Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
For me this is a definite add at this price. Provides me with a nice and steady defensive stock to balance the portfolio. Looking back at the most recent results this has tipped into a great value buy now for a long-term hold for which I would guess as being in the years category
You never know what news might come out that causes these to rapidly rise or fall in the short-term. Based on post CC times they are low and you don't need to time the bottom to still get a bargain. Based on recent updates from house builders the prices will likely stay at the lower end for the next few months at least, regardless of any bull days. Short-term that 5% savings rate might be the winner but if you are looking years or decades ahead the combination of divis (even if cut and re-instated), and SP rebound will far outstrip that in my opinion .
Strong headwinds at the moment - food inflation, cost of living and continued poor weather to name a few. These things are all temporary and will subside. The excellent locations of the restaurants will remain however and I'm backing management to steer the company through this year. Despite the share price hammering since buying into this, nothing fundamental about the business model and growth strategy has changed. The year end update in October will probably not be much better but as long as the business still has immediate cash I'm not going to be worried. GLA
'PSN look like they are offering to pay a mortgage for 10 months which is a great idea'
I've noticed Avant homes also offering to pay the first 12-months mortgage payments, whilst also going with the marketing angle that a new-build is more energy efficient and saves money in the long-run. I think we'll see more HBs follow suit with the mortgage offers
Was to be expected and will probably be reflected across the board for the house builders for H1 2023. As we move through the next half year I think we'll see a continuing improvement/acceptance of the new mortgage conditions, easing cost of living effects and possibly government incentives for first time buyers. GLA, keep the long-term view
From the FT:
The purchase of almost £5mn of shares last week by Baker Estates, a company owned by Vistry chief executive Greg Fitzgerald and John Dunningham, is a sign that its boss also thinks there is money to be made. The buys take their combined stake to 1.94 per cent
Overall the message was that the business is prepared well for the economic turbulence, and adjustments can be made which I would assume they will have to. I largely based my investment here on the experience of the management team and they will have seen similar conditions before. This will continue to grow nicely under the radar for a a few more years I think. GLA
A US equity firm swept in for Biffa yesterday. Certainly could happen here too
Sounds very basic but you are right - they are on time.
Read and watch reviews of Flixbus, Megabus, BlahBlah Bus. Not reliable, not same level of attentive customer service from driver, often use replacement unbranded coaches. Might be a couple of quid cheaper but if people don't trust you then they won't return
The global cost-of-living increases will continue to make coach and bus travel more appealing. From where I live it’s about six to eight times cheaper to take NEX to London than the train. That's massive. The recent railway strikes, staffing problems across European airports and fuel price increases will all drive people to more bus and coach journeys.
There are competitors who will also want a slice of the action. However, looking at many blogs, vlogs, reviews it is clear that NEX at least are clear leaders in terms of quality and customer perception. With all the contracted revenue in Europe and the US, you can trust that they will operate to a high standard to keep them for a long time.
People will always want to travel, and a well branded company offering many cheaper, greener, and comfortable ways to do so will prosper. The growth prospects for a profitable company in expanding global markets, for me, make this too good an opportunity to not buy into long-term. I'm buying in and will add more going into the winter
I'm new to this share but been doing some research and it's taken my interest, especially as the price tumbles. Struggling to find firm indicators about the dividend. Can anyone more in the know here enlighten me as to how likely a future dividend might be? thanks
Should be declared early September, go ex on 22 September.
Payment on or shortly after 18 November
Went to Coppa Club Tower Bridge the other week. Backed up the management's eye for a great location. Food was good. The service on the other hand wasn't good which was disappointing, and reading through google reviews for this site it appears to be an issue. I hope the other sites are better with this and it's just temporary
I work for company which supplies materials to all the major national housebuilders. The forward books across the HBs are very strong and they are reporting that new home sales demand is undeterred, despite the headlines about inflation/house prices/cost of living etc. Taylor Wimpey, from our perspective anyway, are continuing to progress with their site sales
Yes they will in my opinion. Will possibly take longer than this year to get back to the recent highs but it's a solid company that has faced many of these current issues before and is in a market which, as time shows, just will not significantly drop off. Dividends are very good and Barratt has plenty of cover for them. No need to panic over the next few months, they will return