ASX Value Guy

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ASX Value Guy

ASX Value Guy

@asxvalueguy

ASX Value Rock Turner / Show Me The Data! Posting stocks I reject.

Australia Katılım Şubat 2024
543 Takip Edilen135 Takipçiler
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ASX Value Guy
ASX Value Guy@asxvalueguy·
@RonShamgar @Nobody_But_M3 ASX: $CXZ Financial Snapshot 📈💰🚀 🔹 Market Cap: $19.23M 🔹 Net Cash: $6.7M (Debt Free! 💸) 🔹 Enterprise Value (EV): $12.53M 🔹 FY25 NPAT: $3.8M (Historic) 🔹 ROE: 33.2% 📈🔥
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David Orr
David Orr@orrdavid·
I think this is right. To make this more possible, cut people out who prevent you from saying what you think. Often, those people are mutually toxic for each other. So find a group where you can all speak freely with each other, on the same wavelength.
Carl Jung Archive@QuoteJung

Carl Jung was not playing around

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Imtiaz Mahmood
Imtiaz Mahmood@ImtiazMadmood·
In a landmark medical technology milestone, a fully autonomous AI-powered robotic dentist — built by US company Perceptive — completed a full crown preparation on a human patient in just 15 minutes. The same procedure typically takes a human dentist 2–2.5 hours. The robot used real-time 3D scanning, AI decision-making, and a precision robotic arm to perform the entire procedure without any human guidance or intervention mid-surgery. This isn't a concept or prototype — it's already been performed on real patients and a peer-reviewed study was published in the Journal of Dentistry in January 2026. Experts say this is the beginning of a transformation: robotic dentists could eliminate human error, work at any hour, and eventually bring high-quality dental care to remote and underserved communities where trained dentists are unavailable. The dental office of 2035 may look very different from today's.
Imtiaz Mahmood tweet media
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Jon-Bernard Kairouz
Jon-Bernard Kairouz@jonbernardk·
I asked a ‘self-made’ millionaire how he made his money… his answer about the NDIS may surprise you 🇦🇺👀
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Bit Brainiac
Bit Brainiac@BigBitBrainiac·
Companies employees love outperformed the S&P 500 by 82% from 2008-2019. $1,000 in "Best Places to Work" winners → $6,529 $1,000 in S&P 500 → $3,580 Culture isn't HR fluff. It's a financial signal. Great retention = lower turnover costs, compounding execution, no brain drain during downturns. The market prices in what employees already know. Glassdoor's list is free alpha hiding in plain sight.
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Brian Feroldi
Brian Feroldi@BrianFeroldi·
Glassdoor's "best places to work" list is a great hunting ground for investing ideas:
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ASX Value Guy
ASX Value Guy@asxvalueguy·
@MrPitbull07 The early Churchill formed SOE was phenomenal....Nazis didn't know what hit them💪
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
She didn’t sneak into Nazi territory — she walked in. Calm. Collected. She rang the bell and asked for a room. Perfect German. Polite manners. A soft smile. Just a harmless tenant, they thought. Only she was anything but harmless. Her name was Lise de Baissac, agent of the British Special Operations Executive — and the Wehrmacht officer who rented her that room never realized he had invited a phantom of sabotage into his home. Every morning she wished him a pleasant day. Every night she slipped out with explosives hidden under her coat, whispering to the French resistance: “If we are loud, we are dead.” He thought she was a lodger. She was surveillance. She was a messenger. She was a silent disaster wrapped in courtesy. But the story didn’t begin in Normandy. It began in the dark sky over France — September 24, 1942. A Whitley bomber thundered above enemy land. A slim figure jumped — thirty-seven years old, fearless, alone. A parachute snapped open over occupied France. She hit the ground hard and immediately buried the silk canopy — burying any trace of England with it. She became “Madame Irene Brisse.” A shy widow who loved archaeology. A bicycle. A sketchbook. A quiet voice admiring Roman ruins. Invisible. In her basket: detonators, coded notes, blueprints of German defenses. In the shadows: the birth of the Artist network — a dozen resisters that became hundreds… then thousands. “They never search for sparks in ashes,” she would say. She moved her new headquarters 100 yards from the Gestapo. Agents slipped into her apartment trembling — but left trained, armed, and ready to fight another night. The enemy crossed her path daily. They never recognized the storm brushing past them. Then — betrayal struck. June 1943. The Prosper network collapsed. Arrests. Torture. She smashed her radio. Burned every document. Across a moon-black field she ran, lungs on fire, toward a waiting Lysander. Three minutes to escape life or lose it forever. Searchlights split the sky behind her — but Lise never looked back. London welcomed her as a hero. She refused rest. Eight months later — she jumped back into France. New name. New cover. Same fire. D-Day was coming. Her bicycle became a supply