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Temple & Webster (www.templeandwebster.com.au) is one of the leading online retailers for the home in Australia. It operates a members-only shopping club for the home, offering limited time, limited inventory sales events and has over 1.2 million members. Temple & Webster provides a curated offering of over 10,000 different products per month from over 400 suppliers.
The Group also operates ZIZO (www.zizo.com.au), one of Australia's largest online marketplaces for furniture and homewares which currently has over 100,000 products on sale from over 700 suppliers.
It is anticipated that TPW will list on the ASX during December 2015.
P.S. It's one thing to claim to be a new age internet business, it's quite another to be just another internet business that sell things where there are heaps of alternatives. Of course you are going to record revenue growth when you sell things cheap coupled with a great service. Surfstitch is one example (which incidentally crashed today as well)... the items are cheap, delivery was very fast, and they even include a return prepaid envelop if the size is not a good fit. But these companies are only growing their business by subsidising customers at the expense of shareholders. The moment they want to stop competing on price, the 'loyal' customers will quickly switch to any one of the 90 other websites out there.
From cellar dweller to consistently higher prices.
From cellar dweller to consistently higher prices. I love these companies that are a bit up and down but always seem to come up the ATHs.
Only 113.4 million shares with over half tightly held. ATH again today so everybody should be in profit, and in a mind not to sell.
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"With scale, Temple and Webster can improve the customer offering at a faster pace than its peers." "The long tail of products allows them to acquire customers cost efficiently and bring them onto the platform and retain them as recurring customers. Due to their model they also enjoy negative working capital, which means they can fund their organic growth with their operating cashflow easily." "Finally. and probably most importantly, it's their ability to fine tune the customer experience through offering value, offering choice and improving the shopping experience that is leading to very high customer satisfaction."
The NAB online sales index suggests our category grew around 57% during the months of April to July, while we grew around 150% for the same period. We believe this is due to the increasing benefits of scale as we get larger. We are forging closer relationships with our suppliers as we become a more significant part of their business which allows us to obtain stock security, better terms and exclusive product ranges. We are also making larger investments in areas such as technology and data, brand awareness and our private label products; and we can produce more content by having more creative resources. In effect, the bigger we get, the better and strong our customer proposition becomes, which is a virtuous cycle.
Ex- growth? Market expectations excessively high?TPW is having a good lockdown .... can it continue??
( DNH )
randomly search gave me TPW and noticed the last posting from @finicky suggested (sorry if I misread) suggested " it as a completed triple top, neckline at $8 or $9, conceivable target of $4-$2"I have been looking at charts from this livewire article involving 'tips' fron Oscar Oberg. Makes me wonder about my small investments in the Wilson LICs: WAM and WAX as he is lead investment manager for both. Maybe he is trying to pump up his losers.
Investors must be really convinced of the long term growth for Temple and Webster's no bricks and mortar homewares direct 'drop and ship' business model. I see TPW are spending a lot more on advertising/marketing, wages and 'distribution' in H1FY22 compared to H1FY21. They are expecting H2 earnings to be weaker than H1.
A P/E of 81 (average FY21 and expected FY22) for a non dividend paying retail stock with a price/book of 9x for an FY21 ROE of 17%.
A $6.21 s.p for expected measly 15 cps earnings in FY24 - 3 years out! I should say source is analysts that CommSec uses.
Earnings for FY22 expected to be worse than FY21 by the company's own H1 report.
Another dour chart. I'm seeing it as a completed triple top, neckline at $8 or $9, conceivable target of $4-$2
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Thanks mateHi @Miner I maintain my interpretation of the TPW chart. The rally and retracement (5 weeks in all) has not done enough to change my opinion. Where I would start to waiver is if the price moves outside the downtrend resistance line. All the rally did was test and confirm downtrend resistance in my view. If this were to change next week say, the price would have to move convincingly above somewhere btw 6.50 and 7.00 - let's say above 6.65. As always, it's just my subjective view and I liken it to reading a horoscope. Still, I do use a chart in all my own transaction decisions.
The positive signs seem to be the RSI has moved above its downtrend and the MACD has narrowed from an exceptionally depressed level. Also volume has trended down which strikes me as selling pressure relenting in a downtrend. Also it has not yet made a lower low since the 2 week rally.
I am not following TPW but I will try to remember to check the chart occasionally to see if my picture significantly changes. Is this a buying prospect for you?
Not Held
Weekly
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