Research notes

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Research Notes

Strong markets helped but costs to sting in FY26

Aust Securities Exchange
3:27pm
August 14, 2025
ASX’s FY25 result was in line with MorgE and consensus expectations overall. At the top line, revenue was +7% vs the pcp to A$1,107m, driven largely by: 1) a strong Markets performance (‘Futures & OTC’ +~10% and Cash markets +~15% vs pcp); and 2) a +13% year-on-year increase in net interest income received. We make several changes across our forecast period, and factor in the additional A$25-A$35m ASIC related costs for FY26. Our FY26-FY28 EPS estimates are downgraded by 1-5% on the additional charge and FY26 costs guidance. Our DCF/PE-derived PT is lowered to A$67 on the above.

Cash earnings now the focus

Telstra Group
3:27pm
August 14, 2025
TLS’s FY25 result was largely as expected and FY26 guidance was slightly below expectations. That said new guidance metrics for FY26 change the focus. Mobile traction slowed in the year, with revenue and EBITDA slightly below consensus and our forecasts. Mobile Underlying EBITDA lifted ~5% YoY. We retain our HOLD and $4.70 Price Target.

Juiced up organic growth

Viva Leisure
3:27pm
August 14, 2025
VVA delivered an in-line result with strong revenue growth, stable margins and strong cashflow conversion. The outlook for FY26 is positive with capex heavy corporate gym expansion to slow and the existing network to be optimised, driving organic EPS growth, improved profitability, FCF generation and balance sheet deleverage. We maintain a BUY rating with a new price target of A$1.80 (up from A$1.75).

Great expectations

Pro Medicus
3:27pm
August 14, 2025
PME delivered another record result, broadly in line with expectations. We viewed the result as solid, but without any major surprises or new information to hang our hat on to elicit more positivity. Despite now looking to FY26/27 which is expected to deliver yet another step-change to EPS growth, these expectations are already baked in. Key here lies in maintaining size and cadence of new contract wins, while proving out new product success into other ologies. The former will get mathematically harder to achieve while the latter has the task of breaking into new markets (which is hard). We retain our TRIM call, with a marginally upgraded target price of A$285 p/s.

Luxury momentum meets execution test

Treasury Wine Estates
3:27pm
August 13, 2025
TWE’s FY25 result was in line with guidance, reporting a credible 17% growth in EBITS during a period of macro-economic and category headwinds. TWE is targeting further EBITS growth in FY26, led by Penfolds. We have made modest changes to our forecasts reflecting the disruption associated with a change of distributor in California. While lacking near term share price catalysts given industry and macro headwinds and a CEO transition, trading on an FY26F PE of only 12.7x, we maintain a BUY rating. A$200m share buyback should provide some degree of share price support.

FY25: A reality check for the share price

Commonwealth Bank
3:27pm
August 13, 2025
There was no material positive surprise to underwrite CBA’s share price strength. 12 month target price lifted 4% to $100.85. We remain SELL rated on CBA, recommending clients aggressively reduce overweight positions given the risk of poor future investment returns arising from the overvalued share price and mid-single digit EPS/DPS growth outlook.

Grinding away in first gear

Amotiv
3:27pm
August 13, 2025
AOV’s FY25 result contained limited surprises (pre-released) with marginal FY25 sales growth of +1% (-2.2% organic revenue); EBITA -1.3%; and flat NPATA. Soft FY26 EBITA guidance of ~2% growth (A$195m) reflects persistent cyclical headwinds (weak new vehicle sales, tariffs, soft reseller/OE demand), with growth supported by resilient wear-and-tear demand and A$10m in efficiency benefits. We continue to see value in the name (~11x FY26F PE), but we expect patience may be required until improvements in underlying cyclical conditions turn meaningfully more positive.

2Q in line - Early sales validate demand

EBR Systems
3:27pm
August 13, 2025
2Q25 results were in line with expectations, with cash burn down US$2m to US$11.5m, mainly on lower R&D spend and US$87m cash on hand, adequate funding for more than seven quarters at the current rate. Notably, June saw cUS$150k in first commercial sales from three WiSE CRT devices across two leading US hospitals, with favourable physician and patient feedback increasing despite no reimbursement, which is still expected later this year. We continue to view the phased US commercial rollout, with limited market release 4QCY25 followed by full commercial launch CY26, as prudent, balancing adoption with execution quality. We adjust CY25-27 forecasts, with our DCF-based valuation at A$2.86. BUY.

Riding the Unicorn

Evolution Mining
3:27pm
August 13, 2025
Solid and in-line FY25 result with record EBITDA, underlying NPAT, cash flow and its final dividend. Capital management going forward to prioritise dividends, debt reduction, asset investment, and balance sheet resilience to fund future debt repayments. We Maintain our TRIM rating, recommending investors take some profits at current levels, while retaining exposure for continued cash flow strength and potential upside from sustained gold prices over the next 12 months.

