• Digital Wine Ventures (ASX: DW8) rockets 10% on record sales

    treasury wine shares

    The Digital Wine Ventures Ltd (ASX: DW8) share price jumped 10% on Monday after a record number of sales in October. Its shares are up more than 700% this year after a flurry of bullish sales announcements. 

    About Digital Wine Ventures 

    Digital Wine Ventures identifies and invests in early stage technology driven ventures that have the potential to disrupt and digitally transform segments within the global beverage market and support them by providing access to capital, expertise and share services. WINEDEPOT is the company’s coronership investment. 

    WINEDEPOT is a cloud-based software-as-a-service technology platform that empowers direct-to-market sales. It provides value to customers by removing layers of inefficiency in the supply chain. The company operates a network of strategically located deposits servicing key markets, supported by bulk storage centres. Its depots are combined with a software offering that provides customers with direct-to-trade marketplaces, order management systems and smart logistics solutions.  

    Company update 

    On Monday, the WINEDEPOT business shipped a total of 9,749 cases in October, up 34% on the total cases shipped in September. WINEDEPOT also processed another record number of orders in October at 5,817, up 23% on the previous record breaking month in September. 

    The WINEDEPOT platform also added 57 new brands to the platform including various Australian and New Zealand producers, craft spirit & beverage producers and wine distributors. 

    Poised for growth 

    Digital Wines is creating a springboard for growth for its WINEDEPOT business and goal to disrupt the global beverage market. The company’s quarterly update, announced on 27 October, points to the series financial, operational and acquisition actions taken by management to secure its future growth prospects. 

    On 14 October, it entered into an agreement to acquire Wine Delivery Australia Pty Ltd, a South Australia based fourth-party logistics provider servicing the wine industry to accelerate WINEDEPOT’s growth. 

    During the quarter, the company also successfully completed a $6 million capital raising to accelerate WINEDEPOT’s growth strategy through the launch of its marketplace and expansion of smart logistic business required to support the marketplace. 

    Furthermore, the company quadrupled its sales and market team with several new high profile executives joining the team. 

    The Digital Wines share price has retreated slightly from its intraday high, and is trading up 8.7% at the time of writing.

    Man who said buy Kogan shares at $3.63 says buy these 3 ASX stocks now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    In this FREE STOCK REPORT, Scott just revealed what he believes are the 3 ASX stocks for the post COVID world that investors should buy right now while they still can. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks these could really go gangbusters as we move into ‘the new normal’.

    *Returns as of 6/8/2020

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Lina Lim has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Digital Wine Ventures (ASX: DW8) rockets 10% on record sales appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/3eFbxk7

  • Why the ANZ (ASX:ANZ) share price is underperforming on Monday

    ANZ Bank

    The S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) and the banking sector may be pushing higher on Monday, but the same cannot be said for the Australia and New Zealand Banking GrpLtd (ASX: ANZ) share price.

    In afternoon trade the banking giant’s shares are down almost 2.5% to $19.14.

    Why is the ANZ share price underperforming today?

    The underperformance of the ANZ share price on Monday has little to do with its business operations and a lot to do with its dividend.

    This is because this morning the bank’s shares traded ex-dividend for the final dividend it declared with its full year results at the end of last month.

    When a share trades ex-dividend, it means that it is now without the rights to a future dividend payment. Essentially, the seller of the share will receive the dividend and the buyer will get nothing.

    In light of this, a share price will generally decline in line with its dividend to reflect this.

    What is ANZ’s dividend?

    Last month ANZ declared a fully franked final dividend of 35 cents per share, down from 80 cents per share a year earlier.

    This dividend will now be paid to eligible shareholders in a touch over five weeks on December 16.

    What about the other banks?

    ANZ shares aren’t the only ones to trade ex-dividend this month.

    Next in line to go ex-dividend is the Westpac Banking Corp (ASX: WBC) share price on Wednesday for its 31 cents per share fully franked dividend. This will then be paid to eligible Westpac shareholders on 18 December.

    After which, a day later National Australia Bank Ltd (ASX: NAB) shares will trade without the rights to its final fully franked dividend of 30 cents per share. This dividend will be paid to eligible NAB shareholders on 10 December.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro owns shares of Westpac Banking. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Why the ANZ (ASX:ANZ) share price is underperforming on Monday appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/2Ibf5z4

  • Why the Immuron (ASX:IMC) share price is rocketing 18% higher today

    boy dressed in business suit with rocket wings attached looking skyward

    The Immuron Limited (ASX: IMC) share price is soaring today, up 18% in afternoon trading.

