Login | Register
Profile | Log out
logo

  • Home
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Other
    • Market Updates
    • Explainers
    • Satire
  • About
  • Contact Us
    • Contact
    • Get Covered
    • Posting Guidelines
  • Subscribe
Submit An Article

Latest Articles

  • BirdDog Boosts Buy-Back Offer by 40% Ahead of ASX Delisting Vote
    BirdDog Boosts Buy-Back Offer by 40% Ahead of ASX Delisting Vote
    • News

  • AML3D Launches High-Tech U.S. Facility to Power Submarine Supply Chain
    AML3D Launches High-Tech U.S. Facility to Power Submarine Supply Chain
    • News

  • Vection Enters $520K Agritech Deal to Build AI-Powered Farming Robot
    Vection Enters $520K Agritech Deal to Build AI-Powered Farming Robot
    • News

  • Unith Achieves Strong Growth in Platform Usage and Strategic Partnerships
    Unith Achieves Strong Growth in Platform Usage and Strategic Partnerships
    • News

  • FBR and Samsung Heavy Industries Execute Engineering Service Agreement for Shipbuilding Automation Project
    FBR and Samsung Heavy Industries Execute Engineering Service Agreement for Shipbuilding Automation Project
    • News

  • Bioxyne Lifts FY2025 Revenue Forecast as Psychedelics and Pharma Push Gains Pace
    Bioxyne Lifts FY2025 Revenue Forecast as Psychedelics and Pharma Push Gains Pace
    • News

  • dorsaVi Secures Breakthrough Memory Tech to Supercharge Sensor Capabilities
    dorsaVi Secures Breakthrough Memory Tech to Supercharge Sensor Capabilities
    • News

  • Australia’s GDP inches higher in March 2025 quarter
    Australia’s GDP inches higher in March 2025 quarter
    • News

  • Soul Patts and Brickworks Strike $14 Billion Deal to Create a Newly Capitalised ASX-Listed Company
    Soul Patts and Brickworks Strike $14 Billion Deal to Create a Newly Capitalised ASX-Listed Company
    • News

  • TruScreen Secures NZ$2.35M in Fresh Capital to Expand Global Cervical Screening Footprint
    TruScreen Secures NZ$2.35M in Fresh Capital to Expand Global Cervical Screening Footprint
    • News

Three small cap ASX plodders now positioning for the home straight

  • In Opinion
  • June 16, 2021
  • Tim Boreham
Three small cap ASX plodders now positioning for the home straight

Almost every small-cap investor knows the pain of investing in the next big thing, only to find their stock remains resolutely that: a small cap.

Or even worse the company ceases to be altogether, providing fodder for the ever-booming insolvency industry.

Even more annoying is the regret of investors losing patience with a serial plodder, only for the company to come good after they’ve sold out.

So in the June tax selling period, we highlight three industrial stalwarts that have long lost the patience of investors but look to be coming good.

Don’t bail on them just yet.

TZ Limited (TZL)

A leader in self-service technology, TZ should have surfed the boom in ecommerce but the company became enveloped in corporate dramas after it listed in 1999.

Notably, a $6.25 million fraud carried out between 2006 and 2008 resulted in the jailing of two directors, Andrew Sigalla and John Falconer.

The company’s profile was elevated after entrepreneur Mark Bouris – host of The Apprentice and founder of Wizard home Loans – joined as executive chair in mid 2009 (he departed in 2017).

Nowadays the joint is run by entrepreneur Scott Beeton, whose first day involved sending everyone home on the first day of the Covid lockdowns in March last year.

Beeton also radically cut costs (including executive salaries) and rejigged the products and sales channels.

“We overpromised and underdelivered for too long,” he says. “We overspent on our tech to get to where we are.”

TZ’s core product is a lightweight ‘smart’ lock product that enables remote monitoring. The company also makes money out of the subscription software that enables the surveillance, as well as hosting and the physical lockers themselves.

Vaunted applications are larger cabinets for items like scooters and gun cabinets for police departments and the military.

TZ’s clients include Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Singapore Post, well-known US universities and Westpac (which has 26,000 corporate day lockers).

“Not many Australian small caps will service the biggest tech, postal companies and banks in the world,” Beeton says.

In a May 28 update, management said new contracts would take TZ’s recurring revenue base to $3 million in the 2021-22 year. “My goal is to get that to $10 million by 2022-23,” Beeton says.

The company cites $US8.6 million ($11.1m) of additional US orders, a “significant share” of which will be recognised in the 2021-22 year

Locally, TZ expects to sign contracts for $2 million of gear to fit out 6000 lockers, with $150,000 a year of annuity revenue over three years.

In late May TZ said it had secured a $1 million upgrade services agreement with global logistics company DSV South Africa. The company has previously supplied $3 million of lockers to the global logistics company.

