Control battle lifts ID8 as cash returns drive CD2 in a volatile finance week
A control fight and a big private equity payout topped this week’s finance moves, while several small-cap lenders and fund managers slid hard. Platform operators kept printing inflows, but investors stayed quick to punish anything that looked uncertain.
- Identitii (ASX:ID8) jumped 16.67% as a rights issue headed toward a Takeovers Panel dispute
- CD Private Equity Fund II (ASX:CD2) rose 14.01% after announcing a $0.38 per unit distribution
- DigitalX (ASX:DCC) fell -13.33% and N1 Holdings (ASX:N1H) dropped -13.04% despite reporting steady operating metrics
- Big platform inflows continued at HUB24 (ASX:HUB) and Netwealth (ASX:NWL), keeping the wealth “pipes” growing
- A wave of buy-backs and dividend tweaks (AFI, DJW, AMH, SEC) showed boards leaning into cash returns
Identitii (ASX:ID8) led the tape with a 16.67% weekly surge as its rights issue moved from a funding exercise to a control argument. CD Private Equity Fund II (ASX:CD2) climbed 14.01% after declaring a $0.38 per unit distribution, which is real cash back to investors. On the downside, DigitalX (ASX:DCC) slid -13.33% and N1 Holdings (ASX:N1H) fell -13.04%, showing that steady updates do not always stop selling when investors are nervous.
Wealth platforms: inflows stay strong, features get simpler for advisers
HUB24 (ASX:HUB) reported record platform net inflows of $5.6 billion for Q2 FY26 and lifted total funds under administration to $152.3 billion. Investors like this because it means more fees can be earned as money sits on the platform. HUB24 also flagged a lifetime retirement product (IRIS) with TAL for 2HFY26 and an AI-driven adviser system for a 1HFY27 pilot. In plain terms, it is trying to make retirement income products easier to set up, and make advisers faster at handling admin. Netwealth (ASX:NWL) also kept the money coming, with record quarterly custodial inflows of $8.4 billion and FUA up 23.6% to $125.6 billion. The catch was a $101 million compensation charge linked to First Guardian. Investors care because it is a direct hit to profit, and it can raise the fear of more claims. Praemium (ASX:PPS) reported total FUA up 14% to $70.5 billion and highlighted net inflows into Spectrum and Powerwrap. Insignia Financial (ASX:IFL) grew FUMA slightly to $342 billion, but Master Trust funds fell as products moved and clients left older options.Capital raising and control: when funding turns into a shareholder fight
Identitii’s move was not about higher sales or a new product. It was about who might end up controlling the company after a rights issue. Mitchell Asset Management asked the Takeovers Panel to review the deal, arguing the structure could lift Beauvais Capital’s stake from 29.92% to 49.91%. That matters because a near-50% holder can heavily influence board decisions. The stock can rise in these situations because traders expect a better offer, a revised deal, or a forced change to protect smaller holders. Elsewhere, Assetora (ASX:AOH) announced a $4 million pro-rata rights issue at $0.16 to repay debt and fund working capital. Euroz Hartleys (ASX:EZL) showed the other side of fundraising: it benefits when companies raise money. EZL posted a 121% jump in half-year net profit, alongside 84% growth in equity capital markets raisings to $1.78 billion, and lifted its interim dividend.Dividends and buy-backs: boards keep leaning into cash returns
Several listed investment companies and trusts focused on returning cash. Australian Foundation Investment Company (ASX:AFI) held its interim dividend at 12 cents and added a 2.5 cents special dividend, even as half-year profit fell 4.6%. It also launched an on-market buy-back of up to 111.9 million shares. A buy-back is simply the company buying its own shares, which can lift earnings per share if done at sensible prices. Djerriwarrh (ASX:DJW) kept its dividend steady and announced a new buy-back of up to 24.0 million shares. AMCIL (ASX:AMH) reported higher profit, kept its dividend steady, and also launched a buy-back of up to 24.1 million shares. Spheria Emerging Companies (ASX:SEC) shifted toward monthly dividends, starting with 1.3 cents payments for February and March, before moving fully to monthly from April 2026. For income-focused investors, the practical change is getting smaller payments more often.Credit and specialist finance: strong volumes, but the market still sells
Australian Finance Group (ASX:AFG) reported record mortgage lodgements of $31.6 billion in Q2 FY2026. First home buyer share rose to 13%, and refinance activity hit a record low of 16%. In everyday terms, more borrowers are taking new loans rather than switching lenders, which can change what brokers write and what lenders compete for. QuickFee (ASX:QFE) gained 8.70% after reporting steady quarterly revenue and completing a $28.5 million capital return. Investors often reward clear cash returns because they reduce “what happens next” risk. N1 Holdings (ASX:N1H) still sold off even after reporting higher cash receipts and a strong cash balance. That suggests investors were more worried about how tougher regulatory attention could affect SME lending than they were impressed by the quarter.Funds and alternatives: cash distributions lift some boats, crypto exposure cuts others
CD Private Equity Fund II (ASX:CD2) and CD Private Equity Fund I (ASX:CD1) both pointed to ongoing cash returns from realised investments. These vehicles can move sharply when distributions are announced because investors can calculate the cash coming back soon. DigitalX (ASX:DCC) updated its Bitcoin treasury value at about $79.5 million, with exposure of 503.7 BTC including ETF units. Crypto-linked stocks can fall fast if investors step back from Bitcoin risk, even if the company itself has not changed its holdings much. That sensitivity helps explain why a steady treasury update can still come with a weak share price week.Bottom Line?
Late February will matter for Pengana International Equities (ASX:PIA), which has promised an update on its strategic review by the end of the month. In 2HFY26, HUB24 (ASX:HUB) expects to launch its IRIS retirement product with TAL, while AMP (ASX:AMP) heads toward a CEO change on 31 March 2026.
Questions in the middle?
- Identitii (ASX:ID8): will the Takeovers Panel force changes to the rights issue, and if so, who ends up with effective control?
- Netwealth (ASX:NWL): does the $101 million First Guardian compensation charge close the book, or are more customer claims still to come?
- N1 Holdings (ASX:N1H): how much will tighter regulator attention slow SME lending growth, and will that hit profit in the next half?