    This comes after the company announced positive results to one of its vaccines.

    Today’s gains put Immuron’s share price up 104% in 2020 at 26 cents per share, though that’s still well below the 86 cents per share Immuron briefly hit on 21 July. That spike followed a report that one of its flagship drugs, Travelan, could help treat respiratory issues in patients with COVID-19.

    Despite retracing since then, long-term investors likely won’t be complaining about the 104% gains in 2020 in a year that’s seen the All Ordinaries Index (ASX: XAO) fall by 6%.

    What does Immuron do?

    Immuron Limited is an Australian biopharmaceutical company. Its focus is the development and sale of oral immunotherapeutics to prevent and treat unmet medical needs. The company’s orally active polyclonal antibodies provide a targeted delivery inside the gastrointestinal tract so they do not cross into the bloodstream

    Immuron’s shares first began trading on the ASX in April 1999.

    What did Immuron announce to see its share price rocket 18% today?

    In this morning’s announcement to the ASX, Immuron revealed that the US Medical Research Center has confirmed its experimental vaccine produced “a robust immunological response in cows”.

    Immuron’s vaccine targets Campylobacter and Enterotoxigenic E.coli (ETEC). The company’s goal is to develop a multi-pathogen anti-diarrhoeal colostrum supplement to help protect against both afflictions, which are the main cause for infectious diarrhoea for people visiting developing countries.

    This is also a critical issue for the US military, whose personnel are often deployed to remote regions, and report that infectious diarrhoea is their most common illness.

    No surprise then, that the US Department of Defense (DoD) is interested in pursuing Immuron’s experimental vaccine. According to this morning’s release, PCI Clinical Services has been contracted to manufacture its drug product for the DoD to evaluate in clinical trials. Manufacturing is slated to start in November and be complete by the end of 2020.

    Two human phase II clinical trials are scheduled for 2021. The US Naval Medical Research Center plans to file a request with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for an Investigational New Drug application in the first quarter of 2021.

    As these trials progress, Immuron’s share price will be one to watch.

    Man who said buy Kogan shares at $3.63 says buy these 3 ASX stocks now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    In this FREE STOCK REPORT, Scott just revealed what he believes are the 3 ASX stocks for the post COVID world that investors should buy right now while they still can. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks these could really go gangbusters as we move into ‘the new normal’.

    *Returns as of 6/8/2020

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Bernd Struben has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Why the Immuron (ASX:IMC) share price is rocketing 18% higher today appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/32oFj7U

  • Don’t fall in love with a charismatic CEO, says fundie

    Fund manager Damien Klassen

    Ask A Fund Manager

    The Motley Fool chats with fund managers so that you can get an insight into how the professionals think. In this edition, Nucleus Wealth head of investments Damien Klassen tells us how he picks the shares for his fund and why he’s holding onto a pile of cash.

     

    The Motley Fool: For Nucleus Wealth’s growth fund, what’s the philosophy?

    Damien Klassen: We have a big focus on quality and value. The way we think of stocks is that every stock’s got an inherent quality to it, and then a particular value. And it’s about finding the right cross section of those two. 

    For example, if we’re looking at a very high quality stock within our portfolio, then we’re actually happy to pay a little bit more for it. Whereas if we’re looking at, say, the average quality stock, then we want to be buying it really cheap. 

    The discipline for us is all about finding that right match between the quality and the value of the stock that we’re buying.

    One more overlay is, on the growth funds we then use… both quantitative modelling and macro outlook views to work out the right mix of whether we’re buying equities or whether we’re putting the money into bonds or cash.

    MF: So at the moment what’s the split between equities, bonds and cash?

    DK: Very much towards bonds and cash. We’re basically looking at valuations and we figure that we’ll have a better opportunity to buy it at cheaper prices. 

    So the last couple of months we’ve been winding back and just given the risks around, now’s more time to be cautious and we’ve managed to pick up some decent returns from bonds.

    We saw earlier on this week, the RBA cutting rates down to levels they said they’d never do. And we’ve had that view for a while that they would need to keep doing more – and we still have the view they need to keep doing more. So we don’t think all the returns have gone from that end of the market yet.

    COVID-19 crash 

    MF: Did you manage to buy a bit during the February-March dip?

    DK: We bought a little bit. The key thing we did was we got out of everything very early. So it was actually the end of January, early February that we cleared out completely.

