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You talk like you know something, but I bet you Don't.
Mr. Adebayo Idowu explained that the vest stands apart from the tradition “bullet-proof vests” in that BRAV can resist armor piercing bullets, as well as provide commanders with both GPS location and the health status of soldiers in the field.
“It’s truly one-of-a-kind! We are showing the world that Africa has an untapped resource of human intellect and ingenuity… and hopefully we can lure international markets and investors to help us make a global impact.”
The company indicated plans to create a joint-venture with its subsidiary, American Defense Systems (ADFS), based in the United States, to help market the vests globally. [color=red][/color]
"She's So Fine, Ain't No Telling Where The Money Went"
One of my favorite lines.
Krombacher On Vacation???
I'm not sure what you're seeing but I had a tiny trade (1000 @ .0004) go through. Kind of accidental, testing my Ameritrade account. Ameritrade has blocked buying ERHE for a long time, but I guess not now, cause it went through.
What was the date of the Reverse Split???
Thanks in advance.
We accelerated top-line growth at significant scale in the fourth quarter of 2017. Total net revenue was $616 million, up 36% year over year, and Adjusted Revenue was $283 million, up 47% year over year. This is an increase from the third quarter of 2017, when total net revenue and Adjusted Revenue grew 33% and 45%, respectively, year over year. Gross Payment Volume (GPV) was $17.9 billion, up 31% year over year. We continue to see strength in larger sellers, with GPV from this segment growing 44% year over year and representing 47% of total GPV. Net loss in the fourth quarter was $16 million, essentially flat on a year-over-year basis. We achieved fourth-quarter Adjusted EBITDA of $41 million, representing an improvement of $11 million year over year and an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15%.Our 2017 results set the stage for strong momentum in 2018. Three focus areas will drive our strategy and investment this year: omnichannel commerce, financial services, and current international markets. These areas provide meaningful value to sellers and individuals and significantly increase the addressable market opportunity for Square. • Strengthen omnichannel commerce: We are enabling sellers to engage with buyers wherever they are, which includes in person, messaging channels, websites and apps, and digital marketplaces.• Expand financial services: We have an opportunity to provide more financial services to sellers and individuals, particularly those who have been underserved by the traditional financial system.• Grow current international markets: We will focus our international efforts this year on gaining share in our current markets of Australia, Canada, Japan, and the UK. We will strengthen our go-to-market strategy, improve automated onboarding, and expand our overall product offering.We continue to create meaningful vectors of growth: In the fourth quarter of 2017, revenue from products launched since 2014 was 22% of total net revenue and 36% of Adjusted Revenue, up from 14% and 25%, respectively, in the prior year period.
https://s21.q4cdn.com/114365585/files/doc_financials/2017/4Q17/SQ-2017-Q4-Shareholder-Letter.pdf
Square's Recent Financial Performance
For the three months ended September 30th, 2018 vs September 30th, 2017, Square reported revenue of $882.11MM vs $585.16MM (up 50.75%) and analysts estimated basic earnings per share $0.05 vs -$0.04. For the twelve months ended December 31st, 2017 vs December 31st, 2016, Square reported revenue of $2,214.25MM vs $1,708.72MM (up 29.59%) and analysts estimated basic earnings per share -$0.17 vs -$0.50. Analysts expect earnings to be released on February 26th, 2019. The report will be for the fiscal period ending December 31st, 2018. The reported EPS for the same quarter last year was -$0.03. The estimated EPS forecast for the next fiscal year is $0.08 and is expected to report on February 26th, 2019.
To read the full Square, Inc. (SQ) report, download it here: http://Fundamental-Markets.com/register/?so=SQ
I see you invest in Pot, do you smoke it too?
What Caused Square Stock to Soar 61.8% in 2018
Momentum doesn't get much better than this.
