Two SaaS starts to consider
Here are two software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies I think are good prospects of building profitable global businesses, as they embrace the SaaS revolution and move away from their legacy enterprise software businesses
James Dunn is a freelance finance journalist and media consultant. James was founding editor of Shares magazine, and formerly, the personal investment editor at The Australian. His first book, Share Investing for Dummies, was published by John Wiley & Co. in September 2002: a second edition was published in March 2007, and a third edition was published in April 2011. There have also been two editions of the mini-version, Getting Started in Shares for Dummies. James is also a regular finance commentator on Australian radio and television: he gives a daily finance report on Radio 3AW in Melbourne and is a weekly commentator on Sky Business.
Here are two software-as-a-service (SaaS) companies I think are good prospects of building profitable global businesses, as they embrace the SaaS revolution and move away from their legacy enterprise software businesses
One of the most exciting areas in medicine is the emerging field of CAR-T cell therapy, a potentially revolutionary treatment in cancer and a range of other serious diseases. As a world-class centre of medical research, Australia is at the forefront of this area. Here are four ASX-listed companies involved in this fascinating area.
In 2025, several gold mines have achieved their first gold pour, marking significant milestones for the companies involved, as they transition up the curve from explorer, then project developer, to revenue-generating producer.
Lots of investors want to use active investment strategies, where the portfolio managers are backing their skill to choose stocks that will outperform, and sell those that won’t. Because they’re actively managed, ETMFs are a little different to ETFs. Here are four of the best ETMFs.
Here are two great-looking stocks from the agricultural sector that appear well-positioned right now.
I’ve taken a look at the property sector and found two property-related stocks that haven’t performed well on the share market in recent times. What I’ve found is that some brokers believe the market is failing to understand the story well enough.
Opportunities are plentiful in the Australian share market’s ‘micro-cap’ space. James Dunn looks at two companies from vastly different businesses, valued at virtually the same capitalisation, with what looks to be excellent prospects, and share prices capable of pushing up through the 50-cent level.
Recently I came across these two stocks, that both start with the same letter, and sound very similar when spoken aloud. But they have three other things in common, as well. Read on…
Here are two ASX global leaders, both of which operate in specialist global technology fields, where they are very highly regarded: Appen and Audinate. I urge you to have a read.
Australia’s east coast continues to face a potential natural gas supply deficit, that’s likely to hurt both households and industries that use gas in industrial processes. Potential new sources are working hard to address this supply gap. Here are four enterprising hydrocarbon juniors on the ASX doing just that.
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