    We’d been watching the coronavirus stats growing quite quickly. And we just figured that we’re reaching a point in the cycle that it was time to pull out.

    MF: There’s a viral video of you saying in January that the coronavirus would be a headwind.

    DK: Yeah. There’s an interview we did on the ABC where the stockbroker was saying, “No, it wasn’t going to be the next financial crisis”, and I was saying, “Look, I think it is going to be the next financial crisis.” 

    What it meant was we saved a lot of money for our clients from that decision and that, so we’ve been quite measured in terms of what we’ve been buying. 

    And we think that the market bounce back reached heights that we don’t think is justified. There’s certainly stocks out there that are fine, but in aggregate, we think the aggregate stocks that you can get, the risk return just doesn’t add up.

    Buying and selling 

    MF: What do you look at closely when considering buying a stock?

    DK: The first thing we do is any stock must fit into that quality value rank. We spent a lot of time trying to work out whether what we’ve got is true. What I mean by that is that it’s quite easy to create quantitative models that back-test very well in the past. The problem is getting models that are actually going to work going forward. 

    For every stock, you do need to go through and do a fundamental screen. So stocks that come up as being both very high quality and very cheap might seem like they’re going to be the greatest things ever, but almost always they’re value traps or they’ve got some fundamental problems. 

    It might be a healthcare stock that looks really great, but its patent is just about to expire in three years time or something like that, and there’s going to be a wave of competitors coming through. Or it might be a mine that’s finishing in five years. They’re making great profits now, everything looks great, but the profit’s going to run out.

    And so a lot of it is going through the fundamentals and not taking just a quantitative [view], but the qualitative as well.

    MF: What triggers you to sell a share?

    DK: Because we run this quite disciplined process in terms of quantitative measures, it actually puts the focus back on the analyst to justify things, because I think people have this natural tendency where you find a stock that’s quite cheap and the quality is just average. 

    It’s nothing special, nothing terrible, but it’s an average stock and it’s very cheap and people go and buy it. And next thing you know, the stock’s gone up a lot, say it’s doubled. And people start trying to convince themselves that actually, maybe this is a really high quality stock.

    It’s easy to fall in love with stocks from that perspective, and that’s where we use a quantitative process. Because the quantitative process doesn’t care about when you bought it or when you sold it. It’s basically just saying, no, this stock is expensive now, and the quality hasn’t changed and it’s up to the analysts to come back and justify the change or make changes to our outlook to keep it within the model. 

    We do have a lot more scope for the very high quality companies. We have scope for that to run a little bit further. So we can buy them when they’re average quality, average price. And they might run up to being a little bit expensive before we finally pull the trigger and say, “Okay, enough’s enough. It’s just too expensive at this point.”

    What’s coming up?

    MF: Where do you think the world is heading at the moment?

    DK: Back into more lockdowns is probably the obvious answer. 

    We’re in this weird tension where I think the coronavirus was treated as being a very short term problem by governments all around the world, and lots of stimulus was thrown at it: “We just need to get through this short two, three months shut down, and then everything will be back to normal”. 

    If we can just keep everything going the way it is then it’ll be fine, which if you don’t know how long it’s going to go for, that’s a fine assumption to make. But now we know it’s not, and we know the vaccines aren’t coming quickly. And when they do come, it’ll be question marks about how fast they get rolled out… So some of the measures to put in place at the start and not the right measures for this type of outcome. 

    For example, we put a lot of the stimulus was all front-loaded, and that is starting to fall off. Now we actually need stimulus to get people into new jobs because the old jobs – whether it be the number of waiters needed, people in the tourism sector or the number of airline hostesses we need – is a lot lower than what it used to be. We need to be finding those people new jobs. So the stimulus needs to be focused more about that, rather than trying to say, “Can we just maintain what we used to have?”

    The other part is that there were a lot of things put on in terms of stopping corporate bankruptcies and letting people go without paying their rent. Personal bankruptcies, we need to start letting these occur in a measured way, because what’s happening is the bad actors are going to start pulling down the good actors. 

    If you’ve got companies out there that should have gone broke six months ago, but didn’t, and they’re allowed to stay out there accruing more deaths… One supplier stops supplying to them because they won’t pay their bill. They switch to the next supplier and the next supplier and the next supplier, and these guys can’t take them to court because they’re not allowed to, and so these guys just keep racking up these bills.

