Categories
Business

MoneyTalks: 3 ‘below-the-radar’ ASX stocks to watch in the second half of 2022

MoneyTalks is Stockhead’s regular drill down into what stocks investors are looking at right now. We’ll tap our extensive list of experts to hear what’s hot, their top picks, and what they’re looking out for.

Today we hear from Equitable Investors director Martin Pretty.

What’s hot right now?

Pretty says we are in an environment where there has been a rush to the most liquid investments – or to the exit, which has made capital scarce.

“You can see that clearly in the IPO market, where capital raised from IPOs in Australasia is down 88% so far in calendar 2022, relative to the same point in time in 2021, based on Dealogic data.

“Globally the decline is 74%.

“In the unlisted world the issue is visible when stories bubble to the surface such as would-be unicorn Metigy being placed in administration and neobank Volt being forced to wind down after failing to raise capital,” he says.

“Last quarter we counted 374 ASX-listed ‘cash burners’, excluding those in the mining and energy sector, that had reported negative operating cash flow.

“Nearly half of them had one year or less worth of cash remaining based on their “burn rate” in that quarter,” Pretty adds.

“We also counted another 180-odd indebted ‘zombie’ companies that were not covering their interest expense with EBITDA.”

Pretty’s thesis is that the second half of calendar 2022 will be rich with opportunities to apply capital at attractive prices and help below-the-radar listed companies’ de-risk their financial position and improve their strategic positioning.

“Already we have seen a number of these opportunities and expect them to continue to flow,” he explains.

top picks

The MedTech that connects pharmacists and pharmaceutical companies with consumers launched a $14.6m equity raising in July on the back of a deal to buy out its one significant competitor in the Australian market, GuildLink, and take on the Pharmacy Guild as a strategic shareholder with about 13%.

“The acquisition was paid for in shares issued to the Guild at a premium to the price of the entitlement offer (the retail offer is currently open and Equitable Investors is among the sub-underwriters).

“It brings to an end years of competition between MDR and GuildLink and positions MDR’s Australian business with pro-forma revenue of $21.2m for positive EBITDA – and a network of over 5,000 pharmacies and 2.9m digitally connected patients.

“That’s on top-of the $53.6m revenue MDR generated in the US in FY22.”

Pretty adds the capital raising material was compared to its pre-deal market cap of ~$55m.

“While it wasn’t required to fund the GuildLink acquisition, it takes funding off the table as a key short-term risk that has clouded MDR, which has $4.2m to pay in an earn-out for its US acquisition.”

LER has a process for extracting rosin and terpenes from pine with an off-take agreement with a major chemicals company, Japan’s Yasuhara, the company has secured pine feedstock and a processing plant which was under construction with 8,000 tonnes annual capacity.

Rosin and terpene are essential ingredients in everyday products such as sticky tape, paint, disinfectants, and chewing gum, with the direct market for pine chemicals estimated at US$10bn.

“Having executed on a 4,000 tpa pilot plant, moved to construct the 8,000 tpa plant and made its first delivery to Yasuhara in the June quarter of 2021, LER’s plant was struck by lightning, resulting in an explosion and injuries,” Pretty says.

“This led to the suspension of trade in LER shares on the ASX through to July 2022.

“LER has now re-emerged with insurance coverage providing $4.6m and investors in July providing $5.1m in new equity, with a further $3.4m subject to shareholder approval, and $1.5m in convertible notes.

“Yashuhara’s offtake agreement was reaffirmed and LEr is now installing plant with double the previous capacity at 16,000 tpa.

“Doubling the capacity of the initial site, along with significant price increases in rosins and terpenes, means LER is now looking at potential revenue of $68m instead of the earlier $25m target.

“LER now has to prove it can produce at scale – prior to the lightning strike it had been working through plant optimization and hadn’t yet ramped up.”

Data center operator DXN has been facing up to a situation where its share price had declined dramatically over three years and it had a $4m debt facility to service against $1.9m cash at June 30, while producing negative operating cash flow in FY22, Pretty explains .

“Its market cap entering the current month was less than $9m but it has taken action and resolved to sell its business assets for $26m in cash to an industry player.

“The result, DXC expects, is that $0.011 to $0.013 a share in cash will be distributed to shareholders, compared to its share price of $0.006 at the end of July.