In April this year the company bolstered its anaemic financial position with a $2.58 million placement and launched a $7.06m one-for-two rights issue, both at 12c apiece. The latter is expected to attract subscriptions of $4.5-5m, with management confident of placing the shortfall.

TZ’s prospects have been weighed down by an $11.75 million debt facility with its biggest shareholder First Samuel, repayable at the end of July.

Most of the proceeds from the raising will be used to repay the debt, with First Samuel also agreeing to take up its $1.25 million rights allocation.

TZ shares traded at 3 cents a year ago. In an unexplained blip they jumped from 17c to 36c on April 21.

With a repaired balance sheet, TZ can lock in a brighter future.

Orbital Corporation (OEC)

Having been listed on the ASX for close to four decades, the fuel-delivery technology group looked to have run out of juice well before the pit stop but its engine is still running.

The Perth-based Orbital has had numerous iterations over the years and it certainly now has nothing to do with the orbital engine made famous by its founder Ralph Sarich.

After being snubbed by the car industry, Orbital turned to the burgeoning market for military drones, or tactical military unmanned aerial vehicles (TUAVs).

Orbital’s injection method keeps the fuel and oil separate, with a fine mist sprayed directly into the combustion chamber. The Orbital-powered drones can stay in the air longer – up to 20 hours – and require less maintenance.

As is always the case with selling to the military, suppliers need an ‘in’ with the military bigwigs.

Orbital’s production is underpinned by a deal with drone maker Insitu, a division of Boeing. It also has a less formative development and supply agreement with Lycoming (an arm of Textron Systems) and a research and development contract with Northrop Grumman to build a hybrid propulsion system.

Worth up to $350 million, the five-year Insitu agreement involves manufacturing and servicing five different motors, three of them Orbital designed and two of them Insitu-designed.

Orbital chalked up revenue of $19 million in the first half to December 2020, with an operating profit of $600,000 compared to a previous $1.9m loss.

Management has guided to turnover of $30-40 million for the full year, compared with $34 million previously. This flat expectation stems from Boeing tapering back orders, presumably temporarily, because of “prevailing market conditions.”

Orbital shares have enjoyed a strong run since early March. As with the drones, profits need to fly stronger for longer before long-standing investors can be convinced the epic 36 year journey has been worthwhile.

Funtastic (FUN)

In June 23 Funtastic holders will file into their (virtual) EGM to vote on changing the serial laggard’s moniker to Toys’R’Us ANZ Ltd.

A name switcheroo has been a measure of last resort for many a straggler and, in isolation, tends not to help (just ask shareholders of One Steel/Arrium).

But in Funtastic’s case the proposed new identity stems from last year’s reverse takeover of Louis Mittoni’s The Hobby Warehouse Group, which provides a firmer online presence via the local rights to the Toys’R’Us name, as well as the newer Babies’R’Us.

Funtastic also acquires the Mittoni Ltd distribution business, which imports consoles and other e-gaming paraphernalia.

Funded by a $33 million placement the deal saw Mr Mittoni installed as CEO and new ways prevailing.

In the past Funtastic has failed to turn a quid despite holding the rights to kiddie favourites including Lego, Bob the Builder, Thomas the Tank Engine and Pillow Pets.

With the Hobby Warehouse deal completed in late November 2020, Funtastic reported a $1.01 million profit for the half year to January 2021, compared with a $4.2m loss previously.

Revenue gained 15 per cent to $16.2 million but if the acquired business had been part of the company for the whole period, turnover would have been $31m despite a falling contribution from Funtastic’s legacy business-to-business arm.

  • About
  • Latest Posts
Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021
  •  
  •  
  •  
  •  
  • Opinion

Leave a Comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • About
  • Latest Posts
Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021

Login or register for free to access unlimited reading

Register Now!
  • About
  • Latest Posts
Tim Boreham
Tim Boreham edits The New Criterion
Latest posts by Tim Boreham (see all)
  • Amid dazzling returns, is now the time to join the diamond hunt? - November 10, 2021
  • Two listed ag stocks that promise a bounteous harvest for investors - November 3, 2021
  • ASX-listed e-gaming stocks show promise but are they in the main event? - October 27, 2021
  • News

  • Opinion

  • Satire

  • About

  • Contact Us

  • Subscribe

The content published on this website is solely for general information purposes and is not to be construed as financial advice. Should you seek financial advice you should consult with an appropriately qualified person. Opinions expressed on this site are subject to change without notice and The Sentiment who produced this content is under no obligation to keep the information current. The Sentiment, affiliated companies & associates may have a conflict of interest with companies discussed on the website due to commercial arrangements, for example they may be shareholders in the company, be engaged by them to assist in investor communications or receive commission/brokerage for funds raised.

Copyright © 2020 The Sentiment. All rights reserved.
Subscribe

Enter your email address below to subscribe to The Sentiment’s weekly newsletter, highlighting the top news, research, opinion and satire articles shaping ASX investor sentiment.

The Sentiment respects your privacy and will not spam you. View our privacy policy here.