    When they do go broke, now they can’t afford to pay their employees entitlements, and maybe they pulled down some of these suppliers who were overextended giving free stuff. So you’re starting to run into other problems. 

    And we’re waiting to see if the next round of stimulus is going to be as big as the last one. It doesn’t look like it’s going to be, and a divided house in the US isn’t going to help that. So we’re quite concerned about the economic outlook. For us it’s about trying to balance that with the extreme optimism we’re seeing in the stock market.

    Overrated and underrated shares

    MF: What’s your most underrated stock at the moment?

    DK: I’m going to put it into a category. It’s the value stocks which are underrated at the moment… Stocks that tend to be quite cheap, but there’s no obvious catalyst. 

    Quite often the story actually just isn’t that interesting within those stocks. I’ll use an example. There’s Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) – a supplier of computer chips – and their main competitor Advanced Micro Devices, Inc (NASDAQ: AMD), which recently came out with a much better chip. AMD is a lot smaller and more nimbler, and the share price has been on a tear. Whereas the Intel price has been going in the opposite direction.

    So two companies in the same sector with wildly different outlooks and I would certainly agree that AMD from a fundamental perspective looks way better. But if you look at last year’s earnings, Intel’s a little bit under 9 times last year’s earnings, whereas AMD’s on 90 times last year’s earnings. 

    So you’ve got to go, well, AMD is absolutely better. Is it 10 times better? 

    We look through that in a number of other different sectors. The names we come up with, quite frankly are quite boring. It might be things like HP or others that are just trading on price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios below 10, growth is looking actually quite anemic. And you’re not looking like you are going to get much performance, much earnings growth out of them. But at those rates, you’re actually getting a good yield. 

    They’re doing buybacks. As long as the capital is being managed, you just don’t know when it’s going to come good though, because it isn’t a sexy story. 

    It’s another thing when the market takes a bit of a tumble. A stock that’s on a 100 times PE has got a lot further to fall than a stock that’s on 7 or 8 times PE.

    MF: What do you think is the most overrated stock at the moment?

    DK: Certainly there’s some stocks in the tech sector that don’t deserve their premium. So we look through it and behind every bubble, there’s usually a grain of truth and there are stocks out there that we can look at within the tech sector we see why. 

    Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA)’s… probably one of the poster childs of very expensive, effectively not earning anything. It’s a story stock. So they make really nice cars, but is a stock 4 or 5 times better than what it was at the start of the year? 

    It’s pretty tough to come up with a reason why. But there’s a good story behind it, and everyone loves Elon Musk. Maybe not everyone, but there’s a large number of people who love him.

    MF: He has a personality cult going on, hasn’t he?

    DK: Exactly. We tend not to meet management for that reason. We’ll listen in to calls and we’ll run through the transcripts and all that sort of stuff, but we try not to get too close because you can fall in love with stories and magnetic founders.

    Looking back

    MF: Which stock are you most proud of from a past purchase?

    DK: Vestas Wind Systems A/S (CPH: VWS) is a stock which we bought a few years ago… It is the world’s biggest supplier of wind turbines. It’s a Danish company. We’re starting to tip it out now, because it is getting very expensive. 

    A lot of the green stocks have all been pushed up with the whole idea of, okay, Trump’s not going to be president anymore and we’ll have a Democrat president. Therefore possibly a Green New Deal can bid up the prices of these. 

    At the time (of purchase), Trump was in and pushing hard against these renewable energies. Our view was that the costs for renewable energy would reach a stage where they were compelling even without subsidies.

    So that was one we bought and rode that up. Now we’re starting to move out of that. We still like the company, still think it’s high quality, but it’s just the sector that’s flavour of the minute at the moment. 

    And we’d like to buy back in at lower prices.

    MF: Has COVID-19 changed or altered your investment methods at all?

    DK: In terms of the overall philosophy we have for trying to buy high quality stocks at the right price, no, it hasn’t. What it has changed dramatically in terms of what we’ve done in our quantitative models is it means we’ve completely down-weighted both last year’s earnings and the current year’s earnings. 

    Because what we’re looking at very much as a company is, where did we think this company can actually get back to? It’s not about what they’re going to deliver in 2020 or in 2021, because we know those are distorted periods. 

    It’s about trying to work out how much insight we really have into those later years… and also looking at historical (performance) and where do we think there’s a reasonable level for companies to get back to?

