Stefan Bernstein explains how the EU/Greenland critical raw materials partnership benefits GreenRoc. Watch the full video here.
I held RR from 2015 and thought I had done well to get shares at successive lows until everything crashed. Took the RI and was left with a BE of 120p. Given that even when RR was a divi payer it wasn't that great and that I could not see a return to sustained capital growth or a resumption of the divi for at least 1-2 years I sold out last week at 140p and rolled over into PHNX one of my dividend stalwarts. Sole exposure to sector now BAE systems, which has done very nicely for me. Good luck to all those who are long-term here. I continue to watch and may get back in at some point.
Just got back from Valencia and there are absolutely no shortages of fruit/veg/salad over there both in the market hall and in the supermarkets. Plus prices are about the same or in many instances lower. Why is the UK screwed?
Recent Ells performance:
UKOG.......persistent ramping...........true picture..........Price drops back after P & D
RR. ..........persistent deramping prior and after results.......true picture...........up yesterday on results and up again today
IAG.........."£1.80+ tommorow. Too much positive sentiment in the sector."...........price falls on results, currently £1.60
Ever considered dropping the "expert" tag. LOL
Read this absolute clown’s pathetic attempts to ramp the failing non-oiler UKOG on that board a mirror image of his attempts to talk down RR. Trouble is RR are a real company with real products. The exact opposite of UKOG. LOL
Why are people who supposedly understand the way that free market capitalism actually works so confused about the influence of domestic production on gas supply and price? Any gas wherever it is produced is sold into the market by the producer at the going price whatever that is. Just because gas is produced in the North Sea does not mean that it can be ring-fenced for UK consumption at below market prices nor that it will end up powering UK homes. Of course the UK government could legislate to change this but that would be an unprecedented political intervention in the energy market. Thus the subsidies recently provided via energy companies rather than the imposition of restrictions on actual producers such as BP. I exclude UKOG from the latter category as they don't seem to have produced anything of note thus far except hot air. LOL