If you are in for long term investment, you are better off buy proven well established older LIC, eg. ARG, AFI which has been investing in AUstralian market for more than half century or even ETF that mimick ASX performance like STW, SFY. You know their track record. CAM and the like of many newly listed companies (during the bull market run from 2003-2007) are stock picker, it is very hard if not impossible to beat market year in year out. They might outperform in one year but go bust the next year. In short, unless the manager has proven him/herself over longer term (at least 10 years) that they can beat the market, then give your money to Index manager.Any opinion?
Ticking along nicely until the credit corp. **** up, down about 50% from its highs last year.
Worth buying at these levels? (86 cents today with a yield of over 6% FF) have they learnt a lesson after CCP that will make them a better manager ?
I think both Dhukka and josjef make good points.
The thing that annoyed me about the CCP debarcle is that the valuaiton tool that they use (StockVal) had CCP listed as level 3 risk. They use a scale of 1-4 with 1 reflecting companies that are as solid as wood, while 4 being compaines which are more speculative in nature. While the risk is supposedly adjusted by the potential for return or % discount to market price this to me pointed out an inherrent flaw in the design of stock val. That is no matter how good the return might be for the risk if the assumptions used are based on financials which are wrong then the investment opportunity may never be as good as it appears. For this reason putting large positions into riskier companies at a supposed large discount is flawed. I think I would rather a 12% return with very little risk than a 20% return with heaps of risk. I think Cam has learn't that diworsification can be a good thing in a falling market but I do beleive that their approach is sound but maybe their position sizing needs to be looked at.
I think both Dhukka and josjef make good points.
The thing that annoyed me about the CCP debarcle is that the valuaiton tool that they use (StockVal) had CCP listed as level 3 risk. They use a scale of 1-4 with 1 reflecting companies that are as solid as wood, while 4 being compaines which are more speculative in nature. While the risk is supposedly adjusted by the potential for return or % discount to market price this to me pointed out an inherrent flaw in the design of stock val. That is no matter how good the return might be for the risk if the assumptions used are based on financials which are wrong then the investment opportunity may never be as good as it appears. For this reason putting large positions into riskier companies at a supposed large discount is flawed. I think I would rather a 12% return with very little risk than a 20% return with heaps of risk. I think Cam has learn't that diworsification can be a good thing in a falling market but I do beleive that their approach is sound but maybe their position sizing needs to be looked at.
I think you're exactly right but have drawn the wrong conclusion. I don't think it is the valuation tool that is the problem. As you said yourself, it's the assumptions that go into it. The old garbage in, garbage out problem. This is the limitation of any valuation tool.
Notice how all the banks according to stockval looked like good value until they came out a couple of weeks ago and adjusted the discount rates to reflect the higher risk of bad loans etc. CAM was late to the party on this. Anyone paying attention to what was happening to credit markets worldwide could have seen it coming months ago. If you had taken CAM's assumptions as gospel and bought bank stocks based on those assumptions you would proabably be pretty pissed off.
The good part about stockval is that you can adjust the parameters, you don't have to use what the CAM analysts input. In addition, I would never buy a stock on the basis that stockval says it is undervalued. As far as I'm concerned it is just a screening tool, a jumping off point to do more research on selected companies.
In response to the original question, I think Clime is worth buying at these prices if only because they're so far below NTA, but that doesn't mean it's my, let alone your, best buy.
My take on the CCP pain is a bit different, and it'll be interesting to see what lesson Montgomery & co. draw from it as time goes on. Dhukka has said that he thinks they didn't really understand the business and that they didn't value the ledgers properly. He may well be right about that, but the bright red flag for me was CCP management's explanation of the first downgrade. Remember they said that they were putting on masses of new staff and they'd underestimated the time to train them. That seemed to me like a very serious mistake to me, at least as serious as a financial stuff-up. If senior management was that wrong about how long their people needed to learn how to generate projected income, then senior management didn't understand what their people really do and how many ways there might be to do it. For a business that relies wholly on its staff, that's a huge problem. The Clime guys did talk about the staff in some of their commentary: I remember a remark that CCP was the company of choice to work in. I hope they'll be a bit more skeptical about management's views in the future.
On StockVal and CCP, I could have incorporated that sort of soft data into StockVal by lifting the required return to take account of the risk that I perceived (I didn't, but I was never looking at buying it myself). I think that risk as shown in StockVal is a very loose guide, incorporating anything from stock liquidity to debt level to the perceived quality of the board to whatever. I guess it's more an indication of the amount of digging you should do before buying than anything else.
The CCP thing has shaken my confidence in Clime, but I'm encouraged that they seem to be continuing to follow the strategy they always said they would. As a shareholder, I want them to pick up the dropped stitches and keep knitting, not start doing crochet instead. That means I don't want them to diversify and I don't want them to start chasing price action. I want them to keep looking for good companies that will increase in value over time.
Hopefully without too many more mistakes.
Cheers
Ghoti
Apologies for asking this but from what I have read of these posts, CAM uses Stockval, a software package, attempting to undertake an analysis of a particular company's financial situation at a given moment. But, I assume, it cannot factor in poor management, ie a decision to buy and manage debt books for more than are worth.
So, if that is the situation, and please correct me if I am wrong, why would you pay $$$ (have no idea of the actual cost of the product) for a piece of software when it's underlying algorithm cannot necessarily accommodate these 'outliers' and, if so, why would a company rely upon that software to determine its buy or sells?
Sorry but I am a bit thick on these matters.
Apologies for asking this but from what I have read of these posts, CAM uses Stockval, a software package, attempting to undertake an analysis of a particular company's financial situation at a given moment. But, I assume, it cannot factor in poor management, ie a decision to buy and manage debt books for more than are worth.
So, if that is the situation, and please correct me if I am wrong, why would you pay $$$ (have no idea of the actual cost of the product) for a piece of software when it's underlying algorithm cannot necessarily accommodate these 'outliers' and, if so, why would a company rely upon that software to determine its buy or sells?
Sorry but I am a bit thick on these matters.
Judging by the online documentation that was around when StockVal was first released, Sherpa was an ancestor of StockVal, so it hasn't really disappeared.Roger Montgomary has been involved in all sorts over the years and many things have come onto the scene with a bang only to disappear after a year or so, not going to bag him but basically hes a very good salesman, anyone remember the Sherpa software ?, or the AGI futures trading system he sold under the banner investors advantage.
Montgomery is certainly a very good salesman. He's been buying Clime himself lately, FWIW. I bought at the IPO and I've increased my holding since. It's a significant part of my share portfolio and I ain't real happy about the CCP thing or the current share price, but I'm holding and at this price I'd consider buying more if bank deposit rates get less attractiveClime has been going for a while know and is in a different league to anything else hes been involved in plus all the regulatory stuff associated with being a listed company but to be honest I'm wary especially after the CCP **** up.
RM is very good at talking the talk but im not sold he/Clime can do the walking bit over time !
Roger Montgomary has been involved in all sorts over the years and many things have come onto the scene with a bang only to disappear after a year or so, not going to bag him but basically hes a very good salesman, anyone remember the Sherpa software ?, or the AGI futures trading system he sold under the banner investors advantage.
Clime has been going for a while know and is in a different league to anything else hes been involved in plus all the regulatory stuff associated with being a listed company but to be honest I'm wary especially after the CCP **** up.
RM is very good at talking the talk but im not sold he/Clime can do the walking bit over time !
interested in this stock. Anybody have an opinion?
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