Research notes

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Research Notes

4Q beat - breathing easy into FY26

ResMed Inc
3:27pm
August 3, 2025
4Q results were above expectations, with high-single digit revenue growth, expanding operating leverage, and strong operating cash flow. Sleep and respiratory sales were solid, with resupply and new patient set-ups supporting Americas mask growth, while ROW tracked the market and residential care software sales surprised to the upside posting high-single digit gains. GPM continues to expand, underpinned by procurement gains, manufacturing efficiencies and favourable FX, while OPM grew on good cost control. Notably, FY26 GPM is pegged at 61-63% (200bp at mid-point yoy), highlighting management’s confidence in a solid outlook, with strong cash flow supporting growing dividends and share buy backs, we continue to view the fundamentals as sound and the company in a strong position. FY26-27 earnings increase up to 6.5%, with our target price rising to $47.86. ACCUMULATE.

Bigger Beeta steps, better flow bets

Beetaloo Energy Australia
3:27pm
August 1, 2025
Pilot timing firm with Carpentaria Pilot construction starts 4Q25, while C-5H’s IP30 (late Sep) will test deliverability. Stronger balance sheet footing with cash lift to A$39m (total liquidity A$59m) with the further A$30m midstream facility primed once approvals land. Staying busy BTL is now in another very busy half, pushing to demonstrate deliverability and initiate development. We maintain a SPECULATIVE BUY on BTL with a A$0.71 target price (was A$0.73ps).

Striking value beneath the surface

Capstone Copper
3:27pm
August 1, 2025
CSC’s 2Q25 production, costs and EBITDA result beat expectations. Group copper production was +7% qoq and +7% ahead of MorgansF, while C1 cash costs of US$2.45/lb were -6% qoq and -4% below MorgansF. Adjusted EBITDA of US$215.6m was +20% qoq and +13% ahead of MorgansF. We maintain a BUY rating with a A$12.10ps TP (previously A$11.50ps).

Mahalo reserve boost and FEED progress

Comet Ridge
3:27pm
August 1, 2025
Making steady progress at Mahalo, still on track to ramp up the dual-FEED studies by late 2025, with a final investment decision (FID) tracking to 1Q26. Reserve growth and FEED progress support our positive view. Cash balance at June end of A$13.3m. Execution and funding risk remains but countering that COI and its partners are making steady progress through FEED, which also enhances COI’s corporate appeal. We maintain SPECULATIVE BUY rating with an upgraded A$0.25 TP.

Fields of gold

Newmont Corporation
3:27pm
August 1, 2025
A stand-out quarter, both operationally and financially, demonstrates NEM’s exceptional operating capability with its optimised portfolio of Tier-1 assets. Production, costs, EBITDA, Free Cash Flow and Net Debt beat both MorgansF and consensus estimates. NEM doubled its buy-back authorisation to US$6bn (from US$3bn), a show of confidence in its own balance sheet and operations. So far US$2.8bn worth of shares have been bought back. We maintain an ACCUMULATE rating and a A$107ps TP (previously A$103ps).

4Q25: Finishing strong

BETR Entertainment
3:27pm
July 31, 2025
BETR Entertainment (BBT) delivered a strong finish to the year, comfortably exceeding our expectations on both turnover and gross win. Notably, BBT maintained a net win margin above 10%, despite integrating the traditionally lower-margin TopSport customer base. With product enhancements underway, we see scope for increased scale and incremental margin expansion heading into the higher-quality racing and sports finals season. We now forecast underlying NPAT of -$4.7m in FY25 and +$2.3m in FY26, reflecting slightly softer top-line growth and higher D&A linked to the amortisation of acquired intangibles (customer list). We maintain a Buy recommendation, however, our 12-month price target is reduced to $0.38 (previously $0.47), largely a result of the increased share count following the $130m raise. BBT will release its full year result on 28 August 2025.

External and internal issues

Flight Centre Travel
3:27pm
July 31, 2025
FLT has revised its FY25 NPBT guidance by a further 5-12% following a difficult 4Q25 (its key trading period). Given the 1H26 is likely to remain challenging and it will take time for FLT’s internal business improvement initiatives to result in material P&L benefits, we have also made large revisions to our FY26 forecasts. We forecast solid earnings growth to resume from the 2H26. We are buyers of FLT during this period of short-term uncertainty and share price weakness because when operating conditions ultimately improve, both its earnings and share price leverage to the upside will be material.

Ticking a lot of boxes

Airtasker
3:27pm
July 31, 2025
Airtasker’s (ART) 4Q25 update was highlighted by strong momentum in both its core domestic platform and the newer marketplaces (UK/US). Indeed, the business achieved ~21% revenue growth in the quarter (+13% for the full year), whilst also meeting its guidance of being FCF positive for FY25. The UK marketplace achieved TTM GMV of A$15m (~+75% on pcp), a key call-out of the update. We update our forecasts to factor in the recent trading update and post a ~6% reduction in our topline estimates for FY26/27 still assume a robust ~15% 3-year revenue CAGR. Our price target is unchanged given a valuation roll-forward and improved longer-term monetisation rate assumptions. Buy maintained.

Phew! FY25 gross loan target achieved

Judo Capital Holdings
3:27pm
July 31, 2025
JDO achieved its revised gross loan target for end-FY25 (albeit fell short on liquid assets and customer deposits). This should give increased confidence to investors as the bank heads into FY26 where PBT growth is expected to be a stellar 50%. ACCUMULATE retained, with an unchanged 12 month target price of $1.75/sh.

