stocks which had a March deadÂline or thereÂabouts, theyâre comÂing through Stock DocÂtor at the moment. So, ECX, Eclipse, has new results in. It still remains on the buy list, though, with a QAV score of 0.28 last time I had a look. And the same for NAB, NationÂal AusÂtralia Bank, theyâve just reportÂed as have three of the four big banks and MacÂquarÂie. NAB have a QAV of 0.12, so lowÂer down but still on the list. Weâll get to PDL, or PenÂdal, in a minute, but I did a pulled pork on it last week. Theyâve just got new numÂbers into the buy list this week. So, just ignore the pulled pork from last week.
Cameron 22:42
And it wasÂnât the one that someÂbody, I think it was Mark, asked you to do. No, Dave, it was Dave from Newy. I told you last week, wasÂnât it PTL and you were like âno, PDLâ?
Tony 22:54
Iâll do PTL today, Dave. SorÂry about that. âSorÂry about that, Chief.â
Cameron 23:01
âMissed it by that much!â Yeah, okay. PDL has got new numÂbers.
Tony 23:07
Yes. So, and [âŠ] on the buy list.
Cameron 23:09
Good numÂbers?
Tony 23:10
Nope.
Cameron 23:10
Bad numÂbers?
Tony 23:11
Oh, well, theyâre okay, but itâs not on the buylist anyÂmore. What else? Oh, yes. So, with all this buyÂing and sellÂing that Iâve been doing â and I guess othÂer peoÂple have been doing it too â itâs a good time to look at the CGT posiÂtion. So, itâs kind of midÂdle of May that weâre talkÂing now. If you have incurred as I have, because of all the buyÂing and sellÂing capÂiÂtal gain, net capÂiÂtal gain, you might want to do some weed pulling to reduce that before tax time: before end of June. So, this is not tax advice, seek your own finanÂcial advice, but I know with ShareÂsight where I track my portÂfoÂlio I can run a report givÂing me a capÂiÂtal gains tax view of where I am at the moment and an unreÂalised gains tax report as well, and I can sort of manÂage things to try and optiÂmise how I want things to look at the end of the year. And bear in mind all of the othÂer rules around any sort of tax, you canât sort of sell it on in June and buy it back in July. That will be seen as washÂing by the Tax Office and the sale and buy which was done just for tax purÂposÂes, so put that into the mix. If I was sellÂing a weed now Iâd be wantÂiÂng to be fairÂly cerÂtain I wouldÂnât buy it back again in the next six months and, sort of, look like I was sellÂing it just for tax reaÂsons.
Cameron 24:24
Tony, if youâre sellÂing weed right now, just bring some up with you when you come across the borÂder.
Tony 24:31
Yeah, but anyÂway, I just want to highÂlight that. The clockÂâs tickÂing towards the end of June, weâve been buyÂing and sellÂing a lot. I had a big CGT posiÂtion because I sold FortesÂcue MetÂals Group in parÂticÂuÂlar, and I think ChamÂpiÂon Iron as well, in the secÂond half of last year, which is the first half of the finanÂcial year. So, Iâm just tryÂing to come to grips with that. What else? Weâve spoÂken before about how oftenÂtimes comÂpaÂnies on our buylist get takeover offers, and I read in the front page of todayâs Fin Review that BramÂbles is subÂject to a takeover by a priÂvate equiÂty firm, CVC. And BramÂbles I think may have just been on our buylist for a short while, itâs about a QAV score of 0.08 at the moment because its share price has been risÂing with specÂuÂlaÂtion about takeovers. But yeah, anothÂer examÂple of the big guns at the monÂey end of the street also seeÂing valÂue in some of the stuff that we see as well, which I always find valÂiÂdatÂing for our process. SomeÂone asked a quesÂtion on FaceÂbook a litÂtle while ago about where to find ListÂed InvestÂment ComÂpaÂny inforÂmaÂtion, because I had said that JenÂnyâs default posiÂtion if I donât make it or donât outÂlive her is to take the funds that we have in our shares and put them in the top three ListÂed InvestÂment ComÂpaÂnies.
Cameron 25:45
We shouldÂnât be talkÂing about that when sheâs got COVID and you might have COVID.
Tony 25:49
Yeah, I know. Itâs a morÂbid topÂic, isnât it? But anyÂway, where I get inforÂmaÂtion about the ListÂed InvestÂment ComÂpaÂnies and their size is through a MornÂingstar report which comes out monthÂly. So, you can get that from the MornÂingstar webÂsite. If you Google MornÂingstar LIC report, youâll find it. And it has, I think, all of the ListÂed InvestÂment ComÂpaÂnies by marÂket cap in that so you can easÂiÂly find the top three. I think it also gives their ratÂing on those ListÂed InvestÂment ComÂpaÂnies, and a bit of othÂer inforÂmaÂtion. It gives, imporÂtantÂly, it gives their NTA backÂing and whether theyâre tradÂing at a preÂmiÂum or disÂcount to that NTA. So, itâs not a bad report to have a look at. SomeÂone else asked the quesÂtion a week or two ago about South 32 and whether that was a sell because of the aluÂminiÂum graph, but they also asked about the aluÂmiÂna graph. I found it hard to track down and aluÂmiÂna graph, but I did do some furÂther research and South 32 not only sells aluÂminiÂum, but also aluÂmiÂna. So, it is gerÂmane to the quesÂtion that was asked. HowÂevÂer, I think the aluÂminiÂum was makÂing up a large enough part of South 32âs revÂenue that it was a sell just based on aluÂminiÂum by itself. We spoke about MML changÂing its name to X64 last week, and I did pick up its proÂnounced âTen 64â, which is what they call themÂselves now even though the code is X64, so I just wantÂed to clarÂiÂfy that for peoÂple. And I think that was because they bought a comÂpaÂny in QueensÂland with a large prospecÂtive gold field called 1064, which is why they changed their name. A couÂple of musÂings which Iâve been doing, which Iâll talk about here: I havenât realÂly changed anyÂthing because of this yet, but Iâll throw it out there for peoÂple to have a think about themÂselves. Brett from the BretÂteÂlaÂtor put me onto a thing called Renko charts. We were debatÂing back and forÂwards last week about what the iron ore sell price should be if we fudged it, and Brett said, âhey, have a look at this: Renko charts.