Liquidity & Technical

Figures converted from AUD at historical FX rates — see data/company.json.fx_rates. Ratios, margins, and multiples are unitless and unchanged.

Liquidity & Technical

The stock can absorb modest institutional size but is capacity-constrained for any fund north of roughly $120M trying a 5% position — a 1% issuer-level stake takes 12 trading days to exit at 20% ADV participation, and the median daily range of 3.79% means impact costs are not trivial. The tape is bearish: price sits 9.3% below its 200-day average, a 50/200 death cross printed on 23 April 2026, and the stock has lost 65% on a relative basis over three years, with only a fragile near-term MACD bounce to argue otherwise.

1. Portfolio implementation verdict

5d capacity @ 20% ADV ($M)

6.0

Largest 5d position (% mcap)

46.0%

Supports 5% wt at fund AUM ($M)

119.2

ADV 20d / mcap

44.0%

Technical score (−6 to +6)

-3

2. Price snapshot

Current price ($)

12.02

YTD return

-22.7%

1-year return

-30.1%

52-week position (0=low, 100=high)

32.7%

Realized vol (30d, annualized)

46.2%

The 52-week range is $9.35 to $17.52, and DMP sits in the lower third of that range. All-time high was $124 in September 2021 — current price is 90% below that peak. Realized vol of 46% is at the 80th-percentile band of the last five years, i.e. a "stressed" regime.

3. The critical chart — price, 50d and 200d (full history)

Loading...

Price is below the 200-day. The chart is decisive: a parabolic 2020–2021 advance peaked at $122 in September 2021, then unwound to the $9–18 range by mid-2025. From the September 2021 high, DMP has compounded at roughly negative 35% per annum. The October 2025 low of $9.35 was the cycle bottom; the bounce into late November printed a brief golden cross (29 December 2025) before reversing into the April death cross. This is a multi-year downtrend that has not yet given a base.

4. Relative strength

Loading...

The data pipeline did not load a benchmark series suitable for ASX comparison (the default broad-market ETF is US-listed), and no sector ETF is available for ASX restaurants. The chart shows DMP's own cumulative path; relative comparison against ASX 200 / S&P/ASX consumer discretionary would need a separate fetch.

On its own price, DMP has lost 65% over the last three years against an unchanged base, and the line is still sloping down. Two attempted reversals (early 2024, late 2025) failed inside one quarter. There is no sponsorship signature — money has been one-way out.

5. Momentum panel

Loading...
Loading...

RSI rebounded from 27 (deep oversold) on 30 March to 53.5 today — a textbook short-term covering rally, but well below the late-2025 burst that printed 90. MACD histogram flipped from −0.41 in early March to a small positive +0.04 last session: a momentum thaw, not a regime change. The dominant pattern across 18 months is that every momentum surge has been sold within four to eight weeks. The current bounce is consistent with a counter-trend rally inside a primary downtrend.

6. Volume, volatility and sponsorship

Loading...
No Results

Four of the five largest volume spikes in the last three years were negative-return days, with average drawdowns of −22%. This is the textbook signature of a name under distribution: volume arrives on bad news. The single positive spike (6 February 2025, +21.3%) printed on the announced Japan store closures, which the market read as a long-overdue reset rather than a fundamental improvement — and the rally was sold within six weeks.

Loading...

The 5-year realized-vol bands are: p20 = 26%, p50 = 34%, p80 = 47%. The current 46% read sits at the boundary between the "normal" and "stressed" bands, but the run from 22% in late August 2025 to a print of 75% by mid-September shows how violent the regime swings are — DMP has spent four of the last twelve months above the stressed threshold. The market is demanding a wider risk premium even in quiet weeks.

7. Institutional liquidity

ADV 20d (shares)

495,946

ADV 20d ($M traded)

5.7

ADV 60d (shares)

476,304

ADV / mcap

44.0%

Fund-capacity table — what fund size this stock supports

No Results

At normal-market 20% ADV participation, the largest 5-day-clearing position is 0.46% of market cap — about $6.0M. That supports a 5% weight only up to fund AUM of roughly $119M, or a 2% weight up to about $298M. At the more conservative 10% ADV participation, those numbers halve.

Liquidation runway — days to exit by position size

No Results

Median 60-day daily range is 3.79%, well above the 2% threshold at which impact costs become a real friction — a 100,000-share market order is going to move the print. The combination of modest ADV ($5.7M) and a wide intraday range makes DMP cheap to dip into and expensive to exit in size.

Bottom line on liquidity: the largest position a fund can build or exit inside one trading week at 20% ADV is roughly $6M (0.46% of the issuer's market cap). At the more conservative 10% ADV that drops to $3M (0.23%). DMP is implementable for funds up to mid-cap Australian active managers but is capacity-constrained for any global long-only or hedge fund running $350M+ with concentrated portfolio targets.

8. Technical scorecard and stance

No Results

Stance — 3-to-6 month horizon: bearish. The technical picture is unambiguous on the medium-term trend (price under 200d, fresh death cross, sub-stressed vol, distribution-style volume signature, three-year relative loss of 65%), but a real near-term cover/bounce setup exists (RSI recovering from deep oversold, MACD histogram turning positive, 1-week return +7.5%) that could carry the stock back toward the 50d/100d cluster around $12 to $13.90.

Levels that change the view. A daily close back above $13.90 would (i) reclaim the 100-day SMA, (ii) take out the April bounce highs around $13.20, and (iii) invalidate the bearish setup — that's the level on which to reconsider. A close below $9.34 (the 52-week and 10-year low) confirms breakdown and removes the floor.

Implementation sentence: Liquidity is not the binding constraint for funds under roughly $120M targeting a 5% position, but it is the binding constraint above that. For larger funds, the correct action is watchlist only — wait for either the $13.90 reclaim (add) or the $9.34 breach (avoid further); building slowly across multiple weeks at sub-10% ADV remains feasible only because the volatility regime widens the exit cost more than the entry cost. This is not a one-week portfolio decision.