Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.
Neil Herbert mentioned in a recent interview that he was reminded that he wasn't allowed to buy shares in ALL because of half yearly report.
It would be great to see a healthy buy order from Neil after todays RNS.
If you are going to talk the talk, you have to walk the walk.
A11 is catching up ti ALL here in Oz.
We've got a Nr.999 spruiking rubbish and trying to save genuine Investors on HC in Australia. Must be 008's twin brother, working a different time zone.
What's going on with these 3 digit numbers.
filing with the SEC that stated the following:
“The final product lithium recovery is about 90%.
“In other words, six days ago, the company informed a federal agency that its lithium extraction process recovers 90% of the lithium contained in the Arkansas brine it is processing.
“Not 13%.
“If the actual number is 13%, as Blue Orca Capital asserts, then the entire management team of Standard Lithium and its Board of Directors has committed a large-scale fraud…
“A conspiracy and fraud of this scale and complexity seems unlikely…
“More likely is that an ill-intentioned, or ill-informed, short seller has conspired to hammer the share price of a stock its firm has sold short.”
Beware Fake News
By Eric Fry
Soren Kierkegaard, the Danish existentialist philosopher once remarked, “Geniuses are like thunderstorms. They go against the wind, terrify people, clean the air.”
Short-sellers often perform a similar function. Although they certainly are not all geniuses, their incisive analyses can swirl through the financial markets and terrify investors for a spell, while cleansing the air of misinformation and/or fraudulent behavior.
Because these financial thunderstorms can strike an individual stock like a thunderbolt, they usually singe every investor who happens to be in the vicinity.
Not surprisingly, therefore, short-sellers are about as welcome on Wall Street as a thunderstorm at a garden wedding. To put it bluntly, most folks hate short-sellers.
I don’t. I hate the misinformation and/or deception that causes investors to make ill-informed decisions…
Steel Yourself Against the Misinformation
Generally speaking, short-sellers are a fringy community of forensic analysts and truth-seekers. As a group, they expose the sort of misinformation that deceives investors. That’s a public service to all of us investors.
But sometimes, short-sellers themselves, are a source of misinformation — fonts of fake news.
In other words, not all short-sellers are created equal… neither are any other sources of investment information and “analysis” equally reliable.
This fact has never been timelier and more relevant than it is today, when social media sites funnel most of the minute-by-minute investment narrative that we consume.
Because of social media’s scope and dominance, deceptions can magnify quickly and “go viral,” often with mind-numbing speed and destructive power.
In such circumstances, getting to the truth can be challenging.
But a couple of simple steps can facilitate the process of fact-finding. Both of these steps are so ancient (and timeless) that they predate the internet itself: