Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
Hi all LTH's, just wanted to let you guys and girls know that's me sold up (at a loss). Simply put I couldn't wait any longer and need the funds elsewhere, my mind was always chasing March last year when I should have sold but I got greedy. This was my first investment and it was a baptism by fire. I still have faith once this court case is settled either way and the cost of living "crisis" has settled down Cineworld will recover. Lets be honest, the news isn't happy unless there's a crisis.
I take away from my experience this; In November 2020 I seen an opportunity in Cine when they were on their knees. I bought in at around 38p from memory. I sold in December for enough profit to but a deposit down on my A45 Mercedes. I then bought in again January 21 and watched it sore to £1.24ish, while closed and hemorrhaging money during the pandemic with no end to Covid in sight. I got greedy and held on (lesson learned) then watched it slowly erode over the next year and here we are. I believe the court case loss is priced in, the only movement is day traders and even that is settling down now, its like everyone is holding their breath and I can't hold it any longer.
Good luck all, thanks for the encouragement and advice, I wish you all the best (except the shorters :D ) I'll have a biscuit now as I've got money back in the bank lol
I know, silly Marvel making all these billion dollar movies, jeez they are indeed low on story telling forced to make such loses. Or maybe its a generational thing and the majority of todays audience don't want to watch the bridge over the river Kwai, hunt for red October etc. Maybe, just maybe, the majority prefer Marvel, DC and Bond "BS".
Conversely give me Red October anyway : D
I remember the days I could afford biscuits....
I like that personal opinion : D
Diamond hands indeed. Though every month that goes by I am tempted just to bite the bullet tbh. Long slog.
Weird, according to my 212 account, SP at 09.30-10.30 sat constantly at 33.63, then instant drop to 33.20 at 10.40 and is sitting at that, no fluctuation at all until now.
I'm also disappointed, deflated and almost had enough and might just sell at a loss as my financial position dictates it and TBH I'm just fed up with the unpredictability.
I will however be holding at least until the war is over in which case we'll obviously see a stabilization in the markets, particularly in our sector (Noticed Jet2, easy jet and Tui are down today yet we're still up so that's promising) and if the war goes the other way then my holding in Cineworld will be very far down my lists of priorities. We're on a knife edge here yet or share price is stable so again that's not a bad thing. Also do I not recall investor relations recently replying to Sammy saying that its private investors that are in large part responsible for the price/movements? The institutions are holding, Shorts are mostly stable and the board aren't selling.
Maybe I'll hang around actually....
I would like to submit "SO, if we start slapping sanctions on China what could happen with Jangho owning a large portion of Cine?"
"Short" pun intended BTW
Will short, leading questions be considered for entry?
Nice publicity stunt, literally;
https://www.standard.co.uk/news/london/the-batman-london-eye-robert-pattinson-paul-dano-b985034.html
Another day another opinionated tw*t with plenty to say but none of it with any substance filtered.
Good read, though one point I don't like is the insurer's third point for rejection, specifically "loss of market" exclusion. Depending on which side of the table you are. Loss of market was caused by the lock down which was a by product of Covid, out with Regals control. Conversely loss of market was stated as an excluision so it doesn't matter if that was due to covid or people suddenly waking up one morning anti cinema, loss of market is loss of market. Though if I was on the Jury I'd say that's to vague and almost like a get out of jail free card fir the insurer to pull. Who would've guessed an insurer would try to wiggle out of any liability.
A progress update on listing in the US would be nice.
Not sure if it's been mentioned but Highbridge increased their short yesterday by an appreciable amount. Losing the will recently with cine, the roller coaster is losing its appeal (figuratively speaking, court appeal I'll leave out of this), shame share price needs to double for me to get out. The worst thing is I'd probably still stay in : D
"Back to the good old days"
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/grant-shapps-john-hollandkaye-omicron-government-lbc-b2000060.html
That's what we wanted to hear;
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-60047438
Good news for travel sector and we all know how we move up and down (usually) with the airlines;
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2022/01/16/covid-tests-set-scrapped-fully-vaccinated-travellers/
As foolish as a 20 odd percent rise for no reason? Or this time last year rocketing to £1.23 a share when closed and hemorrhaging money? NOTHING is predictable with this share, except possibly the expected drop on good news.
Just a question, if our last day to appeal was yesterday, or the day before, shouldn't we have some sort of notification from the board they have done so by now? You would think it's worth letting the Investors know.
Interesting comment from someone on Cineplex Yahoo board;
"There have been some settlement discussions at a high level between Cineplex and Cineworld recently. No indication if they were fruitful or if further discussions are scheduled"
Probably nonsense, worth mentioning though, it's been very quiet as we all know.