â If youâre using Stock DocÂtor, if you go into the Advanced ChartÂing where you norÂmalÂly select on the line graph and you have othÂer options there like canÂdleÂstick and bar graph, youâll see an icon which is a series of boxÂes, and thatâs a Renko graph. And itâs pretÂty cool, Iâve been playÂing around with it and itâs not a bad chart to have a look at. What it does is it doesÂnât graph things across an even timeÂline or an even dolÂlar graÂdaÂtion, it basiÂcalÂly graphs them in quanÂtum jumps. So, every time the share price goes up by a cerÂtain amount it gets a green box, and every time it goes down by a cerÂtain amount it gets a red box. So, you do quite easÂiÂly and visuÂalÂly spot the long-term trends, and you can auto select that. So, just on a five-year graph itâll pick out what the most approÂpriÂate quanÂtum is for those boxÂes and draw it autoÂmatÂiÂcalÂly in Stock DocÂtor, or you can put your own amount in manÂuÂalÂly if you want to, say, look at a 10% Renko graph for raisÂes or drops. Itâll graph that for you as well. So, actuÂalÂly playÂing around with it to see how it corÂreÂlates to our three-point trend lines, but cerÂtainÂly a very easy way to see some of the charts that weâre dealÂing with if peoÂple want to have a look at that. And the othÂer one that I went back to, a long time ago when I was workÂing full time and, I guess, lookÂing for shortÂcuts to invest in the marÂket with, one of the ones I landÂed on was a report which gave us the foreÂcast divÂiÂdend yields for shares in the share marÂket. And BailÂlieuâs used to put it out and it was a good preÂdicÂtor of stocks that were turnÂing around. And so, I ran it⊠BailÂlieuâs no longer put it out as far as I know, but I ran it using a Stock DocÂtor filÂter â a very simÂple one just on foreÂcast divÂiÂdend yield â and it corÂreÂlatÂed pretÂty highÂly with the buy list. So, Iâm gonna do some more work on that to see whether we incorÂpoÂrate it in the buy list as a checkÂpoint. SomeÂtimes itâs not worth doing that, because if they corÂreÂlate highÂly then itâs not going to change the result in the buy list. But I want to have a look at it, I think it might be a canÂdiÂdate for admisÂsion. I guess itâs a bit of a dog to the Dow-type indiÂcaÂtor; if someÂthing is preÂdictÂed to yield well, so itâs foreÂcast divÂiÂdend payÂment based on its curÂrent share price, if thatâs a high numÂber, itâs likeÂly the share price is low at the moment and so we expect it to rebound. There are othÂer reaÂsons too for that, of course; comÂpaÂnies that are doing realÂly well and makÂing lots of monÂey also pay off divÂiÂdends which are high, like FortesÂcue MetÂals Group for examÂple at the moment, and foreÂcast to do again next year. So, one for peoÂple to invesÂtiÂgate as well, and Iâll do some more work and see if we put it in the checkÂlist. So, a couÂple of musÂings there. Iâve been setÂting alerts for Josephineâs. So, I havenât done this in the past, but because a lot of the stocks â well, most of the stocks on the buy list are Josephineâs at the moment, some of them are just comÂing around â but Iâve actuÂalÂly gone into Stock DocÂtor and set alerts for stocks which are on the buy list and are just slightÂly a JosephiÂna left. I put the price back in above which they would go back to being a buy. So, for examÂple, with AMP, itâs around $1.14 now. I think the closÂing price for the end of April was around $1.18, so I put an alert in at $1.18. So, if AMP goes above that, Iâll know itâs back on my radar for prospecÂtive purÂchasÂes. So, just in the last twenÂty-four hours, Nufarm and ChalÂlenger have both givÂen me posÂiÂtive alerts to put them back on the buy list â and just a decÂlaÂraÂtion, I own both of those. But, I havenât done this before, it was a neat way of tryÂing to keep track of what was a buy givÂen everyÂthing was dropÂping. Iâll be very quick with refÂerÂence to Michael and his request about BitÂcoin and the rest: Iâve been pickÂing up on a couÂple of terms for the curÂrent malaise and in BitÂcoin, and peoÂple have been throwÂing around terms like âbitÂconâ and âhopiÂumâ, which I found amusÂing. And theyâre throwÂing it around in a genÂerÂal sense about whether peoÂple should be buyÂing the dip for BitÂcoin, and again, the age-old quesÂtion is how do you know when to buy if you donât have a sysÂtem for it? For peoÂple who I guess havenât folÂlowed the news, BitÂcoin when at its high was $69,000 and itâs back to $25,000 at the moment. So, itâs a big fall. Is that the botÂtom, who knows?
Cameron 32:06
There was a great artiÂcle I read a few days ago from a guy whose stuff I subÂscribe to, where he did an in-depth breakÂdown of where crypÂto is at the moment and all of the theÂoÂries for and against the future of varÂiÂous crypÂto assets, both as an investÂment asset and also as a techÂnolÂoÂgy platÂform. He broke down all of those arguÂments and I found it realÂly interÂestÂing to, sort of, get back up to speed with at least his view of how he thinks things are gonna play out or how they could play out. You know, the varÂiÂous ways that they could play out movÂing forÂwards.
Tony 32:47
Thereâs a lot of funÂny things going on with BitÂcoin at the moment. You know, itâs fairÂly well acceptÂed that blockchain techÂnolÂoÂgy is going to have a part to play someÂwhere in the finanÂcial sysÂtem. DisÂtribÂuted ledgers are sort of a proven way of crackÂing things reliÂably. Although, I do note the ASX comÂpaÂny and the ASX itself has been tryÂing to build a replaceÂment for the Chess sysÂtem â which peoÂple will be familÂiar with because theyâre shareÂholdÂers â and itâs now on its forth delay because theyâre tryÂing to build it on blockchain techÂnolÂoÂgy. So, when I see that Iâll have more conÂfiÂdence in blockchain havÂing a way forÂward as a techÂnolÂoÂgy. But, when I read artiÂcles, there was one in todayâs Fin Review about someÂone sayÂing, âwell, they should regÂuÂlate staÂble coins now,â Iâm thinkÂing to myself, hang on, we have fiat curÂrenÂcy, we have AusÂtralian DolÂlars and we have US curÂrenÂcies. You want us to link a BitÂcoin to it and then regÂuÂlate it? Itâs like, arenât we just going around the clock here? Around the cirÂcle back to where we are? You want to creÂate a BitÂcoin to mimÂic the dolÂlar. Well, fuck it, just by $1 you idiot. What do you want to have a BitÂcoin doing it for, anyÂway? Thereâs so much froth out there in the marÂket.
Cameron 33:52
Youâre just not cool enough to get it, Tony. You just donât get it.
Tony 33:55
Iâm defÂiÂniteÂly cool enough. I donât get it â well, I think I do get it, but anyÂway.