Installed base hitting its straps

ImpediMed
3:27pm
July 31, 2025
IPD posted its 4Q25 cash flow report noting record total contract value, cash outflow better than expected and solid US installed base growth. The 5-year US$15m growth capital facility is now fully drawn following successfully meeting key sales and revenue targets. Although we have revised down our installed base forecast for FY26/27, seeing the break-even position moving to FY27 after rolling our model forward, our valuation remains unchanged at A$0.15. We maintain our SPECULATIVE BUY recommendation.

News & insights

Michael Knox, Chief Economist explains how the RBA sets interest rates to achieve its 2.5% inflation target, predicting a cash rate reduction to 3.35% by November when inflation is expected to reach 2.5%, based on a historical average real rate of 0.85%.


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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Michael Knox, Chief Economist explains how the RBA sets interest rates to achieve its 2.5% inflation target, predicting a cash rate reduction to 3.35% by November when inflation is expected to reach 2.5%, based on a historical average real rate of 0.85%.

Today, we’re diving into how the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) sets interest rates as it nears its target of 2.5% inflation, and what happens when that target is reached. Back in 1898, Swedish economist Knut Wicksell  published *Money, Interest and Commodity Prices*, introducing the concept of the natural rate of interest. This is the real interest rate that maintains price stability. Unlike Wicksell’s time, modern central banks, including the RBA, focus on stabilising the rate of inflation rather than the price level itself.

In Australia, the RBA aims to keep inflation at 2.5%. To achieve this, it sets a real interest rate, known as the neutral rate, which can only be determined in practice by observing what rate stabilises inflation at 2.5%. Looking at data from January 2000, we see significant fluctuations in Australia’s real cash rate, but over the long term, the average real rate has been 0.85%. This suggests that the RBA can maintain its 2.5% inflation target with an average real cash rate of 0.85%. This is a valuable insight as the RBA approaches this target.

Australian Real Cash Rate -July 2025

As inflation nears 2.5%, we can estimate that the cash rate will settle at 2.5% (the inflation target) plus the long-term real rate of 0.85%, resulting in a cash rate of 3.35%. At the RBA meeting on Tuesday, 12 August, when the trimmed mean inflation rate for June had already  dropped to 2.7%, the RBA reduced the real cash rate to 0.9%, resulting in a cash rate of 3.6%.

We anticipate that when the trimmed mean inflation for September falls to 2.5%, as expected, the cash rate will adjust to 2.5% plus the long-term real rate of 0.85%, bringing it to 3.35%. The September quarter trimmed mean will be published at the end of October, just before the RBA’s November meeting. We expect the RBA to hold the cash rate steady at its September meeting, but when it meets in November, with the trimmed mean likely at 2.5%, the cash rate is projected to fall to 3.35%.

Australian Real Cash Rate - August 2025
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Michael Knox, Chief Economist looks at what might have happened in January 2026 if the cuts in corporate tax rates in Trumps first term were not renewed and extended in the One Big Beautiful Bill

In recent weeks, a number of media commentators have criticized Donald Trump's " One big Beautiful Bill " on the basis of a statement by the Congressional Budget Office that under existing legislation the bill adds $US 3.4 trillion to the US Budget deficit. They tend not to mention that this is because the existing law assumes that all the tax cuts made in 2017 by the first Trump Administration expire at the end of this year.

Let’s us look at what might have happened in January 2026 if the cuts in US corporate tax rates in Trumps first term were not renewed and extended in the One Big Beautiful Bill.

Back in 2016 before the first Trump administration came to office in his first term, the US corporate tax rate was then 35%. In 2017 the Tax Cut and Jobs Act reduced the corporate tax rate to 21%. Because this bill was passed as a "Reconciliation Bill “, This meant it required only a simple majority of Senate votes to pass. This tax rate of 21% was due to expire in January 2026.

The One Big Beautiful Bill has made the expiring tax cuts permanent; this bill was signed into law on 4 July 2025. Now of course the same legislation also made a large number of individual tax cuts in the original 2017 bill permanent.

What would have happened if the bill had not passed. Let us construct what economists call a "Counterfactual"

Let’s just restrict ourselves to the case of what have happened in 2026 if the US corporate tax had risen to the prior rate of 35%.

This is an increase in the corporate tax rate of 14%. This increase would generate a sudden fall in US corporate after-tax earnings in January 2026 of 14%. What effect would that have on the level of the S&P 500?

The Price /Earnings Ratio of the S&P500 in July 2025 was 26.1.

Still the ten-year average Price/ Earnings Ratio for the S&P500 is only 18.99. Let’s say 19 times.

Should earnings per share have suddenly fallen by 14%, then the S&P 500 might have fallen by 14% multiplied by the short-term Price/ Earnings ratio.

This means a likely fall in the S&P500 of 37%.

As the market recovered to long term Price Earnings ratio of 19 this fall might then have ben be reduced to 27%.

Put simply, had the One Big, beautiful Bill not been passed, then in 2026 the US stock market might suddenly have fallen by 37% before then recovering to a fall of 27% .

The devastating effect on the US and indeed World economy might plausibly have caused a major recession.

On 9 June Kevin Hassert the Director of the National Economic Council said in a CBS interview with Margaret Brennan that if the bill did not pass US GDP would fall by 4% and 6-7 million Americans would lose their jobs.

The Passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill on 4 July thus avoided One Big Ugly Disaster.

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