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Great for those that have been CBA holders for the long termStupidity![]()
Great for those that have been CBA holders for the long termStupidity![]()
Do you remember when AMP first floated onto the ASX the SP went ballistic and people put their houses and life savings on it, only to see it go belly up and lose a hell of a lot of precious coin.I think there is alot of fomo going on there. Most expensive bank in the world but that doesn't mean it can't go higher lol.
Well got 6 months to go below 140 and i will be happy, otherwise my super ETFs will benefit...
Great for those that have been CBA holders for the long term
Would make more sense than actual. Investment by a US fundagainst the tide, today . CBA went down 2.5 percent or $4.23 to $163.77.
the other banks were up, about 1 percent
View attachment 198034
and theory #4
Phil King’s $29bn Regal Funds Management is believed to have waved a white flag on his Commonwealth Bank short position on Tuesday, sparking a massive 4.2 per cent rise in its shares.
Bell Potter’s head of institutional sales and trading, Richard Coppleson said a local institutional investor with a “huge short in CBA” had bought CBA shares to cover that position.
I remember 8% being the norm for a while in the early 2000’s for CBAI remember when banks had a dividend yield of about 6% and a pe of around 12.
What's going on here?
View attachment 197943
it might be a 'flight to safety ' betting the Government would bail out CBA if needed ( or just to big the fail in general )I remember when banks had a dividend yield of about 6% and a pe of around 12.
What's going on here?
View attachment 197943
In a nutshell, CBA is detached from fundamentals, and guided by capital flow instead.Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) is the largest stock on the ASX, but we recommend a proxy short position on CBA to track our investment ideas as of 19 July 2024, starting at $131.63. This recommendation is based on valuation concerns, including high price/earnings and price/tangible book ratios, which we find difficult to justify, especially with a deteriorating economic outlook that could impact CBA’s asset quality, such as distressed mortgages. Additionally, potential share capital outflow may occur if the Australian dollar strengthens, and buying support at current prices seems weak, given the traded dividend yield of 3.46%, which is below the RBA cash rate.
Our bearish stance aligns with the broader market sentiment but differs in the timing of the trade. We identify a sticky investor illiquidity premium and indiscriminate buying by ETFs as key factors, with passive index funds becoming net buyers of CBA in 2024, replacing active mutual funds. Retail investors remain hesitant, influenced by capital gains tax concerns and CBA’s unappealing yield, despite the bank’s significant buy-back programs reducing shares by 7% since 2021. Foreign investment in CBA has increased from 12% in 2021 to 17% in 2024, largely driven by active mutual funds, and these investors are exposed to AUD currency risks. Given recent gains in AUD/USD, CBA’s share price, and dividends, totaling about 22%, we question when foreign investors might exit.
Furthermore, domestic risks are easing, and recent positive results from U.S. banks suggest improving asset quality concerns. This could prompt foreign investors, who may have favored CBA over U.S. or European banks for better risk/reward dynamics, to withdraw their capital from CBA in the near term.
i am very underweight in the big 4 ( including ETF and LIC exposure ) because in deciding my investment path ( in 2011 ) , i could see no sensible path of growth and i NEEDED some sensible growth ( not just ten-bagger penny dreadfuls )I wrote the note below, in July 2024. I would be deeply in the red by now.
In a nutshell, CBA is detached from fundamentals, and guided by capital flow instead.
CBA rally was sparked by fund outflows from China for some years now (my story starts at 2023), APAC mandated funds required to maintain exposure to APAC has to pick the best of the duds. Japan is a potential timebomb - decades in the making. HK now = China. Taiwan = ?? China?? SEA markets too tiny. So lets all slot into ASX.
After that, domestic fundies looking at P/B or P/E or listening to analyst looking at p/e or p/b were thinking, CBA short. They sold.
On the other side of the trade, smarter people at the superfunds accumulated. Super funds now have higher weighting to banks vs domestic. Domestic underowns banks/index. Everytime bank rallys, domestic fund underperforms. Dec-23 came around, domestic FMs began throwing the towel in one by one. They become net buyers (and no one is selling). The more they underperformn, the more incentivised they are to buy CBA and get to net neutral.
Meanwhile, international macro fundies are just sitting tight with their bank holdings. They were suppose to sell, but never saw the catalyst for it. If anything, trump's win = negative China (irregardless of relative positioning of the US post tarriffs). Negative China = more outflows. More outflows with nowhere to go, fighting with domestic fundies trying to get net netural = cba goes up.
Last point. Contrary to many beliefs, CBA is illiquid. 50% of retail holders HODL-ing since age of dinosaurs. Dont want to get CGT-ed by the ATO. have a lot of room to "incur" a decline in the value of their CBA shares, before holding CBA outweights the loss from CGT.
Hopefully easy to follow, was a bit of a brain dump from work i did awhile back.
the meteor will wipe you lot out, too..
Last point. Contrary to many beliefs, CBA is illiquid. 50% of retail holders HODL-ing since age of dinosaurs. Dont want to get CGT-ed by the ATO. have a lot of room to "incur" a decline in the value of their CBA shares, before holding CBA outweights the loss from CGT..
Mr DF,the meteor will wipe you lot out, too.
no , I'm one of those long term holders. and happy.Mr DF,
I thought you were a fan of CBA tegardless of SP and the quote post goes your way so i am a bit lost.
Are you now a CBA bear, should I open a club?
With labour probably winning at the election, the local politics of more taxes and less critical thinking/ economics is probably a plus for CBA.they will not rock the boat with their mate
I just base my 6 month short play on global monetary issues which Australia will not be isolated from.
you may have missed the aim of my retort ... an earlier poster called early investors in CBA "dinosaurs". He then mentioned good reasons why they don't sell.Are you now a CBA bear, should I open a club?
.... more taxes and less critical thinking ...
I just base my 6 month short play on global monetary issues which Australia will not be isolated from.
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