Thanks Camden, not a 'suck eggs' explanation at all, appreciate the detailed response.
ok, i think I understand now. I was struggling with the concept when applied in perpetuity, and the fact that no cost if fixed when a long enough time period is considered. I was assuming that fixed costs would trend towards long term averages as the business grew.
Do you apply this theory to long-term growth forecast or for a few years at a time and then recast your forecasts?
Cheers Gralynchett
P.S Yes, either this situation, or more commonly these days the excess cash is deployed to some other project/investment/business, thanks to remuneration KPI's of rewarding good ROE numbers and increasing market capitalisation. Anyway, I'm no remuneration expert and i digress.
P.P.S Yes, you are right. I just took figures at face value with no adjustments. I also only looked back 4 or 5 years, so possibly wasn't getting the full picture.
DLX Price at posting:
$5.46 Sentiment: None Disclosure: Not Held