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Tony Yoo has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Don’t fall in love with a charismatic CEO, says fundie appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/3lfX29c

  • Synlait (ASX:SM1) share price 8% higher on land covenant settlement

    pouring glass of milk from glass milk bottle

    The Synlait Milk Ltd (ASX: SM1) share price was 8% higher today after the New Zealand-based dairy company settled its Pokeno land covenant legal dispute. The company has since paused trading, pending a further announcement.

    Pokeno land decision

    In February 2018, Synlait announced the conditional purchase of 28 hectares of land in Pokeno to establish its second nutritional powder manufacturing site.  

    In November 2018, the High Court removed covenants over the land that would hinder Synlait’s development. Synlait then took ownership of the land. On May 2019, the Court of Appeal overturned a previous High Court decision to remove historic covenants, which, if left in place, would hinder Synlait’s intention to develop the site. 

    In June 2019, Synlait filed an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court to have this decision overturned. 

    The company’s FY20 announcement back in October revealed that Synlait had made a reasonable settlement offer and was working towards one of two outcomes which it believed to be in the best interest of all – a reasonable settlement offer, or a court outcome. 

    The Pokeno site 

    Synlait’s Pokeno site is a newly constructed facility that only began production in late September 2019. The facility has the capacity to produce 45,000 metric tonnes of product and capable of producing a full suite of nutritional, formulated powders including infant-grade skim milk, whole milk and infant formula base powders. 

    Synlait share price higher on settlement agreement

    On Monday, the company announced that it had reached a settlement with New Zealand Industrial Park Ltd and Karl Ye regarding the historic land covenants at the company’s Pokeno site.

    Synlait CEO Leon Clement commented:

    Synlait and New Zealand Industrial Park are committed to work collaboratively for the benefit and integration of the Pokeno community and are pleased to have this behind us. We are also pleased to provide certainty for Synlait’s shareholders, customers, farmer suppliers and staff.

    Further details of the settlement agreement could not be disclosed due to confidentiality. However, the company does state that the settlement price was reasonable and not material to Synlait. 

    At the time of writing, Synlait shares are in a trading halt. Prior to this occurring, the Synlait share price had shot up by more than 8% on the news, trading for $5.54 per share.

    These Dividend Stocks Could Be Your Next Cash Kings (FREE REPORT)

    Motley Fool Australia’s Dividend experts recently released a brand-new FREE report revealing 3 dividend stocks with JUICY franked dividends that could keep paying you meaty dividends for years to come.

    Our team of investors think these 3 dividend stocks should be a ‘must consider’ for any savvy dividend investor. But more importantly, could potentially make Australian investors a heap of passive income.

    Don’t miss out! Simply click the link below to grab your free copy and discover these 3 high conviction stocks now.

    Returns As of 6th October 2020

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Lina Lim has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Synlait (ASX:SM1) share price 8% higher on land covenant settlement appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/2Ijb62O

  • Why the Catapult (ASX:CAT) share price is racing 12% higher today

    catapult share price

    The Catapult Group International Ltd (ASX: CAT) share price is racing higher on Monday following the release of a business update.

    In afternoon trade, the sports analytics and wearables company’s shares are up 12% to $1.97.

    What was in Catapult’s business update?

    This afternoon Catapult released an update on how it has been performing so far in FY 2021.

    According to the release, as of 9 November, the company’s cash balance had strengthened further, rising to US$24 million (excluding drawn loans). This is an increase of US$10.1 million from the end of the previous financial year, which is a big positive given its history of cash burn in the past.

    Management advised that the increase in its cash flow has been driven by strong cash collections, and ongoing cost savings associated with COVID-19.

    This has been underpinned by sports teams across numerous codes continuing to heavily utilise Catapult solutions during return-to-play programs and in competition. It notes that customer usage of its cloud-based SaaS solutions are higher than the previous year across all individual regions.

    And while new business opportunities remain challenged in the current environment, Catapult is utilising its strong cash position and positive cash flow to convert new opportunities and other capital sales to full SaaS subscription-based deals. Going forward, it expects a significant shift from capital to subscription for Performance & Health sales.

    Catapult CEO, Will Lopes, commented: “The continued strength of Catapult’s financial position is testament to the resilience and quality of our SaaS business model. This position of strength has enabled us to repay debt and maintain a healthy cash balance.”

    The chief executive also revealed that churn levels remain low and subscription renewals are strong.

