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I have been here you years and as frustrated as many on this board. I for one do not what to see a buy out and I hope neither do the BOD. The potential for FF as a food additive and a medicine for high blood pressure etc could make this a monster and I for one will wait for the dividends to come rolling in
Has anyone looked at the numbers of passengers United move each year !! if you just consider business class and first class, its tens of millions trips per year. As there is a couple of European airlines looking at using FlyFi as well, this is potentially a massive growth area.
I have spent a bit of time reviewing the last RNS and keeping an eye on new product launches, By-health and for me the most interesting bit been FF's ability to reduce blood pressure and the research into this aspect of FF.If you join the dots up I feel this product has an absolutely massive potential. We now have 90 products on sale world wide and with FlyFit been dished out by a couple of major airlines, I am hoping the next set of financial results should see PXS with a clear path to making a profit. I for one don't what to see PXS sold but to give a decent dividend pay-out bi annually for many years to come.
If the news that a hypertensive drug is to be researched and is true and the developments in china are nearing the development of a new product line with a multi billion dollar company, then perhaps its time to buckle up and enjoy the ride. Its been a long time coming.
Just need to find some oil in Kurdistan, have an export route and I will eat my hat if BP is not sniffing around PCI on 12 months time. Feb 19 (Reuters) - Iraqi Kurdistan has agreed to export crude via the country's main oil marketing body, Deputy Prime Minister for energy Hussain al-Shahristani said, potentially removing a major sticking point in a resource row with the central government. The autonomous region's prime minister and top energy official travelled to Baghdad earlier this week, intensifying efforts to settle the long-running dispute over exports of oil from Kurdistan via a new independent pipeline to Turkey. The region has previously insisted it will export crude on its own terms, bypassing Iraq's State Oil Marketing Organisation (SOMO), but Shahristani said the Kurds had finally relented. "After hours of meetings, we have agreed that our brothers in the region will be represented in SOMO and agreed that this is the sole national outlet responsible for exporting oil," Shahristani said in an interview on Iraqi state television late on Wednesday. "This is an important step forward". Baghdad has repeatedly threatened to sue Ankara and slash Kurdistan's share of the national budget if exports go ahead through the pipeline without its consent. The pipeline was completed late last year, and oil has since been pumped through it into storage tanks at Turkey's Ceyhan, but exports from the Mediterranean port are on hold to give diplomacy a chance. Negotiations have carried on for months with little progress and Shahristani said differences remained over revenue-sharing. "The second issue that is still unresolved is that they want the revenue from oil exports to be deposited in a private account for the region in the DFI (Development Fund for Iraq)," Shahristani said. Revenue from the sale of Iraq's oil is paid into the DFI in New York for Baghdad to disburse. Kurdistan is entitled to a 17 percent share, but says it in fact receives far less than that, and in recent weeks has accused Baghdad of withholding funds, leaving civil servants in the region unpaid. Shahristani said the finance ministry had now sent enough cash to cover the salaries of Kurdish government employees for January, but faced a liquidity crisis and would not be able to pay in February or after that unless the region resumed oil exports. "The Finance Ministry said it will not be able to keep paying salaries whilst the region is still not delivering oil," he said. "The ministry has stopped payments to the region and the only solution for this real problem if for the region to start exporting oil" Crude from Kurdistan used to reach world markets through a Baghdad-controlled pipeline, but exports via that channel dried up due to a row over payments for oil companies operating in the northern enclave.
Does any one know the dates for dividend payouts