Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.
'Let's hope the market is pricing in the 'Out' scenario now rather than later.' Warthog, you ain't seen nothing yet if you think that. There'll be more than blood on the streets if the Leave vote wins. Little Englanders beware!
Yes, mate, stop-loss activated. Celebration time!
Came within 0.5p of my stop loss price this morning so, presently, I'm still holding. But I can't decide whether I'm pleased or disappointed to be still holding shares in this disastrous company.
Gotrader: thanks for your latest, timed Saturday 04.03 - crikey!
Down virtually 10 per cent today to a fraction of its 52-week low in very thin business. I've been in this share for three years now with nothing to show but red ink. Let's hope May 24 brings some of the optimism that is certainly required.
Sorry to hear that, mate. Makes my 10p average look almost shrewd - except when I look at the current and languishing price of this share. Here's hoping for better days.
Sensational newspaper headlines are the share bargain hunters' best friend. As an ex-journo I should know. It's a simple case of accentuating the negative rather than the positive which, very often, is contained within the same story, usually buried in the final paragraphs. GLA.
Non executive director Hugh Tudor buys 75,000 shares at 305.5 on 15 February, total value £229,125.
So what is being said here is that Hargreave Hale, who specialise in AIM stocks in their VCT 1 portfolio, don't rate this stock for one reason or another.
Apologies, the report was dated Feb 1, but on closer inspection it encapsulates the brokers' recommendations since October 2015. Still...
Just two weeks after seven brokers issued buy ratings on this stock with Panmure going highest at 225p, the price has slumped to a 12-month low today of 117p. Heads you lose, tails you lose.
Hope you prove to be right, GT. Been here since 2013 with several top-ups along the way and it is still the biggest loser on my portfolio including an oily or two. Appreciate your input and that of Adastra.
...has faith in the company judging by the big buys that have gone through today.
You wouldn't need to be brain of Britain for whoever it was at JP Morgan to have forecast that target price - virtually at that yesterday. They do make you laugh.
Somebody offloaded 150,000 shares this morning for nearly half a million quid. The results of poor Christmas trading on the horizon?
9 x The Real Greek and 17 x Franco Manca + 1 new Bukowski Grill franchise opening early 2016.
The extra stamp duty won't be as drastic as the drop in PAG's share price yesterday intimated - hence the bounce back today. Buyers of property-to-let will haggle with sellers to mitigate the increase and a couple of grand here or there won't stop people buying.
Having bought around the 47p mark, I'm still awaiting a decent breakout (target price 70p) some 18 months later. Could have sold at a profit at 60p and bought back in again during that time, therefore enhancing profit margins. Anyone ever adopted a similar strategy as this?
Less than two weeks ago, an RNS from the company stated: 'We believe the company will achieve market forecasts for the full year ending March 31.' And so, today, only some seven trading days later they say they are 'unlikely to achieve the market forecasts for the full year.' To quote the famous shout from the terraces: 'You don't know what you're doing.' This is Corporate bungling of a quite pathetic nature.
Many thanks Adastra and Gotrader for your reasoned thinking. Cheers.