Cameron 34:01
If you donât think itâs cool, then you donât get it. Thatâs just how it is. Are you ready to get into quesÂtions, Tony?
Tony 34:07
Oh, pulled pork, sorÂry, pulled pork.
Cameron 34:08
Oh, pulled pork. Which of the Pâs are you gonna do this week, Tony?
Tony 34:15
Yes, todayâs brought to you by the letÂter P: PTL. PenÂtal, so sorÂry about that Dave. PenÂtal, a sumÂmaÂry of what PenÂtal do: theyâre a supÂpliÂer of dry goods to superÂmarÂkets in essence, so theyâre a manÂuÂfacÂturÂer and disÂtribÂuÂtor. They manÂuÂfacÂture and disÂtribÂute brands like White King, SunÂlight Soap, DuraÂcell batÂterÂies, and the like. So, what superÂmarÂkets would call dry goods. This comÂpaÂny reminds me a litÂtle bit of one called MacpherÂsonÂâs, MCP, which I made a lot of monÂey out of in the past. MCP hasÂnât done well lateÂly, but again, simÂiÂlar sort of thing: a comÂpaÂny which was importÂing things like, I think from memÂoÂry, alfoil and sellÂing it to superÂmarÂkets. Did realÂly well, then came a cropÂper. I know they had a few transÂacÂtions which went bad. AnyÂway, Iâm familÂiar with this kind of comÂpaÂny in this kind of indusÂtry, and I want to highÂlight off the bat that they can be rewardÂing busiÂnessÂes â like MacpherÂsonÂâs was for quite a while there â but there are risks. And the biggest one is that theyâre supÂplyÂing, basiÂcalÂly, a duopÂoly. So, they have two big cusÂtomers: Coles and WoolÂworths, probÂaÂbly some othÂer smallÂer ones like Aldi and Franklin â whatâs Franklinâs called now, Action? But yeah, the big superÂmarÂkets will know that they can dicÂtate terms, so itâs not unusuÂal for a comÂpaÂny to see a big gap left in the revÂenue foreÂcasts if Coles and WoolÂworths decide to play hardÂball on price, or even dump one of their prodÂucts in total from their line. And the biggest threat for what is called âbrandÂed supÂpliesâ, which is what this comÂpaÂny is, is what the superÂmarÂketâs have been doing more and more of which is called âhouse brandsâ. So, you would have seen in Aldi, of course, lots of house brands, but in Coles and WoolÂworths as well theyâre putting their label on more of the brandÂed prodÂucts that are out there â espeÂcialÂly the comÂmodÂiÂty type ones like deterÂgent and bleach â and then sellÂing it under their own label at a cheapÂer price point to the PenÂtal brand. So, thatâs anothÂer risk for them. The supÂpliÂers have gotÂten around that in the past by white labelling their own goods, so itâs not a death knell for the indusÂtry but itâs cerÂtainÂly a risk. And then lastÂly the risk a comÂpaÂny like this faces, of course, the risk that all manÂuÂfacÂturÂers and importers are faced with at the moment, which is the high cost of shipÂping and delays bringÂing things in. And if theyâre manÂuÂfacÂturÂing, then the loss of workÂers to COVID and the risÂing wages to try and replace them and keep them there with that. So, this kind of comÂpaÂny is not withÂout its risks, howÂevÂer as conÂtrarÂiÂan and valÂue investors that means we get a cheapÂer price. So, it can be attracÂtive, but I just wantÂed to highÂlight the risks. This comÂpaÂny is curÂrentÂly a Josephine and when I did this analyÂsis this mornÂing it was tradÂing at 40 cents, which is right on its sell price. So, may tip over to a sell by the time peoÂple hear this. Or, it may be a buy because the buy price is also 40 cents. So, itâs kind of a strange buy/sell posiÂtion. If peoÂple want to visuÂalise the graph if they canât see it, itâs one of those ones that goes high at the top left and then drops down to the botÂtom right about three quarÂters of the way along, and then slowÂly makes its way back up from there. So, itâs a bit of a rebound stoÂry and itâs havÂing its buy and sell on on the way up. So, who knows where it will be by time you hear this, so do your own research. I would think someÂthing like 42 is the magÂic numÂber â which it always is thanks to the HitchÂhikÂerâs Guide â but if it cerÂtainÂly gets to 41 cents itâs a buy again, 42 would be an even firmer indiÂcaÂtion. My analyÂsis is done at 41 cents, which is the price of my most recent downÂload. At 41 cents the comÂpaÂny is still below its conÂsenÂsus tarÂget, and itâs a recent conÂsenÂsus tarÂgets so it gets a tick. The comÂpaÂny is very small, so this wonât suit all investors. It has an ADT of only $27,000 and a marÂket cap of $69 milÂlion, so itâs not a big comÂpaÂny. But you know, itâs room to grow, I guess. The good thing about this comÂpaÂny is the divÂiÂdend yield is curÂrentÂly 7%, so it scores well for us on that basis. FinanÂcial health is strong and steady and the price to cash flow ratio is only three times, so itâs cerÂtainÂly a valÂue stock for us. And probÂaÂbly because of the risks Iâve highÂlightÂed above the PE is under eight times, so all of that cash flow is flowÂing through to the botÂtom line, which is, I think, a good sign. Net equiÂty per share Iâm getÂting at 42 cents, and thatâs difÂferÂent to net tanÂgiÂble assets that Stock DocÂtor reports of only 18 cents. And Iâm guessÂing the difÂferÂence is, probÂaÂbly givÂen that brands are involved, probÂaÂbly going to be goodÂwill. So, at some stage they would have acquired the rights to disÂtribÂute some of these comÂpaÂnies or built the brands up from scratch and incurred costs or acquiÂsiÂtion costs. And thatâs going to be on the balÂance sheet, which I guess is the difÂferÂence between NTA and what weâre seeÂing is net equiÂty per share, which is not a bad thing. As weâve said before, goodÂwill can be valuÂable and can often be recordÂed in an underÂvalÂued sense on the balÂance sheets, so it can cut both ways. AnyÂway, Iâm scorÂing it for being at a share price less than book and also less than book plus 30, which Iâm sayÂing book is 42 cents a share. On the negÂaÂtive side foreÂcast EPS is declinÂing by 15%, and so we get a minus one for EPS over growth. And interÂestÂingÂly enough the direcÂtors only hold 1% of this comÂpaÂny, so itâs a bit surÂprisÂing givÂen itâs a small marÂket cap and you would expect it to be fairÂly entreÂpreÂneurÂial, and thereÂfore for manÂageÂment to have a reaÂsonÂable stake. So, I was a bit surÂprised by that but thatâs how it is. So, it doesÂnât score for that. It does score for record low PE over the last three years, so it gets a two, and itâs also a recent three-point upturn havÂing turned upwards durÂing April, so it gets a score for that. It doesÂnât have conÂsisÂtentÂly increasÂing equiÂty so it doesÂnât score for that. So, all in all, it gets a qualÂiÂty score of 71% which I was a bit surÂprised by givÂen that we donât have scores for the direcÂtorâs holdÂing a large share and foreÂcast EPS is going down, but thatâs what it scores. Has a QAV score of 0.24, but I think the focus is realÂly on the valÂue side of this equaÂtion; on a Pr/OpCaf of three times. Thatâs where the valÂue is. So, thatâs PTL, Dave. SorÂry Iâm a week late. Hope it helps.
