So_Cynical
The Contrarian Averager
- Joined
- 31 August 2007
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I imagine that Pipoupiou won't agree with me here but I wouldn't be buying TGA while the SP trends down, often a sign that someone knows more about a stock than I do!
Time to reassess when the trend reverses, IMO.
I seem to remember you posting pretty much the same thing in the Beach thread after i posted my buy in at 67 cents on a falling share price 18 months ago...SP now over $1.40 and was $1.70 a couple of weeks ago.
You seem to lack a bit of vision oldblue...or perhaps faith. :dunno:
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?t=299&page=28
the macquarie report is a bit of a concern to me, with flat growth forecasts making me rethink a bit.
Interesting blog post that makes you consider the possible downsides to what has been a great business for shareholders. TGA is not expressly mentioned but similar reasoning applies.
http://www.iifunds.com.au/bristlemouth/rent-try-buy-youre-better-loan-sharks
In summary downsides to be aware of are:
1. customers might one day wake up to the raw deal they are in fact getting from rent-try-buy schemes;
2. government takes it out of the customers' hands and regulates the industry (cf the proposed new regulations for the lending industry of which all CCV shareholders will be aware)
Would be interested to hear people's thoughts
I actually had a look at Silverchef recently.TGA is nothing like Silverchef
Interesting blog post that makes you consider the possible downsides to what has been a great business for shareholders. TGA is not expressly mentioned but similar reasoning applies.
http://www.iifunds.com.au/bristlemouth/rent-try-buy-youre-better-loan-sharks
In summary downsides to be aware of are:
1. customers might one day wake up to the raw deal they are in fact getting from rent-try-buy schemes;
2. government takes it out of the customers' hands and regulates the industry (cf the proposed new regulations for the lending industry of which all CCV shareholders will be aware)
Would be interested to hear people's thoughts
1. TGA's customers are on welfare. They are unlikely to have access to any other means of finance. Silverchef's are not (start a cafe and watch coffee suppliers throw furniture/espresso machines etc at you). Whether you like it or not, a lot of thier customers probably don't have any idea how much it's actually costing them. There was actually a very interesting essay recently in the Journal of Finance about how little payday borrowers actually understand about what they are doing...
http://www.afajof.org/journal/abstract.asp?ref=0022-1082&vid=66&iid=6&aid=2&s=-9999
On a similar note (not related to TGA directly, but to the idea that people don't know what the service is costing them), I know one of the big banks is noticing a similar trend in areas of unemployment in NT. The following scenario is something they're trying to overcome with their ATM fees:
Basically, each 'payday' for the unemployed, they're constantly checking their accounts so that they can pay each other back for any loans they may have taken out over the course of the past 2 weeks. During this time, they constantly query their account balance for $2.00 a hit at a foreign ATM, sometimes chewing through up to 5-10% of their 'pay'!
They're now working with the state government there to either remove ATM fees, or find another work-around.
And from this, I can only draw the conclusion that a good portion of the population will never realise they're getting ripped off.
Makes TGA look good to me, lol.
I dont think ripping off your customers is a good idea whether they know it or not
I like to think that you front up the capital, you took the risk and you charge so it return reasonable return for investors and at 20-25 ROE isnt a ripped off.
there are other business that generate this sort of return, are they a ripped off?
all fees and charges are disclose upfront I dont see anything wrong with it...
On balance, I think acquiring NCML was a mistake.
Two things attract me to TGA over their competitors.
The first is that it is predominantly equity funded – huge risk reduction in comparison to say TSM. The other is the acquisition on NCML. Leaving aside that in hindsight with the loss of the ATO contract they paid too much – It is the strategic direction I like. What makes more sense then a company that is so exposed to defaulting customers, then for them to focus on debt collection? This is the exact culture that can mitigate bad initial credit decisions and give a comparative advantage.
Looking at the very short term market depth the seller is quite enthusiastic although there are substantial buys all the way down to $1.50. With the full year result coming mid May there "should" be a run up towards it if everything is fine. A trade here with $1.50 stop should offer decent reward/risk.
skc, my TA knowledge lacks quite a bit but from looking at TGA's chart it looks like its in a downtrend from approx 4/4/2011 through to now and if you draw a closing price ceiling along this downtrend it looks like it might find some resistance around the $1.65-$1.70 mark in the short term if it were to continue its rise in the next couple of weeks. If it broke through this downtrend ceiling say on the back of a good annual report would you agree it could run up a little back towards $2 possibly?
As I said i'm pretty poor with TA but just from playing around a bit thats how the chart read to me. Can post an image of what I mean if that helps?
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