Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.
Great to see some SOLID progress and nice to put faces to names. Best of luck at the conference next month.
Wildcat Petroleum - Quarterly Update (CATFLAP) #WCAT https://www.**********.co.uk/rns/announcement/3991ceb1-dd83-4797-9cea-17b0ce92055e #********** undefined
Gentlemen, glad to see you are finally coming round to my way of thinking.
In Michael Edelson we have a POWERHOUSE of a businessman with an incredible network - he is in charge of acquiring assets.
In Olinga Taeed we have a world leading Blockchain expert who is backed by the chinese state.
Someone explain how WCAT doesn't win?
As the resident IPO investor on this forum, i've said it before and i shall i say it again - you aint seen nothing yet. We've got this far off building a super team and building a strategy. Once we all learn who is backing our crypto currency, who is willing to accept it and the scale of the potential acquisitions, this will rocket to 10p. I wont even consider selling a fraction till then.
You are correct. Let me shed some light on why: The simple answer to this is that buys are showing as sells and vice versa, because the algorithm used to determine these trades is outdated.
Effectively, a trade is given a "Buy" or "Sell" status depending upon which side of the mid point price of the Bid/Ask spread the trade lands on.
e.g.
Bid= 1.9p
Mid Point= 2.05p
Ask= 2.2p
The trade is currently filled at a price of 2.04p on HL and other platforms and is therefore shown as a "sell" by the system.
Just some further information on the credentials of our latest apointee and why its a BIG deal!
Olinga Taeed
Advisor China on Blockchain & E-commerce
Olinga Taeed is Council Member (of just 7) and Expert Advisor to the ‘China E-Commerce Blockchain Committee’ (CECBC) responsible for targeting growth to US$ 100 trillion, maintaining current China 70% global market share, and government compliance’ for the national Ministry of Commerce. He is Chief Editor of international peer reviewed Swiss journal Frontiers in Blockchain with 367 editors, Social Value and Intangibles Review with 125 editors, and UK government sponsored Efficiency Exchange. He is founder and director of the not-for-profit Centre for Citizenship, Enterprise and Governance which is the world’s leading think tank on the movement of value (measurement, transaction and delivery) with 125,000 members. He is Visiting Professor in Blockchain at Birmingham City University, and previously Professor in Social Enterprise and Northampton University. He conducted the UK’s first (and only) ICO in 2017 with FCA guidance, the Seratio Token focusing on Non-Financial Assets; he is currently setting up the Seratio Bank, a blockchain bank with UK£ 210 million initial capital. He retired at the age of 48 in 2008 from a successful private sector career with 9000 staff across 12 companies.
As an IPO investor in WCAT (and first time poster!)i am very EXCITED to see the following news article from the Sunday Times:
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/shellmeister-hopes-to-score-in-oil-and-gas-kps60mbn2
"Michael Edelson, the Manchester United FC director, is back in the game. Lancashire-born Edelson was dubbed “the shellmeister” for his use of listed cash shells to make acquisitions. He orchestrated the floats of online fashion giant Asos, Leicester City FC and Sheffield United FC.
Now, the former professional footballer has returned to the shell game as a senior adviser to Wildcat Petroleum, a London-listed vehicle scouring the market for an oil and gas deal.
Manchester United’s Michael Edelson is chasing deals.
Listed cash shells are the new craze on Wall Street, where they are known as special purpose acquisition companies (Spacs). Shares in some Spacs have gone ballistic in recent months, triggering concerns about a bubble since they don’t even have assets.
Edelson, 76, should know a thing or two about that. In 1999 he set up Knutsford, a listed cash shell for the so-called Knutsford four: Archie Norman, then chairman of Asda and now head of Marks & Spencer’s board, Richer Sounds’ Julian Richer, Saracens rugby club owner Nigel Wray and property mogul Nick Leslau.
The value of Knutsford soared to £1 billion within weeks of the quartet taking charge as they sought a mega-deal that never materialised, with rumours that M&S was among their takeover targets. Edelson was ahead of his time."