QAV 542 CLUB

Cameron  00:06

Wel­come back to QAV. This is episode 542, TK. We’re record­ing this Tues­day the 25th of Octo­ber 1:46pm Bris­bane time, 2:46 In the more advanced states.

Tony  00:25

Does­n’t feel that advanced at the moment. We’re under­wa­ter. It’s just incred­i­ble weath­er.

Cameron  00:29

I don’t know how your farm­ers sur­vive with day­light sav­ings in place. We can’t do it in Queens­land. It’s impos­si­ble. How are you, TK?

Tony  00:40

Yeah, good. Well, you don’t need day­light sav­ing with the farm­ers in Queens­land, just do the south­east cor­ner so every­one can stop frig­ging around about whether it’s an hour ear­li­er or an hour lat­er when they call peo­ple in Bris­bane or the Gold Coast.

Cameron  00:52

Yeah. Okay. So, we should just have two dif­fer­ent time zones in the state. That’s your solu­tion to make things eas­i­er?

Tony  00:58

Yeah. Because no one calls any­one north of Gimpy do they, real­ly?

Cameron  01:04

Oh, you’re includ­ing that much of the south­east cor­ner. Okay. Yeah.

Tony  01:09

Might be the first stage towards a split for the whole of Queens­land.

Cameron  01:14

Well, big news this week, Tony, I want­ed to share with you and all the lis­ten­ers. Fox has a pod­cast, so there you go.

Tony  01:23

What’s it called? Foot in the wall? Foot through the wall?

Cameron  01:26

No, that’s just what he does if I don’t upload his pod­casts for him quick­ly enough. It’s called The Fox and the Furi­ous.

Tony  01:35

That’s a great name.

Cameron  01:36

Yeah, well, it’s not alto­geth­er his idea. When we were in Phoenix, he and his cousins made a home movie that they called The Fox and the Furi­ous where Fox was a super­hero and was beat­ing them up. So, any­way, he start­ed his own pod­cast, and as eagle eyed lis­ten­ers will know the sto­ry, QAV came out of a pod­cast my adult sons, Hunter and Tay­lor, did when they were eigh­teen or nine­teen and they inter­viewed you and you talked about your invest­ing method­ol­o­gy. I heard it and I was like, “holy shit. We should do a pod­cast about that.” So, who knows what I’m gonna learn from lis­ten­ing to Fox’s pod­cast. Most­ly at the moment it’s about Minecraft and his friends at school, but, you know, some­thing of an oppor­tu­ni­ty may come out of it. You nev­er know. I’ve learned not to dis­miss my chil­dren hav­ing pod­casts, it can lead to good things.

Tony  02:30

Well, he obvi­ous­ly needs a few inter­view sub­jects for his pod­cast, though.

Cameron  02:35

That would be inter­est­ing. Yeah, you should go on as a guest on Fox’s pod­cast. Have a chat about invest­ing for eight-year-olds. He can talk about his invest­ing port­fo­lio, or every­thing he knows about invest­ing.

Tony  02:47

Yeah.

Cameron  02:47

All right. Well, onto stock relat­ed stuff. Com­mod­i­ty sta­tus. Plat­inum now a buy, alu­mini­um now a sell. Don’t think we own any alu­mini­um stocks, so that was­n’t real­ly a prob­lem. But I did add ZIM to one of the port­fo­lios yes­ter­day. I could­n’t remem­ber, we’ve had a lot of con­ver­sa­tions in the past; is ZIM a plat­inum stock or is it some­thing else? I went back and looked through my notes and decid­ed it was prob­a­bly plat­inum enough. I think they also mine pal­la­di­um.

Tony  03:16

Yeah, that’s right. Have you checked the pal­la­di­um graph.

Cameron  03:19

No. That was too much work. I just decid­ed it was good enough.

Tony  03:24

Fair enough. Keep it sim­ple.

Cameron  03:26

I think we did decide it was a plat­inum stock last time, did­n’t we? Do you remem­ber? You remem­ber every­thing.

Tony  03:31

No, I don’t. I don’t remem­ber. I don’t remem­ber every­thing, and I don’t remem­ber decid­ing what ZIM was. But I remem­ber talk­ing about hav­ing pal­la­di­um, because plat­inum was in a sell posi­tion, but ZIM was going up and we could­n’t work out why.

Cameron  03:43

Well, it went down after I added it to the port­fo­lio. Unlike SMR, which is up 30% since I added it by mis­take to the port­fo­lio a few weeks ago. You win some, you lose some in this game.

Tony  04:01

Absolute­ly.

Cameron  04:02

Any oth­er com­modi­ties that we need to talk about, Tony?

Tony  04:06

I did have some­thing to say about com­modi­ties. And peo­ple should check out the score­card that has the list of com­modi­ties in their state in terms of three-point trend lines. No, the only thing I want­ed to talk about was nat­ur­al gas, and that’s in response to a ques­tion lat­er on. But I did notice the score­card did­n’t have nat­ur­al gas on it, so we should add nat­ur­al gas to the score­card, to our list of com­modi­ties.

Cameron  04:29

Is there a Stock Doc­tor chart for nat­ur­al gas?

Tony  04:32

There is, but it looks like it’s track­ing the US price, and the US price is a lot worse than the Asian price, which is the one that’s more appro­pri­ate to us. So, the Asian graph, I got mine off — what’s it called, Fred? The Fed St. Louis site which is a com­modi­ties site tracks almost all the com­modi­ties in the world and Asian nat­ur­al gas. And I guess just for peo­ple if you’re unsure what com­mod­i­ty to do, because, as we’re just say­ing, you know, there’s dif­fer­ent types of oil, dif­fer­ent types of nat­ur­al gas and var­i­ous oth­er things as well, in the case of nat­ur­al gas, and this is indica­tive of what to do, I went to the Wood­side results pre­sen­ta­tion. Almost all of these com­pa­nies will include a graph telling you what they bench­mark or where they sell their prod­uct and what they bench­mark against. So, in the Wood­side pre­sen­ta­tion, they were talk­ing about the Asian spot price.

Cameron  05:28

So, I’m on Fred now. Is this glob­al price of LNG, Asia?

Tony  05:34

Yeah, that’s the one.

Cameron  05:36

All right, I will add that to the week­ly buy list where we track the com­modi­ties. So, see­ing as we’re talk­ing about it, let’s get it out of the way. What’s your posi­tion on LNG? It looks like it’s a buy.

Tony  05:52

Yeah, so the chart on the Fed for Asian LNG is a very strong buy. It’s shoot­ing almost straight up.

Cameron  05:58

Yeah. Okay.

Tony  06:00

And that’s cer­tain­ly been what’s been report­ed in the press over the last six to nine months since the Ukrain­ian war start­ed.