Cameron 40:35
LookÂing at its chart reminds me of my all-time favourite joke.
Tony 40:38
Two nuts walkÂing down the street, one was assaultÂed?
Cameron 40:41
No, but thatâs now my secÂond favourite joke.
Tony 40:44
Well, thatâs the joke that won the war. I was watchÂing MonÂty Python the othÂer night on TV.
Cameron 40:49
Who won the war?
Tony 40:51
Oh yeah, its a great skit. They keep havÂing peoÂple⊠the Nazis kidÂnap the joke writer from the British army, but they all die because they transÂlate the joke.
Cameron 41:05
Gee, I donât know that sketch. Iâll have to dig that one out. No, my all-time favourite joke is, âwhatâs the defÂiÂnÂiÂtion of disÂgustÂing? When you take your underÂpants off, throw them at the wall and they stick. Whatâs the defÂiÂnÂiÂtion of very disÂgustÂing? When you take your underÂpants off, throw them at the wall, they stick and slide down. Whatâs the defÂiÂnÂiÂtion of comÂpleteÂly disÂgustÂing? When you take your underÂpants off, throw them at a wall, they stick, slide down, and then slowÂly start to crawl back up again.â Like PTLâs chart, slowÂly crawlÂing back up again.
Tony 41:39
Did Fox write that joke?
Cameron 41:41
No. My friend John SonkowsÂki told me that joke in 1976 when we were in grade one, and itâs still my favourite. Heâs still a friend of mine, he still lives in BundÂaberg, and itâs still my favourite joke of all time. Itâs perÂfect. Itâs the perÂfect joke. All right. Paul asks, âfolÂlow up quesÂtion to the one about investÂing in a high interÂest rate enviÂronÂment. TK, if the mortÂgage rate on your first apartÂment was 15%, what types of stocks would pass that type of rate in the checkÂlist? CurÂrentÂly, our mortÂgage rate in the checkÂlist is about 3.5%, a 15% rate would knock out a huge amount of stocks. Am I corÂrect in that, or are there stocks that thrive in high interÂest rate enviÂronÂments?â
Tony 42:27
Well, Paul, first of all, it was my first house. I bought a house as my first purÂchase, not an apartÂment. AnyÂway, I had a look at the buy list now, I just ran my finÂger down the buy list and thereâs a heap of stocks with high yields at the moment. So, I mean, just to name a few: FEX â Fenix Iron â 18.5% yield, MAM â I think itâs Micro Asset ManÂageÂment â 15% yield, GRR 9.6%, FMG 15.3%. So, itâs not hard to find high yieldÂing stocks on our buy list. I grant you that we would knock quite a few off as well, but theyâre there and theyâve always been there in my expeÂriÂence. The othÂer thing that Iâll say about a realÂly high interÂest rate enviÂronÂment, and perÂhaps even a mediÂum one too, is that there is always a tusÂsle in the wider investÂing marÂket between bank deposits, and I guess thereÂfore bonds, and the yield in the share marÂket because theyâre all tryÂing to attract investorsâ monÂey. So, you always start from the premise of, âif I can put my monÂey in the bank and get 5%, why would I put it in the share marÂket and take the risk?â So, the share marÂkets got to comÂpenÂsate for that risk which it does partÂly through growth, but also too, parÂticÂuÂlarÂly in AusÂtralia with its frankÂing credÂit laws, partÂly through yield. So, I expect that weâll see the divÂiÂdend yield rise as interÂest rates rise, which means that comÂpaÂnies will be forced to pay more of their profÂits out in divÂiÂdends. So, that may have a slowÂing effect on growth, which is one of the reaÂsons why high interÂest rates affect the share marÂket returns. If you looked at total returns of divÂiÂdend and growth, weâll do okay. So, yes, I canât recall what divÂiÂdend yields were back when interÂest rates or mortÂgage rates were 15%, but they would have been high. I rememÂber not too long after that my father retired from work and he was getÂting about 9%, from I donât know if it was bank deposits, but cerÂtainÂly the sort of fixed rates you could earn from a bank term deposit at that stage. So, to comÂpete with that kind of guarÂanÂteed return the share marÂket yields has got to go up, so I would have thought divÂiÂdend yields would be around that 8 to 10% if the bank deposit rate was 9%. So, yeah, the marÂket will adjust and keep pace with the risÂing interÂest rate.
Cameron 44:41
Yeah, that makes sense. Paul as a secÂond quesÂtion. âWhat does Tony define as an indeÂpenÂdent direcÂtor? TK has comÂmentÂed preÂviÂousÂly that a potenÂtial red flag is the resÂigÂnaÂtion of indeÂpenÂdent direcÂtors. Where a comÂpaÂny announces the sudÂden resÂigÂnaÂtion of a direcÂtor and no real reaÂson is givÂen, should that be a parÂtial red flag?â
Tony 44:59
Yeah, I think, Paul, youâre right. I count indeÂpenÂdent direcÂtors as someÂone who is not manÂageÂment and isnât there because of a shareÂholdÂing in the comÂpaÂny. So, theyâre meant to be appointÂed because of their strengths in cerÂtain areas; like, they might be a lawyer or they might be the past CFO of a comÂpaÂny, or someÂthing like that. So, a speÂcialÂist. Theyâre either doing that to bring those skills to the board, but theyâre also meant to be the imparÂtial direcÂtor and doing whatâs best for shareÂholdÂers rather than havÂing skin in the game like manÂageÂment does with their incenÂtives to get their options and like some stakeÂholdÂers will have. SomeÂtimes stakeÂholdÂers can be conÂflictÂed as weâve seen with some of the minÂing comÂpaÂnies, where their cusÂtomers have big stakes in the comÂpaÂny so they might be maxÂimisÂing the returns of the othÂer comÂpaÂny thatâs the buyÂer of the outÂput of the comÂpaÂny rather than the shareÂholdÂers to the minÂer. So, thatâs where the indeÂpenÂdent direcÂtor is. HavÂing said that, if a large stakeÂholdÂer direcÂtor also resigned unexÂpectÂedÂly, I think that would also be a red flag. So, Paulâs right to ask. Weâve seen that before, too, when, I think, Chris CorÂriÂgÂan resigned from Hawthorne resources; he had a stake and it was a red flag when he resigned.