    “Our focus on creating value for our customers with enhanced and innovative new solutions in a COVID environment has driven usage of our solutions to record levels. Although there is short-term pressure on the sport from COVID, our churn remains low and subscription renewals strong. While the signing of new business remains a challenge this year, COVID has not impacted the long term growth potential of the business,” he concluded.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Catapult Group International Ltd. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Catapult Group International Ltd. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Why the Catapult (ASX:CAT) share price is racing 12% higher today appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/3n4UHyb

  • It was close. Too close. At least now we have a winner

    Tug of War

    Well, that was some weekend.

    A contest between good and evil, a flurry of pointed tweets, plenty of conjecture over the law and, finally, an outcome.

    And that was just the Rugby on Saturday night.

    I’m pleased to say that the goodies managed to triumph, too!

    (That was probably the Rugby, too. Then again…)

    Okay, okay… settle down. I’m just having a little fun.

    Other than the All Blacks and Donald Trump, though, is it possible that the RBA was the Biggest Loser last week?

    No, I’m not going to have a rant about the rates decision (though, if I was in their shoes, I would have held at 0.25%), or even the $100 billion being spent to buy government bonds.

    Instead, it’s the Australian dollar that seems unduly keen to give the central bank a kick in the teeth.

    Lower rates and lower bond yields were supposed to help keep the dollar low.

    On Tuesday it was around US 70.5c.

    By last night, it was riding (relatively) high at a little over US 72.5c.

    Oops.

    So much for a lower dollar helping our export industries.

    It’s not the RBA’s fault, though. The rising Aussie Dollar had at least as much to do with a weakening Greenback as anything.

    And, like a Mack truck in a tug-o-war with a Mini, there’s only going to be one winner.

    Which does beg the question: wasn’t the RBA wasting time trying to create an outcome, playing a game it was only ever going to be a bit-player in?

    Wasn’t it bringing a knife to the proverbial gunfight?

    Probably.

    But…

    It’s easy to think that, right?

    Action —> Outcome.

    Not so fast.

    What we don’t know — and can never know — is what might have happened if the RBA hadn’t taken that action.

    Maybe, in the face of a weakening US dollar, the Little Aussie Battler would be at 73, 74 or even 75 US cents right now.

    I mean, it’s unlikely the RBA action had no impact at all. And if that’s true, the dollar would be higher if they’d done nothing.

    But, as I said, we’ll never know.

    Frustrating, huh?

    Unfortunately, that’s also just the world we live in.

    The boffins call it the ‘counterfactual’ — what might have otherwise happened if a given action wasn’t taken.

    Donald Trump has just lost the election. For every commentator who says “Trump should’ve…” or “Biden won because…” we can reasonably ask how they can ever know.

    Was Trump too bombastic? Or would he have garnered even fewer votes if he’d become a shadow of himself?

    Did Biden win because his running mate, Kamala Harris, was near-opposite in almost every demographic way, or did that scare off some more conservative voters? Or, is there a third possibility: that it didn’t matter either way?

    Did the mail-in scare campaign keep Republican voters away? Or did those concerns increase the number of them who voted on election day?

    You might have an answer to each of those questions. I have a leaning, too.

    But I want you to suspend the urge to jump to any of those conclusions.

    I want you to, instead, first think: “We can’t know and will never know”

    Then, by all means, try to scientifically consider the range of inputs and explanations and come up with a theory.

    But, again, try not to just fall back to your current preconceptions.

    They’re convenient. Hell, they might even be right.

    But if we don’t seriously, rigorously consider the other options, we’re not going to learn anything.

    We won’t — can’t — evolve.

    One of my colleagues, Anirban Mahanti, is a zealous Tesla shareholder. And, frankly, that’s been a really profitable perspective.

    And, given he’s a long term shareholder, he’s watched the almost constant stream of short-sellers attacking the company’s shares for years.

    I’m not sure whether he’d consider himself completely unbiased, but he also makes a really interesting point:

    The Tesla short-sellers’ theses seem to shift (or, less charitably, conveniently change) as their existing theses fall by the wayside.

    From “Tesla will never manage to operate a factory successfully” to “The cars catch fire” to “It’ll run out of cash” to “It’s not cash flow positive”, the latest (dominant) short thesis centres around valuation.

    Now, I have no view on Tesla. I really (really!) don’t want to hear from Tesla bulls or bears.

    But given those negative views have been held, in almost-seamless succession, by some of the same people, isn’t it just a little bit likely that at least some of them are trying to find a reason to support their preconceived view, rather than letting their thinking evolve with the information?

