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Yet Pioneer has two challenges: properly scaling its business, given the relatively small size of the personal loan market it is focused on, and accessing longer-term funding facilities that cannot be suddenly pulled when the next recession lands. If Pioneer can apply its core distressed debt competencies to other larger sectors (e.g. Home loans) and secure committed financing, it could be the perfect business to profit from any downturn.
Would not trust the management. Aggressive accounting is always a huge red flag. Them writing up the value of their PDLs and declaring it as increased profit is very aggresive accounting chicanery designed to bolster reported earnings and push up the share price. Managements and boards that play these sorts of games are not to be trusted.
Agree especially with the part you have bolded. I've looked at this one before briefly (I believe after you mentioned it on another forum) and I couldn't make heads or tails of it either. I honestly have the same problem with CCP, and have avoided that one too.It's not necessarily aggressive - the problem is, we can't tell.
For all I know, they're amortising the PDLs too quickly.
Completely puzzled by PNC. At face value, it seems to present opportunity... but when one looks at the way PDL "Change In Value" (CIV) is calculated, it totally destroys any chance at determining credit quality.
Simply put, they have their own DCF, with assumptions against their PDL book. There's some adjustment of this value downwards according to presentations, but nowhere do they quantify it. This is very different to the upfront provision CCP take, followed by straight-line amortisation (I think it's straight-line...).
To date, they've performed well, but that's because NPAT is heavily dependent on CIV. Even trading at 8 times forward earnings with strong PDL investment, I just can't get comfortable.
And today, there's notification that the MD and a director sold over 1m shares each (the Director through Banksia capital) to investors at a discount to market price, even at what seems to be a low price
There are some other investments in the company (such as an ~17% holding of Goldfields, an ADI) and some productivity investments through opex (telephone systems upgrade was $1m from memory).
Confusing accounting policies + future moment of market panic = psychological disaster waiting to happen for me because it's too bloody hard to get a decent oversight of what is actually going on.
I see very little difference between the two approaches, FVTPL and effective interest rate amortisation. Both basically require the same underlying assumption of cashflow amount and timing.
I've looked at this one before briefly (I believe after you mentioned it on another forum) and I couldn't make heads or tails of it either. I honestly have the same problem with CCP, and have avoided that one too.
CCP Possibly better business, but neither is truly knowable so price of the risk to hold comes into it for me.
You may have missed a bullet. PNC might not end well - it is a very difficult company to have any transparency on. Just as CCP is. Ceratinly no reason to have both.I missed the boat (again!!!) ummming and arrring, ummhing and arrhing!!! Procrastination, wait until July next year, (another year passes), wait until July next year (another year). After waiting for an opportunity for two years, I lost it. Owning CCP, I thought 'don't buy another company like CCP'. Why? Not a rational decision! Just emotionally wanted a food stock or a tech stock. I got neither and missed out on PNC.
Is there such a thing called emotional investing? No logic applied, no analysis, just going off emotions only. I hope that I am not one of those but it looks like I am becoming one??
I must have been too busy during PNC lows over the past 13 months, that I didn't take any notice, saving money or had no funds. Actually no excuse. I just missed out.
Just emotionally wanted a food stock or a tech stock.
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