Cameron 46:04
Hope that helps, Paul. Mark asks, âone lesÂson that was reinÂforced for me last week was the cost of delayÂing a deciÂsion to buy a stock immeÂdiÂateÂly after a sell. I delayed buyÂing a stock after a sell on ThursÂday and the marÂket rose 1.5% first thing FriÂday mornÂing. Does TK buy immeÂdiÂateÂly upon a sell?â
Tony 46:27
Yeah, I do. Iâm assumÂing that Mark is talkÂing about a difÂferÂent stock. So, yes, I would say 99% of my trades, or my orders, to Alex Hay and his team are to sell stock X and buy stock Y with the proÂceeds so Iâm nevÂer out of the marÂket.
Cameron 46:43
If you can find someÂthing to buy.
Tony 46:45
Yeah. If I canât then Iâll get the cash and Iâll wait for someÂthing to buy, but thatâs very, very, very rare. Iâm always just sellÂing and buyÂing. So, Iâm not quite sure if Mark is sayÂing he sold stock X and then should have bought it back the next day? If that was the caseâŠ
Cameron 47:00
No, I think heâs talkÂing about a difÂferÂent stock.
Tony 47:02
A difÂferÂent stock? Then yeah, defÂiÂniteÂly, Iâm always sellÂing and buyÂing at the same time.
Cameron 47:06
Okay, Dave from Newy said, âitâs PTL, not PDL,â and someÂthing about someÂbody else wantÂed PGL. So, maybe thatâll be the next one. Yeah.
Tony 47:20
Prospa, next week?
Cameron 47:21
Yeah. We can do any pulled pork you want, as long as thereâs a P and an L and someÂthing in the midÂdle. SorÂry, Dave.
Tony 47:27
WelÂcome to todayâs WorÂdle, where we have a P and an L and we have to find what the word is.
Cameron 47:32
Just make sure the words not foeÂtus. No? You didÂnât see that stoÂry.
Tony 47:36
No⊠oh, I did! Yes, they took it out of the⊠yeah, God.
Cameron 47:39
There was a big uproar. PeoÂple were offendÂed that foeÂtus was the word on the back of the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court stuff thatâs going on over there, because they are a strange counÂtry. Ally: âHi Cam, can we please go over the difÂferÂence between a Josephine verÂsus a falling knife, and which charts to check for each? I just want to be crysÂtal clear on the difÂferÂences.â Look, I gotÂta say, like, thereâs been a few times lateÂly when Iâve had email you on a MonÂday when Iâm lookÂing at charts and going, âis this a falling knife or a Josephine, or what?â We did talk about it last week or the week before?
Tony 48:19
Yeah, and we talked about it last year, as well. And apoloÂgies to Ally, itâs not butÂtoned down perÂhaps as much as weâd like, or as Iâd like. But, what we do know is that, well, weâre always lookÂing at a five year monthÂly graph for a start. So, Ally asked what kind of graph weâre lookÂing at, thatâs what weâre lookÂing at. The first test is, is the curÂrent share price above the closÂing share price from the month before? If Ally looks at the BretÂteÂlaÂtor sheâll see thatâs highÂlightÂed. If the share price curÂrentÂly is below last monÂthâs closÂing share price the share price will be shown in red in the BretÂteÂlaÂtor, and thatâs straight away a Josephine for us. So, we want to see an upward trend based on the closÂing price of last month. There are inherÂent flaws with that; if weâre on the first day of the month, itâs not going to make much sense. But it cerÂtainÂly does by the end of the first week, and cerÂtainÂly into the secÂond week it makes sense. So, thatâs the first rule, I guess. Iâve used the prinÂciÂple which I call âthe secÂond buy prinÂciÂpleâ, and at the moment when the marÂkets been trendÂing sideÂways or down itâs realÂly the first buy prinÂciÂple, because in a lot of casÂes H1 and H2 are both our sigÂnals for a buy â a three-point trend line buy â but also the end of a Josephine. So, what I mean by that is when the marÂket was trendÂing up we would have stocks like FortesÂcue MetÂals Group which was going low left to top right, and it would have, you know, zigzaÂgs along the way, and it was a buy a year or so before we were lookÂing at it. Then, it would turn down as it often does, it would go up and then come down, and I would use the prinÂciÂple of the secÂond buy. So, Iâd look for the highÂest point on the graph and then look for if it turned down from there, which it had to because it was the highÂest point. I would look for a secÂond peak to form so I could get a new H2 and then draw a mini buy line, and when that crossed, that was out of Josephine terÂriÂtoÂry for me. And now, I guess, takÂing that a litÂtle bit furÂther, if we couldÂnât do that, like, if it had made a high recentÂly and was on a downÂward slope and that slope went for more than the curÂrent month, then yeah, thatâs where it becomes a falling knife. So, Iâm waitÂing for that tick up to give us anothÂer H2 to be able to draw the line. So, thatâs as best as I can say, Ally. I think, you know, rule one â or use the first rule â use the closÂing price from the last month and see if the curÂrent price is above that. Rule two, if itâs in buy terÂriÂtoÂry and you go back to the most recent peak and then itâs been trendÂing down from there, see if thereâs anothÂer peak you can draw up a secÂondary buy line through. When it goes above that and crossÂes that, itâs out of the Josephine terÂriÂtoÂry. If you canât find that secÂond peak, itâs still a Josephine and thatâs a falling knife. Thatâs as best as I can describe it. I mean, thereâs a bit of art in this one as well.
Cameron 50:59
Okay, Ally, hope that helps. Next one is from James: âquesÂtion, please. How do we treat gold as a comÂmodÂiÂty chart buy or sell when the US chart has a sell and the AusÂtralia chart is a buy? Many thanks.â Well, we just go with the AusÂtralian chart.
Tony 51:15
Well, yeah, and I think the reaÂson for that is â I mean, itâs a difÂfiÂcult one. Itâs a good quesÂtion, James. Like I said before, Iâm almost lookÂing for reaÂsons to hold on to gold because Iâm doing a bit of preÂdicÂtion here, which may go against me, but I expect gold will do well if inflaÂtion takes hold. So, thereâs that. But, we are investÂing in AusÂtralian gold minÂers which is the othÂer reaÂson, and thereÂfore the AusÂtralian dolÂlar gold price is imporÂtant to them. Now, havÂing said that, I know someÂone will come back and say, âyes, but ComÂpaÂny XYZ sells in US dolÂlars, but they do get conÂvertÂed to AusÂtralian dolÂlars at some stage before the comÂpaÂny reports. So, I think the AusÂtralian dolÂlar price is the more relÂeÂvant one for AusÂtralian gold minÂers.
