Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
The 0.8133p Sell today is slightly worrying! MMs would appear to be reluctant to take a mere 215,000 shares off the punter's hands. I suspect many investors attempting to sell illiquid shares are facing similar problems which would indicate choppy waters ahead. PML is my smallest investment and I might be tempted to double my holding if it goes much lower. However, 100,000 shares still wouldn't be worth much and it would still be my smallest holding. A reverse TO would be transformational.
...in you being Richard Jennings? Get off your very high horse! And try to stop insulting other investors you ****! I tried to sell my remaining investment in GRIT yesterday and was offered Fill or Kill which means it's very illiquid. Stupidly I tried the last sell price but it failed. So no surprise that today GRIT is among the Top Fallers. I remain confident.
If you only have one minus figure to worry about I envy you! I suspect LOGP's down because PVR's stalled amidst calls for a change of Management from a very arrogant investor who holds 1.2m shares. Either Barryroe attracts a farm-out or it doesn't - if it does we're all laughing. If it doesn't I can write off 15% of my PF.
So no worries about backing the right horse - GRIT will do it for you and has the ability to invest in companies before they list on the Stock Market. Hence the discount to future NAV could be ridiculous.
Could you be American? The "Folks" was a giveaway. Us Brits don't bother being so polite. I weighed up AMP & MTFB and decided to buy MTFB - if it rockets why would I want only 22%? Having said that AMP does look cheap...
I foresee another plunge before a bounce. What do new investors think they're buying into? UK Manufacturing was struggling even before Brexit and the situation must have deteriorated since. Worth buying @ 30p in the hope of a takeover.
I've had a look at Short Tracker and noted that SBRY is the 4th most shorted share. But why? I read a comment somewhere about SBRY being more exposed to a downturn because non-food items are a larger proportion of its sales than the other supermarkets. Contrarily I view that as a positive not a negative. While SBRY is down today by almost 3% I note that TSCO is down almost 7% - are we all expected to be eating less post-Brexit?