- Joined
- 20 May 2013
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10% reduction in commissions and fees this year and again for the next 2 years. If that happens (and assume that it will), what is VTG's sustainable earnings power? I estimated it elsewhere at around $17 million in EBITDA. Give VTG a 10 x multiple and you're look at an EV of around $170 million which works out to be around $1.15 a share.
But I readily admit this could be optimistic because there is a good chance that the market has woken up now and will never again accord VTG an EV/EBITDA multiple of 10 which is about standard for the retail industry.
If it's 10% at the start of every year is it a 27.1% cut in total?At half year VTG earned $103m fee and commission. Take a 30% cut on that which drops straight to the bottom line you basically get $0 PBT.
If it's 10% at the start of every year is it a 27.1% cut in total?
I guess it only makes a few million bucks in difference, but every little bit counts...
Lot of insider buying of this name at sub $1. Simpson, Osborne and Wilson are all directors and all have topped up their super and direct accounts via on-market purchases.
A sign that negotiations with Telstra are not as bad as the market perceives? Or merely insiders averaging down? Only time will tell.
There are 2 types of directors buying.
A. Directors see a real bargain and buy the stock.
B. Directors see share price taking big hits and buy the stock in hope of propping up the share price.
When multiple directors buy on-market at the same time and release the Appendix 3Y as soon as they could, I would guess the intent is more B than A. Doesn't mean the share price won't react, but implying too much into how the company is traveling fundamentally would simply be.... too much.
For the record, 3 directors bought recently: Osborne ~$60k, Simpson ~$18k, Wilson $87k. I'd be a lot more interested if Maxine buys a few $m on market.... that would be telling me something.
I've never really taken either action because a director has done it first.
With relation to taking cues from directors even if you could trust their 'reputation' there's no visibility (unless they're willing to disclose) on all of the important stuff such as their valuation basis, their expected return hurdle, their time frame, their reasons etc. Just because they're a director doesn't mean they're an expert investor. It could be the exact opposite.
I'd be way more comfortable with coming up with my own thesis for buying/selling and holding myself accountable to this rather than reacting to what someone else is doing.
The ASX listing rule states that director trading must be disclosed for corporate governance reasons. And the reason that it is an important corporate governance issue is because all directors are insiders. If they are not insiders they are by definition not performing their director duties.
So director trading can be important, not because they may or may not be expert investors, but because they are insiders. Large director sales do matter, based on piece of research by Wilson in Jan this year which looked at Director activities in 2016.
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Absolutely... It certainly isn't a sufficient condition for changing your investment, but it can provide further information.
Roger Montgomery (and his team who parrot his views) is a muppet who is always late to the party and backwards looking with his analysis and most of the time his analysis is incredibly flawed and leaves out vital risks. He and his team have no real conception of how to analyze businesses or business risk. He f***ed up many times. He was blatantly wrong about Matrix composites and Engineering, wrong about The Reject Shop, wrong about Vocus, wrong about Vita Group and so many others. He always tries to sound so smart and so assured with his analysis. He always makes high risk business that are having their moment in the sun sound low risk and dependable. Everyone makes mistakes from time to time but his arrogance and smugness really irks me.
Not too mention previously their software Skaffold gave Vita Group their highest rating of "A1" which mislead naive subscribers into thinking it was a top quality low risk business when it was plainly speculative and had a weak/risky business model all along. The team at Montgomery Investment Management really are a bunch of snake oil salesmen.
... He really misleads people into thinking that they are taking less risk then they actually are...
I see Marine Horne has added to her position in VTG recently. She now controls 18.7% of the voting stock - up from 17%. Another director, Watts, also added.
That's five insider buys in the last week.
Montgomery's biggest failing is that he blabs too much about his positions. And because he has a large retail following, the your-money-your-call crowd often buy his positions and get burnt when they tank - like they did with VTG, HSO, ISD. These are all stocks that Montgomery has talked about regularly as being top quality "A1" businesses. And a case can be made that they are, but not at 20, 25 or 30 times forward earnings.
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