Cameron 51:54
But, we donât do that with our othÂer comÂmodiÂties. Why is it only gold that we look at in AusÂtralian dolÂlars?
Tony 52:02
Yeah, we probÂaÂbly should. I think I would strugÂgle to find platÂinum in AusÂtralian dolÂlars and copÂper in AusÂtralian dolÂlars, and some of these othÂer ones. I could be wrong, I havenât tried. Like I said, I startÂed off when the US dolÂlar price in gold got close to crossÂing. I startÂed to think about that, why were the share prices of AusÂtralian gold minÂers still going up and the comÂmodÂiÂty was trendÂing down? And, did a bit of research and thought, âokay, itâs because the AusÂtralian dolÂlar price is more relÂeÂvant.â So, yeah, potenÂtialÂly we should be lookÂing at all the othÂer charts as well in AusÂtralian dolÂlars. And some of them are, just natÂuÂralÂly defaultÂing to AusÂtralian dolÂlars. But in gold, we are lucky enough to be able to get our hands around the AusÂtralian dolÂlar five-year monthÂly gold chart as well as a US dolÂlar one.
Cameron 52:46
So realÂly, you saw a disÂconÂnect between the gold USD price trend and the gold minÂers â the gold stocks in this counÂtry â and you were tryÂing to figÂure out why the disÂconÂnect? And that was your conÂcluÂsion, right.
Tony 53:00
CorÂrect. Now, itâs kind of reversed at the moment because the gold shares, like everyÂthing else, are dropÂping as well. So, whether thatâs because of the genÂerÂal marÂket malaise or whether itâs because the US dolÂlar is the right gold chart, Iâm not sure. But yeah, at this stage Iâm stickÂing with the AusÂtralian dolÂlar chart.
Cameron 53:17
Okay, thank you. Glen asks a quesÂtion about the ACL chart. We talked about this over lunch yesÂterÂday, too. He says, âIâm thinkÂing itâs a buy. If so, a QAV score of about 0.18. Keen to see any othÂer comÂments.â I think these guys only floatÂed, like, in the last year and theyâve got one of these weird ones where itâs going up, but itâs a litÂtle bit hard to draw a buy line for this. I know the BretÂteÂlaÂtor canât draw a buy line. What do you think about the buy line for ACL?
Tony 53:44
Well, the BretÂteÂlaÂtor canât draw a buy line because H2 is not quite a peak. So, when I eyeÂballed the chart this mornÂing preparÂing for the show I thought, oh, yeah, thereâs a buy line there. Itâs H1, h2 are pretÂty obviÂous. But, when I had a close look at H2, itâs not quite a peak. In othÂer words, using the monthÂly graph the month before the secÂond peak was lowÂer, but the month after was like a cent highÂer. So, itâs not quite a peak which is why the BretÂteÂlaÂtor canât draw it as a peak. So, you can fudge it and you get a buy price as it looks like Glen has done, or you can wait until there is a propÂer H2 peak, as such.
Cameron 54:21
Which way would you go with this if it was you?
Tony 54:25
Iâd probÂaÂbly fudge it. Itâs so close to being a peak. Itâs only, like, a cent out. Again, this comÂpaÂny comes with risk because, I think, I donât know much about ACL but I think itâs made its name through COVID testÂing. So, not sure how long thatâs going to be a thing in demand. And just as a genÂerÂal rule, and no asperÂsions on ACL which of course could do all sorts of things from here and pivÂot into all sorts of othÂer testÂing prodÂucts, but genÂerÂalÂly if you see someÂthing which is ridÂing a wave and then it lists durÂing that wave, it might be a sign that someÂoneâs tryÂing to get out at the high, so just be careÂful. But thatâs a preÂdicÂtion and all things being equal, itâs a buy.
Cameron 55:08
They want to get high and youâre sellÂing weed. Itâs all comÂing togethÂer.
Tony 55:14
High School ecoÂnomÂics.
Cameron 55:18
All right. Last quesÂtion is from Dan, âwhen using the operÂatÂing cash flows it doesÂnât include the prinÂciÂpal porÂtion of lease payÂments and to myself, and maybe most, I feel like this is part of an operÂatÂing busiÂness. It can have pretÂty big impacts on scores, seeÂing as the operÂatÂing cash flow carÂries the most weight when scorÂing comÂpaÂnies on the checkÂlist. I know itâs a lot of work, but would it not be worth checkÂing the prinÂciÂpal payÂments first before buyÂing from the list to make sure it doesÂnât have a sigÂnifÂiÂcant impact on the scores?â
Tony 55:53
Dan, good quesÂtion. We did get a quesÂtion simÂiÂlar to this a litÂtle while ago â over a year ago. I guess I need to interÂpret this quesÂtion. So, the prinÂciÂpal porÂtion of lease payÂments Iâm takÂing to mean the main porÂtion, but it could also be read as the prinÂciÂpal verÂsus the interÂest comÂpoÂnent. But, thereâs no real prinÂciÂpal repayÂment for a lease, itâs all interÂest, right? Youâre rentÂing, youâre leasÂing someÂone, itâs all rent. Itâs not like itâs a rent to buy and youâre makÂing prinÂciÂpal payÂments as repayÂments as well. So, Iâve took this to mean the majorÂiÂty of lease payÂments are now on the balÂance sheet. So, I think this ties into the quesÂtion that we were asked eighÂteen months ago or so â and Dan, please feel free to come back if Iâm off track here â but I think it was around 2019 the accountÂing stanÂdards changed so that lease payÂments went onto the balÂance sheet rather than were shown in the P&L. So, I think thatâs when they were takÂen out of cash flow, and that was cerÂtainÂly the quesÂtion that was asked at the time, did that make a difÂferÂence? And yeah, it makes a difÂferÂence, but makes a difÂferÂence to cash flow. I donât think itâs had a big effect on our buy list. I mean, some retailÂers have come on to the buy list since then, like JBH, JB Hi Fi, Adairs, Myer have come on. But we had retailÂers on before that as well. If I think back, we had the Reject Shop, weâve had KathÂmanÂdu, thatâs just the ones I can think of. I think Myerâs been around for a long time as well, before the accountÂing change and after. So, look, it may proÂmote some of these comÂpaÂnies a litÂtle bit highÂer on the buy