Daniel Sparks
(TMFDanielSparks)
Jan 9, 2019 at 10:16AM
What happened
The market may have faced some major headwinds in 2018 as the S&P 500 fell about 6%. But some stocks bucked this trend and delivered returns for investors that were not just good but outstanding. One of these stocks was financial technology company Square (NYSE: SQ).
Square stock soared 61.8% in 2018, according to data provided by S&P Global Market Intelligence. The stock's gain came as Square saw its year-over-year revenue growth accelerate in every quarter reported during 2018.
So what
Square saw surging growth in 2018, with the rates surpassing the levels seen in 2017. Revenue and adjusted revenue in the fourth quarter of 2017 increased 33% and 45% year over year, respectively. Comparatively, in the company's third quarter of 2018, revenue and adjusted revenue saw 51% and 68% year-over-year growth, respectively.
Square also notably made significant progress toward becoming a profitable business recently. The company's adjusted EBITDA margin was 16% in its quarter of 2018, up from 13% in the year-ago quarter.
The strength in Square's business comes as the company gains momentum with larger sellers -- those with $125,000 or more in sales. In the third quarter of 2018, gross payment volume from larger sellers was up 41% year over year, accounting for more than half of Square's total gross payment volume.
Now what
Square has yet to provide guidance for 2019, but the company's recent trend of accelerating revenue growth suggests it is poised to deliver more of the same this year. For the full year of 2018, which Square hasn't reported results for yet, management expects adjusted revenue to be between $1.52 billion and $1.54 billion, representing 55% year-over-year growth.
Daniel Sparks owns shares of Square. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Square. The Motley Fool has the following options: short January 2019 $80 calls on Square. The Motley Fool has a disclosure
2 More Reckless Predictions for 2019
Anyone can play it safe with their forecasts.
Motley Fool Staff
(the_motley_fool)
Jan 10, 2019 at 11:47AM
Forecasting in the business and investing world is an art -- in other words, totally not a science. Most "experts" who try to make binary predictions don't even get their guesses right half the time. But that never stops Motley Fool Money host Chris Hill from asking his colleagues to make "reckless predictions."
In this segment from the Motley Fool Money podcast, senior analyst Jason Moser prognosticates about why Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) would do well to scoop up mobile-payment player Square (NYSE: SQ), while Ron Gross goes way out there -- with a forecast about Mars.
Chris Hill: Reckless predictions for 2019. What do you have, Jason?
Jason Moser: I was thinking about going with the Red Sox repeating as World Series champions. Then I thought about it, that's not that far-fetched, really. I'm calling it, they're going to repeat. That's not my reckless prediction.
I'll go with a more business-related story here. I was talking earlier about the potential acquisitions that Apple could be looking at here. What would stop them from wanting to acquire Square? You want to look at expanding your business and becoming a little bit more of an integral part of the commerce scene here, not only domestically but globally. I think Square and Apple have a lot in common. They're both in the business of developing sleek hardware that people like to use, generating some pretty strong brand loyalty there. Then, we know, of course, the payments space is one that's growing very quickly.
I'm not saying it'll happen, but it's certainly an acquisition that Apple would be capable of executing. Maybe it will happen.
Hill: Ron?
Ron Gross: I went a little off the rails here. There's going to be more definitive signs of previous life discovered on Mars in 2019. That's going to build off of the work done by the Mars Curiosity Rover that, earlier in 2018, found some organic molecules. We'll figure out where those actually came from and build on that. There aren't going to be any signs of actual Martians running around --
Hill: Or will there?
Gross: -- but I think we're going to see signs of some previous life.
Chris Hill has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Jason Moser owns shares of Apple and Square. Ron Gross owns shares of Apple and Square. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Apple and Square. The Motley Fool has the following options: long January 2020 $150 calls on Apple, short January 2020 $155 calls on Apple, and short January 2019 $80 calls on Square. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Square's New CFO -- What Does It Mean for Investors?
Square recently filled the position vacated by beloved ex-CFO Sarah Friar.
