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Average purchase price of $1.70
Yes, Klogg. I must have bought just a bit earlier, my average price is $1.63
Was this price explosion instigated by any corporate development in late 2018?
Thanks, I was unaware of any significant event also. I sold my last DDR holding in Sept18 (market dip) and unfortunately didn't re-buy Feb19.
Yeah, it's done very well. Average purchase price of $1.70 here - bought a bit back when they took over Express Data and the stock tanked on a bad HY.
If only I bought more than I did...
And an interesting bit of info: if you bought $10k worth in Jan 2011, here's the return:
View attachment 96216
52% CAGR is just insane.
I used Sharesight. I believe there's a free tier.Hi Klogg,
Well done and it must of been very tempting to sell the stock along the way.
I was interested in that little calculation you did, is that from a particular website or app?
Cheers
Leyy
but FWIW I offloaded a small portion of my holding today. 33 times trailing earnings (~ 3% yield) is quite expensive, even if they do achieve a 40%+ NPAT this year.
Now I have to go and do some real work and try to find a new home for the capital!
DDR released their HY report today, (they run a calender year), given the strength of the result for the half I may come to regret offloading a significant part of my holding! Smashed their guidance and are about 25% ahead of guidance at this stage.
When you look at the growth in this business over the last 5 years you have to wonder why people are paying insane multiples of things like revenue & sales for so called growth businesses.
I'm already regretting my sale. I broke the rule - "Buy right, hold tight". I look years in advance when buying things, but sell due to overvaluation on the current state. Cognitive dissonance at its finest.
I'm already regretting my sale. I broke the rule - "Buy right, hold tight". I look years in advance when buying things, but sell due to overvaluation on the current state. Cognitive dissonance at its finest.
Looking at the chart I suspect that may not happen for some time.
I generally do the same, but at some point when the price is so far ahead of any sane valuation, I think there is a case for taking some off the table. Also at some point postion size becomes an issue, while i dont normally do any rebalancing or allocation nonsense, my DDR had become such a large part of my total wealth that it was effecting my peace of mind.
Probably talking to the wrong people there tinhat!! I dont believe the squiggly line of history informs or indicates anything about the future.
Don't beat yourself up. If in doubt, sell out. Nothing wrong with preserving profits. You can always buy back in but you might find better opportunities elsewhere in the mean time. The problem is the volatility in the share price. How likely is it to beat the July high anytime soon? Looking at the chart I suspect that may not happen for some time.
Hi @KloggI'm already regretting my sale. I broke the rule - "Buy right, hold tight". I look years in advance when buying things, but sell due to overvaluation on the current state. Cognitive dissonance at its finest.
Hi @Klogg
When I use the mantra, “buy right” it means buy good businesses at prices that make sense.
“Hold tight” to me means hold through thick or thin so long as the business is trending in the right direction. The thick is sometimes the hardest to deal with, you know the earnings are elevated and you know the price multiple is high. Your run of the mill business contraction which is just a normal part of a healthy business could easily see the price down 50%.+ What do you do??? I coined the term hold tight for myself in relation to this point because I worked out that for me, holding was the best solution so long as the business fundamentals stayed intact. It’s not easy sitting through retracements, especially if you eventually work out at a lower price that things are heading south with the business, but then paying tax and buying back isn’t easy either, especially if you get whipsawed.
I had plenty of premature sales as I strengthen my holding discipline. Sometimes switching into something else, another good business at a lower valuation is a potential solution – If you do this don’t just look at the sell in isolation but what you replaced it with as part of evaluating the total decision.
I will always remember seeing a Charlie Munger clip where he said if you can’t handle a 50% retracement you have no right being an equity investor. It sort of helps me when things move from thick to thin whilst I’m still on the ride.
Nice to communicate with you again.
But oh, the PE, that's pretty high. The aim seems to be to take advantage of current turmoil to enhance their position. Don't achieve the growth and the downside becomes pretty apparent, and quickly.Looking out longer term, the company will be financing some of its own customers through Dicker Data Financial Solutions (DDFS), which is risky, and moving to a bigger distribution centre, which will reduce its strong operating leverage over its current physical assets, at least temporarily. On top of that, I think IT spend will reduce overall as Australia copes with recession. So over the next 2-3 years, I’m not overly bullish the business.
But in the short term it is a beneficiary of the pandemic, with good management and a long term history of solid growth. It is also exposed primarily to Australia and NZ, both of have avoided [a covid-19 disaster]
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