Adrian Hargrave, CEO of SEEEN, explains how the new funds will accelerate customer growth Watch the video here.
I've added. The conditions precedent were what was holding the stock back. They have been addressed now. Assuming there isn't a massive cost overrun, I don't think the detail is overly relevant.
Good show from Numis this morning. Revenue from market making operations was up 299%!
This is a potential banana skin: https://twitter.com/SkyNews/status/1335597653305024514
With Brexit coming to a head I decided to bank half my gains. I'd expect a deal to be beneficial to the shares. There is always the outside possibility that the clarity of no deal could be seen as a positive by the markets in general.
More M&A https://news.sky.com/story/estate-agency-deal-frenzy-grows-with-bid-approach-for-hunters-12150364
Hopefully give us another boost tomorrow.
Right on cue: https://www.lse.co.uk/rns/MRW/morrisons-to-waive-business-rates-relief-in-full-nwrgtwy4gitclat.html
Thanks. Good day yesterday, well in the money :)
Tesco this morning announced that they intend to repay all business rate relief. Morrisons and others will clearly follow suit. I don't agree with it, particularly in Wales where they were told which aisles they were allowed to have open. This changes the investment case for me. I've sold.
Might there be news on stamp duty in today's spending review? Shaes up 6% this morning and US institutions have been buying
Gas production in the Netherlands dropped 14% on last year despite it being noted that lockdown had no effect. Very much glossed over in the results (they were keen to point out a production increase in 2019). 2p reserves are largely unchanged.
Strong buy. The investment case isn't scuppered by a vaccine, quite the opposite. Things take off here when government support comes to an end, working capital demands increase and VAT becomes payable. I expect a lot of insolvencies next year.
CWD gets a potential takeover offer at a 72% premium and LSL shares are trading down. You couldn't make it up!
Looks awful but you need to put in the context of the trading update provided end of September. Most of the sales to date were made after H1
o Q1 CY2020 sold 3,334 tonnes, representing an increase on the 3,000 tonnes target
o Q2 CY2020 sold 6,525 tonnes compared to the 14,400 tonnes target
o Q3 CY2020 sold 27,577 tonnes against the 30,600 tonnes target
Added more this week. I think an acquisition must be near on the horizon. I'd hope/expect it to trigger a rerate.
I think that MRW stacks up as an attractive low risk/medium reward (and yield) investment without Amazon's involvement. The potential for a takeover only increases the potential upside. I may be tempting fate but with the share price underpinned almost entirely by net tangible assets, I really don't see much downside. Reduced travel will continue to dent fuel sales over the coming months but I see a healthy proportion of money that would ordinarily be spent in bars and restaurants making its way into supermarket tills.
£2m underlying H1 profit against a £26m mcap. Not much above book value. Fixed costs reduced. Looks good to me.