Do you think they will make a move on Gcm. The shareholders are thirsty for a decent profit and if the project is guaranteed (the Chinese should know) then that’s how I would do this, if I was them!!
Nice find searcher. So the Chinese are building power plants heh. Haha and where is the leverage for approving the Phulbari plants and mine?
Right there, in your face Hasina lol.
I have to agree searcher. When there was one Chinese conglomerate involved I was confident of the GL. Now there could be 2 massive Chinese companies with all their persuasive power with Hasina it’s guaranteed (in my head). I’m a buyer and bought further stock this morning.
It’s only a matter of time....11 Sep 2018 10:08
...... before someone big (individual or company) starts buying our stock.
For example, BHP just announced a 6% holding in SOLG. It will happen here too.
The shelf life on the FF+ product I bought yesterday was 2021. Perfect 3 year shelf life. I also bought some directly from the company. I’ll let you know the shelf life of that too when it arrives.
I work on the bottom line with Pharma products. If it costs 30 grand for 4000 vials of product or 40 grand for 6000 vials then I’ll go for 6000 every time when it has a 3 year shelf life.
I’ve made, tested, placed on stability, launched to market, increased shelf-life in the pharmaceutical industry for 20 years. I currently make 65 sterile and non sterile products. I think I know what I’m talking about. :-D
I should say it’s a balancing act of committing your expensive raw material into product, the stability profile of the product and the expected life span of the product with shelf extensions. The shelf extensions can only be performed under controlled circumstances (within the manufacturers facility) and I would be gobsmacked if it was performed at H&B as you need a licence and QA oversight. Well you certainly do with pharmaceuticals.
..... supply for the wife and I yesterday from H&B in Middleton (Manchester). They were just finding shelf space for them so I picked them off the trolley.
You make as much as you can in a batch to keep costs down. Making lots of smaller batches is more costly than a single batch. That might be the reason. They may have chosen to do this with the intention of performing a shelf life extension run as a less costly option.
I work in the pharmaceutical industry making drugs. Shelf life extensions are granted when extra stability data becomes available (sometimes from accelerated stability conditions) which allows for existing stock shelf life to be redefined.
Overlaying this new date on existing stock is usually due to this and not because of too lack of sales. Gives the end user more time to use the product up and saves throwing premanufactured stock away.