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I wouldn't fret too much about the sells....the biggest one was mine ;)
(and that's only because I still hold more than that, but just keeping myself closer to a no-lose position, whatever eventually pans out in the coming days/weeks/months, rather than anything having changed or some judgement on the value here, or I'd have sold the lot :p)
Yes, it’s a load of b*llocks, as usual, hope this helps.
Far from being the only idiot contrarian, there’s absolutely loads on these boards, spamming nonsense price targets and trying to manipulate people, this site is famed for it. You’re a particularly persistent example of it as others usually go through countless usernames.
As always. You’re wrong. At least you’re consistent.
Another essay of world class nonsense.
Oh if only I had a penny for every time some twit tried to tell me about their thousand years experience and that gaps always work. It’s the response every single time without fail.
Gap trading is right up there with astrology in terms of how it works.
-“one of”
Another account created by the numpty gang appears.
“Long term holder” supposedly, yet weirdly has never posted here till now, and only created his account a few months back, and turns up to pick a spurious low target saying they’ll buy at some silly low target.
Looks like one of Al Murray’s trying to rope in his customers to push his story ;)
Yeah, that one would seem to be pretty notable imo, this chap isn't exactly Al Murray, if you catch my drift ;)
Nicholas J. Grace
Portfolio Manager
London office
Nicholas J. Grace is an equity portfolio manager at Capital Group. He has 32 years of investment experience and has been with Capital Group for 28 years. Earlier in his career, as an equity investment analyst at Capital, he covered global mining companies. Prior to joining Capital, he was manager of metals research for J.P. Morgan Investment Management in Australia. Nick holds an MBA from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and a bachelor’s degree in finance and economics from the University of Waikato, New Zealand, graduating with honors. He also holds the Chartered Financial Analyst® designation. Nick is based in London.
Hard to interpret that as anything other than a good sign, with a mining specialist for one of the biggest asset managers in the world (that have trillions of $ of AUM) buying over 1% of the company, with his own money. Whether that be because he feels it's good value or he's been tipped the wink (as you say).
Zzzz nobody cares about your view on HOC (or anything else). You keep saying you’re not going to talk your book or that you’re going to be quiet. Then you come back to spam this board with drivel again. Not even about this share now.
Are you lonely or something?
“ Decent buying today. Are we due a bid??
Have bought in this morning on the back of the Kenya results.
DYOR”
Yet just a couple of working days ago he’s posting:
“ The market does not think an offer is coming, otherwise the SP would not be at 10p.
Old man Leslie does not think an offer is coming, otherwise he could not be selling ANY of his shares.
But the mugs here think an offer is coming and they are mopping up all the cheap shares being offloaded to the market.
Laughable really.
DYOR”
Shameless bell*nds trying to scare people into selling then buying their shares and ramping.
I've heard various explanations over the years but you're much better off knowing that it's largely a fool's errand trying to read into trade feeds (especially in the very short term). It is a giant game of smoke and mirrors at all levels for countless reasons.
High rates were never going to solve this bout of inflation without crushing economies, in a world addicted to and predicated on, low rate debt.
The central banks and governments have been mind numbingly stupid.
You could raise rates to 10%, tank the global economy, and you’d still not cure the principal driver of inflation which was war (fuel prices), that filters through into everything, on top of the existing logistics crisis post pandemic.
Instead of self-harming via rates they should have looked at addressing the drivers of inflation. This means protecting businesses/consumers from the rising fuel prices from day 1 and starting to properly fund development of supplies, from domestic sources and western sources.
Don’t=don’t need
(Typo King)
Overriding thought is we don’t a running commentary with no new information ;)
And gold has bounced nicely too.
Nothing quite like someone who turned up and bought the top of the spike, and then sold at a loss as it fell, saying see you at even lower prices, because they desperately need it to fall because otherwise it’ll make them feel even sillier ;)
Hell much of the selling could just have been him trying to exit, as he claimed to have 1.5million shares before…so now if he’s done, and nobody else is selling, it bounces :p
Yeah I held KEFI for a bit in 2016 but it didn’t smell right and exited thankfully or I’d be in your shoes.
Fingers crossed. Hell, if Shandong agree with both of us, that gold relatively near to bottoming out, there might never be a better time to put in an offer than soonish!