Cameron  06:07

Right. Peo­ple need their gas.

Tony  06:09

Yeah, I can’t explain why the US ver­sion of the gas chart is not doing that, but cer­tain­ly the Asian ones been going gang­busters.

Cameron  06:18

Okay. If any­one can explain that, let us know. What else have we got? Port­fo­lio update. Well, it’s been a crazy week on the All Ordi­nar­ies, Tony. It’s up and down like my waist­line before and after my birth­day. Came down, but then it was back up again last cou­ple of days. Got any analy­sis on why the All Ordi­nar­ies can’t decide if it’s up a hun­dred points or down a hun­dred points on any giv­en day?

Tony  06:48

Maybe it had a birth­day?

Cameron  06:49

Yeah.

Tony  06:52

God no. Well, again, it’s fore­cast­ing. Every­one’s try­ing to sec­ond guess the Fed, the Reserve Bank. So, it’s like, peo­ple come out with reports say­ing the Fed in the US is get­ting close to its tar­get, what do they call it? The neu­tral rate set­ting. So, it’s the tar­get for inter­est rates so it does­n’t grow or shrink the econ­o­my. And there­fore, they expect it to start taper­ing any rate increas­es, but who knows. And then some­one comes out with a counter argu­ment, and so the mar­ket just swings on that kind of volatil­i­ty.

Cameron  07:23

It’s fas­ci­nat­ing to me just to watch it going up and down with no sense of rhyme or rea­son. Emo­tions regard­ing the mar­ket to dif­fer that broad­ly day to day just does­n’t seem ratio­nal.

Tony  07:39

It’s not real­ly. I think it’s a fac­tor of the incen­tives involved. I mean, a lot of this has been dri­ven by the bond mar­ket, right? Because that’s where inter­est rates play out. If you’re on a mul­ti­mil­lion-dol­lar bonus incen­tive, and you think you’ve got some kind of inside…

Cameron  07:56

What do you mean, if? What do you mean, if I am? Am I not? Do we need to rene­go­ti­ate? Do we need to talk about the deal?

Tony  08:04

Yeah, we do. If you think you are, then we do.

Cameron  08:11

Okay, my lawyers will be in touch. Sor­ry, back to your point. If you’re on a mul­ti­mil­lion-dol­lar bonus deal, what’s the bonds mar­ket got to do with it?

Tony  08:21

Well, they’re the ones who pay the most atten­tion to the inter­est rate move­ments. And you can make a lot of mon­ey if you’re a bond trad­er out of just a very small move­ment in yields. And if you think you can fore­cast where it’s going because you got a mate who works at the Fed or what­ev­er, you start pil­ing in ear­ly to try and you know, get that edge which gives you your bonus. So, that’s what it’s all about. But of course, we all know fore­cast­ing is a fool’s game.

Cameron  08:45

So, how does that play into the All Ordi­nar­ies going up and down?

Tony  08:50

Well, because there is a bit of a cor­re­la­tion between what the bond mar­ket does and what the All Ord’s does in terms of the fore­cast bond rates feed into dis­count­ed cash flows and bor­row­ing costs for com­pa­nies. So, peo­ple, you know, I’d hate to be a spread­sheet jock­ey work­ing for Gold­man Sachs or some­one like that right now. Like, almost every morn­ing you’d get up and change your spread­sheet for what you think a com­pa­ny’s worth, which is ridicu­lous, but it’s going on too.

Cameron  09:15

So, it’s some­what based on fore­cast­ing about the price of mon­ey for these com­pa­nies and how that’s going to affect their bot­tom line, etc., etc.

Tony  09:25

Cor­rect.

Cameron  09:26

And their com­pa­nies buy­ing and sell­ing stocks based on their pre­dic­tions about what the future holds for these com­pa­nies.

Tony  09:33

Yeah, and I mean, if you think about all the reper­cus­sions of try­ing to… well, what the Fed does, let’s not wor­ry about try­ing to fore­cast what the Fed does, but if the Fed does start to taper inter­est rate ris­es and that leaves ana­lysts to think there won’t be a reces­sion in the US or Aus­tralia next year, then they’re going to get more bull­ish on their stock pur­chas­es and their stock rec­om­men­da­tions and that will dri­ve the mar­ket. And then some­one will come out and say “no, no, the Feds gonna raise the inter­est rates fur­ther,” and that’ll swing the mar­ket back the oth­er way. So, it’s a lot of noise at the moment. For me, the most inter­est­ing thing in the last week or two was the way the bond investors just drove the British mar­ket into the ground and claimed the scalp of Liz Truss. That was just incred­i­ble to watch. The bond vig­i­lantes as they’re called, they’re just play­ing hard­ball, hard-nosed invest­ing; “we don’t think the British gov­ern­ment when it’s heav­i­ly indebt­ed… You know, it’s a high­er risk than the US gov­ern­ment or the Ger­man gov­ern­ment. And we’re going to sell off our bonds there. So, good luck, fel­las. See you lat­er.” It just forces the Prime Min­is­ter to resign and all sorts of things, and Boris John­son to fly home from the Caribbean to put his hand up again.

Cameron  09:35

Have anoth­er crack.

Tony  09:39

Only for it to be slapped down.

Tony  09:56

So much for democ­ra­cy if bond traders get to decide who the Prime Min­is­ter is.

Tony  10:12

Cor­rect.

Cameron  10:13

I saw a clip from Trevor Noah on The Dai­ly Show say­ing that all of the for­mer British colonies like India are now con­tact­ing Britain say­ing, “we don’t think you know how to run a democ­ra­cy very good, and we will come in and take care of it for you. I think it’s in your own best inter­est that we come and run your gov­ern­ment for you. Yeah, trust us. We know what it’s like.”

Tony  11:21

Aus­tralia would­n’t be putting its hand up because we’ve had more of a revolv­ing chair than they have.

Cameron  11:25

That’s true.

Tony  11:26

But yeah, it’s inter­est­ing, because the British gov­ern­ment, or the Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty, delib­er­ate­ly made it hard­er to change their lead­er­ship. So, Liz Truss got in because they had to go through a vote of par­lia­men­tar­i­ans, and then at least a six week or three month vote for the Con­ser­v­a­tive Par­ty base, and they both had a weight­ed say in who got elect­ed. And this time, they just went “no, you’re resign­ing. No, Boris, you’re not stand­ing. No, you’re not stand­ing. Rishi, you’ve got the job.” It’s just like, they bought in these demo­c­ra­t­ic rules and then they just tossed them straight out.

Cameron  11:59

Real­ly? They did­n’t fol­low them this time around?