Generating momentum into FY26

LGI
3:27pm
August 12, 2025
LGI hit the mid-point of FY25 guidance, delivering 13.6% EBITDA growth on FY24. The underling result was in line with expectations, but the highlight was a new battery contract win (12MW) – bringing total new contract wins to six for FY25 and increasing the medium term development pipeline to ~56MW (from 47MW). We continue to like the long-term and structural growth opportunity ahead of LGI as it works through its multi-year capex program. We expect a structural uplift in FY26F EPS (+29%) as LGI realises its FY25 investments. Strong operational execution and contract wins support the positive outlook. Maintain Accumulate.

News & insights

In recent days, several people have asked for my updated view on the Federal Reserve and the Fed funds rate, as well as the outlook for the Australian cash rate. I thought I’d walk through our model for the Fed funds rate and explain our approach to the RBA’s cash rate.

In recent days, several people have asked for my updated view on the Federal Reserve and the Fed funds rate, as well as the outlook for the Australian cash rate. I thought I’d walk through our model for the Fed funds rate and explain our approach to the RBA’s cash rate.

It’s fascinating to look at the history of the current tightening cycle. The Fed began from a much higher base than the RBA, and in this cycle, they reached a peak rate of 535 basis points, compared to the RBA’s peak of 435 basis points. For context, in the previous tightening cycle, the RBA reached a peak of 485 basis points.

The reason the RBA was more cautious this time around is largely due to an agreement between Treasurer Jim Chalmers and the RBA. The goal was to implement rate increases that would not undo the employment gains made in the previous cycle. As a result, the RBA was far less aggressive in its approach to rate hikes.

This divergence in peak rates is important. Because the Australian cash rate peaked lower, the total room for rate cuts and the resulting stimulus to the economy is significantly smaller than in previous cycles.

The Fed, on the other hand, peaked at 535 basis points in August last year and began cutting rates shortly after. By the end of December, they had reduced the rate to 435 basis points, where it has remained since.

Recent U.S. labour market data shows a clear slowdown. Over the past 20 years, average annual employment growth in the U.S. has been around 1.6 percent, but this fell to 1.0 percent a few months ago and dropped further to 0.9 percent in the most recent data.

This suggests that while the Fed has successfully engineered a soft landing by slowing the economy, it now risks tipping into a hard landing if rates remain unchanged.

Fed Funds Rate Model Update

Our model for the Fed funds rate is based on three key variables: inflation, unemployment, and inflation expectations. While inflation has remained relatively stable, inflation expectations have declined significantly, alongside the drop in employment growth.

As a result, our updated model now estimates the Fed funds rate should be around 338 basis points, which is 92 basis points lower than the current rate of 435. This strongly suggests we are likely to see a 25 basis point cut at the Fed’s September 17 meeting.

There are two more Fed meetings scheduled for the remainder of the year, one in October and another on December 10. However, we will need to review the minutes from the September meeting before forming a view on whether further cuts are likely.

Australian Cash Rate Outlook

Turning to the Australian cash rate, as mentioned, the peak this cycle was lower than in the past, meaning the stimulatory effect of rate cuts is more limited.

We have already seen three rate cuts, and the key question now is whether there will be another at the RBA’s 4 November meeting.

This decision hinges entirely on the September quarter inflation data, which will be released on 29 October 2025.

The RBA’s strategy is guided by the concept of the real interest rate. Over the past 20 years, the average real rate has been around 0.85 percent. Assuming the RBA reaches its 2.5 percent inflation target, this implies a terminal cash rate of around 335 basis points. Once that level is reached, we expect it will mark the final rate cut of this cycle, unless inflation falls significantly further.

So, will we see a rate cut in November?

It all depends on the trimmed mean inflation figure for the September quarter. If it comes in at 2.5 percent or lower, we expect a rate cut. The June quarter trimmed mean was 2.7 percent, and the monthly July figure was 2.8 percent. If the September figure remains the same or rises, there will be no cut. Only a drop to 2.5 percent or below will trigger another move.

We will have a much clearer picture just a few days before Melbourne Cup Day.

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The Wall Street Journal of 21 August 2025 carried an article which noted that Ether, a cryptocurrency long overshadowed by Bitcoin has surged in price in August

The Wall Street  Journal of 21 August 2025 carried an article which noted that Ether, a cryptocurrency long overshadowed by Bitcoin has surged in price in August.

The article noted that unlike Bitcoin, there was not a hard cap on Ether supply, but the digital token is increasingly used for transactions on Ethereum , a platform where developers build and operate applications that can be used to trade, lend and borrow digital currencies.

