Knobby22
Mmmmmm 2nd breakfast
- Joined
- 13 October 2004
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I'm very suspicious of this company as explained earlier.Any idea why it's listed on the ASX and not in Israel or the UK? Or listed there also?
These payment, credit and splitting pays is just a fad. It's just a modern way to get people to spend on things they really couldn't afford.
That's all fine and good, as a business, if you got collateral. But to do it in an environment where OZ are among the most indebted people in the world, going through the most expensive property boom in the world, and are struggling to make ends meet...
To give credit without collateral, making it quick and easy, might sound smart. It's just asking for trouble.
But then its share price is doing really well... just like those dotCom etc.
Any idea why it's listed on the ASX and not in Israel or the UK? Or listed there also?
These payment, credit and splitting pays is just a fad. It's just a modern way to get people to spend on things they really couldn't afford.
That's all fine and good, as a business, if you got collateral. But to do it in an environment where OZ are among the most indebted people in the world, going through the most expensive property boom in the world, and are struggling to make ends meet...
To give credit without collateral, making it quick and easy, might sound smart. It's just asking for trouble.
But then its share price is doing really well... just like those dotCom etc.
I'm very suspicious of this company as explained earlier.
It all seems to me a pump and dump riding the coat tails of Afterpay. Already Westpac has pretty much done the same thing as after all it really is just an app on a credit card. It has no future but the people who floated it will be making a lot of money. I don't even believe the users are real. When I first looked at this company a few weeks before they floated, the website wasn't even operating properly. Even now they only have i last time I looked 8 merchants using it and how do we know they aren't tied in to this float?
you can own shares in a company with long term profit guidance but any economic down fall can bring it's share price down to the level of a start up too.
https://www.afr.com/street-talk/ipo-litmus-test-splitit-locks-in-jan-29-listing-date-20190122-h1abpd
Point of sale payments business Splitit has conditional approval to hit the ASX-boards next week, making it the first new listing of 2019.
A number of funds are understood to have tipped into the $12 million IPO, perhaps pulled in by former Vocus Communications' founder James Spenceley as a key backer and ex-National Australia Bank head of institutional Spiro Pappas' role as chairman.
See Pappas, as the story goes, headed the team at NAB that onboarded Afterpay which has been a roaring success for early investors and is now worth more than $3.5 billion
I'm very suspicious of this company as explained earlier.
It all seems to me a pump and dump riding the coat tails of Afterpay. Already Westpac has pretty much done the same thing as after all it really is just an app on a credit card. It has no future but the people who floated it will be making a lot of money. I don't even believe the users are real. When I first looked at this company a few weeks before they floated, the website wasn't even operating properly. Even now they only have, last time I looked, 8 merchants using it, and how do we know they aren't tied in to this float?
you can own shares in a company with long term profit guidance but any economic down fall can bring it's share price down to the level of a start up too.
https://www.afr.com/street-talk/ipo-litmus-test-splitit-locks-in-jan-29-listing-date-20190122-h1abpd
Point of sale payments business Splitit has conditional approval to hit the ASX-boards next week, making it the first new listing of 2019.
A number of funds are understood to have tipped into the $12 million IPO, perhaps pulled in by former Vocus Communications' founder James Spenceley as a key backer and ex-National Australia Bank head of institutional Spiro Pappas' role as chairman.
See Pappas, as the story goes, headed the team at NAB that onboarded Afterpay which has been a roaring success for early investors and is now worth more than $3.5 billion
Waiting for the decline, anyone else watching this Stock?
I'm just watching this one. It's down a few % today but that's not surprising after yesterday's move.Waiting for the decline, anyone else watching this Stock?
They've become entrenched very quickly.The critical question is whether or not the revenue is there. Personally, I've never used any of these services but I'm a middle-aged old fart so what do I know?
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