Motley Fool Staff
(the_motley_fool)
Jan 11, 2019 at 3:18PM
Fintech company Square (NYSE: SQ) recently announced that it had hired Amrita Ahuja to be its next chief financial officer.
In this Industry Focus: Financials clip, host Jason Moser and Motley Fool contributor Matt Frankel, CFP discuss Ahuja's background, what CEO Jack Dorsey had to say about her, and what the news means for Square's investors.
Jason Moser: Matt, there was some news that came out late last week that seemed relatively relevant to our universe here. It looks like Square has a new CFO in town, Ms. Amrita Ahuja, who is currently the CFO of video game developer Blizzard Entertainment. Yes, that's Blizzard of Activision Blizzard. She's going to be coming in and taking over the reins there at Square. After reading a little bit about her work history and a nice little Twitter thread she had out there regarding her family and how they came to the country, I feel really good about this hire. What do you think?
Matt Frankel: It seems like they got the right person for the job. Like I've said before, Sarah Friar left some pretty big shoes to fill over there. Having said that, I like what Jack Dorsey had to say about how entrepreneurial she is and how she's going to focus just on the CFO role. Sarah Friar was a dual focus. She did a lot of the CFO role and a lot of the PR work for the company. Pretty much everything we know about the company's future plans to get into banking, and to be the one-stop-personal finance-shop, we know from Sarah Friar's speeches and discussions and things like that. He says she's going to be a little more focused on the job, which I think is a very good thing from an investor's perspective. It definitely seems, a lot of parallels between her old job and new job. I think it's a good hire. I think the stock does not deserve to be down 30% from when Sarah Friar announced that she was leaving. Even though Square has popped in the last few days, I don't think the pop was a direct result of the announcement, I think it was more because the market was going crazy higher on Friday. But I think they have the right person for the job. Only time will tell, but this is definitely a step in the right direction. Investors hate uncertainty, and this removed a big chunk of that uncertainty. I'll leave it with that.
Moser: That's a good point. We weren't sure how long this was going to go on. But given that Jack Dorsey at both Twitter and Square, he said his primary role as CEO of both companies is to make sure that he's getting the appropriate talent in the appropriate positions. That's encouraging. You look at Ms. Ahuja's work history, she had stints at Fox Network Group, at Disney and Morgan Stanley after receiving degrees from Duke and Harvard Business School. So, yeah, I'd say she seems pretty qualified.
Frankel: Yeah. This definitely seems like a good person to have at the top of their list. I can easily see why Jack Dorsey went ahead and pulled the trigger and brought her on the team.
Moser: It's probably a little bit of a different stage for Square at this point in its life. For a while, Sarah Friar needed to be out there front and center, creating that public image and helping to nurture that public image of Square, so that consumers and merchants and restaurateurs all understood more about what Square does and the value proposition that they're offering to all of their different customers. Perhaps today, there's more public awareness, more understanding as to what the company does, to where Ms. Ahuja can go in there and focus more on the numbers and making sure that the company is allocating its investments appropriately.
It reminds me, perhaps, of when Ruth Porat took over at Alphabet. She was able to go in there and focus a little bit more on the numbers and make sure that they were running a smartly led operation there. Maybe that'll be something that Ms. Ahuja has the chance to do here, as well.
I don't know how public a face she will be, but I would recommend anyone who wants to learn a little bit more about her, you can go to Twitter and actually see the thread that she tweeted out shortly after this news was announced. She gives a little bit of her story, her parents' story, and, as you mentioned, the entrepreneurial spirit of her and her parents. I think that gives a little bit more understanding as to why we like that hire. Certainly, it seems like she would be somewhat empathetic to not only the company, but its customers, as well, and that can only be a good thing.
Frankel: Definitely. I like your point about how they don't really need that public face as much anymore. When I first started writing about Square and first invested in it a few years ago, I used to have to use the first hundred or so words of every article about them explaining who the company was.
