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Generally brokers recommendations are to buy. Almost 90%. .They very rarely put out sell notices.
JT16 I don�t think MM needs any encouragement.
In this lesson, children, we are going to learn how to use the hyphen correctly. I�ve long been an advocate of the humble hyphen, I feel it has played second fiddle to the coma for too long �Wake up Crabshaw!� (Throws board rubber towards the sleeping Crabshaw, misses and hits the attentive Happy- Le Rob). What on earth are you going on about Marksman?
I think it was Ooffy Prosser, a character from a Woodhouse. who said that �There is no shallow end in the stock market where the investor might dip his/her toe in. It�s all varying degrees of deepness.� Something like that. Well, the reliable old Grandad has fallen off his chair. He�ll get up again, I�m sure.
It's a tin hatter day!
PJ invest. . It was an unfortunate choice of words, that's all. and if you knew me you'd know I'm an expert in saying things far worse than that.. More importantly, where do you see this company going? I was in Lonrho a while back and they got bought by SF Africa. Quite a lot of of smaller African companies have been absorbed.
I think that is a very inappropriate word to use.in the context of this airline.
Hi oldbutnotwisa thanks for your thoughts. It's a funny game this even if it does sometimes make me cry. As for a flutter fund, I said to myself a while back I'm too old to flutter. Them myself said to me 'go on , what about that one', One is doing well and paying for the other two. but for how long I don't know. Anyway good luck and I hope your decisions come good in the end.
I buy these for the income. The swing downward has been, in HICL Land, quite severe. Top up, sell I don't know. Don't just do something , sit there, springs to mind.
They are are right 50% of the time. You might as well spin a coin. It's a bit like taking advice from bulletin boards. If someone you don't know is advising you do something how much attention should you give to that advice?
I wish the very best in 2018 for Fastjet. My comments on here have not been , well lets say encouraging, but it's a discussion board. Some of the banter has been amusing. I've lost on shares, I've won as well. It's the game we are in.The big problem private investors in small companies face is that we don't control the game.
There have been quite a few monster buys recently in the RNS statements. A takeover is looking likely. A group has gobbled up almost all the company in the space of a few months. If a takeover is announced, what will the Price be to flush out the remaining share holders bearing in mind there is little likelihood of management resistance? I understand there is a 12 month rule stating the Price cannot be less than the highest Price the bidder paid for shares in that period. Any pointers, anyone?
Fatherelmer Very good point . I've said things along the same lines in the past, albeit a bit tongue in cheek, but the African market place is miles different from Crawley
are on the point of crossing the 3000 posts mark, one with only sixty or so to go, and another is coming up fast. It could be a close finish. I know where my money is. The amount of time and energy put into this race surely deserves some sort of reward. I�m willing to chip in towards the cost of the prize for the winner.. Anyone got any suggestions. I thought maybe a model of one of the Fastjet planes in full livery, a leather-bound copy of the Fastjet timetable and past flight magazines, or perhaps some more Fastjet shares to tuck away in the bottom drawer.
Alphapig That made me laugh. I wish they had done me that favour many times in the past.
I've tried to buy some more of this company's shares. I might be mad to do that but the system didn't allow me. I then tried to sell some. I could sell. What does that meam?
When you do your research into whether or not to buy an individual share rather than an investment trust, a fund or a tracker, I think there are a few questions that need to be asked. 1) Does the company have any money? 2 Is the company looking forward i.e are its products a thing of today or tomorrow? 3 Management. Are they known in the city? Do they have money in the business? How long have they been in the business? 4 Price. How does the price I can buy them today relate to the company�s actual value , which is known, and the value , the guess, in a future time frame? 5 Liquidity. If things go well, or badly, can I get out of this position? Simigon ticks some of the boxes. Few companies tick all of them. I hold.
Don't worry yourself about whether they are buy or sells. Some sites don't bother to report this. Who knows? And if they are sells , who is buying them? And if they are buys , who is selling them? It's the Price that you can buy at or sell at that must concern you. Remember, if you want to sell, someone must be willing to buy. Bit like your house really.
There maybe some of this guy's descendents on this board In Greek mythology Sisyphus or Sisyphos (/ˈsɪsɪfəs/;[2] Greek: Σίσυφος, S�suphos) was the king of Ephyra (now known as Corinth). He was punished for his self-aggrandizing craftiness and deceitfulness by being forced to roll an immense boulder up a hill, only to watch it come back to hit him, and forced to repeat this action for eternity. Through the classical influence on modern culture, tasks that are both laborious and futile are therefore described as Sisyphean
I don't understand that RNS about warrants. It seems a very small amount. Would welcome views on warrant issues and whether they signal good tidings or bad.