“But DXN still had to raise $2.125m in new equity at $0.085 a share to fund its working capital up until the completion of the sale, which is expected by November 30.”

Its debt funder, Pure Asset Management, committed to subscribe to at least two thirds of the placement and Equitable Investors also participated.

The views, information, or opinions expressed in the interviews in this article are solely those of the interviewee and do not represent the views of Stockhead.

Stockhead does not provide, endorse or otherwise assume responsibility for any financial product advice contained in this article.

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Categories
Technology

HPM USB and Qi wireless charge hub D123WTC (review)

The HPM USB and Qi Wireless charging hub may solve more than a few desktop clutter and power problems if you work from home. It offers a USB-C, five USB-A and a Qi charging pad in a handy mains-powered pack.

OK, why do you need the HPM USB and Qi Wireless charging hub?

One 240V cable/device to charge up to six devices replacing six chargers and cables!

The wireless Qi pad outputs 5V/9V up to 2A for 10W charging – perfect for wireless charging iPhones, Samsung Galaxy and any other Qi-compatible device. Qi is gentler on batteries (leading to longer life) as it intelligently delivers what the battery needs. So, you can safely leave the phone on it all day to top up and don’t worry that it will fry your battery.

Then there is a USB-C 5V/2.4A/12W port (with a 1m USB-C to USB-C cable) that is perfect for PD 1.0 or 2.0 devices.

Four USB-A ports, each 5V/2.4A/12W, complete the package. Think smartwatches, headphones – whatever.

There is only one caveat – it provides 60W total power, so it shares this around. Don’t worry – It automatically detects the power required to charge each device quickly and safely, even when all ports are in use.

Australian Review: HPM USB and Wireless charging hub (D1235WTC)

website product page
Price $99 but shop around – seen at Bing Lee for $69
desde Bunnings, Mitre10 and most hardware stores as well as retail electrical stores and trade wholesale stores
Size 130 x 79 x 31mm x 290g
Warranty 12 months ACL warranty
Company HPM Is an Australian electrical industry icon. It was established in Sydney by Doris and Berthold Herrman in the 1920s. It grew from a button manufacturing company to plastic molding and electrical components. In 2007 it became part of the Legrand Group.
More CyberShack HPM news and reviews

We use Fail (below expectations), Pass (meets expectations) and Exceed (surpasses expectations or is the class leader) against many of the items below. We occasionally give a Pass ‘+’ rating to show it is good but does not quite make it to Exceed.

You can click on most images for an enlargement.

First impression – Pass

There are two impressions. First, it solves multiple charging and USB power issues, including Qi wireless charging.

Second, it is a tad boring and industrial looking. It is time manufacturers realize that fashion colors and exciting design drives ‘Shallow Hal’ Gen X, Y, and Z purchasers. They miss so much of the work-from-home market because of traditional design. All that aside, its practicality far outweighs its plain Jane persona.

Quizzes-Pass+

We measure voltage and amperage from each USB port using our USB test rig. It is a rock-solid 5V/2.4A. We loaded the ports to maximum power draw, and it totaled 60W. It automatically detects the power for each device.

Qi charging: A Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra (it can use Qi up to 15W) went from 0-100% in just under four hours – about typical for a 10W charger. An iPhone 12 took a little longer. It is not rapid charge but safe overnight, and you can leave your phone on it all day.

Safety-Exceed

It has over-current protection, short circuit protection and over-temperature protection. I like that it uses 240V and has an internal transformer versus an external brick power supply.

CyberShack’s view – unclutter your desk with the HPM USB and Qi Wireless charging hub.

It is well made with a tremendous electrical pedigree from an Australian company. It uses 240V power (1.5m standard two-pin cable) and has six charging ports.

HPM USB and Qi wireless charge hub D123WTC

$99 but seen for $69 at Bing Lee

HPM USB and Qi wireless charge hub D123WTC

pros

  • HPM Quality build and backing
  • Australian certified, so it is safe
  • 60W shared power to 5 USB ports and Qi pad
  • Comes with 240V mains power cord

Cons

  • A tad utilitarian looks-wise


Categories
Entertainment

Rebel Wilson shows off slimmed-down figure as she heads to the gym in LA

Rebel Wilson displays her slimmed-down figure in a crop top and leggings as she heads to the gym in LA – after revealing Olivia Newton-John ‘tried to teach me about health years ago’

Rebel Wilson showed off her slimmed-down figure in flesh-flashing workout gear while heading to the gym in Los Angeles on Tuesday.

