I brought some IMF today at $1.345 ive been watching for a long time and after much uming and arhing, and a couple of failed attempts to low ball other stocks i finally settled on IMF.
My reasons for including IMF in my long term portfolio are more about what it isn't than what it is, and how it fills a gap in my 18 stock portfolio, if that makes any sense?...ill list some of the things i like about IMF.
- Unaffected by currency fluctuations.
- Unaffected by consumer sentiment.
- Unaffected by Market sentiment. (except of course in the extreme)
- Unlikely to be affected by changes in legislation.
- Unlikely to be affected by changes in technology.
- No debt.
- 43 mill cash (26% of market cap)
- Super simple structure/overheads.
- Market leader/great record of success.
IMF is a simple business dealing with complex issues and having great success, and they have proven in the past that when successful they are more than happy to pass that on to shareholders via dividends, now its the nature of there business that there revenue flow will be intermittent and i think anyone investing with IMF for the long term needs to except that.
Personally i think the ups and downs in revenue and thus dividends will offer many in and out/buy and build opportunity's..and that suits me just fine, 2 year chart below showing lots of (post GFC) support at around this level.
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I brought some IMF today at $1.345
i look forward to buying more IMF the next time it dips below $1.36
Business spectator said:IMF (Australia) Ltd requested a trading halt on October 28, 2010 pending an announcement by the company about a capital raising. Trading will resume on Monday, November 1, or on an earlier announcement.
Or when IMF decide to offer discounted shares through a capitol raising of some sort, personally i like rights issuesi would reckon the issue price would have to be around 1.32 > 1.37 :dunno:
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/bs.nsf/Article/IMF-in-trading-halt-AMV8G!OpenDocument&Click=
(23rd-September-2010) I brought some IMF today at $1.345 ive been watching for a long time and after much uming and arhing, and a couple of failed attempts to low ball other stocks i finally settled on IMF.
(20th-October-2010) I took 85% of my money out of IMF today at $1.49 a 10% profit in 4 weeks is acceptable due to my new position sizing policy...i decided 2 months ago to increase my position size by 40% when entering trades so i could take advantage of smaller % SP moves, and its paid off with IMF, unfortunately hasn't gone as well with BPT
I like the idea of investing with lawyers and may well add another legal stock to my portfolio...i look forward to buying more IMF the next time it dips below $1.36
My reasons for including IMF in my long term portfolio are more about what it isn't than what it is, and how it fills a gap in my 18 stock portfolio, if that makes any sense?...ill list some of the things i like about IMF.
- Unaffected by currency fluctuations.
- Unaffected by consumer sentiment.
- Unaffected by Market sentiment. (except of course in the extreme)
- Unlikely to be affected by changes in legislation.
- Unlikely to be affected by changes in technology.
- No debt.
- 43 mill cash (26% of market cap)
- Super simple structure/overheads.
- Market leader/great record of success.
IMF is a simple business dealing with complex issues and having great success, and they have proven in the past that when successful they are more than happy to pass that on to shareholders via dividends, now its the nature of there business that there revenue flow will be intermittent and i think anyone investing with IMF for the long term needs to except that.
Personally i think the ups and downs in revenue and thus dividends will offer many in and out/buy and build opportunity's..and that suits me just fine, 2 year chart below showing lots of (post GFC) support at around this level.
~
I like the same things about IMF, I am looking to get in below $1.30 if possible.
Maybe a case looking weak may be the opportunity I am looking for.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/bus...s-action-on-fees/story-e6frg9kx-1226214539468
The recent expansion into the US should provide growth.
http://news.gnom.es/pr/imf-australia-launches-bentham-capital-in-u-s
Not sure if IMF can hold spot in ASX300 due to lack of liquidity, my opportunity may come when/if the fund managers have to sell.
The thing that turned me off whilst looking at its fundamentals was the fact that I cannot gaurantee how many cases they will win. They obviously cannot either. They can mitigate the risk by being very selective, but there is still judgment risk.
Low capital intensity is a big tick, but earnings have the potential to be very lumpy and hard to predict going forward. The CEO mentioned something about the "lack of gaurantee on contracts streaming to the company" in previous reports. This is a little worrying; no real problems thus far... but the future isn't always governed by the past.I think that this stock is a lot riskier than it seems on the surface.
I try not to buy into businesses with either lumpy cash flow or earnings. They are notoriously hard to value, especially if they seem to follow no particular earnings cycle.
I know a lot of people bought this as a high-yielding stock, but it isn't. Some times it will pay a good dividend, other times it will pay none (ie. last half).
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