skc
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- 12 August 2008
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There is considerable discussion on another forum suggesting very significant shorting by UBS, a major investor.
he last point is what I am worrying about. I reduced my holdings by half and am expecting some announcement in this field. the franchising industry appears very corrupt at present. The latest findings related to Dominos just shows what it's like. There may be little or nothing though as RFG seem to have very good management and most of their businesses don't run on the smell of an oily rag like 7-11 and Dominos.
I don't really understand shorting but know that some think it a great vehicle to make money [at the expense of the small investor].
Surely this can only go so far and be permitted to go so far?
Shorting only makes money at the expense of the small investor when the small investor makes poor decisions - just like going long makes money at the expense of small investors.
Shorting actually has some stabilising effects on markets in times of severe distress.
I dont believe there is any need for controls or limits on short selling beyond those that exist now.
So small investors are expected to anticipate shorting? Anyone on ASF never made a "poor decision"?
There are many other factors at play here imo.... I have frequently bought well performing stocks with strong fundamentals.... And not had this happen.
Of course people win and others lose - nature of the game. But manipulation by big players is quite different.
I'm not stressed about RFG and do accept volatility but see manipulation rather differently.
I also get what you are saying about the fund manager "need". Does this explain why UBS are in and out of being a major investor, so many times recently, as indicated by RFG announcements?
I'm not stressed about RFG and do accept volatility but see manipulation rather differently.
I also get what you are saying about the fund manager "need". Does this explain why UBS are in and out of being a major investor, so many times recently, as indicated by RFG announcements?
Having done some work for UBS' custody and registry provider, I can honestly say that the left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing.
They have a fair few funds, and could be selling down in one and buying in the other. It sounds silly, but it happens - alot.
It's hardly manipulation, just the result of each fund adjusting its weighting in the company so they can hug the index to an appropriate level.
A little off topic, but the part that rubs me the wrong way is when one fund buys another, and each is charging a percentage of Assets under management along the way. Multiple commissions for nothing.
Interesting... I didn't know you work for/at/with UBS?! I've always thought that UBS is a prime broker and it holds stock on behalf of various clients/instos so not all transactions are their own decision. Plus they lend out stocks which get returned from time to time, thereby changing their holding %. Please correct me if I am wrong.
With respect to funds owned by the same umbrella playing pass-the-parcel... it's a bit of a joke I agree. Macquarie used to be quite good at those. I also think that it creates an artificial valuation perception in the market... so next thing you know a completely independent 3rd party would buy an asset at similar valuations, thereby validating all the previous internal transactions.
I didn't look at RFG's report in great detail, but on first glance it appeared in line with expectations. One of the key issues in the past for RFG was putting certain costs into the "one-off" bucket which the market doesn't always agree. That seems to be absent in the last 2 reports. The downward share price movement really only lasted 3 days with ~10m volume. So perhaps a holder took the opportunity to reduce/exit their exposure. I wouldn't be too concerned on that alone, provided that you did your homework on the latest report.
One key thing about RFG is that it has a portfolio of franchise brands. It is a roll-out as much as a roll-up model. So even though some of the same store sales growth looks pretty low, they can still roll out more stores thanks to cheap capital from would-be franchisees. However,
Lastly, there's a bit of negative headwinds in the franchising industry - wage increases, wage frauds etc. So it might turn some investor away, or turn some would-be franchisees away and actually impact the business.
Trading under 5.10 today, closing in on a new 52 week low, 5 year chart shows a lot of price action around the 4.40 mark, closing in on the bottom trend line as well.
~
View attachment 70629
rfg is going to get smashed again monday:
http://www.theage.com.au/business/r...ustralias-franchise-king-20171207-h00lbl.html
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