The actress, 42, bared her toned midriff in a sporty crop top and skintight leggings as she stepped out into the sun, warding off the California rays with a visor and shades.

The Australian screen star’s latest outing comes after she shared that the late Olivia Newton-John ‘tried to teach me about health years before I took it seriously’.

Work it: Rebel Wilson showed off her slimmed-down figure in flesh-flashing workout gear while heading to the gym in Los Angeles on Tuesday

Work it: Rebel Wilson showed off her slimmed-down figure in flesh-flashing workout gear while heading to the gym in Los Angeles on Tuesday

Olivia died Monday at the age of 73 surrounded by family at her California ranch after withdrawing from the public eye as her health deteriorated.

She had a roller-coaster 30-year battle with breast cancer, which she was first diagnosed with in 1992 and which came back in 2013 and 2017.

During her life she was an enthusiastic advocate for breast cancer research, even trekking over 228kms along the Great Wall Of China as a fundraiser to build a cancer and wellness center in Melbourne, where she was largely raised.

In 2020 Rebel embarked on a Year Of Health and lost almost 80lbs – nearly a decade after she starred with Olivia in the Australian comedy A Few Best Men.

Off she goes: The 42-year-old actress bared her toned midriff as she stepped out into the sun, warding off the California rays with a visor and shades

Work it! The actress, 42, bared her toned midriff in a sporty crop top and skintight leggings as she stepped out into the sun, warding off the California rays with a visor and shades

Weight loss: The Australian screen star's latest outing comes after she shared that the late Olivia Newton-John 'tried to teach me about health years before I took it seriously'

Weight loss: The Australian screen star’s latest outing comes after she shared that the late Olivia Newton-John ‘tried to teach me about health years before I took it seriously’

After news of Olivia’s death spread around the world, Rebel, her fellow Australian, shared a touching Instagram post in memory of her.

She wrote to Olivia: ‘You were the most gorgeous lady inside and out, you are a true Aussie icon and to play your daughter on screen in A FEW BEST MEN was beyond an honour.

‘Seeing you star in the huge Hollywood blockbuster GREASE with your natural accent was so instrumental to me as a little girl, helping me to believe that it was possible for an Aussie girl to star in huge international musicals.’

Rebel went on to star in major Hollywood musicals herself when she became a scene-stealing presence in the Pitch Perfect films.

In her post about Olivia she recalled: ‘You were the reason I auditioned for my high school production of GREASE at 15 – I was only in the chorus, but it was a start!’

'Love and Light': Rebel shared on Instagram that Olivia was 'a true Aussie icon and to play your daughter on screen in A FEW BEST MEN was beyond an honour'

‘Love and Light’: Rebel shared on Instagram that Olivia was ‘a true Aussie icon and to play your daughter on screen in A FEW BEST MEN was beyond an honour’

Rebel added: ‘You tried to teach me about health years before I took it seriously. You were so kind to me and it was such a blessing to know you Olivia.

‘I’ll never forget us singing at the piano in our lunch break on set together – what a complete legend you are! I am so sad you are gone Love and Light always to you ONJ, Rebel xoxo’.

Earlier this year Rebel revealed that her staggering 80lbs weight loss was inspired by her desire to eventually become a mother.

For years she has been candid about the fact that she was looking at the prospect of freezing her eggs, which was an influence on her decision to slim down.

Covering People this May, Rebel revealed that a fertility specialist ‘looked me up and down and said: ‘You’d do much better if you were healthier.”

Although her reflex response was to think he was ‘so rude,’ she eventually came to the conclusion the doctor ‘was right. I was carrying around a lot of excess weight.’

She has insisted her fitness journey ‘wasn’t a goal to get to a certain weight. It was just being the healthiest version of myself.’

Rebel, who is 5’3′, has previously credited Vivamayr, a luxury medical center and holistic retreat in Lake Altaussee, Austria, for her astonishing weight loss journey.

Now she has revealed that the process of improving her health involved ‘dealing with the emotional issues that caused me to emotionally eat, and that’s a process. You cry a lot, analyze things. I’d never done that before.’

