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...I'm with Njames.
PSA licence transferred to FRUS whilst part of FRC. FRUS then immediately moved out of FRC and becomes a completely separate company and all our shares moved with it. With respect to nominee shares, this I believe is a "share certificate" that includes all the shares a broker holds for their customers. Therefore it is easier for the company because they only have to keep a register of brokers, the brokers themselves, in effect, holds the share registration. Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Whether there is an 80/20 split between new and old shareholders, well let's hope for better than that.
Bloody good job too Lifey, I think some people have got too much time on their hands...
Luckily I haven't so that's it from me.
I'll look in next in next month...
Oops that's tomorrow!
;-)
Looed, that's a totally different conversation, but you could be right...
:-)
...Looed has a sense of humour...
...must be close to wearing through now though...
Well 12 weeks is a lot sooner than 5 years...
Though even if we do some how retain shareholdings in something significant it is still going to be a number of years before it turns into a positive investment IMHO.
Maybe, maybe not...lets see what the budget brings (March 6th). It is general election year after all...
https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/spring-budget-2024-what-it-means-for-your-money-aRzMQ1q7C9uy
Shandy, I like the option in your last paragraph to raise the sp in the short term but, imo, they should be look at offloading all Revolution bars to guarantee survival over any term. The 18-30's brigade are not going to get affluent anytime soon, probably not this decade anyway.
It won't be the only company trying to survive this year...
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/jan/22/more-than-47000-uk-businesses-on-brink-of-collapse-warn-insolvency-experts
What is the % split?
Interesting for this next year https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1851844/brexit-european-union-recession-pmis
When the 18-30's do get a bit of extra cash then...boom, well possibly not, they do seem to be a bit more cautious post covid...
Just getting rid of the chaff. Business model covers equally all demographics not just the young. Families have little spare cash but the over 50s do. It'll survive.
Agree though, not the best time to expand. Should've waited until the economy stabilised. 2025 maybe?
Hold or watch IMO.
...after "long covid" people getting pay rises, inflation coming down = money in their pockets to get back to the normal pre-covid socialising level and then some...all loans could be paid off very rapidly, quicker than people think...as long as no more global diseases etc are lurking...
So we might get a decision just before Christmas...
This Christmas will be telling. I think they've got their business model about right both geographically and demographically.
One to watch and/or invest small regular amounts IMO.
If they survive another year then by 2026 I think the sp will be many many multiples of the current sp.
Leicester City fans thought the same about them winning the Premiership (i.e "There's more chance of Carlisle getting promotion") at the beginning of the 2015/16 season...
...except some of the daft ones...
...shame what's happened to them now though 8 years on...they need Ted Lasso! :-)
Until we can harness fusion energy or better still zero point energy I'm afraid only hydrocarbons can provide our current global energy levels requirements...hydrogen processing will be the halfway house. Any company looking into hydrogen processing and transportation should be looked at from an investment point of view over the medium to long-term imo.
Fusion energy is probably 20-30 years away...https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-63950962
Zero point energy...https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/follow-up-what-is-the-zer/