RE: Think refinancing looking more likely23 Oct 2020 10:54
I think people are forgetting the consortium trying to buy is new, they will have to sort themselves out before looking at putting an offer in, for me, another extension most likely
RE: How do you work out when a share price is at the peak?11 Aug 2020 22:12
I don't over worry about hitting peaks, I work out what I think would be a good profit for me with a realistic view and take it or at least use that as stop limit if it goes past and just be happy with profits. Chasing exact peaks can lead to greediness and easy to get caught out with an unexpected crash.
£3b offer minus debts equals 56p which would be a good price, if 10% more could be squeezed out, £3.3B minus debts equates to £1.04. For me that would be the likely range, would be very surprised to see offers above that
Not normally 1 for guessing but 250. Don't think any real surprises are likely, money has been lost due to covid and that is well known so isn't a shock to anyone. Once the state of play if fully known, money will come back in without any further covid escalation/border closures.
Been through similar with 212 in the past with other stocks. They will email you with details of what to do with a link to opt into buying the new shares if you want them, then deduct the amount from your account. They then automatically put the new shares in your account when they come on the market.
I tend to ignore what motley fool have to say. Next article will be avoid AML at all costs. Constantly contradicting themselves. Look up all recent articles they have done on AML. Motley fool aren't to be trusted imo
For me, I prefer steady increases, 5-10% range, generally stops bigger dips, so 33-35p Monday would be fine for me. Boring and safe rises are perfectly fine for me.
I tend not to have a sell price as such but more a point in which I make a decision on what I do. On Cine its around £1.20. At that point I will see if there is any real value left in holding or time to jump out with a good return and invest in better looking stocks