RE:RE:RE:RE:torontoguy??
This is hardly a business analysis.
The guilt by assoication with Cashstore is ridiculous. They process payments, they don't pass judgment and are not responsible for ethical judgement on those payments. As far as I'm concerned, it's a free country and no one is forced to take out payday loans.
The same government that came down on Cashstore for not following regulations is the government that makes generous tax revenue from the sale of cigarettes and booze to same disenfranchised people that borrow from the Cashstore.
I'll let the courts decide if contracts were broken. Your interpretation of this as unusual highlights your naivety on the subject. DCI has thousands of customers and any anecdotal stories you may have are not relevant to analysts and investors.
Finally, DCI share price drop has been primarly the result of short sellers and weak hands that rolled over, not mismanagement or their business style. While ATM transactions have been dropping, they've improved margins to compensate and diversified their business. The Cashstore, the supposed death blow for the company is just a tiny slice of overall pie now.
And if you scan back far enough in this comment stream, their are posts by you indicating if the price got low enough you'd be interested in buying shares, so how can it be that you have ethical issues with them? The story keeps changing.