    Maybe — eventually — the Tesla shorts might be right. But it almost certainly won’t be because the cars catch fire, or the company isn’t able to run a factory effectively.

    And if they’re eventually right, having just conveniently evolved their short theses to suit their preconceptions, you can put that down to luck, rather than skill.

    (And yes, the same accusation can be levelled at many Tesla bulls who, one could argue, might have been irrationally certain in the past, too!)

    Investing — done properly — is the art of taking calculated risks. It’s keeping a mind that’s as open as possible, having enough conviction to buy shares in a given company, but not so much that it blinds you to changing circumstances that might require you to sell. (And the opposite, in the case of short-sellers!)

    And, frankly, it’s accepting that you’ll be wrong, too. Almost certainly more often than you’re comfortable with.

    Done well, over time, the risks you take will produce a return that more than makes up for the ones that don’t work out.

    And — here’s the discomforting bit for those who prefer easy cause-effect relationships — sometimes you’ll be right for the wrong reasons and wrong for the right reasons. Sometimes, the world won’t act the way you think it should. 

    Worst of all, you can apply the same logic to two almost-identical situations, and get a different result in each!

    As an investor, you’ve just gotta make your peace with it. You have to take the world as it is, not the way you wish it was.

    And remember, the future is inherently unknowable. All you can do is find an investing process that tends to work more often than it doesn’t, and for which the average gains are greater than the average losses.

    Leave irrational belief and hope for the football field — and for next year’s Bledisloe Cup!

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Scott Phillips has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. owns shares of and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post It was close. Too close. At least now we have a winner appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/32omVMk

  • Nine (ASX:NEC) share price edges up on rugby union deal

    rising arrow on staircase symbolising business growth

    The Nine Entertainment Co Holdings Ltd (ASX: NEC) share price is up by 1.09% at the time of writing, after the company announced it has reached an in-principle agreement with Rugby Union Australia for the rights to all Wallabies and Wallaroos test matches. This brings the 25-year partnership between Foxtel and Rugby Union Australia to a close. 

    What are the details of the agreement?

    The agreement covers a number of high profile events internationally. For example, the premier domestic and trans-Tasman competitions including Super W, Super Rugby Australia and Super Rugby Aotearoa. In addition, it includes international matches featuring New Zealand, South Africa and Argentina, and the New Zealand and South African domestic competitions.

    The three-year deal, based around both live free-to-air and subscription coverage, is worth approximately $100 million, and includes a two-year option for Nine to extend. Based on this deal, which only requires the approval of the body which oversees Super Rugby, Nine is launching Stan Sports. This will be a live and on-demand premium sports package to be offered as a bundle to Stan’s streaming customers from 2021.

    The launch of Stan Sports will enable Nine to provide extensive live and on-demand coverage. Additionally, the company advised it is progressing opportunities to invest in additional exclusive sports rights to drive its long-term subscriber growth and profitability objectives.

    Company performance

    In its FY20 annual report, Nine stated that digital now comprised almost half of the company’s earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA). This is a 38% increase on FY19. Its streaming service, Stan, has seen strong growth in active subscribers and profitability. Several financial KPIs saw increases during FY20. For example, revenue was up 17%, and group EBITDA was up 13%. The company attributed this in part to cost savings to tackle low advertising revenues caused by COVID-19.

    In FY21, Nine plans to generate about 60% of EBITDA from digital businesses, along with more than 35% of group revenues from subscriptions.

    At the time of writing, the Nine share price is $2.32 per share. Nine shares are up by 27% since the start of the year.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Daryl Mather has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Nine (ASX:NEC) share price edges up on rugby union deal appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/2JQz8mL

  • Is the Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) share price the best REIT of 2020?

    row of white eggs with cartoon sad faces with one gold egg with happy face and crown representing high performing asx share

    The Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) share price has been the most dominant ASX 200 real estate investment trust (REIT) performer in 2020. Its shares closed at an all-time record high last Friday of $19.66 or an almost 50% return this calendar year. The company also yields a modest 1.50% to top things off. 

    Best performing ASX200 REIT? 

    The Goodman share price has outperformed all its mid to large cap REIT cap peers.

    This includes the likes of retail REITs such as Scentre Group (ASX: SCG) and Vicinity Centres (ASX: VCX) which are still down 40% year-to-date. Both companies highlight recovering rental collections and improving customer visitations to its shopping centres in quarterly updates this month. They also both revealed the intention to pay a distribution late this year or early next year subject to circumstances.  

