Scancell founder says the company is ready to commercialise novel medicines to counteract cancer. Watch the video here.
Let me Google that for you: https://lmgtfy.app/?q=clon+share+price
121's reply seems a little aggressive for my taste but you can see their point. There are a number of famous web search engines and a some other obvious sources of information that might help you. You might also expect to get some biased opinions here, so be careful what and who you listen to.
The conclusions of a New Scientist article on sodium batteries (January 2021) was that sodium batteries might become competitive with lithium batteries in a few to several years and also that "We shouldn’t necessarily expect sodium batteries to directly replace lithium ones. Instead, it might make sense to use sodium cells in certain applications and so, hopefully, take pressure off our lithium reserves."
The day traders are just doing their job. The short term fluctuations are just noise and, for long term holders, are best ignored. That's not always easy but we need to focus on the medium and long term trends, not changes of a few hours or days.
Does anyone here have a clear idea of how much effort it takes to pull together an RNS? On the face of it it would seem fairly simple and then your (Acker's) desire for increased formal updates might be reasonable. But I imagine there are regulatory requirements to be met and checking by board members and lawyers. It might be quite extensive.
Anyone have any relevant knowledge?
No idea what industries we collectively have experience of here but in my sector the testing/commissioning phase is not something you rush. If you need to take an extra week or a month, you do so. The consequences of a failure (knackered belt, stripped gears, whatever) have unquantifiable impacts on cost and schedule. It can feel tough to wait a little longer, but I hope PREM aims for 'right-first-time' and not 'quick-as-possible' just to satisfy us!
Chipleader, the answer to your question lies in psychology. It takes some effort to retain a rational approach to life in general but this seems especially true where money is involved; money seems to hook into emotion in a powerful way. This is shown at both ends of the curve, where some people preach the gospel and look forward to nirvana (i.e. multibagging whatever their investment was) while others become prophets of doom, trying to save us all from damnation (i.e. the sp crashes).
Rational people don't feel the need to go to extremes. They present their opinions, listen to others and try to respond rather than react. It has seemed to me that, until the last few days, this board has been dominated by rational people with a few evangelists. The occasional heretic is treated has been vocal but not really listened to.
It's fun to watch!