Remember when: Rebel and Olivia are pictured playing mother and daughter between Xavier Samuel and Laura Brent in the 2011 Australian comedy A Few Best Men

Remember when: Rebel and Olivia are pictured playing mother and daughter between Xavier Samuel and Laura Brent in the 2011 Australian comedy A Few Best Men

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Sports

Cameron Smith refuses to deny new reports of $143 million LIV deal | Sport

Open champion Cameron Smith, the world No 2, has again refused to deny reports that he has agreed to join the LIV rebel golf tour on a reported AU$143 million deal.

Fellow Australian pro Cameron Percy told Melbourne’s RSN radio network on Tuesday that Smith and countryman Marc Leishman have agreed to join the controversial Saudi-backed series fronted by Australian golf icon Greg Norman.

Meanwhile, the London Telegraph is reporting that Smith, also the reigning champion at the Players Championship, flagship event of the PGA Tour, will make his LIV Tour debut in Boston next month. The Telegraph report claims confirmation of his switch from him is expected after the PGA Tour’s FedEx Cup playoffs this week in Memphis.

Speaking at a press conference ahead of the FedExCup St Jude Championship, the man with the most famous mullet in sport again refused to rule out reports he will become the most high-profile defection to LIV. “My goal here is to win the FedEx Cup play-offs,” said the 28-year-old Queenslander. “That’s all I’m here for.

“If there’s something I need to say regarding the PGA Tour or LIV, it will come from Cameron Smith, not Cameron Percy,” Smith added. “I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys need to know anything it will be said by me.

“Like I said, I’m here to play the FedEx Cup play-offs. That’s been my focus the last week and a half, that’s what I’m here to do. I’m here to win the FedEx Cup play-offs.”

However, in a twist, Smith confirmed he intended to play next month in the President’s Cup in Charlotte, North Carolina which suggests a move to the LIV series is not as imminent as the Telegraph’s speculation suggests. If Smith did join the LIV tour, he would be banned from the Presidents Cup, a PGA Tour event.

“That’s something that we’ve been looking forward to for the last three years,” Smith told reporters of playing on the International Team in the Presidents Cup. “We missed a year because of Covid and that’s something that I look forward to being a part of.”

Since his stunning Open victory at St Andrews in July, when he overturned a four-shot deficit with a final round of 64, finishing 20 under par to beat Tiger Woods’ 22-year-old record, Smith has refused to confirm or deny reports linking him to LIV. If he does defect Smith would be the rival tour’s highest-ranked player, who has already signed Dustin Johnson, Brooks Koepka, Bryson DeChambeau and Sergio Garcia.

Percy, the 48-year PGA player from Victoria, told RSN radio on Tuesday that Smith and Leishman were “gone.” Percy clarified his remarks about him in a tweet the next day saying: “I was on the radio yesterday in Australia and he said it doesn’t look good for Leish and Cam going to LIV. My source is talking amongst other players. Not Cam and Leish.”

Categories
Australia

The COVIDSafe app is dead – but was it ever really alive?

The federal government’s COVIDSafe app has been scrapped just over two years after its launch.

But the $21 million platform, designed to trace close contacts of people who tested positive for COVID, had problems from the start.

What was COVIDSafe?

When COVIDSafe launched in late April 2020, it was touted as a critical part of the government’s plan to reopen the economy.

The app relied on a bluetooth signal which transmitted at regular intervals to make contact with other users nearby.

If a person tested positive for COVID-19, state and territory authorities could request access to the phone log to work out who else may have been infected.

But the lower the number of people actively using it, the less effective it was – and it wasn’t guaranteed to work for those who did.

So, did COVIDSafe work?

When it was launched, Australians were told they didn’t have to do anything special to get COVIDSafe to work.

But the then-government’s own testing showed that when it went live, COVIDSafe only worked effectively about a quarter of the time or less on locked iPhones.

Communications between locked Androids and iPhones was also poor – although this later improved.

The app’s effectiveness was hampered by bugs which had the potential to limit its core function – particularly at big events, according to experts.

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It also took until late 2021 for COVIDSafe to be updated to track the more infectious Delta variant.

Months before, experts had warned the app’s 15-minute exposure window – the time frame used to define a close contact – was “very useless” in tracking the more transmissible variant.