"You know, the ones that make the little card readers you see sticking out of people's iPhones?" Now that's no longer necessary. You don't really need someone to tell you where the company's going constantly, who they are, what they do. I like that they're consolidating this role down to a more traditional CFO role. That's a big positive in my mind.
Moser: Good news for your One To Watch for 2019. We'll keep following it and wish them the best of luck. I'm sure we'll learn a little bit more when earnings season comes around.
Suzanne Frey, an executive at Alphabet, is a member of The Motley Fool's board of directors. Jason Moser owns shares of Alphabet (C shares), Square, Twitter, and Walt Disney. Matthew Frankel, CFP owns shares of Square. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends Activision Blizzard, Alphabet (A shares), Alphabet (C shares), Square, Twitter, and Walt Disney. The Motley Fool has the following options: short January 2019 $80 calls on Square. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Square Might Become a Monster Stock if It Reaches This Goal
The company renews its effort to push deeper into a massive financial services segment.
Eric Volkman
(TMFVolkman)
Jan 11, 2019 at 6:16PM
Square (NYSE: SQ) has been a darling stock in the finance sector for quite some time. It recently posted its first-ever quarterly net profit, and with a smart and innovative business model, it's set for more wins. It isn't easy to be edgy and successful in this sector, but Square is managing, and it's getting a lot of investor love for it.
It'll get even more if one of its big ambitions is fulfilled.
Banking on a license
Last month, it was revealed that Square is making another attempt at obtaining what is effectively a banking license.
In late 2017, it applied for permission to operate an industrial loan company (ILC). This is a form of corporation owned by nonbanks that can accept deposits, make loans, and conduct other activities usually reserved for banks.
Square's application was eventually withdrawn. The company ascribed this to technical reasons, saying in a statement that it pulled the application as "a procedural step in the review process that will allow us to amend and strengthen some areas of our FDIC insurance application."
If the new effort to obtain a license is successful, the ILC will be managed by a company arm called Square Financial Services.
Unlike standard banks, ILCs are not regulated by a clutch of federal agencies. Instead, they fall under the gaze of only one, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), in addition to the state issuing the license (Utah, in Square's case). Some critics argue that since ILCs are not operated by banks and escape the scrutiny of numerous federal bodies, their charters should be curtailed or even eliminated.
Square doesn't seem to mind courting controversy, and there's good reason it shouldn't. Owning what's a banking license in all but name would give it the scope to dramatically ramp up its lending activities.
Square currently offers loans to some of its clients, but since the company isn't licensed, it can't do so directly. Instead, it partners with an ILC, Celtic Bank, which originates the loans, then sells them to third-party investors.
That's an awfully clunky way to shovel money to clients. Perhaps that's why the growth of Square Capital -- encouraging as it's been -- was overshadowed by that of other units in the company. In Square's third quarter, total net revenue came in at $882 million, or 51% higher on a year-over-year basis. Square Capital, however, grew the tally for its loans by a comparatively modest 34% to $405 million.
With an in-house banking operation, Square would have no need for a lender like Celtic Bank. It could then concentrate on aggressively pursuing loans, and could provide them without having to coordinate among partners.
In Q3, according to Square, it facilitated more than 62,000 business loans totaling a combined $405 million. This dollar figure is a drop in the bucket of the massive U.S. small and mid-sized business (SMB) segment that is the core of the company's business. There is much more market share to carve out, and with its many services for SMBs, Square is beautifully positioned to do so.
On top of that, it has lately become much more successful in getting larger enterprises to sign on for its services. Often, the bigger the business, the hungrier it is for borrowing. Lending to this segment could really expand and deepen Square's loan portfolio, and contribute meaningfully to the company's results.
Lender of first resort?
Absent a deep recession in this country, I can't imagine a scenario in which Square Financial Services flops. After all, its parent is the scrappy upstart that took on more famous and entrenched players like PayPal Holdings (NASDAQ: PYPL) to carve out a niche in its business.
