The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode featuring Jeremy Skillington, CEO of Poolbeg Pharma has just been released. Listen here.
I believe the following buy is the largest single buy since this rally.
22-Feb-21 13:33:11 1.60 1,375,000 Buy* 1.50 1.60 22.00k
that's might be the reason the biggest shareholder is still hanging here, arrange a NED and support RI.
this part was bought from STB in 12/2015 for £235M, but only 30s branch, and now it's doubled.
there are 46 trade deals today and all of them are buyers as indicated.
so where's the stock selling ones from?
are those only the Market makers who accumulated from previous trading days?
if so, when they finished their stocks, does it mean PTR would fly?
He is quite famous for chart technical analysis, but a little quiet in the last two years.
I googled some moneyshop information about its Soa, to claim an affordable loan and so you could claim is so easy, we should not invest in this kind of business at the first place:
1. Check if you were mis-sold the loanBefore a lender gives you a loan, it has to check whether you are able to pay it back.For a payday loan to be affordable, you had to be able to pay it back the following month as well as pay your other bills and debts.The loan was unaffordable if:
you often rolled loans or borrowed again soon after repaying a loan;
your loans from a lender were increasing in size;
some repayments were late; or
the loan was a significant part of your income.
Mr Jennision is labeled turnabout specialist, is there any one know that he did the similar SoA for this previous manged business and succeeded?
TIA
"
Gary is a serial turnaround expert with an extraordinary track record having held CEO positions with The Warranty Group, Together Money, Payzone and Secure Trust Bank. Prior to this he ran the UK branch network of Barclays Bank, was the Managing Director of B2B at Lex Vehicle Leasing and was the European Sales & Marketing Director of GE Capital.
Gary was Positive Momentum’s first proper customer in early 2003 when he had the faith to hire Matt to deliver a sales skill development programme. He has been an invaluable client, sponsor and mentor ever since. In addition to his advisory role with PM he is also Chairman of Orchard Funding Plc and Non-Executive Director of Admiral Financial Services Limited.
Paul,
many thanks for your explanation.
I thought NSF was a group company and each of its 3 business are separated limited company.
so it might be like the lizard, cut the tail to stop the loss and still be ok to run the branch loan one.
what will happened if the SoA could not been approved? Amigo will go busted.
what's the worst case for NSF? Could we close the GL business but still have the fund/flexible to run the other two business?
TIA
many thanks for your reply.
I also think AMGO is not that bad and priced to fail for guaranteed load business, if it's main and only business is going to fail, then the bond price must be much lower, like 10-20s.
I believe those bond holders know it better than our PIs
it could easily reach last top of 3P if there's the right news flow.
Bear in mind, many new investors might not know, there's not many free float shares in PIs hand.
sorry i cannot paste the link in full, it's from the directortalking interviews,
www.***************************/petroneft-resources-l67-increase-deal-great-for-both-parties/412954038
https://www.***************************/petroneft-resources-l67-increase-deal-great-for-both-parties/412954038
welcome to the board.
it's quiet because not many PIs notice this, it will be hot when the market realize it's so undervalued.
there are 36 trades today and only 5 are selling ones.
tight your safe belt for next roller coaster.
it seems Blackrock was closed it's short on 24/10/2019, that's roughly NSF announced to buy PFG.
https://shorttracker.co.uk/company/GB00BRJ6JV17/
he is from london and graduated from Oxford. very smart successful chap.
https://www.bloomberg.com/profile/person/5543238
from recently trade volume, it seems most of the big sale trades are more than 100K, but most of the buys are much smaller.
does it mean there is/are still institutional investors selling and most buyers are PIs?
GL section might be not as bad as some of you thought.
I read some information and consulted someone who works in this business, it's said that even if some one win the complain for GL, he might be able to written off the interest, but still has to pay back the amount load he borrowed.
any one else did any work on this? your view is much appreciated. TIA.