In December 2021 Mark Butler — who was then the shadow health minister — called for it to be scrapped after it was revealed to have identified just two close contacts nationally in six months.

Mr Butler is now the Health Minister, and figures released by his office on Wednesday show just 17 close contacts that had not already been picked up by manual contact tracers were identified in more than two years.

In its lifetime, the app clocked just two unique COVID cases.

Did anybody use COVIDSafe?

At its launch, the government said it would need 40 per cent of Australians – 10 million people – to use COVIDSafe for it to be a success.

But that number has rarely been mentioned since.

By the time of its decommissioning, there were 7.9 million registrations, according to Mr Butler, who called it a “failed app”.

The vast majority of sign-ups – more than 6 million – were in the first few weeks.

But the app relied on active users, and people consenting to their positive test results being used, to work.

Illustration of someone holding a phone with the government's COVIDSafe app open with parliament house in the background.
The app cost $21 million but detected only two unique COVID cases.(ABC News: Emma Machan)

Fewer than 800 users consented to their data to be collected, according to Mr Butler’s office.

In September 2021, as COVID cases spiked in New South Wales, Victoria and the ACT, the ABC revealed the app had not uncovered any close contacts in those outbreaks.

In fact, the ACT never used data from the app at all, instead opting to rely on its own contact tracers.

How much did taxpayers pay for COVIDSafe?

The previous federal government entered into contracts worth nearly $10 million for work on the app until the end of 2021.

It refused to join Apple and Google’s joint contract tracing system, which was adopted by more than 50 jurisdictions around the world.

The total cost of the Australian app, which had a monthly operating price tag of $100,000, now sits at $21 million.

Of that, $10 million went to develop the app, a further $7 million on advertising and marketing, $2.1 million on upkeep and more than $2 million on staff.

What happens now?

Users are now being asked to uninstall COVIDSafe.

Doing so will delete all their data, according to a message on the app.

The Health Department will no longer gather personal data, and the data gathered via the app so far will be deleted as soon as possible, Mr Butler said.

The app will be formally decommissioned on August 16.

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Categories
US

What’s in it for you? Five cash benefits in the Democrats’ climate and health bill

WASHINGTON — The Democratic spending bill making its way through Congress contains a series of benefits for consumers, including tax credits for clean energy household products and electric vehicles, as well as savings on prescription drugs and health insurance premiums.

The Inflation Reduction Act passed the Senate on a party-line vote Sunday and is expected to get a vote in the House on Friday, before heading to President Joe Biden’s desk.

“Yes, I hope to pass it on Friday,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi told NBC News on Tuesday. “It’s a great bill. It’s historic.”

Republicans, who unanimously oppose the bill, have blasted it as a “reckless taxing and spending spree” that won’t solve inflation and could harm pharmaceutical innovation.

The legislation includes over $400 billion in spending on energy and health care programs, with more than $700 billion in revenues through drug savings and higher taxes on corporations.

Unlike the Covid relief packages in recent years, there are no direct payments or checks in the mail for broad swaths of people. So what’s in it for ordinary Americans? Here’s a rundown.

Medicare out-of-pocket cap, free vaccines

For the first time, Medicare beneficiaries will see their yearly out-of-pocket expenses capped at $2,000 starting in 2025. Today, there is no cap. Medicare seniors would also have the option of spreading out the expenses over monthly payments.

The average Medicare recipient spent $5,460 on out-of-pocket costs such as deductibles and copayments in 2016, according to a study by the nonpartisan Kaiser Family Foundation.

In addition, the bill grants them free recommended vaccines, including for Covid and shingles.

Clean vehicles credit

Want to buy an electric vehicle? The bill offers a credit of up to $7,500 for qualified “clean” vehicles, including popular models from General Motors, Tesla and others.

That credit drops for vehicles that don’t meet all the requirements on electricity power and mineral or battery components, according to details provided to NBC News by the Senate Finance Committee.

It applies to new vehicles that cost up to $55,000 — or $80,000 in the case of SUVs and vans. And you have to earn less than $150,000 in income (or $300,000 for joint filers) to qualify.

There’s a catch: The benefit is cut or eliminated unless the vehicle is sold by a “qualified manufacturer” and for which the final assembly took place in North America, in order to increase domestic production.