One reason for this is Square's clever leveraging of its disparate but related assets to create an ecosystem for its customer base. Using the growing list of Square services, clients can issue virtual gift cards, get money deposited in their accounts almost instantaneously, and handle employee payroll. As successful as PayPal has been, its menu is far more limited. We can say the same for many other merchant services providers.
There's a reason Square has been more popular with investors than PayPal and other rivals. It has a sticky business model, a great many clients that will need capital at some point, and a talent for integrating business lines and making them contribute to the parent company. And if Square can secure that ILC license, it'll jump into what could be the most promising business line of them all.
Eric Volkman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of and recommends PayPal Holdings and Square. The Motley Fool has the following options: short January 2019 $82 calls on PayPal Holdings and short January 2019 $80 calls on Square. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Insider Buying
Jan 02, 2019 (MarketNewsVideo.com via COMTEX News Network) -- Bargain hunters are wise to pay careful attention to insider buying, because although there are many various reasons for an insider to sell a stock, presumably the only reason they would use their hard-earned cash to make a purchase, is that they expect to make money. Today we look at two noteworthy recent insider buys.
At Allegiance Bancshares (ABTX), a filing with the SEC revealed that on Friday, President Steven F. Retzloff bought 15,000 shares of ABTX, at a cost of $31.30 each, for a total investment of $469,437. So far Retzloff is in the green, up about 6.9% on their purchase based on today's trading high of $33.45. Allegiance Bancshares is trading up about 2% on the day Wednesday.
And on Monday, Chief Executive Officer AJ Teague purchased $243,600 worth of Enterprise Products Partners L.P. (EPD), purchasing 10,000 shares at a cost of $24.36 a piece. Before this latest buy, Teague purchased EPD at 5 other times during the past twelve months, for a total investment of $1.84M at an average of $25.23 per share. Enterprise Products Partners L.P. is trading flat on the day Wednesday.
The preceding is a transcript of the MarketNewsVideo.com video published at: http://www.marketnewsvideo.com/?id=20190120190102insiderABTXE&mv=1.
http://www.marketnewsvideo.com/
MarketNewsVideo.com
Copyright 2019 MarketNewsVideo.com
Dec 27, 2018 (Baystreet.ca via COMTEX News Network) -- The market selloff in December is so widespread that even payment processing firms are falling. This is one area of the market where stocks should not fall. Electronic payment services, online payment processing, and credit card transactions keep growing.
Even a mild recession in the U.S. should not hurt this sector by that much. The permanent shift from the traditional use of cash towards electronic payments suggests that investors should keep a position in this sector.
Visa (NYSE:V), which is set to report quarterly results on Jan 23, 2019, has potential upside if it reports strong holiday transaction numbers.
Mastercard (NYSE:MA), which is similarly valued from a P/E perspective, would rebound too.
PayPal (NASDAQ:PYPL) is even more likely to beat expectations when it reports on January 17. But the stock punished the most is Square (NYSE:SQ), which topped $100 in October and fell to $52.51 last week.
Square has a distinct advantage over the above-mentioned firms. It helps small businesses process transactions. And it keeps its fees low to help businesses grow, instead of hampering them with high costs.
Takeaway
Selling pressure in these payment firms will continue if negative market sentiment picks up. This creates a perfect time to start a position in any of those stocks, especially with Square.
Dec 24, 2018 (Baystreet.ca via COMTEX News Network) -- Square Inc (NYSE:SQ) was off to a strong start in 2018 when its share price hit over $100 just three months ago. Since then, however, it has crashed more than 35%. Although it's still up 50% year to date, it's an opportunity for investors to buy the stock at prices not seen since May.
The markets as a whole have been plummeting recently and the decline in Square's price isn't reflective of anything wrong or concerning with the stock itself. And that's an important consideration, because it means there's nothing that should be holding it down. While Square may trade at a high multiple to its book value and it has a negative price-to-earnings multiple, there's still a lot to like about it.
