Never ever put a stop loss on your AIM shares. The MM's will rob you of them in broad daylight. It happens way too often... with tree shakes and spurious negative spikes. Some have lost their life savings this way.
It will be interesting to see what happens if the MM's decide to drop the SP below the placing price before November 22nd... that way the II's can buy the shares on the open market.... just depends on how man Pi's sell their shares on the cheap. Transfer of wealth. Facinating.
Sounds to me like there is an awful lot of PI's who have over committed their finances by piling in on one stock. Either ANGS or UKOG... if you can't afford to buy into both and are terrified that one stock will do better than another... i would suggest you re-consider your strategies.
1. Never go all in on a stock 2. Never get emotionally involved in a stock 3. Never invest what you can't afford to lose 4. Never rely on deramping stocks you don't own in the hope that it somehow benefits you.
5. Never feel jealous of a stock rise you missed and attack those that didn't.
Chances are if you have broken one or more of the above - there will be an air of panic and desperation in the posts you write.
There are more bad stock choices on AIM and elsewhere then there are good ones. To spend the majority of your time to discredit a stock is fruitless when the real skill lies in finding the one or two good ones.
Those people who are continually worrying about placings - should check out CERP - Columbus Energy Resources.
Who on two seperate ocassions announced a placing and both times the SP went rocketing northwards... Read between the lines... when the Big boys start sniffing around... thats when you know you could be onto a potential muti-bagger. DYOR.
Same happened at ANGS : Nobody wanted in at 5p... even though SP was 37p not long ago... now everyone scrambling to get in at 12p... believing it to be an absolute steal. Crazy way of investing your money.
Understand the fundamentals not the fickleness of the Share price.
Oakleak... the main difference is in the valuation of the company and the number of shares in free float.
Its difficult enough to deter people from flipping the ANGS shares with so few in circulation... much much harder when your dealing with over 5 billion shares. That to me is a game changing negative.