For previously owned electric vehicles that are at least two years old and selling at $25,000 or less, there is a credit of up to $4,000 — allowable for individual incomes up to $75,000, according to an analysis by the Bipartisan Policy Center.

Energy efficient home credits

The bill contains a grab-bag of benefits to encourage the use of clean energy items in homes over the next decade.

It increases the credit for installing qualified goods — such as Energy Star products — at non-business properties from 10 percent to 30 percent. That includes “solar electric, solar water heating, fuel cell, and small wind energy, and geothermal heat pumps,” according to the Senate Finance Committee.

The legislation replaces a lifetime cap on credits with a $1,200 annual credit ceiling, offering $600 for energy-efficient windows and $500 for doors. That jumps to $2,000 for biomass stoves and heat pumps. It also enhances the existing credits to cover home energy audits (to $150) and upgrade electrical panels (to $600).

Medicare insulin cap of $35

For Medicare beneficiaries, the legislation imposes a $35 cap on the cost of covered insulin products starting in 2023.

A Health Affairs study last month found 41% of people who use insulin were on Medicare. Overall, 14% of those using insulin said they spend “catastrophic” levels of money on insulin — more than 40% of their remaining income after paying for food and housing.

Democrats also attempted to cap insulin costs on the private market at $35, but Republicans objected and that provision was stricken under the Senate’s strict budget rules needed to pass the bill. Subsequent attempts to add it were unsuccessful.

Affordable Care Act funding

The bill prevents a sharp hike in health insurance premiums on Affordable Care Act plans that were scheduled to hit next year by extending enhanced funding for the ACA passed under the American Rescue Plan for another three years, through the end of 2025. That means the extra aid remains available to Americans with incomes above 400% of the federal poverty level, with premiums capped at 8.5% of family income for the “benchmark” plans.

It means no sticker shock this fall for millions of Americans who were otherwise slated to face premium hikes as a result of the money drying up, a prospect that many Democrats were nervous about heading into the Nov. 8 midterm election.

Categories
Business

Grumpy Donuts Opens in a Marrickville Factory With Brekkie Burritos and Chicken-Salt Hash Browns

Drive past Grumpy Donuts in Camperdown on any given day and you’ll see a line snaking from its serving window. The buzzing donut shop opened in 2016, and was partly responsible for spearheading Sydney’s obsession with iced and glazed wheels of deep-fried dough. Now, there’s another spot you can pick up Grumpy Donuts’ carefully calibrated chocolate- or strawberry-iced and vanilla-glazed donuts. Founders Elise Honeybrook and Scott Clark – who also own supremely popular Marrickville cafe Valentinas – have recently brought Grumpy Donuts to Marrickville, opening in a red-brick factory on the same street as the Bob Hawke Beer & Leisure Center and Brickfields’ Marrickville bakery.

While there are plans afoot to fit out the space with tables and chairs, as well as a centralized production kitchen, for the moment it’s no frills, with crates of donuts, a counter stacked with boxes in Grumpy’s signature green and pink, and a coffee machine at the front. A new addition to the Grumpy experience are chicken-salt-sprinkled hash browns and breakfast burritos, which are made in a food truck at the back. You can get a vegan or bacon version, or a sausage one made using sausages from nearby Whole Beast Butchery.

“It’s just sausage, egg, cheese and two hash browns,” Clark tells Broadsheet.

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“It’s just so nice having the soft, fluffy egg and then you bite into a real crispy bit of hash brown,” says Honeybrook. “We started Grumpy because we would travel and hang out in LA or New York, and we’d eat donuts there. And now breakfast burritos … I think that’s the next thing we’d always be interested in when we went overseas, and people aren’t really doing it [as much] here.”

Grumpy’s full range of donuts is available in the new space, as are rotating specials. Honeybrook and Clark say the sleeper hit is the blueberry fritter, which wasn’t selling when they launched in 2016 – but slowly punters have come around to it. One customer was even inspired to name their dog “Fritter”.

“Once one person tried it, then they’d get their friend to try it… it’s ugly delicious,” says Honeybrook. And the strawberry sprinkle donut is the most popular “for sure”.

The new centralized kitchen will give the couple – and their company, Deep Fried Hospitality – a chance to open shopfronts in Sydney’s north, west and south, and deliver fresh donuts from Marrickville. It’ll also give Clark space to experiment with flavours.

Honeybrook and Clark say it’s nice to be back in the world of donuts.