list, but I donât think itâs havÂing a draÂmatÂic effect. I did a bit of a drill down at that time around these leasÂes, and it looks like â Iâm not even sure if the change in accountÂing stanÂdards is affectÂing the retailÂers as much as it might at first appearÂance, because I think the change had to do with operÂatÂing leasÂes and it removed those from the accountÂing stanÂdards. So, in the past, there were two types of leasÂes operÂatÂing in capÂiÂtal, and, in a nutÂshell, a capÂiÂtal lease was for a large asset over a long periÂod of time. So, I think store leasÂes would have been capÂiÂtalised. But, if you were, say, hirÂing or leasÂing a car for the busiÂness that wouldâve been an operÂatÂing lease. So, smallÂer valÂue, shortÂer time periÂod. Itâs the operÂatÂing leasÂes, I think, which are now being put on the balÂance sheet â although the capÂiÂtal ones would have been on the balÂance sheet already. So, not sure if itâs havÂing a big effect on the retailÂers. I could have that wrong because Iâm not an expert in accountÂing stanÂdards. My obserÂvaÂtion is it hasÂnât made a big difÂferÂence to the buy list, but if anyÂone wants to take me up on that, please do, and Iâm hapÂpy to be eduÂcatÂed about it. I think if leasÂes are on the balÂance sheet theyâre still going to have to be charged to the P&L someÂwhere for them. So, thereâs a whole, if you Google this, thereâs a whole lot of examÂples about amorÂtisÂing the full valÂue of the lease and putting it on the balÂance sheet and then doing a DCF on the lease payÂments and matchÂing that as an obligÂaÂtion or a liaÂbilÂiÂty on the balÂance sheet. Thatâs fine, but you canât just take out a lease and then pay for it with pixÂie dust, so itâs got to come off the P&L someÂwhere â which will be some kind of amorÂtiÂsaÂtion charge or depreÂciÂaÂtion charge on the asset. So, even though it may not be comÂing out of operÂatÂing cash flow anyÂmore, these kinds of lease charges are going to be in the P&L someÂwhere. So, they are going to affect othÂer items on the checkÂlist like increasÂing equiÂty, for examÂple, and it will probÂaÂbly have an effect on the gearÂing so itâll be in the health ratÂings as well. So, it will have some effect on the checkÂlist score. Like I said, my obserÂvaÂtion is itâs not havÂing a big skewÂing of retailÂers. It may even be that weâre barkÂing up the wrong tree here. If itâs a change to operÂatÂing lease stanÂdards only, it may affect comÂpaÂnies with big fleets. So, it might be comÂpaÂnies like McMilÂlan ShakeÂspeare which does fleet leasÂing; Iâm not sure if it affects them but that might be a place to look. I donât know, because it hasÂnât realÂly come up as an issue for me to dig any furÂther into it, but hapÂpy to have someÂone like an accounÂtant come in and tell me where Iâm wrong. It posÂsiÂbly is pushÂing some comÂpaÂnies slightÂly highÂer up the list because of it. You know, maybe not. TalkÂing about accountÂing stanÂdards like this and the accountÂing stanÂdards Bureau or counÂsel, whoÂevÂer changes them, does someÂtimes, I think, obscure things when they try and clarÂiÂfy them. And, Iâm sure thereâs good reaÂsons why they did this, like, it does make sense if you have⊠In some casÂes, like Myer has a great asset, you know, in the Bourke Street store, even though theyâre leasÂing it, right? So, itâs worth someÂthing, posÂsiÂbly more than what the lease is actuÂalÂly costÂing them because, you know, theyâre stopÂping David Jones from havÂing that spot or anothÂer comÂpetiÂtor from havÂing that spot. So, yeah, a good lease is actuÂalÂly an asset in some respects. I get it why itâs put on the balÂance sheet. And also, too, Iâve spoÂken before about how, you know, manÂageÂment startÂed to gain return on equiÂty by doing sale and leaseÂbacks. So, they were, perÂhaps by about the 90s, most retailÂers would have owned their land, which was an asset. But, it would get much lowÂer return then operÂatÂing the store, and so they were sellÂing off that land. But then as part of the sale they were doing a long-term lease, and so that was sort of skewÂing the accountÂing process there for a while as well. So, I can see why thereâs some sense in changÂing the accountÂing stanÂdards, but realÂly, someÂtimes these accountÂing stanÂdards are a bit of a cirÂcle jerk, you know; they can be arcane and they go overÂboard. And the fact is, if we canât pick up a balÂance sheet and work it out they havenât done their job. So, Iâm not a big fan of some of these accountÂing stanÂdard changes. And apoloÂgies to the accounÂtants out there because Iâm sure theyâll tell me Iâm wrong, but Iâm a simÂple guy who likes simÂple things and I think tryÂing to work out the effect on operÂatÂing cash flows of amorÂtisÂing leasÂes is not one of them. So, Iâm hapÂpy to be schooled on that one, but the long stoÂry short, Iâm not seeÂing a big impact on the buy list because of it.
Cameron 1:01:30
Youâre a simÂple guy who likes simÂple things, like breedÂing raceÂhorsÂes.
Tony 1:01:37
Itâs like peoÂple say to me, âI canât buy you a birthÂday present.â Iâm like, âmate. I like golf, I like scotch and I like horsÂes. What could be hardÂer?â
Cameron 1:01:47
Just buy me a raceÂhorse. How hard is it? Thatâs it for the Q&A. After hours, Tony, whatâs going on? Your wife was on the front page of the AusÂtralian.
Tony 1:02:00
She was. So, this has been a very up and down week for Jen. Sheâs now in bed asleep tryÂing to fight COVID. Sheâs pretÂty sick. She was meant to be doing a teleÂviÂsion interÂview for ChanÂnel SevÂen today and she asked me, âdo you think I should?â And Iâm like, âI think you should go to bed, youâre not lookÂing that great. Give it to someÂbody else in your organÂiÂsaÂtion.â So, sheâs done that. So yeah, sheâs on the front page of the AusÂtralian: JenÂny Fagg, doesÂnât have the same surÂname as me. JenÂny Fagg andâŠ
Cameron 1:02:24
Dr JenÂny Fagg.
