Chris Heminway, Exec-Chair at Time To ACT, explains why now is the right time for the Group to IPO. Watch the video here.
agree 100%. These forums are full of well informed people who post really useful stuff BUT anyone who says they know what a share is going to do is lying (unless they are insider trading, in which case it's illegal). There is all sorts of bs posted about 'target prices' and 'I can see this and that sp by..' It's all guesswork albeit sometimes more educated than others. Remember that active funds frequently underperform passive ones...
I think the green sector is a good one to invest in and this company may well succeed, but what it's worth is almost impossible to say
My advice is don't put all your eggs in one basket, don't invest in what you don't understand, and don't invest what you can't afford to lose (in AIM shares anyway)
(I bought at 2.25 and am in it for the long haul)
I seem to an expert at buying at the peak. I was watching this at £1 and missed the rise. Any advice to a potential investor on a good entry point? I like what the company does but working out a realistic market cap seems very difficult.
Yep, Lesser, like you I've also got a foot in each camp. I like what is happening to the SP of AFC, but that market cap does seem enormous , even when considering the potential. I do think we might be entering. a bit of a 'hydrogen bubble'- Just because CWR and ITM are valued higher it doesn't make their valuations realistic. I've got a much bigger foot in the Simec Atlantis camp-tidal is SUCH a good reliable source of energy for which the UK is really well placed with 8/20 best potential sites in Europe. (slower burner w/r to SP though)
thanks Phyl-I was getting a bit jittery as I have overstretched with SAE as I am so confident/hopeful that tidal energy is the way forward. The Uskmouth deal , while potentially lucrative , is also a potential risk, and i'm concerned that this could impact the business negatively.
Come on guys, we don't really have a clue whether the share price goes up to 22/23 or down to 12. Is there an issue with the Guptas being involved? I wasn't aware that they have a dodgy history-thought they were successful businessmen. Tim Cornelius is impressive. I like what they are doing with the tidal division, and that's why I invested and why I have just topped up (now holding more than I intended to), but I'm in it for the long haul.
Well, i've just had a zoom link from joe Quinlan to the presentation , so no poblems with the email address batterseafish
Hi Batterseafish-I've also tried registering. email seems to have gone , so I'll let you know about the joequinlan@luther.co.uk address and whether I get an invitation or not
I'm neither wise nor do i have much time to invest, but what I can tell you is that I invested in Experian because Nick train (who i believe is both wise and has time to rsearch) recently added Experian to his lindsell Train UK equity fund. I also felt that the recent drop in share price following the last 6/12 of results was covid related and that this would not effect the longer term trajectory of the share price, so bought on the drop.
seems a fair enough point , that just because rivals are doing well, doesnt mean AFC will. However, the market has definitely become more favourable for hydrogen, and AFC do seem to be generating new momentum. i'm holding-bought at 30p about 6/12 ago
looks as though Meygens turbines are fitted with active rather than passive pitch control. We've got passive pitch control on our small domestic wind turbine and it's genius-much better design idea than the downwind/yaw options of some of its competitors. I suppose active pitch control might be worthwhile for the bigger turbines though. I'm not sure what the full yaw expression refers to....
https://www.renewableenergymagazine.com/ocean_energy/emec-enters-partnership-with-ptec-to-grow-20201102?utm_campaign=newsletterRenewableEnergyMagazine&utm_medium=newsletterClick&utm_source=General+newsletter+2020-11-06
Apologies if this has already been shared.
Anyone know why the climb?- I thought the worsening pandemic would have been putting downward pressure on the SP.
That's a really very interesting study OT. I still think that the majority of optimal UK tidal sites might prove unsuitable for optimal wind generation, but there are probably some for which a hybrid would work really well - mouth of the Severn estuary maybe...