Tony  12:00

They did fol­low them, but like, the way around the rules was for the Prime Min­is­ter to resign, and then to only have one nom­i­na­tion to replace her.

Cameron  12:09

Oh, right. Well, that makes things eas­i­er. I mean, Xi Jin­ping thinks that’s a good mod­el. He said just, “one can­di­date, that’s all you real­ly need. Yeah, it works. Sim­ple. Sim­plest ways are the best ways.” Occam’s raz­er tells us that; sim­plest solu­tion is prob­a­bly the right one. Back to our port­fo­lio. Last thir­ty days, the dum­my port­fo­lio is up 2.67% ver­sus the SPDR 200, which is up 3.9%. So, it’s still beat­ing us by a good third. Since incep­tion, were up 16% and the SPDR 200 is up like 5.7%. So, I looked a lit­tle bit ear­li­er when I did the newslet­ter today, we’re still beat­ing it by 2.8% over three years. Sor­ry, 2.8 times over three years, near­ly three times.

Tony  13:02

Yeah, near­ly three times. And I just want­ed to make a point about that, because I was think­ing about it dur­ing the week. My port­fo­lio is kind of, you know, in a sim­i­lar direc­tion to the dum­my port­fo­lio. It was on a high a year ago, and now it’s dropped back. So, I’m in the same boat when I did a bit of a review. But you know, first of all, last year, we were get­ting 24% CAGR, that kind of num­ber, and now we’re get­ting 16% CAGR. And the aver­age between 16 and 24 is 20. So, at some stage, we’re going to revert to the mean again. And so, whether it hap­pens tomor­row, or next week, or next month or next year, there’s going to be a catch up in the mar­ket, and we’re going to be cat­a­pult­ed back towards our stan­dard aver­age returns. So, I’m not over­ly wor­ried with the fact that we’re down and we’re trail­ing the index in the short term. I’ve seen this before, and I’m pret­ty sure — again, you can’t fore­cast when — that we’re going to catch up. The 19.5% that I had before this lat­est down­turn was over a long peri­od of time, so that gives me sort of the con­fi­dence that we are going to regress back to the mean at some at some point. And that’s why we need to stay invest­ed, I guess, as well. And you know, by the way, 16% is still pret­ty bloody good. I’m look­ing at peo­ple out there who make a big song and dance about being 1% above the index over time.

Cameron  14:22

Yeah, we’re near­ly three times above the index.

Tony  14:26

And what was it, 90% of fund man­agers don’t beat the index active­ly?

Cameron  14:30

Yeah. No, I believe you, like, I believe that over time, things will con­tin­ue to go well for us. We have good years and bad years, but the good years make up for the bad years. Not that it’s a bad year, as I said. Well, over the last year it’s been down but in the last thir­ty days were back up. The port­fo­lio is per­form­ing well again, even with the chop­pi­ness of the mar­ket. What else do you want to talk about?

Tony  14:57

Just a cou­ple of things. Three of the major banks plus Mac­quar­ie are going to report this week because they’re on a Sep­tem­ber 30 end of year. So, watch out for those. Expect new num­bers in Stock Doc­tor next week, I would have thought. There’s a lot of analy­sis in the paper now say­ing the results will be good because inter­est rates are ris­ing and that’s help­ing them, because they don’t lift deposits, but they lift mort­gage rates. So, they should be good. That’s one to watch. We’re into AGM sea­son. A cou­ple of stocks from the buy list that I own had some news: AMP came out and said that their funds under man­age­ment reduced or shrunk by the least that it has and in any of the quar­ters in the last few years since it’s had prob­lems after the Hayne Com­mis­sion. They’re basi­cal­ly say­ing that the peo­ple have stopped tak­ing their mon­ey out of the port­fo­lio and the funds under man­age­ment shrunk because the mar­ket shrunk. So, that’s a pos­i­tive for that stock. And the oth­er one in the news was White­haven Coal, which has com­plet­ed a buy­back it announced ear­li­er in the year which has been sup­port­ing its share price, and it’s going to have an AGM, I think, tomor­row and ana­lysts are expect­ing it to see the con­tin­u­ance of the buy­back or start a new buy­back. So, that will also help under­pin that stock.

Cameron  16:12

Speak­ing of banks before you go on, I added NAB to my Super port­fo­lio in the last cou­ple of days. So, NAB is back on the buy list, talk­ing about banks. It’s always inter­est­ing when we see banks in our buy list. I’ve nev­er had a lot of suc­cess with banks in my port­fo­lios. I always buy them, includ­ing Mac­quar­ie, and then have to sell them again pret­ty quick­ly. I haven’t got them in the right peri­od of uptick in the last cou­ple of years, but hav­ing anoth­er crack with NAB, we’ll see how they go.