This is important  because of the passage on 18 July 2025 of the GENIUS act which creates the first regulatory framework for Stablecoins. Stablecoins are US Dollar pegged digital tokens. The Act requires  that  Stablecoins , are to be to be fully  backed by US Treasury Instruments  or other  US dollar assets .

The idea is that if Ethereum becomes part of the infrastructure of Stablecoins , Ether would then benefit from increased activity on the Ethereum platform.

Tokenized money market funds from Blackrock and other institutions already operate on the Ethereum network.

The Wall Street journal  article  goes on to note that activity on the Ethereum platform has already amounted to more than $US1.2  trillion this year ,compared with $960 million to the same period last year.

So today ,we thought it might be a good idea to try and work out what makes Bitcoin and Ether  go up and down.

As Nobel Prize winning economist  Paul Krugman once said "  Economists don't care if a Model works in practice ,as long as it works in theory" .  Our theoretical model might be thought as a "Margin Lending Model" . In such a model variations in Bitcoin are a function of variation in the value of the US stock market .

As the US stock market rises, then the amount of cash at margin available to buy Bitcoin also rises .

The reverse occurs when the US stock market goes down .

Our model of Bitcoin based on this theory is shown in Figure 1  .  We are surprised that this simple model explains 88% of monthly variation  in Bitcoin since the beginning of 2019.

Figure 1 - BTC

At the end of August  our model  told us that when Bitcoin was then valued at $US112,491 , that it was then overvalued by $US15,785 per token.

Modeling Ether is not so simple . Ether is a token but Ethereum is a business.  this makes the price of Either sensitive to variations in conditions in the US Corporate Debt Market.

Taking that into account as well as stock market strength, gives us a model for Ether which is shown in figure 2.


Figure 2- Ethereum


This model explains 70.1% of monthly variation since the beginning of 2019. Our model tells us that at the end of August, Ether at $US 4,378per token was $US 560 above our model estimate of $US3,818.00 . Ether is moderately overvalued.

So neither  Bitcoin nor Ether are cheap right now.

ETFs for each of Bitcoin and Ether are now available from your friendly local stockbroker .

But right now , our models tell us that neither of them is cheap!

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Uncover insights from Jackson Hole: Jay Powell’s rate cut hints, Fed’s soft landing concerns, and dire demographic trends. Analysis by Morgans’ Chief Economist.


There is more to what happened at Jackson Hole than just the speech by Jay Powell.

In my talk last week ,I said that our model of the Fed funds rate stood at 3.65%. This is actually 70 basis points lower than the actual  level of 4.35%.

I also said that the Fed was successfully achieving a "soft landing" with employment growing at 1%. This was below the median level of employment growth  since 2004 of 1.6%.

Still , as I listened to Jay Powell Speak , I noted a sense of concern in his voice when he said that "The July employment report released earlier this month slowed to an average pace of only 35,000 average per month over the past three months, down from 168,000 per month during 2024. This slowdown is much larger than assessed just a month ago."

My interpretation of this is that Chair Powell may be concerned that the "soft landing " achieved by the Fed may be in danger of turning into a "hard landing". This suggested a rate cut of 25 basis points by the Fed at the next meeting on 17-18 September.

This would leave the Fed Funds rate at 4.1%. This would mean that the Fed Funds rate would still be 45 basis points higher than our model estimate of 3.65%. Hence the Fed Funds rate would remain "modestly restrictive."

Dire Demography?

Jackson Hole was actually a Fed Strategy meeting with many speakers in addition to Jay Powell.

Two speakers who followed on the  afternoon of his speech were Claudia Goldin, Professor at Harvard

and Chad Janis of Stanford Graduate Business School. They each gave foreboding presentations on the demography of developed economies.

Claudia Goldin spoke on "The Downside of Fertility".  She noted that birth rates in the Developed World are now generally  below replacement level. The Total Fertility rate is below 2 in France , the US and the UK.

It is dangerously low below 1.5 in Italy and Spain and below 1 in Korea. She observes that the age of first marriage of couples  in the US is now 7 years later than it was in the 1960's. This reduces  their child bearing years.

This paper was then followed by a discussion of it by Chad Janis of Stanford Graduate Business School. He noted that there is a profound difference between a future with a replacement rate of 2.2 kids per family , which he called  the "Expanding Cosmos"  with

•   Growing population leading to a growing number of researchers, leading to rising living standards  and Exponential growth in both living standards and population AND a replacement level of 1.9 kids per family which leads to  

•   Negative population growth , which he called "an Empty Planet " and the end of humanity

 as numbers of researchers declines and economic growth ceases.

Of course this seems all  very serious indeed .  Perhaps what this really means ,is that  if  we want to save the world , we should just relax and start having a lot more fun!!

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