Anyone know what proportion of CAB's revenue and/or earnings come from payments as opposed to other services like taxi finance, taxi insurance etc.?
Will new methods of payment like using iPhones threaten CAB's infrastructure?
Will the EFTPOS machine become obsolete if payments can be made for free with an iPhone app?
Chequebooks, coins, notes, credit/debt cards a thing of the past?
Just playing devil's advocate here, not owning CAB at present.
Up just over 7% today on no news released to the market - any idea(s) why?
Cheers
PB
Up just over 7% today on no news released to the market - any idea(s) why?
Cheers
PB
Anything is possible but at this stage lot of noises but I don't see it make much of an impact
on CAB, those who think it will are jumping the gun and don't understand CAB business that well.
5% regulation has much more impact but then again it not just CAB everyone else get hits as well
as I mentioned earlier maybe blessing in disguise.
According to the expert at morningstar analyst CAB has absolutely no moat whatsoever so they say sell away
Apple's iWallet will be a massive gamechanger, it is typically Apple, others have fiddled around the edges with half arsed NFS systems, despite consumer critisism Apple waited until they had nailed it and then released it.
Its a whole new ball game, its super secure, much better than physical credit cards, and will take over where ever you currently use a credit card.
This was my initial feeling too, but widespread adoption might take some time.
Here is an interesting article on Apple Pay and near field communication (NFC) technology:
http://www.forbes.com/sites/stevenb...ay-is-doomed-unless-it-can-do-these-7-things/
I think payments is an area where there maybe disruption with technological innovation, so something to be mindful of.
Others have failed in this area, so it will be interesting to see how well Apple executes on this.
The base case for me is that in ten year's time CAB's payment business will be very different. As is the incumbent they have a natural advantage however new technology has shown over and over again to be the worst enemy of the entrenched rent seeker. I have little confidence in CAB's ability to adapt. Maybe I'll be wrong. I'm happy to watch from the sidelines.
Not to put you on the spot McLovin, but do you have any specific examples to elaborate your point on "rent seekers"?
at of the day you got to make a judgement call on the business and if you not comfortable owning it then don't
stock market has lot of noises and it is important you have enough knowledge to counter these noises and be your own man...listening to someone else could be costly including me.
Rent seeking was probably not the best choice of words. Although I think CAB earns rent, I was thinking more along the lines of the lazy, un-innovative incumbent. FXJ is the one that comes straight to mind and guys like Uber are far better funded than SEK, REA or CRZ were in their start up days.
Think about it this way, virtually everyone who uses Uber uses it because they like the product, no one uses CAB for any other reason than there is no other option.
I disagree that they had no choice, people have always had a choice even before Uber. ie cash. I wouldn't label CAB as being lazy given how they have been changing their existing products and diversifying into other transport areas. Kind of like saying Coca-cola are lazy for selling the same products for the last 100 years.
Find me a company that prefers its employees to pay cash rather than use a credit card.
As for diversifying, the economics of a bus company are very different to those of their payment system. I'm sitting in an airport about to get on a flight but from memory, CAB's bus venture has about $1b in assets and generates the same EBIT as their taxi/payment service which has about $250m in assets.
it can use the same API call as Apple and paypal already has a foothold, most people are already on paypal and they just end up using paypal unless apple offer something remarkably better or some sort of freebie I cant see them upsetting the existing guy like paypal
Its going to take a couple of years to take over, but I think people will be well advised to do some research and have a think about how it make affect our lives - and therefore our investments.
As someone with an Apple logo in their avatar you may be biased?
Android actually has a bigger market share than iOS, so if Apple only has 50% of the mobile market I don't see how it can 'take over'. It will likely be another product for Apple fanboys and something similar and possibly better could come along on Android
Its a lot different to Paypal, as I said the implementation and security with iWallet is going to be a game changer, not just in the case of CAB, but across the board. There are good reasons Apple took so long to come to the market with NFS technology and its not about the reader, its all about the implementation, security and ease of use.
Its going to take a couple of years to take over, but I think people will be well advised to do some research and have a think about how it make affect our lives - and therefore our investments.
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