Tony  16:40

And then the only oth­er thing I’ve got is the pulled pork, which this week is NWH, that’s the tick­er code for NRW Hold­ings. It’s con­fus­ing, ones NWH, ones NRW, but any­way. NWH for those who don’t know it, is in the busi­ness of engi­neer­ing. When I owned it once before it was prob­a­bly more a min­ing con­trac­tor than it is now. They’ve cer­tain­ly diver­si­fied into oth­er areas. They do civ­il engi­neer­ing now as well as min­ing con­tract­ing, as well as what they call MET, which is the third spoke to their wheel. And MET stands for Min­ing, Ener­gy and Tech. They’re man­u­fac­tur­ing equip­ment for the min­ing sec­tor. They’re get­ting into ener­gy, so, oil and gas as well as min­ing. And they’re also expand­ing and fol­low­ing the the­mat­ic, which is the bat­tery met­als. So, for a long time they’ve just been focused on gold, iron ore and coal, they’ve been get­ting into lithi­um now as well. So, they’re on the buy list. I guess oth­er news for them is them dropped the takeover offer for MACA, MLD, late in August. So, they were try­ing to diver­si­fy and buy out that com­pa­ny, but Theiss, anoth­er over­seas engi­neer­ing firm up their offer, and NWH have backed away. They’re back on the buy list now. The price I’m doing this analy­sis at is $3.50, which is less than con­sen­sus tar­get. And before I go into the num­bers, I guess I should men­tion that min­ing ser­vices com­pa­nies are very cycli­cal, which is one of the rea­sons why NWH is try­ing to have oth­er areas like civ­il engi­neer­ing to fall back on if the min­ing boom, or when the min­ing boom comes to an end. But I’ll just point out that sort of strat­e­gy of hedg­ing your risk is a good one, but it’s does­n’t elim­i­nate risk. So, you know, the share price will still suf­fer when the min­ing boom ends and con­tract­ing work starts to dry out. But this is the clas­sic case of sell­ing picks and shov­els in a gold rush. So, min­ing con­trac­tors are good dur­ing min­ing booms, which we which we’ve had. And I guess the ben­e­fit of it is that, you know, if they lose a con­tract with BHP, they pick one up with RIO, or if gold becomes a sell, then they pick up some­thing with coal. So, that’s a ben­e­fit to them, you’re not hav­ing to go through and pick which of the min­ing com­pa­nies you’re going to invest in, they pick up work with a lot of them. So that helps them. Back to the num­bers. $2.50 is less than con­sen­sus tar­get. The ADT for this com­pa­ny is quite high, it’s $2.6 mil­lion, so it’ll suit most of our lis­ten­ers. It’s trad­ing on a 5% yield which is also very good but is less now than the cur­rent mort­gage debt rate, which is near enough to six so it does­n’t score there, even though it may inter­est peo­ple who are inter­est­ed in yield. Stock Doc­tor finan­cial health is strong and steady, which is very good, and the Pr/OpCaf is also very good for this one; it’s 3.9 times, so the share price is 3.9 times oper­at­ing cash per share. PE is 11.53, which is rea­son­ably low but not the low­est, so it does­n’t score for that. And the share price is cur­rent­ly above both IVs, IV1 and IV2, and book plus 30%, which is only $1.13. And that’s prob­a­bly a fact of the fact that min­ing com­pa­nies like this don’t have a whole lot of assets, because they’re often just pro­vid­ing labour to min­ing com­pa­nies, skilled work­ers, for exam­ple, or ser­vices to min­ing com­pa­nies. So, even though it’s good on the val­ue met­ric of price to oper­at­ing cash flow, it’s not scor­ing on our oth­er ones, IV, one, IV, two or plus 30, which is inter­est­ing, I think. But any­way. The ana­lysts are fore­cast­ing 12% earn­ings per share growth, which is pret­ty good. But when we apply the growth over PE hur­dle to in our spread­sheet, we only get 1.08. So, it’s less than our over­all rate of 1.5 for a score there. Direc­tors hold­ings are only 2% which I thought was inter­est­ing, so that’s a zero in our spread­sheet again. Not sure why that’s the case, but it is. I’d have to go back and do a deep dive to have a look at that. Poten­tial­ly, maybe some­one who owned the com­pa­ny orig­i­nal­ly has sold out, but cer­tain­ly does­n’t get a score for own­er-founder. Gets a score for being a new three-point upturn; like I said it’s back on our buy list just recent­ly. It gets a score for con­sis­tent­ly increas­ing equi­ty. And all of those scores add up to a qual­i­ty score of 10/16, or 63%, and a QAV score of 0.16. So, it’s not at the top of our buy list, but it’s cer­tain­ly a large cap stock if any­one needs that for their port­fo­lio. Have a look.

Cameron  21:26

And we don’t need to keep an eye on the com­mod­i­ty sta­tus for any of the stocks that they’re involved in sell­ing into, like the gold indus­try, etc.?

Tony  21:39

Good ques­tion. I’ve nev­er done that, and my guess would be it’s prob­a­bly fair­ly well spread across most of them. And then they’ve also got Sybil, which does­n’t have a com­mod­i­ty as well. I think they’ve done a good job of spread­ing their risk far and wide on the min­ing stocks. So, no.

Cameron  21:57

So, they’re kind of neu­tral.

Tony  21:58

Yeah.

Cameron  21:59

Thanks for that Tony. NWH. Some­thing with Hat­ti­tude. I nev­er can come up with a good thing for what NWH stands for, but I know they don’t like the police, that’s all I know. Okay, Q&A time. First one is from Alex: “there’s a recent ques­tion post­ed to this forum about invest­ing in the gold ETF as well as Tony’s com­ment on last week’s episode that being an investor just means being an allo­ca­tor of cap­i­tal. It all just remind­ed me of a book by Per­cy Allen called Crash­proof I read years ago. The basic premise cham­pi­oned in the book is to move between uncor­re­lat­ed asset class­es and/or sec­tors as they cycled through, under, and over per­for­mance through the use of tech­ni­cal indi­ca­tors. For exam­ple, the All Ord’s EMA 50 Day cross­ing the EMA 250 day to the down­side was an indi­ca­tor to get out. A sim­i­lar sig­nal in an uncor­re­lat­ed asset like phys­i­cal gold was an indi­ca­tor to buy into as a store of val­ue and hedge against infla­tion­ary pres­sures dur­ing side­ways or down­ward mov­ing mar­kets. When things reverse, sell gold and buy com­pa­nies, or in their exam­ple ETFs. Giv­en most of us are sit­ting on a high per­cent­age of cash, infla­tion is reduc­ing the buy­ing pow­er of cash, gold is now a buy again, I think,” don’t think so. “The gold price is increas­ing with increas­ing eco­nom­ic uncer­tain­ty, the effect of a falling AUD, and Aus­tralia being a large exporter of gold, and gold has his­tor­i­cal­ly been a strong hedge against infla­tion. I won­der if it’s worth sit­ting in phys­i­cal gold, GOLD on the ASX, rather than cash until there are things to buy accord­ing to QAV. An alter­na­tive is to hold a bas­ket of gold min­ers, GDX, as you get the div­i­dend pay­ment from a pro­duc­tive asset. How­ev­er, with min­ing costs fuel and gen­er­al sup­ply chain sit­ting at five times the rev­enue boosts they’re receiv­ing from increased gold prices (those are real time fig­ures from an indus­try source) the price may sit flat with lit­tle to no div­i­dend pay­ments. Is this a top­ic that’s been explored before?” What do you think, Tony?

