Dona Ferentes
Did the Thessalonians write back?
- Joined
- 11 January 2016
- Posts
- 20,244
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and coming in at #11 (2.8% of total) at Mirrabooka; its the sort of stock that appears in 'value' portfoliosI notice WAA has listed EQT in one of its Top 20 Holdings.
also in Mirrabooka's, as at July 2022 - #19I notice WAA has listed EQT in one of its Top 20 Holdings.
would you really be comfortable with a LIC with WAA's mandate being much larger . sometimes small and nimble gets the cherries ( and only the cherries )Not directly related to EQT but I see it's not longer in the Top 20 of WAA - and I was surprised how small is WAA at a mere $57m in assets.
am still thinking , but i already participate in the EQT DRP ...also in Mirrabooka's, as at July 2022 - #19
And more consolidation in the field - with a market cap above $500Mill, EQT is one of the acquirers
"A transformative acquisition with compelling strategic and economic rationale."
Highlights
• EQT Holdings Limited to acquire Australian Executor Trustees Limited for total cash consideration of $135 million
• To be funded through a $125 million fully underwritten equity raising and new debt facility... comprising a $40.4 million institutional placement and $84.6 million from a 1 for 6 accelerated pro-rata non-renounceable entitlement offer; both at $24.00
• Strategically and financially compelling acquisition that delivers significant growth for EQT
• Complements EQT’s TWS private client business, adding scale, expertise and geographic spread
• Adds $5.4 billion in FUMAS, boosts overall revenue and EBITDA by more than a third, and expected to be earnings accretive
• Synergies expected from restructure of platform service business and additional investment revenues in relation to the Trustee Services business
• Balance sheet remains strong, retaining flexibility for the future
deservedly so, if this is the scant sequence of events that allowed First Guardian to be added as an optiondown more than 13 percent
ASIC, the corporate regulator, is suing ASX-listed superannuation business Equity Trustees for allegedly failing to conduct proper due diligence..
that caveat alone should have caused an avalanche of red flags ( up to 50% in any long/short fund in recent times since 2020 )The only caveat was that any investment in Shield should be capped at 50 per cent of a person’s portfolio.
now my return email may not have been very polite , but i would have replied ( and so should somebody appropriate at EQT )No one from the Equity Trustees oversight department ever replied to her email
instead of investment advisors, try risk analysts.' )
it gives the appearance the company has been recruiting sales staff rather than investment advisors ?
and a further drop yesterday after Macquarie fessed up and will repay all net capital - some $321 million - to investorsdown more than 13 percent
this is making the statement of 04 September a little brave. (since then, radio silence)ASIC, the corporate regulato, is suing ASX-listed superannuation business Equity Trustees for allegedly failing to conduct proper due diligence over the now-collapsed Shield Master Fund, which had $160 million of retirement savings funnelled into it via the super firm’s channels before it failed last year.
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