Dave Rowland via Getty Images AUCKLAND, NEW ZEALAND - JANUARY 05: Dick Smith's Manukau Store on January 5, 2016 in Auckland, New Zealand. Dick Smith was taken public by buyout firm Anchorage Capital Partners two years ago. Stock last traded at 35.5 Australian cents on the ASX, after dropping 84 per cent from the A$2.20-a-share Anchorage set for its initial public offering two years ago. The electrical retail chain was founded by the entrepreneur Dick Smith in the 1960s. (Photo by Dave Rowland/Getty Images)

Business is business and opportunities shouldn't be missed, sure. But can some business come, well, a little too soon?

Picture: Twitter/@robbiejwood The fall of electronics retailer Dick Smith has been seized as a growth opportunity by Jaycar Electronics, which is encouraging landlords with Dick Smith leases to ring for a "confidential no-obligation discussion" about their premises. If it's at all possible for a black-and-white print ad to ooze a cheshire cat grin, it's this one. And these sentences fit in like mocking dimples: "Dick Smith Electronics may indeed trade out of their current problems and indeed we wish them well," the ad reads. "You probably have nothing to worry about."