Tony  24:05

Oh, I think it’s a worth­while strat­e­gy. It’s dif­fer­ent to QAV, and I don’t know if the returns will be as high or poten­tial­ly bet­ter, I guess. But there’s a lot there. So, to pick apart bits of it. So, there was a state­ment there about the earn­ing pow­er of cash going down because of infla­tion, and that’s true. How­ev­er, giv­en that we hold cash because we want to deploy it back into the mar­ket as the mar­ket goes from being a sell to a buy, the buy­ing pow­er of cash actu­al­ly goes up. So, what I mean is if we sell $1,000 worth of shares, go to cash and then buy back into that same stock or anoth­er stock and the mar­kets down 15/20% from where we sold out, then we bought 15/20% more stock. It’s like the cash has grown. It’s cer­tain­ly grown its pur­chas­ing pow­er in terms of the stock mar­ket. That’s not with­stand­ing the fact that infla­tion is eat­ing into it for oth­er pur­pos­es, but on a net basis, gen­er­al­ly, I stay in cash. That’s the first point. Sec­ond point is my expe­ri­ence is I don’t stay in cash for very long. I cer­tain­ly did­n’t dur­ing COVID, and cer­tain­ly haven’t this time around. I did go to about 50% cash a month or two ago, but it’s all been rein­vest­ed again since then. That’s anoth­er point, too, is that if peo­ple are sit­ting on cash, I have rebought posi­tions. So, I have a dou­ble posi­tion in some stocks. So, I would rather do that than sit in cash because I want to be exposed to the mar­ket. And I guess that’s the third point, which is kind of under­ly­ing this dis­cus­sion, is one that we’ve talked about before a cou­ple of times is that do we use a three-point trend­line sale or some oth­er way of telling whether the mar­ket is going to turn down? And in this case, I think we would have done well if had of sold-out last year and bought a short fund which one of our lis­ten­ers is try­ing. Doug is try­ing it out. But that’s not always the case, and I went back and had a look over his­to­ry, and it’s not always the case that if the mar­ket goes down the port­fo­lio under­per­forms. And that’s what I’ve found: my expe­ri­ence is, a) I can usu­al­ly find stocks to buy, even in down­turns, and b), they don’t have a cor­re­la­tion with the mar­ket. So, for exam­ple, the mar­kets going down, but ener­gy stocks and coal stocks are going up. So, while high­er ener­gy costs impact on a lot of busi­ness­es and increase their costs, it’s good if you own the ener­gy stocks that are going up. So, I under­stand Alex’s point, and I think it’s worth­while inves­ti­gat­ing, Alex, but it’s not what I do and I nev­er real­ly find myself hav­ing long peri­ods of sit­ting on lots of cash to wor­ry about it.

Cameron  26:45

You like to expose your­self to the mar­ket, Tony? At all times.

Tony  26:53

Yes, Cam, I do.

Cameron  26:54

Good, I’ll keep that in mind. Should be on a cof­fee mug. “QAV: expose your­self.”

Tony  27:01

I just had a vision of one of those lit­tle boys pee­ing in the pool, or in the, you know, the foun­tain in the Ital­ian back­yards?

Cameron  27:12

Yeah. Good old Renais­sance stat­ue. Right. So, and rather than being exposed to gold, you’d rather be exposed to stocks that the QAV process has deter­mined are under­val­ued?

Tony  27:29

Well, yeah. And that’s a good point you’ve when you’re talk­ing about it. Gold isn’t a buy at the moment, and there­fore the gold’s min­ers aren’t buys at the moment. So, if you did go to gold rather than to, say, a short, an ETF that shorts the mar­ket, you might not have as much upside as buy­ing the ETF that shorts the mar­ket.

Cameron  27:50

Now, I know that Buf­fett and Munger quite famous­ly aren’t big sup­port­ers of the idea of buy­ing gold.

Tony  27:57

They hate it.

Cameron  27:58

I know I’ve heard both of them say things like “gold does­n’t pro­duce any­thing,” “it does­n’t gen­er­ate any val­ue,” etc., etc. Are there oth­er good rea­sons why they don’t like to hedge their port­fo­lio in gold? Like you, are they just bet­ter off active­ly find­ing under­val­ued things to invest in rather than tak­ing what might be the eas­i­er path and hedg­ing with gold.

Tony  28:21

They don’t like hedg­ing, full stop. I think one of them said some­thing like, “hedg­ing is like walk­ing the tightrope with a net: you’re nev­er going to real­ly com­mit to it until the net goes away. Then you focus. That con­cen­trates the mind.” So, that’s how they approach invest­ing, they don’t like edg­ing. Yeah, they don’t like invest­ing in gold. Buf­fett talks about that being an unpro­duc­tive asset, does­n’t pro­duce any­thing. That’s not quite true, because gold is obvi­ous­ly used in cir­cuit chips and for jew­ellery and things like that. But his­tor­i­cal­ly most peo­ple have bought it as a hedge against infla­tion. And look, you know, it’s inter­est­ing, we’re in a peri­od of high infla­tion, yet gold isn’t real­ly going up much. And so, that either means that the hedge is fin­ished, or they’re using — well, they can’t be using Bit­coin, because that was an even worse invest­ment to hedge with than gold.

Cameron  28:51

That’s the new gold, dig­i­tal gold.

Tony  29:15

Yeah, peo­ple have used it to hedge against infla­tion, which of course has­n’t worked. And I do won­der how much of all this goes back to the days when the dol­lar was tied to gold. So, Fort Knox was full of gold and there was the gold stan­dard, which Richard Nixon, I think, elim­i­nat­ed. But gold cer­tain­ly had, at least in the minds of investors for a long time, still had a place in their port­fo­lio, his­tor­i­cal­ly, or sen­ti­men­tal­ly, because of that hedge against infla­tion. Don’t know, not the gold expert, but I’ll buy gold min­ers when they pop up on our buy list, and I’ll stay invest­ed for as long as I can in the mar­ket oth­er­wise.

Cameron  29:51

If you had invest­ed in Bit­coin a year ago when it was trad­ing around $91,000, Tony, now that it’s trad­ing around $30,000, you would be able to buy more of it with the mon­ey you no longer have. But, if when the mar­ket start­ed to tank in the begin­ning of April this year, if we’d gone to cash and invest­ed in Bit­coin when it was $61,000, we would have only lost 50% of our mon­ey in the last what­ev­er months. Okay, maybe Bit­coin’s not the right place to be putting our cash or gold. But thank you for those thought-pro­vok­ing ques­tions and com­ments, Alex.

Tony  30:35

I think they are good thoughts, Alex.

Cameron  30:37

Ben and Jack­ie: “hi, Cam and TK. Assum­ing we are ful­ly invest­ed and not requir­ing the div­i­dend pay­ments else­where and bro­ker fees, cap­i­tal gains, etc., are cov­ered from out­side the port­fo­lio, my ques­tion is, how would Tony go about rein­vest­ing the div­i­dends to get max­i­mum com­pound growth? For exam­ple, do we put the mon­ey on the top one or two stocks, or do we wait until we sell a stock and put it towards the next on the buy list? Also, can TK explain how the All-Ords fig­ures are cal­cu­lat­ed?” That’s an easy one. Let’s go to the first one. “And can you explain the dou­ble slit exper­i­ment in quan­tum mechan­ics, Tony?”

Tony  31:13

Well, there’s a wave the­o­ry of light and a par­ti­cle the­o­ry of light.

Cameron  31:17

Oh well, that was the easy one. Right. So, now explain how the All-Ords are cal­cu­lat­ed.