Tony 1:02:25
Dr JenÂny Fagg, thank you. AmazÂing woman, just startÂed a new comÂpaÂny called 2Be finance, and weâve interÂviewed JenÂny last week as part of the launch. So, weâll be putting that one to air over the comÂing weeks. Her comÂpaÂny is a reverse mortÂgage comÂpaÂny which can be used for many things, but the prime gap in the marÂket theyâre aimÂing to fill is the âbank of Mum and Dadâ, where peoÂple have equiÂty in their house and theyâre tryÂing to help their kids into the propÂerÂty marÂket. So, they can borÂrow through JenÂnyâs comÂpaÂny and then help their kids with a deposit in the housÂing marÂket. So, that was fanÂtasÂtic to see all her hard work, and there has been a lot of hard work, come to fruition. And she made it to the front page of the AusÂtralian newsÂpaÂper with a big interÂview in the busiÂness secÂtion. So, well done, Jen.
Cameron 1:03:08
What I should have asked her when we did the interÂview is if her next busiÂness, âor not 2Beâ could be for parÂents that want to borÂrow monÂey from their kids. Because, the way that my kids are going, thereâs more of a change Iâm going to be borÂrowÂing monÂey from them rather than the othÂer way around.
Tony 1:03:27
Long term investÂment stratÂeÂgy.
Cameron 1:03:29
Shifty kids.
Tony 1:03:30
Yeah, well thatâs the obviÂous carÂtoon, isnât it? The share marÂket vote evenÂtuÂalÂly for 2Be: 2Be or not 2Be?
Cameron 1:03:37
Yeah, no, thatâs great. Well, conÂgratÂuÂlaÂtions to Dr JenÂny Fagg.
Tony 1:03:41
Yeah, and fasÂciÂnatÂing to just be on the othÂer side of watchÂing her go through the machiÂnaÂtions of raisÂing capÂiÂtal through famÂiÂly offices and othÂer priÂvate shareÂholdÂers, dealÂing with tryÂing to get wholeÂsale fundÂing â all the things we would nevÂer see. Itâs been absoluteÂly fasÂciÂnatÂing. And bruÂtal, to be honÂest, the negoÂtiÂaÂtions that have gone on. But she got there, so full credÂit to her and her team, its fanÂtasÂtic.
Cameron 1:04:05
And thereâs not just her whoâs a heavy hitÂter, obviÂousÂly, but forÂmer WestÂpac ManÂagÂing DirecÂtor â is that right? Or, chairÂman, CEO? With her on the team.
Tony 1:04:14
Yeah. BriÂan Hartzer, whoâs the chairÂman. JenÂnyâs the CEO. Thereâs some othÂer bankÂing peoÂple involved as well from her bankÂing days.
Cameron 1:04:21
Heavy hitÂters.
Tony 1:04:22
Yeah. And it was part of the reaÂson that they had entre into the priÂvate famÂiÂly offices and comÂpaÂnies that we wouldÂnât norÂmalÂly know were out there lookÂing to invest, is because of BriÂanâs conÂnecÂtions.
Cameron 1:04:34
Very good.
Tony 1:04:41
Yep. Thank you, thank you, thank you. They have been. So, BelÂla SorelÂliÂna won yesÂterÂday, which was fanÂtasÂtic. Sheâs got a bright future and sheâs the sisÂter of BelÂla NipotiÂna whoâs still winÂning races, so thatâs great. Miss Dunsford had a solÂid third last SatÂurÂday in AdeÂlaide in a black type race, a group three race, which is very imporÂtant as a future breedÂing prospect for us. And thatâs our busiÂness modÂel, my busiÂness modÂel, is to invest in filÂlies and then hopeÂfulÂly take them to the breedÂing barn as a good famÂiÂly type to breed from in the future, and just keep comÂpoundÂing their racÂing acuÂmen.
Cameron 1:05:16
Itâs how I treat my chilÂdren as well. HopÂing they breed well.
Tony 1:05:19
Yeah, and the imporÂtance of⊠she ran third, but thatâs called âgetÂting black typeâ. So, if we did ever sell her, or if we sell from her when she breeds, the front page of the book will say that she has black type, so itâll be in bold so it stands out, which is a good thing if youâre a breedÂer. So, that was great. Itâs increased her valÂue more than what she won on the weekÂend. NevÂer Say Nay, who won two weeks ago, may race this SatÂurÂday but more likeÂly WednesÂday next week at sale. And so, he was a $16 winÂner and is proven to be a handy sprintÂer. Even though heâs a boy, not a female, we did buy into him with the aim â heâs well bred â with the aim of takÂing him to the MagÂic MilÂlions. So, heâs in my wifeâs name and my daughÂterâs name because you get a bonus if thereâs female ownÂerÂship, so hopeÂfulÂly heâll make it up to the Gold Coast next year. But, weâll see.
Cameron 1:06:14
Is that how Alex introÂduces herÂself to peoÂple now? âHi, Alex KynasÂton. Horse BreedÂer.â
Tony 1:06:21
Alex could be the most disÂinÂterÂestÂed perÂson I know with horsÂes. Even when she was growÂing up, it was like, âyou want to come to the races?â Or, âIâll take you to the padÂdock, you can pat the horsÂes.â âNo, Dad. No.â Or, âdo you want to come play golf?â âNo, Dad.â Sheâs had a lot of potenÂtial expeÂriÂences which most peoÂple wonât ever get, but sheâs just turned them down. AnyÂway, sheâs a conÂtrarÂiÂan as well.
Cameron 1:06:50
Yeah, well, thatâs kids. My kids are nevÂer interÂestÂed in anyÂthing. âLetâs watch this movie.â âNo, no. Donât donât watch that, nup.â âHey, lisÂten to this album.â âNup, nup.â Just, straight away if I recÂomÂmend someÂthing: âNup, not gonna hapÂpen.â
Tony 1:06:51
Oh no, Alex is not like that. Like, she sent me her SpoÂtiÂfy list over ChristÂmas and about 25% was stuff that weâd lisÂtened to togethÂer when she was a kid. So, she does lisÂten to music that I recÂomÂmend and watch movies I recÂomÂmend, so we to-and-fro on that, which is great. But, when it comes to othÂer things, no, not so much.
Cameron 1:07:22
Ah, well. Iâve got nothÂing to reportâŠ
Cameron 1:13:39
The QAV PodÂcast is a proÂducÂtion of space craft pubÂlishÂing ProÂpriÂetary LimÂitÂed authoÂrised repÂreÂsenÂtaÂtive of AFSL 520442 AFS repÂreÂsenÂtaÂtive numÂber 001292718. Please donât make any investÂment deciÂsions based soleÂly on lisÂtenÂing to this podÂcast. This is preÂsentÂed as genÂerÂal advice only not perÂsonÂal finanÂcial advice. We donât know your perÂsonÂal finanÂcial cirÂcumÂstances. Please see a finanÂcial planÂner before makÂing any investÂing deciÂsions.