“It feels really comfortable,” says Honeybrook. “It’s how we started, it’s the thing that we know. Valentinas we built with a team, whereas Grumpy we built with literally just the two of us.”

Grumpy Donuts Marrickville
31 Sydney Street, Marrickville

Hours:
Mon to Fri 8am–3.30pm
Sat & Sun 9am–4pm

grumpydonuts.com
@grumpydonutsofficial

Categories
Technology

The 1970 Holden Torana GTR-X Is a Beast That Never Made It to Market

Holden might be done and dusted in Australia, but the company made a wide range of pretty great cars, including a whole heap of extraordinary concept vehicles.

My personal favorite Holden concept is the 1969 Hurricane, which would have been the only mid-engine Holden ever made, but a close runner-up would likely be the 1970 Holden Torana GTR-X.

Designed by Phil Zmood, this beautiful muscle car, with retracting headlights and a Datsun 240Z-like body, wasn’t always going to remain a concept car. A brochure at the time indicated that Holden would be building a limited collection of GTR-X vehicles, however this never happened.

“Engineers dream. Sometimes those dreams become a reality. But not often,” the brochure reads.

“One such dream is the Holden Torana GTR-X. And it has come true. It is the product of the GMH Research and Development, and Advance Styling Groups. It was built to assess the public reaction to an advanced design two-seater sports car.

“The GTR-X borrows heavily in styling and innovation from GMH’s experimental ‘Hurricane’, but it is designed with the thought of possible limited volume production. And low tooling costs could make it available for far less than its European counterparts.”

holden torana gtr-x
A page of the brochure. Image: Holden

Specs-wise, the GTR-X would have been quite powerful. The engine was a 3-liter 189S six-cylinder, with a four-speed manual gearbox (RWD). The car weighed just 1,043, capable of putting out 5,200rpm, with power peaking at 119kW. They’re specs comparable to the 2-liter Mazda MX-5.

The brochure goes on to call the GTR-X “another dimension in motoring”, but the project was ultimately scrapped. Cars4starters claims that it was discontinued due to concerns about profit from the planned 1,000-1,5000 annual sales. There may have also been concern within the GM (General Motors) brand that it would compete with the Opel GT, which did look quite similar. Opel was a sister company to Holden, operating in the European and US markets (another was Vauxhall).

Now, one of the only pre-production 1970 Holden Torana GTR-X vehicles sleeps soundly at the National Motor Museum in Birdwood, South Australia, as a member of the Holden exhibit, sitting with the Hurricane and the Coupe 60. I recommend checking the museum out.

Also, who doesn’t love the Torana? The Torana everyone remembers best, the small and boxy muscle car Peter Brock thrashed around Bathurst, setting a lap record on the final lap of the race, would have been in good company alongside the special edition GTR-X.

I hope that one day these concept cars can be added to a game like Grand Touring or forzamotorsport, to be loved and appreciated years later.

Long live the Holden Torana GTR-X.

Categories
Entertainment

Fran Kelly to host ABC’s new prime-time chatshow Frankly | Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Broadcaster Fran Kelly, who left Radio National Breakfast in December after 17 years, is returning to the ABC with a new Friday night chatshow in front of a live audience and a house rock band.

The prime-time show, called Frankly, has been billed as “glitzy” and will feature the former political journalist talking to actors, musicians, “big thinkers” and “change makers”.

It’s a change of pace for the veteran ABC broadcaster whose career has focused on hard news and political interviews for three decades, despite having a background as a musician.

Kelly studied arts at the University of Adelaide, was previously a singer in several bands in the late 1970s and 80s and an arts administrator before moving into journalism.

She got her first job at the ABC as a reporter on Triple J’s Hack program in 1988 when she was 29.

RN Breakfast has been breaking news for years, but this morning we’ve got some breaking news of our own.

After an unparalleled 17-year-stint, @frankelly08 has announced that she will be stepping away from the Breakfast mic at the end of this year. pic.twitter.com/j5omXjj6yc

— RN Breakfast (@RNBreakfast) October 20, 2021

“I’m so excited about this new show,” Kelly said on Wednesday, when the show went into production at ABC TV.

“Leaving RN Breakfast was bittersweet… I’m loving the sleep-ins but missing all those incredible conversations with fabulous guests from around Australia and the world.