Tony  31:22

I’ll do that last. Okay, div­i­dends. So, yeah, div­i­dends just sit in my cash account and accu­mu­late until I can use the cash to buy the next QAV stock. So, I don’t mind hav­ing lit­tle bits and pieces of cash in my account until I have a mean­ing­ful amount to invest. And if you’re just using div­i­dends, you will prob­a­bly have to wait twelve months until you get to, say, a 5% cash posi­tion just based on div­i­dend yield, and then you can invest it. But gen­er­al­ly, it’ll get rede­ployed along the way, as you said. If I sell some­thing and want to buy a full posi­tion next time, and I’ve sold some­thing that’s 10% below full posi­tion, I’ll add the div­i­dend cash to it to try and bulk it up a lit­tle bit. So, no, noth­ing spe­cial there, it just goes into the cash account and it either gets spent on race­hors­es or doc­u­men­taries or goes into the next QAV pur­chase.

Cameron  32:11

Doc­u­men­taries? Oh, real­ly?

Tony  32:13

Doc­u­men­tary.

Cameron  32:14

Okay. Yeah. I thought you’re gonna hit me with a new idea, anoth­er way to spend your mon­ey.

Tony  32:23

Now, that’s a good movie.

Cameron  32:26

What’s that?

Tony  32:27

Anoth­er Good Way to Spend Some­one Else’s Mon­ey.

Cameron  32:31

Yeah, can you give me some mon­ey to make that movie?

Tony  32:38

Inside the Life of Cameron Reil­ly.

Cameron  32:40

I’ll even let you be in this one, more than just a voice in the back­ground. For peo­ple who have seen Mar­ket­ing the Mes­si­ah. Tony’s voice is the one that says “split­ters!” When we’re talk­ing about the Peo­ple’s Front of Judea.

Tony  32:56

Yeah, the Judean Peo­ple’s Front.

Cameron  32:58

That was Tony’s cameo: “Split­ters!”

Tony  33:00

Okay, back to the ques­tion. How is the ASX’s All Ordi­nar­ies cal­cu­lat­ed?

Cameron  33:06

Yeah, how are the ordi­nar­ies cal­cu­lat­ed? He said he’s Googled it, but he needs it explained in TK Eng­lish. “Tkeng­lish.”

Tony  33:15

Yeah, well it’s pret­ty easy. It’s just the top 500 stocks by mar­ket cap, and then they’re giv­en a weight­ing accord­ing to their mar­ket cap. So, BHP which is the largest stock will have more of a say in the per­for­mance of the All-Ords and the small­er stock, but the top 500 that are mar­ket weight­ed by their size, which is their mar­ket cap. And then it’s just left that way for twelve months, and then rebal­anced every year accord­ing to whether the five hun­dredth com­pa­ny drops in or out. But it does have a cou­ple of lim­i­ta­tions. So, if a com­pa­ny goes broke or it’s tak­en over, the All-Ords won’t be adjust­ed until the fol­low­ing March. So, if it was BHP, it’s going to have a big impact on the index if it sud­den­ly dis­ap­pears from the boards. Most times it won’t, but that’s one thing. Where­as the oth­er index­es like the ASX 200 are bal­anced every quar­ter. So, they’re more up to date than the All Ordi­nar­ies. That’s pret­ty much what it is. A cou­ple of oth­er dif­fer­ences. The ASX 200, and in fact all the oth­er ones, the top fifty, top twen­ty, etc., they also have some oth­er con­sid­er­a­tions. So, you have to have a cer­tain amount of liq­uid­i­ty to be count­ed in the index. So, the mar­ket index peo­ple would say, I think from mem­o­ry, a com­pa­ny like Yan­coal is owned by two big com­pa­nies and there’s not much free float. Even though it’s a large mar­ket cap stock, we’re either going to weight it low­er or even elim­i­nate it from the index because it does­n’t have much of an impact on invest­ing in the Aus­tralian mar­ket, in terms of how much you can buy. So, a cou­ple of dif­fer­ences, but the All-Ord’s has been around since the 80s, I think, and is the tra­di­tion­al one that’s been used. A cou­ple of oth­er points which are inter­est­ing. I noticed when I was quick­ly Googling this, the All-Ords make up 77% of the mar­ket by mar­ket cap, the ASX 200 make up 72%. So, that bot­tom 300 stocks in the All-Ords are only account­ing for 8% of the mar­ket by weight­ings, by mar­ket cap. So, not real­ly hav­ing much effect. And sim­i­lar­ly, I think the last time I had a look at the ASX top 20, I did­n’t look at it for this lot, but I think from mem­o­ry, that’s in the 63%/64% of the mar­ket cap is the top 20 stocks. So, a lot can be said for focus­ing on the ASX top 20 as well. That in itself is inter­est­ing, that the way that they run the index­es is by mar­ket cap weight­ing. So, if you’re a BHP and you move 10%, you’re going to have a much big­ger impact on the index than if you’re a small com­pa­ny, like some of the ones that we invest in. If they move by 10%, it’s not going to move the index at all. But that’s one of the advan­tages we have, and that’s one of the rea­sons why a dum­my port­fo­lio or an invest­ment port­fo­lio using QAV can decor­re­late from the mar­ket, because it can hold small­er stocks in it and they can all per­form much bet­ter than the index just by the fact that they’re per­form­ing, and their per­for­mance does­n’t count much in the index com­pared to the big com­pa­nies.

Cameron  36:21

So, the All Ordi­nar­ies is sit­ting at $6,991 today, is that just the sum of the prices of the top 500?

Tony  36:32

Yeah, it is. So, it’s the cal­cu­lat­ed mar­ket weight­ed index. So, you know, say BHP accounts for 10% of the mar­ket. So, they mul­ti­ply BHP’s share price move­ment by 10% all the way down to dec­i­mal places and then move­ments, and then add them all up and get an aver­age to work out the All-Ords.

Cameron  36:53

Get an aver­age?

Tony  36:54

No sor­ry, I should say a total.

Cameron  36:56

Total. Yeah. But it’s based on their weight­ed posi­tion in the index.

Tony  37:02

Which is based on their mar­ket cap.

Cameron  37:04

Very good. There you go. The All-Ords in Tkeng­lish.

Tony  37:07

Yeah.

Cameron  37:07

Any oth­er sub­jects — does­n’t have to be invest­ing — any­thing. Like, a dou­ble slit exper­i­ment. Any­thing you need to be explain­ing to Tkeng­lish. The name of our new series, Tkeng­lish, a new doc­u­men­tary where Tony explains stuff. Rich white man explain­ing things, that’s what the world needs more of, I think. The world does­n’t have enough rich white guys mansplain­ing things for the rest of us.

Tony  37:32

Was it your wife of my wife who said the def­i­n­i­tion of pod­cast­ing was mansplain­ing?

Cameron  37:37

Yeah, some­thing like that. I think my wife got that off of some­body. But yes, white men mansplain­ing the world to me. That’s very true, very true.

