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I dont think we will get any director buys just yet as this would be taking the mick out of the 15p placing guys.... Imagine taking part in a placing at 15p and then watching the guys that sold you the story then buying at 8p lol!!
I think the next flf tranche will probably tie up with a trading update very early in october...
The AGM is in sept and would advise anyone invested to attend, there are a few people i know that are attending, im away so i wont be able to make it
Chinner, im looking for 150 percent growth for q2 this year, then for q3 and q4 i would like to see 100 percent growth (the reason im saying 100 percent for q3 and q4 is because the second half of last financial year was a lot stronger than the first half so i expect the percentage to drop)
If the above happens then i can see the share price being well into the 20s by march, maybe even higher depending on other things happening....
First of all we need to break and hold 10p followed by 15p...
Always remember people like Waheed and Biyani look at the long game.... They have patience and that is what has made them wealthy
Steady as she goes chinner!! This could gain some nice momentum from here until the october trading update for q2
If we might finish on a weekly high
Readily available quotes to sell 400k shares....
Lol mick!! Its quite ironic you mention asos being one of the biggest companies on aim, who was it that built asos? Who is it that is building koovs? The one and only Lord Waheed Alli(net worth 200 million) of course!!
Do a bit of research on koovs largest shareholder Kishore Biyani... Known as the king of Indian retail and worth 2.7 billion...
Its quite amazing you choose to listen to the alcholic Paul Scott who sold out of asos at 9p because he thought it wouldn't go anywhere.... That move cost him about 30 million quid...
I believe Waheed checked out of asos with well over 30 million which he put into koovs....
The signs are there for everyone to see where koovs is going....
GLA
Didn't hold the 8p but still finished positive again! Lets hopenin continues!
Nah im not currently holding, traded it a few times since exiting my main holding last june though.... Would like to think this is the year that boohoo breaks 300p even though im not holding (i dont think it will hold the 300p though)
I have built a large holding in koovs since leaving, have a tad over 4 million shares at 10p average in koovs with a plan to hold for 2 years minimum....
Be nice to close on or above 8.25 today
Wont be long before we see the real value in double figures....
Fingers crossed for blue finish....
Yup!! Next one due in oct.... For july august and Sept....
Yup it is long winded dunns for sure!!
Probably when you are at your most frustrated and lose hope you will be rewarded heavily....
Take a look at Ocado, they were destroyed by shorts and MM's and had loads of false dawns and then boom! The share price more than quadrupled in avery short time....
Yes chef i agree.... This is currently fluctuating on small buys and sells.... Real value will come soon enough though
They were offering above bid yesterday
There is a big buyer or two in the market, large holders of million plus shares are getting phone calls to sell their shares also live quotes are available to sell over 500k shares.... This never happens with koovs!!
DO NOT SELL UP BOYS AND GIRLS!!
The wealthiest people on this planet arw value investors ie long term holders....
Day to day traders make pennies while long term value investors make billions yet the short term traders are the ones that shout the loudest.....
With the market finally delivering its long-overdue correction, it’s comforting to recall Warren Buffett’s statement: “Stock prices rarely reflect the true value of companies. When it does happen, it’s an accident.” Say again? What do stocks represent if not the value of the companies we have in our mutual funds and investment portfolios?
In 2001, one of my weekly columns explained “marked to market,” which is the mechanism through which every single share of stock in a public company is valued from second to second throughout the day. The day’s “closing price“ is the price per share reported for the last sale of the day. All shares are effectively “marked,” or valued, based solely on the price of just those being sold on the stock exchange — an extremely small fraction of the total.
A typical public company has just a thin sliver of its total shares changing hands on exchanges throughout the day. Yet, this thin sliver of all the outstanding shares determines the total value of all the company’s shares. In simple terms, if company ABC had issued a million shares, and 100 of them happened to trade on a given day, the sale price of those that were bought and sold determined the price of all the shares. If our favorite mutual fund happened to own company ABC’s shares, any change in the share price would be reflected in the value of the mutual fund’s holdings at day’s end.
The only time the share price reflects the true value of the company, the ‘’accident” to which Mr Buffett refers, is when the entire company is being sold — not just a fraction of its shares on Wall Street. At this point, it is not an “accident” because the true value of a company is determined thanks to the fact that “a willing seller and a willing buyer” have agreed to a price for the whole company.
While the marked-to-market pricing model is less than perfect, it’s the only thing we have. Its soft underbelly is that amateur investors, self-styled investment experts, financial pundits, market timers, stock manipulators, high-frequency traders and a host of other camp followers all get to influence the demand — and therefore the price — of stocks from second to second. Everything from sheer panic to irrational exuberance can drive prices up and down by as much as 10 percent to 20 percent in relatively short periods. By now, we all know what this looks like.
By comparison, a group of seasoned merger-and-acquisition specialists will spend months developing spreadsheets to convince themselves that an entire company is worth purchasing — and if so, at what price. A few shares selling on Wall Street have little or no influence on that transaction. The price per share is therefore not “marked” to the market price.