    Even pure industrial REITs such as Centuria Industrial REIT (ASX: CIP) and APN Industria REIT (ASX: ADI) are still down 10% year-to-date. This is despite significant improvements in their share prices since COVID-19-related March lows.

    What’s driving the Goodman share price?

    The Goodman Group operates a unique real estate portfolio compared to more ‘traditional’ office and retail REITs. The company owns a highly industrial concentrated portfolio that focuses on real estate in urban infill market where supply is limited and demand is driven by consumers. The scarcity of land in these areas drives increased intensity of use. This includes multi-story logistics, data centres and other commercial uses that provide potential value add opportunities. 

    On 5 October, Goodman released its first quarter trading update that outlined strong real estate fundamentals with demand being driven by “customers adapting to the acceleration in online and digital activity and more intensively utilisating available space in our markets”. These strong underlying characteristics have allowed the company to maintain high occupancy rates, a strong development pipeline driven by demand and increasing assets under management. The trading update reaffirms the group’s forecast FY21 operating earnings per security of 62.7 cents, an increase of 9% on FY20. 

    Credit Suisse has followed up on its quarterly update by raising its Goodman share price target from $17.34 to $19.84 with a neutral rating. 

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Lina Lim has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Is the Goodman Group (ASX: GMG) share price the best REIT of 2020? appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/3piizR5

  • Here’s why ASX gold shares are surging today

    asx gold share prices

    Last week, the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) had a fantastic few days at the end there. The prospects of a Biden presidency together with a divided Congress helped push ASX 200 shares up by more than 4% over the week, with a 1.3% gain on Thursday and a further 0.82% on Friday. Today, this trend seems to be continuing into the new week, with the ASX 200 up another 1.68% at the time of writing to 6,294 points.

    One of the sectors outperforming even these impressive gains is ASX gold miners. The ASX’s largest gold miner – Newcrest Mining Limited (ASX: NCM) was up 4.77% over last week and 3.54% on Friday alone. Today, it’s up another 0.91%. Other ASX gold miners enjoyed similar moves. Northern Star Resources Ltd (ASX: NST) was up more than 7% on Friday and up another 0.36% today. Resolute Mining Limited (ASX: RSG) is displaying similar moves, as is Gold Road Resources Ltd (ASX: GOR).

    Why are ASX gold miners shining as of late, ahead even of bullish performances by the ASX 200? It’s probably got something to do with the gold price itself.

    Gold shines for investors

    Gold can be a strange commodity. It is accepted that gold behaves as a ‘defensive’ or ‘safe haven’ asset, often rising in times of economic or geopolitical uncertainty, and falling when investors are feeling comfortable and less ‘risk-averse’. A week ago, when the markets seemed to be pricing in a Biden landslide and a Democratic ‘blue wave’ as the most likely election result, gold was trading at US$1,882 an ounce.

    Today, it is trading at US$1,957.65 an ounce. That’s a 4% increase in just one week.

    And that’s probably behind the surging share prices of gold miners like Newcrest and Northern Star.

    See, the economics of the mining industry means that the mining companies are ‘leveraged’ in a way to the price of the commodity they mine.

    Take Newcrest Mining. In its last annual report, Newcrest told investors that it’s all-in sustaining cost (AISC) of extracting one ounce of gold form its largest mine (Cadia in NSW) was US$843. That means that when gold fetches more than this price, it represents pure profit for Newcrest. It also means that, even though gold rose 4% in value over the past week, Newcrest’s profit margins for Cadia increased from US$1,039.60 an ounce to US$1,114.65 an ounce – an increase of 7.22%.

    This same phenomenon applies across all gold miners. And it’s likely for this reason that ASX gold shares are outperforming the ASX 200 today.

    Where to invest $1,000 right now

    When investing expert Scott Phillips has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, the flagship Motley Fool Share Advisor newsletter he has run for more than eight years has provided thousands of paying members with stock picks that have doubled, tripled or even more.*

    Scott just revealed what he believes are the five best ASX stocks for investors to buy right now. These stocks are trading at dirt-cheap prices and Scott thinks they are great buys right now.

    *Returns as of June 30th

    More reading

    Motley Fool contributor Sebastian Bowen owns shares of Newcrest Mining Limited. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

    The post Here’s why ASX gold shares are surging today appeared first on Motley Fool Australia.

    from Motley Fool Australia https://ift.tt/2IhD0fI