Tony  37:48

It is.

Cameron  37:49

Okay, hope that helps, Ben and Jack­ie. Steven. “Hi Cam, bit of a per­son­al ques­tion for Tony if he’s hap­py to share with every­body.”

Tony  37:58

I’m hap­py to expose myself to the mar­ket.

Cameron  38:02

“What per­cent­age of Tony’s invest­ments out­side of his pri­ma­ry res­i­dence are made up of Aus­tralian shares ver­sus over­seas shares…” We’re going to speak like that from now on.

Tony  38:16

CReng­lish. “Cring­lish”.

Cameron  38:21

Sort of a North Shore thing. “…Resid­ual prop­er­ties and com­mer­cial prop­er­ties. It would be inter­est­ing to know how some­one in Tony’s league spreads out his invest­ments.” He did­n’t include doc­u­men­taries.

Tony  38:35

Well, it’s the res­i­den­tial prop­er­ty. So, it’s our apart­ment, it’s the hol­i­day home, and the rest is in shares. Except for the tiny bit that goes into hors­es and docos and books.

Cameron  38:48

So, it’s all Aus­tralian shares.

Cameron  38:52

It’s all a sim­u­la­tion. That’s what it is.

Tony  38:52

Yeah, cor­rect. I fail to see why invest­ing over­seas gives you any ben­e­fit. The ASX is big enough so that there is enough expo­sure to pret­ty much every asset class, if not every asset class. And, okay, so some­times the US mar­ket goes up. I remem­ber talk­ing about this a cou­ple of years ago with Rud­dy and he was say­ing, “oh, you should have been invest­ed in the US mar­ket, it’s up more than the ASX has been over the last five years.” Well, take a look at it now, it’s down 25% this year. So, it swings and round­abouts, and both Aus­tralia and the US — and all the oth­er index­es — tend to have their time in the sun, but over­all tend to hug around that 10%. And I’m not talk­ing about Brazil or Turkey or some­where like that, which might have very big swings in volatil­i­ty, but the large coun­tries all tend to work in the same way. I don’t know why that is, whether it’s a law of eco­nom­ics or a dou­ble slit exper­i­ment in stock invest­ing.

Tony  38:56

Yeah. But if you think about it log­i­cal­ly, if the UK mar­ket, for exam­ple, went up over the last hun­dred year at 15% it’d be a lot damn big­ger than it is now. Every­one would be invest­ing in the UK mar­ket. But they don’t, they spread it around, and it’s because pret­ty much mar­kets over time will tend to hug that 10% growth. So, I’ve always been invest­ed in Aus­tralia. Plus, you’ve got all the issues of cur­ren­cy hedg­ing and any oth­er tax impli­ca­tions, no div­i­dend frank­ing in over­seas invest­ments, etc., etc. So, I find it sim­pler to be in Aus­tralia, I find I know the com­pa­nies, I’ve known the play­ers, I know who to avoid. Because, you know, it’s not a big mar­ket, but over time you will get to learn where the good com­pa­nies are and where the bad ones are, and which ones to avoid.

Cameron  40:40

There are times when you’re not able to stay ful­ly invest­ed, although you said ear­li­er they don’t last very long, and forc­ing you as at the moment to take dou­ble posi­tions and some of the stocks, but… *crash in back­ground* You alright there?

Tony  40:58

That was Chris­sy: “It’s mansplain­ing, dammit!”

Cameron  41:04

She does­n’t even lis­ten; she just gets angry know­ing that it’s hap­pen­ing. If you had more mar­kets to invest in, so if you were also invest­ing in the US mar­ket, you might be able to stay ful­ly invest­ed more eas­i­ly.

Tony  41:21

Poten­tial­ly.

Cameron  41:21

But it does­n’t seem to be a prob­lem for you.

Tony  41:24

No, I’ve nev­er found it to be a prob­lem. But yeah, that’s a good point. I had­n’t con­sid­ered that. I’ve received pre­sen­ta­tions from var­i­ous stock­bro­kers and invest­ment funds, and they talk about, you know, Euro­pean banks being the val­ue play around the world at the moment, for exam­ple. So, yeah, poten­tial­ly you’re right. But I’ve nev­er real­ly been hard up for some­thing to invest in, in Aus­tralia for more than a month maybe. So, I’m not that wor­ried.

Cameron  41:50

Despite the fact that you expose your­self, you’ve nev­er been hard up. You’ve nev­er had to expose your­self over­seas, you just expose your­self at home.

Tony  42:04

What’s inter­est­ing, like, I lived over­seas and…

Cameron  42:06

Nev­er exposed your­self when you were over there?

Tony  42:08

I nev­er exposed myself to over­seas com­pa­nies. I just could­n’t find…

Cameron  42:12

It makes it worse when you put a lim­iter like that. “I nev­er expose myself to over­seas com­pa­nies…”

Tony  42:21

Lis­ten­ers, I’m try­ing to get us back onto invest­ing.

Tony  42:25

Oh, okay, be like that.

Tony  42:31

No, but it’s inter­est­ing. I’ve lived over­seas in both New Zealand and Cana­da, and in both places, maybe it was just me, but I could­n’t find the infor­ma­tion I need­ed to do a QAV type analy­sis as read­i­ly as I can using Stock Doc­tor or some­thing equiv­a­lent in Aus­tralia. And I know there are ser­vices around now, so maybe that’s chang­ing, but the access to data was an issue. The finan­cial press is pret­ty poor over­seas. There’s the Finan­cial Times I guess in the UK, and there’s the AFR, but like, The Wall Street Jour­nal is only about a dozen pages each edi­tion now. Cana­da did­n’t have a busi­ness dai­ly and nei­ther did New Zealand, and so you’re stuck with the busi­ness page in the local rag, which was noth­ing. And when I spoke to peo­ple about it, they said, “oh yeah, I get my com­pa­ny advice from my stock­bro­ker,” and I’m like, “what if it was a com­pa­ny they don’t like?” “Oh, no, they’re good, they look after me.” And I’m like, “okay.” So, yeah, I nev­er dipped my toe over­seas.

Cameron  43:32

We’ve been try­ing to fig­ure out a way to get the data that we need so we can start a US ver­sion of the show, but it’s proved tricky.

Tony  43:42

Yeah, I’m still work­ing on it. One of the prob­lems is get­ting some clear time to work on it. If some­one asked a ques­tion about the alu­mini­um chart or a 3PTL cod­ing ques­tion, I’d just have to push it aside. I just need to get clear run on it I think, and prob­a­bly some help, too, from an ana­lyst, to run some sce­nar­ios for me.