“People have been asking ever since what’s next for me. Well this is it and I can’t wait. More great conversations, a live audience and my own band … what’s not to be excited about. It’s such a privilege and going to be so much fun.”

Kelly worked in the Canberra press gallery for 10 years and in 2001 was political editor for ABC TV’s 7.30 before a stint as the ABC’s Europe correspondent based in London.

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Since stepping down from RN Breakfast, Kelly has appeared across radio and TV as a political commentator, covered the federal election and co-hosted a podcast with her Breakfast successor, Patricia Karvelas.

When Kelly announced her retirement from daily current affairs radio she wasn’t clear what her next career move would be.

“Sometimes I feel like every hour of my day is mapped out by what I need to achieve in that hour in order to be able to deliver the show the next morning, so it will be nice to breathe out a little,” Kelly told Guardian Australia in December.

Frankly will be produced in-house by the ABC’s entertainment division.

“Fran brings such a warmth and depth of intelligence we couldn’t be more excited to invite the audience in to hear her chat with the most interesting and electrifying people on the planet,” the head of entertainment, Nick Hayden, said.

The last chatshow on the ABC was Adam Hills’s in Gordon Street Tonight, co-starring comedians Hannah Gadsby and Dave O’Neil, which ended in 2013. Andrew Denton’s Enough Rope talkshow, co-created with producer Anita Jacoby, ran between 2003 and 2008 .

The ABC has not released a date or a time-slot for the show yet.

Categories
Sports

Boult to step back from international cricket

Trent Boult has signaled a winding down of his international career after New Zealand Cricket agreed to release the world’s No.1-ranked ODI bowler from his central contract.

Citing a desire to spend more time with family, while also making himself available for domestic leagues around the world, Boult requested the release after several conversations with New Zealand Cricket (NZC).

In a statement, NZC chief executive David White said Boult had made it clear during discussions that his appetite for touring had diminished, and that he wished to spend more time with his family.

The 33-year-old will still be available for international selection if and when available but will have a significantly reduced role with the Black Caps during the final years of his career.

He is currently with the Black Caps in the West Indies for a white-ball tour leading into October’s T20 World Cup in Australia.

Injuries and performance pending, Boult is still likely to be picked for that tournament.

Boult celebrates after dismissing David Warner in last year's T20 World Cup final // Getty
Boult celebrates after dismissing David Warner in last year’s T20 World Cup final // Getty

Beyond that, Boult plans to devote more time to domestic competitions and looms as an obvious candidate to join the newly launched UAE T20 League.

The Big Bash League is also a possibility with Boult having never played in the tournament as it clashes with New Zealand’s own home summer.

Boult has been a central part of New Zealand’s success over the past decade, playing 78 Tests, 93 ODIs and 44 T20Is, including the World Test Championship final victory over India last year.

He also featured in the 2015 and 2019 ODI World Cup finals, and the 2021 T20 World Cup final, losing twice to Australia.

Boult said the call to step away was a “really tough decision”.

“Playing cricket for my country was a childhood dream and I’m so proud of everything I’ve been able to achieve with the Black Caps over the past 12 years,” he said.

Boult screamer labeled ‘IPL’s best ever’

“Ultimately this decision is about my wife Gert and our three young boys.

“Family has always been the biggest motivator for me and I feel comfortable with putting it first and preparing ourselves for life after cricket.

“As a fast bowler I know I have a limited career span, and I feel the time is right to move into this next phase.”

White said Black Caps selectors would continue to prioritize players with central or domestic contracts and Boult understood his decision would diminish his chances of playing for New Zealand.

Boult has taken 317 Test wickets for New Zealand // Getty
Boult has taken 317 Test wickets for New Zealand // Getty

“We respect Trent’s position,” White said.

“He’s been completely honest and up-front with us about his reasoning and, while we’re sad to be losing him as a fully-contracted player, he leaves with our best wishes and our sincere thanks.

“Trent’s made a massive contribution to the Black Caps since his Test debut in late 2011 and is now considered one of the best multi-format cricketers in the world.

“We’re very proud of what he’s achieved.”

It comes after England Test captain Ben Stokes announced a shock retirement from one-day internationals last month to prioritize the Test and T20 formats, saying he could no longer give his teammates “100 per cent” in 50-over cricket.