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Did you see the report listed? Earnings are up 160% year on year.
"Near term we expect customers to return to physical stores as restrictions ease, and higher unemployment to result in lower household discretionary income and consumer sentiment," Mr Faul said. "Longer term we expect Amazon Australia to continue to aggressively take market share and many omni-channel retailers to become increasingly competitive online."
Financial services firm Morningstar says Kogan.com shares are "materially overvalued" because investors are extrapolating the current surge in sales due to online migration during the pandemic too far into the future.
I can't see how this space is going to remain buoyant when there are so many competitors, there is only so much computer screen to fit adverts and be on the first page of the search engine.Sheesh! You wouldn't want to be paying for insights like that one, would you?!
Its hardly just Kogan, every business that has had a revenue and earnings spike during covid has been run up in a similar way, even if the source is just JobKeeper payments!!
The return to reality is going to be a harsh reset when it comes.
We aren't going back to how things were before.
the article goes on to quote RKPart of the group's recipe for cheap prices is a relentless focus on data and inventory management in guiding its import of exclusive brands from China. About half of gross profit still comes from house brands such as Kogan, Ovela, Fortis and Komodo, around 90 per cent of which are sourced from Chinese factories.
Mainly undifferentiated cheap stuff out of factories, branded for the customer. The Kogan biz has certain advantages, of being an early mover, having robust IT, but spin is not a moat."Other than Aldi I can't think of a business in Australia that would do anywhere near that from an exclusive brands perspective," Mr Kogan said. "The way we manage inventory there [in China] is what makes us such a strong business."
This time? Do you mean compared to the GFC?So, you think things are different this time?!
This time? Do you mean compared to the GFC?
Bricks & mortar etc have been in structural decline for 20 years.
The only hope commercial real estate has is to convert to residential - but even then, they're going to be inner city apartments etc that nobody actually *wants* to live in.
In short, commercial real estate "investors" are f***ed.
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