Cameron  44:05

All right. Well, thank you for their ques­tion, Steven. Hope that makes sense. Got a late ques­tion from Simo, TK, and he’s talk­ing to me about… We men­tioned, I think on the show last week, that I tipped $2,200 into the dum­my port­fo­lio to make up for miss­ing div­i­dends, and Simo is con­cerned that it might be screw­ing with our per­for­mance num­bers. He says, “Hey, Camo, it’s a bit naughty, but you’re kind of bor­row­ing from future cash com­ing into the port­fo­lio. It keeps your start­ing bal­ance the same but inflates your invest­ment tem­porar­i­ly until the cash goes back into pos­i­tive ter­ri­to­ry. As an exam­ple, if my start­ing invest­ment bal­ance on paper was $20,000, but I over­spent by $2,000 or $22,000 worth of stocks, my cash bal­ance is now minus $2,000. Assume I’m just tak­ing invest­ment mon­ey from an off­set account, which has a lot more than $20,000 in it, it’s right there for me to just take more from to invest with if I want. But I real­ly want to keep my start­ing bal­ance as $20,000, because that’s my base­line on which I’m track­ing the per­for­mance. The more I think about it, though, you’re prob­a­bly best to with­draw the cash that you acci­den­tal­ly put in as soon as you can, because you don’t want to arti­fi­cial­ly enhance your per­for­mance num­bers for the dum­my port­fo­lio. But until you have that cash there to take back out, either from div­i­dends or sale of some shares, and you have been sell­ing and buy­ing a lot late­ly, you can keep track of the num­bers by let­ting the cash bal­ance go neg­a­tive by the extra amount you acci­den­tal­ly put in just in the mean­time.” That was my ini­tial con­cern when we fig­ured out that there was extra cash in there, but my under­stand­ing is that the way that Navexa reports it is it just cal­cu­lates there’s been $22,000 of cash put in and it’s build­ing the per­for­mance num­bers around $22,000, not $20,000. Am I right?

Tony  45:57

Yeah, well, you’re right in terms of if they’re using a mon­ey weight­ed cal­cu­la­tion. They’re not even look­ing at what the start­ing bal­ance was, or what the cash bal­ance is, they’re just say­ing “you had this many stocks in the port­fo­lio at this peri­od of time, and dur­ing that peri­od of time the invest­ments went up by this amount.” And they work it back to be an annu­al fig­ure. There’s that. Look, Simo could be right, I need to do some analy­sis on whether to take it out or not. My gut feel says that Simo’s right from a dol­lar point of view. So, if we said “hey, presto, we’ve got $30,000 in the port­fo­lio and we start­ed with $20,000,” we real­ly should say we’ve got $27,800 in the port­fo­lio. But we don’t do that, we look at the per­for­mance.

Cameron  46:40

The CAGR num­ber.

Tony  46:41

Yeah. And in fact, putting mon­ey into a port­fo­lio actu­al­ly reduces the CAGR num­ber, because it’s increas­ing the base at the cal­cu­la­tions done from it. But it all comes out in the wash in my expe­ri­ence, because my port­fo­lio — except for the super­an­nu­a­tion com­po­nent of it, which tends to be her­met­i­cal­ly sealed, almost — is mon­ey. The cash accounts got mon­ey com­ing in and going out because I invest in race­hors­es, or there could be some prop­er­ty expens­es, or what­ev­er, that I’ll take it out for. And also, too, his­tor­i­cal­ly, if I’ve had a bonus when I was work­ing, I’d put it in. That would make this year look bad because the per­cent­age would be down, because you’ve got that lump of cash which was intro­duced. Say it’s only had a cou­ple of months to invest, then that por­tion of the port­fo­lio might have got­ten 2%, where­as over­all the rest got 20%. So, you’ve got less than 20% if you aver­age it out. But then next year you’re also still on the hook on a per­cent­age basis for the new cap­i­tal to per­form as equal­ly as the past cap­i­tal has. So, it’s the per­cent­age num­ber I think which would be large­ly unaf­fect­ed by putting new cap­i­tal in. But look, I do need to do some analy­sis on, a) whether what we’re say­ing hap­pened, and b), what to do about it. But I’m also look­ing to set up a dum­my port­fo­lio using real mon­ey, just try­ing to work out the best way to do that at the moment. Then hope­ful­ly Navexa or Share­site can take a feed from the stock broking accounts and just work all that out with­out us hav­ing to check it all the time like we’ve had to do.

Cameron  48:11

So, for Simo’s ben­e­fit, when we’re report­ing our per­for­mance fig­ures, we’re not bas­ing it on cap­i­tal that we’ve put in and the cur­rent port­fo­lio val­ue, we’re just tak­ing in Navex­a’s CAGR num­bers and they’re fac­tor­ing in cap­i­tal cash inflows and out­flows and all that kind of stuff.

Tony  48:31

Not sure how Navexa works out CAGR, but in its oth­er form which was the mon­ey weight­ed way of work­ing out per­for­mance, it would just say there’s $2,000 more in the port­fo­lio and that’s $2,000 more invest­ed in the shares, or in the cash account, and it achieved this per­for­mance because it was invest­ed for a hun­dred days or two hun­dred days or what­ev­er. It would throw that in the mix with the mon­ey that had been there for the full three six­ty-five days. It would work out an aver­age of all that as a per­cent­age, of all the things invest­ed over the days that they were invest­ed for. So, this is a com­mon prob­lem. I mean, fund man­agers face this all the time, because peo­ple pull the funds out or put their funds in, and they have to take that into account. Which is why com­pa­nies like Navexa use dol­lar weight­ing, I think it’s called, dol­lar weight­ing in terms of their cal­cu­la­tion. I’m not sure how Navexa is doing the CAGR cal­cu­la­tion, but I think it’d be a sim­i­lar sort of thing. It’s what’s the mon­ey earned that was sit­ting in the port­fo­lio for a year, not how much was in there, what was tak­en out or what was intro­duced. But I will look fur­ther into it.

Cameron  49:36

Thanks for that input, Simo. That’s it. That’s it for ques­tions, TK. What have you been doing with your­self after hours this week?…

Cameron  1:06:29

The QAV Pod­cast is a pro­duc­tion of Space­craft Pub­lish­ing Pro­pri­etary Lim­it­ed, autho­rised rep­re­sen­ta­tive of AFS sale 520442, AFS rep­re­sen­ta­tive num­ber 001292718. Please don’t make any invest­ment deci­sions based sole­ly on lis­ten­ing to this pod­cast. This is pre­sent­ed as gen­er­al advice only, not per­son­al finan­cial advice. We don’t know your per­son­al finan­cial cir­cum­stances. Please see a finan­cial plan­ner before mak­ing any invest­ing deci­sions.

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