6 ASX stocks you forgot were listed

Nick Sundich Nick Sundich, May 8, 2025

Here are 6 ASX stocks you forgot were listed

 

Brisbane Broncos (ASX:BBL)

No it is not a mistake. This $100m company is none other than Brisbane’s first NRL team. And while it is no ASX 200 company, the Red Hill-based team made $81.6m in revenue (up 9%) and a $5.7m post-tax profit (up 2%) in CY24. Aiding the Broncos’ cause have been significantly increased attendance with home game attendance averaging 40,000 and total memberships exceeding 60,000 – off the back of the club’s 2023 grand final appearance.

The company’s most recent announcement was that the introduction of a PNG team (which was confirmed in December last year) would be that $4m would be payable to the broncos and the other 16 existing clubs with the first $1.75m installment payable in April 2025.

 

Love Group

This $4.9m penny stock has dating apps including Lovestruck and Ever. The latter brand is a new app, being launched in Singapore in FY24 and into Hong Kong and the UK in FY25. Ever is powered by a proprietary matching tool that delves into 26 constructs encompassing various aspects of personality, attachment, love styles, idealistic distortion, self-care, self-esteem, narcissism, social justice and others.

While its market capitalisation remains low, the share price is in positive territory over the last 12 months. That’s more than can be said for many dating app stocks such as Match.com (NDQ:MTCH), which are struggling as desperate singles turn back to the real world (particularly run clubs) to find love.

 

National Stock Exchange (ASX:NSX)

Yes, Australia’s secondary stock exchange is listed on its primary exchange. Things have been tough over at the NSX, with the company making just over $700k in revenues in 1HY25 and a loss of nearly $2m. It was struggling with low liquidity, even before interest rate hikes.

The company entered into a short-term loan with ISX Financial for A$1.6m ‘to provide immediate working capital for the Company while the Company engages with investors for additional capital to progress the growth strategy and business development plans’.

However, one recent win was the hiring of former ASX executive Max Cunningham as its Managing Director and CEO. Upon his appointment he said,’ NSX has challenges to provide a viable alternative to a strong incumbent and compete for new listings, however with those challenges come great opportunities to provide both better service and more transparent regulatory outcomes and accountability for both listed companies and investors’. His performance incentives include listing targets, 75 entities in the short-term and 100 in the long-term.

 

3P Learning (ASX:3PL)

This company, one of the ASX’s few ‘ed-tech’ stocks is capped at over $260m. You may not know this, but it is the owner of the world-famous Mathletics software. Others include Mathseeds and Reading Eggs. Its portfolio are used in 179 countries, 17,000 schools and loved by 5.5m students. 3PL made $110m in revenue, up 3%, in FY24, but its bottom line swung from a $6.3m profit to a $57m loss due to impairment.

 

(Unibail-Rodamco) Westfield (ASX:URW)

Many investors may have thought Westfield just disappeared once it was bought by French real estate giant Unibail-Rodamco. But it has remained on the ASX with its shares trading as CDIs. The company’s CY24 results were severely impacted by the disposal or foreclosure of its US properties as well as negative valuation movements on other assets. In our view, it’ll only be a matter of time before it delists and makes its European listing its sole one.

 

Zoonoo (ASX:ZNO)

Yes, it is still listed. That company that made sanitisers and went from 9c to over $3 in a matter of months in 2020 all over hype. That company whose then boss Paul Hyslop sold NZ$23.2m in shares to Regal Funds Management in March 2020 at $1.38 per share.

Now a days, it trades at $12.9m or 3.2c per share. It had just NZ$192,000 in cash as at the end of March 2025 (enough to last 0.36 quarters, although the company purported to have stock inventories of NZ$6m to raise revenue). It lost $527,000 from operating activities.

 

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