Faramir
Very New Investor
- Joined
- 24 March 2014
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From the AFR article:FinTech nibbling away
Know what you mean. I posted (on another site) about an obscure company:.. know a couple of investors who both saw and understood the opportunity before the hyperbole took over, they have created significant wealth and I wish I had understood the sector well enough to see the opportunity as well!
that was 14 Sept 2017; S/P sub $5 !! Where's my yacht?... under a new code, out of a merger between Afterpay Holdings and Touchcorp.
- the group website includes this : Afterpay Touch Group (ATG) https://www.afterpaytouch.com/investor-centre,
- the old code was AFY, and
- ASX website throws up APT : http://www.asx.com.au/asx/share-price-research/company/APT
whatever the case, the SP has a bit of a rocket under it, right now.
Yes, I thought the drop was a bit unnecessary. Down 13.51% for the whole day.Down some 10%
https://www.asx.com.au/asx/share-price-research/company/EMLYes, I thought the drop was a bit unnecessary. Down 13.51% for the whole day.
I think it's a "buy on the rumour, sell on the news" scenario. That's my interpretation of what happened. If that's the case, we should see it start to pick up again shortly.True - by ordinary means, the result today was an excellent one. Market dived down like any thing. Same reflected on WTC.
and then there is his quote:I wonder if there is any real value in the acquisition, other than diversifying away from the prepaid card gimmickry into General Purpose Reloadables. That's probably unkind, as it is a move into open banking, with multi-currency offerings. (garlic bread with that?)
Acquisitions can be problematic, the cash burn is contained but they'd better get it right, first time.
now that's a 'leveraged play'A key risk for EML is its reliance on revenue from breakage, or the unused amount left by consumers on reloadable gift cards. EML can share this with retailers, although it is possible regulators may require unspent funds to be returned to shoppers. EML said breakage continues to fall as a percentage of group revenue, now comprising 23 per cent, down from 33 per cent in FY19, and it is expected to represent a lower percentage of group revenue in FY21 with further growth in the [general purpose reloadable card] segment
another fundie luvin' itI know just about nothing of EML Payments other than lots of hype on Livewire and that many brokers love it.
- Joe Magyer, Lakehouse CapitalEML Payments, a local digital-payments business, is one of the largest positions in the Lakehouse Small Companies Fund. EML has flexible technology that allows it to securely channel payments for gift cards, gaming payouts, salary packaging, and payroll, among other use cases.
The business grows with its customers, who rarely leave, and has optionality thanks to fintechs finding new ways to build on top of EML's platform. The company also has a strong, aligned leadership team.
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