George Frangeskides, Chairman at ALBA, explains why the Pilbara Lithium option ‘was too good to miss’. Watch the video here.
The full name is Normal Market Size, the minimum number of securities for which a market maker is obliged to quote firm bid and ask prices. This supplies liquidity into the market, for those interested further there is more detail on:
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/n/normalmarketsize.asp
I have massive admiration for the UK national press of all political pursuasions - including BBC online - and their valued ability to dig down through the spin to get at the facts, though newer paywalls have removed some of the variety online. But on this issue I feel let down, as both of the long industry inside commentaries below were a revelation. Obviously the editorial point of view comes through and the actual decision went ahead within hours, as those with shares in Balfour Beatty, Kier Group and Costain can testify (I am not in the industry or a holder of anything related but am pleased with the go-ahead).
https://www.railmagazine.com/research-hub/comment/comment-special-let-s-get-hs2-done
And for those who like detail (and cost detail) the gold-plating was a revelation possibly noone else has covered:
https://www.railmagazine.com/research-hub/comment/comment-from-the-archives-r892-build-hs2-in-full-says-review
For the vast majority able to make an easy portal claim, you should be back in action between January and March 2020. The letters are coming out at present:
https://www.leonardcurtis.co.uk/SVS/ (note you there are extra downloads beyond the default screen)
Now fixed on LSE - sort of - via the Liberum reiteration on 12 November at the same target price. This has gone into the LSE database immediately. Thank you.
Though a limited holder of one stock and I've written on it a few times. I don't think many knowledgeable readers here would consider that the headline is controversial , ramping, or deramping. Things haven't much changed since a slight commodity uptick since the summer, very simple chart at the end.
My question is simple. Are there any lithium production or exploration companies trading in the UK (not abroad) where the price remains OK or good and the majority of LSE posters are happy with progress and management please? Ability to do so in the current environment would be praiseworthy indeed. Since this will hopefully attract strong supporters please back up your assertions with facts or RNS and include one smaller downside that you'd rather was kept low key! Occasionally the best opportunities come at the peak of pessimism. Thanks in advance from the clifftop.
https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/lithium
Bobg, find the share you're interested in, for full thread go to Share Chat on the menu and click on the green box in the headings on the right hand side. The BB summary that you see as part of the info from the (initial) Share Price page that you land on doesn't have this facility. If you want your own postings only you can click on your handle (chat name) in blue on the left hand, this also applies if you want to see the interests of any other member. Hope these help.
Still uncorrected by the data provider to lse.co.uk, on the ITV Broker Ratings link. Thanks again for whatever you can do.
If you need justification with original as opposed to secondary source it makes interesting reading:
https://liberum.s3.amazonaws.com/ITV_BUY_TP_180p_SDN_a_hidden_gem_15_pgs.pdf
(Thanks for your attention - shareholder in ITV.L but no connection with the broker or news providers)
The extract below is not yet on your Brokers data bank in spite of being updated to yesterday, for some reason there is a 2 September detail for Liberum @ 145p unchanged which may or may not be connected:
06 Sep 2019 | 10:40
Broker Forecast - Liberum Capital issues a broker note on ITV PLC
Liberum Capital today reaffirms its buy investment rating on ITV PLC (LON:ITV) and raised its price target to 180p (from 145p).
Story provided by StockMarketWire.com
Broker Forecasts data provided by www.sharesmagazine.co.uk
Sorry the system has removed the links to the necessary forms, but you can access them by searching for "broker transfer form" or via your share registrar's website. Good luck.
Hi WD-40,
Yes you have to physically sign them over to her, but it's very easy and gifts (ie consideration money £NIL on the form) between family members are quite common for the reasons you have worked out, as paper share transactions of value over £1000 attract stamp duty payable to HMRC by post.
Most or all of the share registrars have their own forms which come with guidance notes, two of the largest providers are:
http://www.shareregistrars.uk.com/ShareRegPortal/PDF/Stock%20Transfer%20Form%20-%20use%20from%206%20Apr%202012.pdf
http://www-uk.computershare.com/Content/download.asp?docId=%7BCAFDB55F-F249-44EE-909B-CEC875D8DF10%7D
For paperless transactions held on CREST you'll have to authorise your broker something similarly, it works best if you and your wife both have separate accounts with the same broker. Hope this helps.