I think it's worth revisiting Aquis #AQX here in light of a couple of data points that have since come out.
There are three main parts to the co: a stock exchange (AQSE); a tech licencing biz and their multilateral trading facility (AQXE) - it's this last one I want to look at.
First is the RNS from earlier this month announcing their MTF (investopedia.com/terms/m/multil…) had achieved 6.2% market share. Across the €53.6B traded on AQXE in July, this came out to €1.7B a day.
Those 6.2% and €1.7B are quite significant numbers and I'll come back to them later
In the period since the beginning of 2018 market share has risen from 1.72% to that 6.2% above. Here's how that value traded looks.
This success may be due in part to certain rule-based and technical attributes of AQXE but perhaps also in good part to the company's experimental revenue model. The CEO explains it in interviews using Amazon Prime as an example - in short, subscriptions change consumption habits
The second and perhaps more important data point is this brief mention of AQXE membership numbers in the post-period highlights of the most recent FY report.
The numbers below speak for themselves as to why.
Just as new stores take time to mature as consumers adapt to them, in 3 years the company increased membership numbers by just over a quarter but grew revenues by nearly 4x - and here the store base just expanded significantly
A new cohort will take time to bed in, establish their trading behaviours etc but it's not hard to eyeball a scenario where revenues begin annualising in the mid teens before too long and op lev really kicks in. At the risk of embarrassing myself again..
..I come up with a H1/21 subscription revenue of somewhere between £4.5M - £5.5M depending on the "take rate", which of course doesn't exist given the revenue model :) If, somehow, that's anywhere near correct, it's +20%-50% on the yearly comps and 10%-40% on the sequentials
Put that all together, invent numbers for the other parts and at the low end it could still be something like +20% yearly.
Licencing's for another time but it's an interesting biz - H2/20 bump may be an initiative for Aquis' trading tech into Amazon AWS & Singapore exchange
Significant numbers: Reading up on the arcana of MTFs the TLDR big issue has been that without major sell-side sponsorship, new entrant MTFs fail to get traction and die yet experimental upstart AQX at €1.7B daily is now within shooting distance of mighty LSE's Turquoise at €2B
Whether there's some natural limit to the amount of share market participants would allow a MTF to take or what the response is likely from other operators, IDK but at 6.2% mkt share and 6/7th overall, there's still room for growth if even if that were only from cohort maturation
6.2% share also seems significant because this was more or less the level where BATS bought the Chi-X MTF 10 years ago for $360M according to the WSJ - sold to them by one Alasdair Haynes, founder and CEO of Aquis.
Aquis looks v expensive but just on the sub revs alone I'm not so sure it is. It's already decently CF +ve and whilst I don't know what multiple MTF sub revenue merits, w/the barriers to entry, market success and the growth embedded in the model, I suspect it could be quite high
Trade data posted up by #AQX today perhaps suggesting the start of some decent traction with the sudden new cohort of client members and potentially quite a strong H2
Good results from #AQX. A rise of 20% sequentially in the subscriptions but perhaps more surprising is that +100% in the data line - revenues from the sale of price data from the MTF, commentary suggests the result of a price increase, so presumably this run-rate sticks around
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$RADA makes small tactical military radars. The recent sell off hasn't made it cheap but it has begun to bring it closer to GARP territory
It's a rare pure-play on a theme that's perhaps not yet widely appreciated and is hard to access directly but you can see it in the numbers
Here's where it trades on a forward sales multiple against some of the big diversified defence majors - has lost much of the premium and now sits a little off the top end. Brits bottom of the pile.
Same group of majors but here on forward EBITDA multiples and towards the bottom end excluding the UK companies.
Naive view but I think Hunting #HTG may be on its way back to Covid lows because it's orphaned on the wrong market and there's an information disconnect - if so, my guess is that it's pretty oversold here.
The company isn't a pure play but it's good enough to say it's very shale exposed, towards the completion side vs the drilling side of things.
Three year chart to around May 2021: HTG in green vs several US oil services ETFs - as you can see, they trade in lockstep.
Same chart but on a 2021 YTD basis and it starts diverging somewhere around mid summer.
IG Design #IGR was a ten bagger in the 5 years leading up to Covid. An update a fortnight ago dropped the shares by half and erased all the gains in the most recent five years. Knife catching and broken growth this soon is almost always a mistake but IG may be an exception here.
My basic premise with it is that the accounts are a complicated nightmare (CTRL+f for "adjust" is 232 hits in the last FY report) but most immediately, that this is right now a gross margin story - I think there are grounds to at least consider whether IG can be given a pass here
Unfortunately, it does mean walking through it so grab a.. (just no) so anyway, here's the rough idea: Pre-covid in white, M&A growth darling, 20% gross margins. Forget the op margin for now - I'm stripping out the adjustments that made adjusted whatever go up and to the right
Saw a one-line tweet the other day mentioning McColls #MCLS as one of 2 highest conviction names.
I think I see why: there's a metamorphosis happening underneath and reasonable path to PE and FCF multiples between 2-3 plus a growth narrative, all under that lovely grim exterior
Story is that they're shrinking. 1500+ stores 2 years back, to 1050 by the end of FY21
Also changing: culling small newsagent shops to focus towards larger, more profitable grocery-heavy stores. So far, so worthy - but the real interest is the transformation into Morrisons Daily
Company raised recently to accelerate a programme converting 350 stores into these Mini Morrisons. They're at 56 today, will be 350 by end FY22
Cost is £90K per shop, what they call "cash payback" is 2-3 years and so far they're providing pretty immediate LFL sales growth of 25%
What does Sneller see to get such sudden FOMO for the old zombie that is Iofina #IOF? If you recall the name, it should produce revulsion but a few things have changed and there's a chance it may be about to make some money.
IOF produces Iodine in the US via O&G brine. Iodine is a beneficiary of industrial recovery generally and covid specifically - the largest use is used as x-ray contrast which may benefit demand from catch up on delayed hospital treatment.
And because it's 2021, inevitably:
Production is trapped on the wrong side of the Pacific: the two major production centres are Japan and Chile - so you have the obvious logistics issues for both and potentially politics for the latter.
Someone else has also since mentioned $JAKK to me - it's a (shitco) toy maker, similar to Character Group #CCT in the UK. CC's tweet mentions the refi, he has a point - I think there may be something here to play for, perhaps towards a double or so before the end of the year.
Company has cash of $80M + new debt of $99M (pink) repays difference on prior debt of $129M with cash on hand (green) so $50M cash + debt $99M
6,395 shares at $10.6, converts at $5.65 (purple) into $18.9M (blue) so + 3,345 shares = 9,740 / $103 cap & $20M prefs (grey) $172M EV
As you can see it's highly seasonal into Q3. Mgmt mentioned in the last (Q1) call that inventories are low. Typically they would be about $20M higher than here in Q2, so if we penalise the cash in the EV by that amount to account for inventory build we're at $192M