For one, it was able to pull out a profit in its most recent quarter, where its sales were also up more than 50% year over year. In four of its past five quarters, Square has also generated positive free cash flow, which is something that's going to be crucial for the company to continue to grow its business in a sustainable way.
I'm very bullish on the stock because I know the opportunity that exists for Square and the potential that it has worldwide. Investors shouldn't be deterred by this recent decline because it won't last. When the markets recover, Square is going to be one of the stocks to watch as it will start to take off. It may be down right now, but long term, the stock could produce great returns for investors.
Payments processor Square signed an office lease Thursday for Oakland’s Uptown Station in one of the city’s biggest real estate deals ever.
The 356,000-square-foot expansion, taking all of the building’s office space, gives Square room for up to 2,000 employees. Square is poised to become the largest tech company in Oakland, surpassing Pandora, which has about 1,000 employees and was sold to SiriusXM in September.
Oakland has long been overlooked by major tech companies even as the industry transformed nearby San Francisco and Silicon Valley.
“We’re excited to join the Oakland community as a partner, an advocate, a neighbor, and a customer of local businesses,” Square CEO Jack Dorsey said in a statement. “As we continue to grow, we want to support our employees wherever they are so they can work and invest in the communities in which they live.”
Uptown Station housed a Sears department store until it closed in 2014 and has been under renovation ever since. In 2015, Uber bought the building with plans for a major secondary office. But the ride-hailing company changed course as it sought to cut costs and sold the property one year ago to developer CIM Group.
Square expects to open in Uptown Station late next year with 300 to 500 employees. The building at 1955 Broadway is adjacent to BART’s 19th Street/Oakland Station.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/business/article/Square-leases-Oakland-s-Uptown-Station-in-one-13482170.php
The Yahoo Finance Company of the Year is Square! The company you know by the white credit-card-swipe fob that sticks out of a phone or iPad.
https://finance.yahoo.com/video/square-yahoo-finance-company-2018-221526504.html
I.M.H.O. Square's downturn has a lot to do with end of year selling. There were plenty of profits to be taking. Like I've seen this before, look at the chart for last year. Hell it's been happening to the whole stock market. I think next year will be another good year.
Markets Closed Tomorrow (Wed.)
Might be a good thing.
I'm wondering if... "Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Sarah Friar announced she will be leaving today, a few weeks earlier than the expected"... Is because they already have a replacement for her, that they will be announcing very soon? Otherwise letting her leave early wouldn't make any sense.
Thanks
I think $125,000,000 divided by 300,000,000,000 = $.0004 Or am I missing something?
Net Income 20M
2017
Q3 (16M)
Q4 (16M)
2018
Q1 (24M)
Q2 (6M)
Q3 20M
Highlights
We continue to drive strong revenue growth at scale: In the third quarter of 2018,
Total net revenue grew 51% year over year and Adjusted Revenue grew 68% year over year,
Compared to 48% and 60%, respectively, in the second quarter of 2018.
What part of Block 11 do we still have???
I use Square & I pay 2.75% transaction fee. Does anyone know if big businesses get a lower rate? I know big businesses pay lower rates with other companies, just don't know about SQ.
Great info, Thanks
Thanks for posting the link.
You coulda given me this advice a year or 2 ago.
Yes. Try Fidelity Investments.
If the talk is of buying out SQ for 10 Billion, what is SQ worth today?
Analyst Lisa Ellis suspects the company will make a strategic acquisition in the coming months. The analyst sees PayPal likely buying Adyen for $5 billion, Klarna for $2.5 billion, Square (NYSE: SQ) for $10 billion, or Stripe for $9 billion.
Do We Know When That Will Be???
Oldoil. It has to do with 1 of your removed posts. eom
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Why Is ERHE Being Blamed For Not Reporting The Results. They are not the operator, CEPSA is. ERHE said they will report when they can.
There's No Conection Here. CEPSA is in charge of the reviewing, not ERHE.
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We Can All Private Message Until 7/22/16. It's "Happy Week" (See above)