The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.
Could turn it into a drinking game, take a sip every time one is mentioned and we will all be bladdered by 10!
Some stellar releases coming for Q2:-
18th March 2022 – The Phantom of the Open
1st April 2022 – Sonic the Hedgehog 2
1st April 2022 – The Bad Guys
1st April 2022 – Morbius
8th April 2022 – Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore
22nd April 2022 – The Lost City
22nd April 2022 – Operation Mincemeat
22nd April 2022 – The Northman
29th April 2022 – Downton Abbey: A New Era
6th May 2022 – Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
27th May 2022 – Top Gun: Maverick
10th June 2022 – Jurassic World: Dominion
17th June 2022 – Lightyear
24th June 2022 – The Black Phone
24th June 2022 – Elvis
For me Top Gun will be huge for all ages, Gru and Lightyear, will be one for the kids and parents, Downton will be big for some of a certain age (my parents want to see it so....) Jurassic park could also be a possible big hitter. I'm more hopeful and I think Bond, The Batman, and Spiderman provided great foundations in the times we needed it, now we need the following to build. For me the shoots of recovery are green! Fingers crossed, in the grand scheme of things not much has changed since the £1+ days of Bond in November, bar the court case which is under appeal and won't be paid for some time yet. Films are coming out, cinemas are busy and show the public still has an appetite.
Thought the same when I saw it was Russian CEO, Chairman and CFO, with operations 80% in Russia. Thought to myself that wouldn't last long. All I know it was a green box banding it around.
speaking of Divi's How much do you think the dividend plays on investors minds? As CINE doesn't have one (at the moment) will investors look elsewhere for ones who do pay a divi, or am I overthinking? Could news on when the BoD bring back a divi bring some more investment money in?
I managed to buy some cheap National express too end of last year, plus some other little bits and bobs, but CINE is my biggest by a lot. On red days I tell myself I've put too many eggs in the one basket, back when Bond was released and I was green, those eggs looked tasty.
My average is like 65p, and I'll be happy to see green, part of me thinks just get out, the other thinks that it could possibly pay towards a house deposit, so to stay for £1+. This has been my first investment and well as everybody here knows it's been very rocky, and at times completely baffling and demoralizing. I'm not in for big money, which kind of makes it easy and forces my hand, fair play to you guys and girls who are playing with massive portfolios!
Sat and thought this myself about 20mins ago!
Founded in Russia, Russian owner, CEO and chairman, and when reading where their sites are, most are in Russia.
Are there any plus sides to dropping off the 250? We see how CINE are lumped in with leisure and travel stocks when airlines have a bad day it affects us, as the same with the FTSE. Trying to think of a positive here...
Been saying the same thing for weeks KTP, would be nice to hear something, instead of being left in the lurch. Obviously they can't come out with specifics over the court cases, but just something would be nice!
it is, but this morning IAG are down 0.38%, Whitbread are down 1% and National express are up 1.2%, whereas Cine are down almost 6%. Surely that's not just because they are in the same sector as travel which is being affected by the oil price.
I have to admit though, the most frustrating thing for me is the silence from the BoD/ Mooky. Occasionally we get an interview from him, but nothing directed directly to us investors about how they plan to bounce back. Selling more tickets, popcorn and Pepsi only goes so far.
I sit here and think personally £6bn~ is quite alot of debt, but in the grand scheme of things is it really? There are other multinational companies out there with much more debt - Googling the largest gives the top 4. Funny enough these companies still have good credit ratings too.
1 Volkswagen AG $192bn
2 AT&T $176bn
3 Daimler AG $151bn
4 Toyota $138bn
Litigation costs up 178%. Mr Mark charging a fortune!
it's $ not £.
Need to be a subscriber! Synopsis please!
Or Cineplex are after a quick payout to stop themselves going into administration. The fact is nobody knows what the outcome will be.
I'm still hoping for a fair for both parties out of court settlement, however as time drags on, this seems less and less likely.
Jackass for Feb too. Might not be the next $bn BO, but from what I've seen and people looking forward to it, it will do well, hopefully!
Don't say his name because he'll come back now. *Facepalm*.
Not even worth clicking the link. Freelance writers writing to suit their own personal agenda, and using clickbait headlines to generate clicks. Anything from MF is worth ignoring.