Stephan Bernstein, CEO of GreenRoc, details the PFS results for the new graphite processing plant. Watch the video here.
London South East prides itself on its community spirit, and in order to keep the chat section problem free, we ask all members to follow these simple rules. In these rules, we refer to ourselves as "we", "us", "our". The user of the website is referred to as "you" and "your".
By posting on our share chat boards you are agreeing to the following:
The IP address of all posts is recorded to aid in enforcing these conditions. As a user you agree to any information you have entered being stored in a database. You agree that we have the right to remove, edit, move or close any topic or board at any time should we see fit. You agree that we have the right to remove any post without notice. You agree that we have the right to suspend your account without notice.
Please note some users may not behave properly and may post content that is misleading, untrue or offensive.
It is not possible for us to fully monitor all content all of the time but where we have actually received notice of any content that is potentially misleading, untrue, offensive, unlawful, infringes third party rights or is potentially in breach of these terms and conditions, then we will review such content, decide whether to remove it from this website and act accordingly.
Premium Members are members that have a premium subscription with London South East. You can subscribe here.
London South East does not endorse such members, and posts should not be construed as advice and represent the opinions of the authors, not those of London South East Ltd, or its affiliates.
SUFCESSEX - thanks for your reply.
The share may top the 10yrs bottom as you say but one thing I do know and trust is that LLOY is much stronger than it was 10yrs ago. Just a pity it gave up so much on that bloody ppi scandale... Otherwise It'd have been fantastic! Hopefully the cov hit will be limited ; in any event the cheap access to financing granted by the BOE will clearly help mitigate it and the bank will also raise LTV and other guarantee requests on new loans. All in all, like I said I believe this is one to consider for the long term.
GATE13
I'm not sure what type of trades you mean?
Do you mean “Off-book” trades that don’t appear on the L2 order book as the price is agreed by buyer and seller "off the exchange" ?
Please clarify...
Mick,
I think you’re misunderstanding it a little. FTSE 100 companies do trade using the SETs system where there is no need for MMs but a large number of trades are done outside the SETs system directly with MMs in the same stock. Quite often at the end of a days trading MMs will transfer shares between themselves so as to keep a smaller or larger position.
GATE13
The article is about the common complain that market makers cause a false market.
It's about small caps were it does say
"market makers tend to keep a relatively small float of shares, which would be depleted almost immediately."
But it does mention the large caps here..that I quoted in my last post...
Supply and demand
With larger companies, like FTSE-100 constituents, which are traded on the electronic SETS system, the normal market sizes are vastly larger than the example here. And casting our minds back to how SETS works, there are no human market makers in the middle, so when we want to buy shares we can only buy at a price that other shareholders are willing to sell at.
You're mixing up market makers on the smaller companies. to what happens on large cap LLOYDS
Granted it wasn't the best article to select.
Best it was the first I found.
Mick,
Your article even states that MMs hold a float of shares. SETs balance buy and sell orders that can be matched but do not account for all shares traded.
GATE13
I'm talking about FT350 not small aim shares
Extract
Supply and demand
With larger companies, like FTSE-100 constituents, which are traded on the electronic SETS system, the normal market sizes are vastly larger than the example here. And casting our minds back to how SETS works, there are no human market makers in the middle, so when we want to buy shares we can only buy at a price that other shareholders are willing to sell at.
Please read this..
https://www.fool.co.uk/investing-basics/how-the-stock-market-works/market-makers/
Mick,
“ If no one sold you couldn't buy as market makers don't hold shares. Shares sold always equals the numbers bought.more or less. every day.”
That is not true Mick. Market Makers do hold positions in stocks.
SUFCESSEX
I think you mean when their is more demand for buying than selling on the SETS order book
If no one sold you couldn't buy as market makers don't hold shares
Shares sold always equals the numbers bought.more or less. every day.
Its more demand on either side of the order book that causes the swings up and down as the order book changes every micro second.
Check out how the matching system called SETS operates for all FT350 shares
London Stock Exchange 4 minute video explains this
https://www.londonstockexchange.com/products-and-services/trading-services/sets/sets-intraday-auction.htm
Sekiro
I agree 100%
There will be a bottom here, its when there are no sellers left
I agree if you can and still got a little spare cash in the bank earning 0% , top up in staggered amounts on each fall
Its a nice feeling if you do hit the Jackpot Bottom call with the buy
Nothing like the feeling you got in there on the 10 year lows :-)
Yeah memory mixed up
It was RBS that bought NAT WEST at the turn of the century
Ta.
If you already hold shares like me, now is the time to lower your average price. Bearing in mind the long term holding horizon.
Its bad enough to lose 60% of your saving AKA capital on the share prices today and then right kick in the nuts to cancel the 2019 Dividend many share holders like me budgeted this to survive on in 2020
No Dividends = No Staff Bonuses paid
OK, they got away with paying the staff Bonus without making profits in the past, that does not mean they should carry on now its Ethically not the right thing to do
BTW Mad Mick I think you mean Midland Bank not NatWest
HSBC bought Midland Bank in the 90s
I'm a long term investor, holding the share for more than 10 yrs now... And I'll buy more of it probably in the coming days at those levels to lower my average price... The cancelation of the divi was clearly disappointing for me... But this will strengthen the bank which is a good thing and ultimately it will benefit from that decision. So I'll keep holding it for quite some time!
https://www.fool.co.uk/investing/2020/04/04/is-now-a-good-time-to-buy-lloyds-shares/