line. Vegetables on top — explosives hidden beneath. A warm smile for every German checkpoint. “They don’t see us,” she whispered. “That is their mistake.” When she needed lodging in a heavily garrisoned town? She rented a room inside the enemy command post. Tea with the officer. Bread and butter with troop movements. Then slipping out to cripple trains, bridges, fuel depots. June 6, 1944 — Normandy ignites. Reinforcements race toward the beaches — but roads erupt, rails twist, petrol depots burn. The feared Das Reich Division should’ve reached Normandy in three days. It took seventeen. Seventeen days purchased with coded ink, spinning bicycle wheels, and dynamite tucked beneath apples. Lise did that. A quiet woman. A silent blade. Two years undercover. Two parachute drops. Two entire networks built from dust. Death always inches behind — yet she never faltered. She lived. She won. She endured. She received the MBE, the Croix de Guerre, the Légion d’honneur. But among the fighters she trained, the title that mattered most was simply: “One of us.” After victory, she faded into ordinary life — flowers instead of fuses, roses instead of resistance. She never asked for praise. True heroes rarely do. Lise de Baissac died at ninety-eight — a quiet woman who once brought an empire to its knees. She proved something the Nazis never learned: Courage is not noise. It walks softly. It waits in the daylight. And in the dark — it becomes unstoppable. Sometimes the most dangerous weapon in a war… is a woman no one bothered to fear.
Mr PitBull tweet media
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Outsider on the Watch
Outsider on the Watch@OutsiderWatch·
🥴 Because WHY haven’t you filed with FARA yet?? Your podcasting dorkdom was played for over 24 hours straight in January on the Iran state-sponsored tv news channels. You NEVER commented about it. You claim to be American but never once thought it would be important to comment that a regime that has killed Americans for over 47 years was playing your work? That seems SKETCHY af and of course there is a file on you as thick as your head is. You are an agent of chaos, communicating with foreign actors, intent on dividing America and YOU KNOW IT.
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Tucker Carlson
Tucker Carlson@TuckerCarlson·
When you discover the CIA has been reading your texts in order to frame you for a crime.
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Aayush Patil
Aayush Patil@AayushPati70109·
@ManOfFocus_ Learning to read financial statements. The man who understands a balance sheet sees opportunities invisible to everyone else.
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Malvin
Malvin@ManOfFocus_·
To all men, What’s one side hustle that you feel like more men should know about it? Save a man.
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Oukham
Oukham@OPteemyst·
@elonmusk @xai @barisakis Look for the good hearts "It actually matters whether somebody has a good heart. It really does" - Elon
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Dating Dynamics
Dating Dynamics@Dating_Dynamics·
4. "The word 'deserve' will destroy you." My father warned me against the entitlement mentality. "I deserve more." "I deserve better." "I deserve to be happy." He said this thinking focuses entirely on what you are not getting. It makes you blind to what you have. It turns your wife from a partner into a disappointment. The healthier question, he said, is not "What do I deserve?" but "What do I owe?" What do I owe my family? What do I owe this marriage? What do I owe the woman who chose me? That orientation builds gratitude. Gratitude builds fulfillment. Entitlement builds resentment. Choose wisely.
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Dating Dynamics
Dating Dynamics@Dating_Dynamics·
My parents were married for 33 years. Not once did I hear the word “divorce” mentioned in our home. Not during arguments, financial pressure, or difficult seasons. Never. Before my wedding, my father took me aside and shared a few words that have stayed with me ever since….
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Lee Roach
Lee Roach@leevalueroach·
Who are the best deep value nano-cap guys on here? I want to follow all of them.
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Jacinta Allan
Jacinta Allan@JacintaAllanMP·
If you're selling a home, you should have to provide a building inspection report - instead of every interested buyer paying for their own. We're changing the rules to require exactly that.
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BowTiedStocks
BowTiedStocks@bowtiedstocks·
@JacintaAllanMP Lol - I think you’ll find there’s a perfectly good reason why a buyer would want to get their own report, for what in many cases would be their largest financial purchase
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Clifford
Clifford@10footinvestor·
@asxvalueguy things that work well were a result of my superior taste and judgement things that suck are claude's fault
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Clifford
Clifford@10footinvestor·
Still needs a lot of UI polish* but everything is working (*I have been polishing it for two days already)
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