Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
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Everyone is suddenly a massive expert! It's crashed, property crashed, only a few select people know why.
Fck this I'm going drinking, need to be home for 10... What a pump and dump mess!
Thanks for the reply pilgrim.I do appreciate vision and wasn't a fan of the modern water merger so early.However i saw the value of it later and trust in gb.I also realise the importance of innovation, research and development.Companies like amazon have realised this for a long time and their margins were not big for a while if you excluded research and development.I am worried we are a bit too small for that strategy though and would have preferred sticking to where we have the advantage tech\ip wise.However you have to believe in the ceo i believe and i do and small caps fluctuate alot anyway in the best of times.
This is nothing like other testing methods nlondon. That's the problem at the moment..people just can't see the difference. It's an end to end solution, not just a testing method. And the costs will involve multiple partners and huge volume high volume...but there's nothing else out there other than stand alone tests which aren't self administered. Perhaps they would have been better holding this back until Xmas and just discussed water detection..at least the majority of people seem to be able to understand that.
Cash burn does worry me a little with the breathyser test, but gb hasn't mention edany extra costs, but i do really like the company and the vision and we have a clear front-runner position in wastewater based epidemiology with modern water ip and rinoclouds previous studies.The breathalyser test i like the idea of but i have no idea about really i guess like others and although it differentiates itself from other covid tests clearly, it concerbed me when gb said we needed mass adoption to be able to get the price point down , i guess to compete with other testing methods.Also does anybody know if induviduals or companies would have to pay for their own machine(s) (sorry i don't know the name) to breathe into before it is analysed?I'm not sure if people would unless mandated by government and events\theatres\ footie etc... wouldn't want to make people have to pay more to attend?
You can't deliver more news that what's available. There will be other updates between now and when Aberdeen complete testing, but there's no need to come out today or Monday just because some people have sold. Everybody knows how fickle Aim is with Covid related stocks. It's just a bunch of amateurs trying to double up like it's a casino. Helium may have sold down because of the price..they have to keep their fund balanced..that's in their regs. If the sp floats around here for a bit, so what. If it goes back to 50p, so what..it's not relevant to anyone other than traders
I'm with VeganEater, the model he suggests though only a small change to the proposed model has a better chance of success and doesn't require mass (government level) adoption. The only economy I see capable and maybe even willing to adopt the proposed model is China but I imagine they already have their own plans and are already comfortable with the root they have taken.
I'm willing to hold my position for now, but if the cash burn goes extreme I'll have to exit.
And if you're a on a knife edge, just sell up. You're obviously not cut out for investing in micro caps...
Deb..GB is building a business over the next few years...peaks and troughs on a daily basis are not his concern.The sp is where it was 10 days ago, and significantly higher than a month ago. In between there's been a peak of buying post RNS and then some selling...In the whole scheme of things who cares, except any traders that got caught on the spike..well, that's trading for you. There's labskin, water monitoring and now a potentially game changing inhaler. The company is in good shape, doesn't need funds, unless in 6/9 months the order volume goes through the roof for said products and they have to raise to meet production, but there's plenty going on before that point. The business model may be refined but the concept is now out there..an end to end solution..the first one anywhere in the world. Enough said
I agree 100% Deb !
Retiredby40 - don't get me wrong, this is a goer against zero alternatives, but there is also some obvious friction in delivery but at the same time so close to being the total answer.
I think it is possible to find a solution to verify the person taking the test in the home environment, but carrieds complications about what society will accept, but to beat Covid some may have to accept previously unpalatable options such as a biometric info bank to verify people in specific circumstances via currently available gadgets and tech, then integrate this into what Integumen are doing. Appreciate my opinion and not smart enough to outline exactly how that would work, but surely the end game v Covid
That’ll be the same for any self-administered test which is what’s needed for mass screening so a catch-22.
Because the system can be abused without verification of who blew into the kit i worry it will hamper mass adoption, everything else is literally dripping in positive potential. Got to be a way with modern technology and biometrics to have a one hit remote solution that tests, gives results and verifies the user.
FWiW, the vaccine may well appear at some point but that too has many questions that will need to be answered before there us a mass uptake. The virus is constantly mutating so there will be question marks over the reliability and efficacy of the vaccination. Once infrastructure etc are in place the kite be easily recalibrated for the next pandemic which no doubt won't be far behind. There are of course other viruses in other parts of the world for which vaccine development has stopped or not taken off at all. From what I have heard and read over the last few days the breathalyser is a neat piece of kit which, if production is not an issue, is imo capable of delivering what the company outlined in the presentation and return the country to some form of normality. There is therefore every incentive for the Govt to have look at this technology. A 24 hr "health pass" to watch a game, go to pub for few beers after, followed by a curry and a bit of clubbing all for the price of coffee.
I am inclined to agree that the business model is too complex, if it worked this would make DV a company worth tens of billions but I think it very unlikely and a lot of cash would be needed on the way. What people are missing is that this technology can be adapted, with disposable mouth pieces a similar machine or two at an airport or sports stadium could test thousands of people a day and DV could charge per test and make a killing. If markets demand this sort of solution it would be very easy for DV to pivot and provide this instead or as well. People are getting hung up on the business plan and forgetting that the technology (if it works) is hugely valuable.
Too many ducks have to fall in line for this business model to work. The test needs to be demonstrated as being at least as effective as existing tests. Hardware and software will need to be produced tested and made available, this will take time. All this will need to be funded before any certainty that public will be willing to participate and knowing that a vaccine could make the project unecessary. A project of this size would take a minimum of twelve months to get off the ground even for a multinational company with vast resources not available to Deepverge.