Gordon Stein, CFO of CleanTech Lithium, explains why CTL acquired the 23 Laguna Verde licenses. Watch the video here.
Imagine if you'd listed to Slater606 at 22p when they said this was going sub 10p again.....
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I didn’t say that nor did anyone else…Posts are publicly available and your history is without doubt the most embarrassing and wildly wrong on LSE.
Keep lying and making up random quotes or nonsensical stats…We’ve all witnessed you with egg on your face seemingly every week 🍳 😂
You’ve humiliated yourself so many times on here I actually started to feel sorry for you. Trawling through Twitter at 2am looking for a ray of sunshine when Tullow has to double JUST to get back to where it was when you were ramping…
Got trolled for it, however this is why trawl the Internet late at night. Sucks to be short......
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You trawl the internet every night at 2am for leads and special information, concluding in you telling people to buy at 50-60p?
That sounds kind of special buddy, you should probably see someone about that 😂
I wouldn’t post on a stock I haven’t had or didn’t have a financial interest in…Risk is almost certainly to the upside now for those who are still short but that move from 22p shows most of those profits have been taken.
Remarkably quiet in here on breakout day.
Funny old game ;)
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Are you new here?
We’ve already had umpteenth “breakout days” at prices ranging from 250p to 500p.
April’s OPEC cut was looking like a breakout day until it was defeated at 297p :|
Are cigarettes really 13 squid in the UK now?
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If you can stomach something like Pall Mall yes, decent ones e.g. Marlboro are closer to £15.
Price hikes were one of the few government policies that actually worked though, UK smoking rate is far lower than European and global average; it certainly helped me stop in my 20s haha.
Nice little bounce today as yields and GBP drop on lower inflation print. Hopefully 2511p was the bottom of this cycle and I’m primed to average up now as averaging down was becoming a bit like Groundhog Day.
Make your mind up Terry you seem to change your outlook on a whim…
Whilst it’s been another ****show year for shareholders I’d suspect H1 will be pretty good so would be odd to sell now if one has held all year.
Given the extent of institutional investor holding in this share, why would she be "sending out ramping accounts"? This is a FTSE 250 share, not a tiddler on AIM. No private investor can influence this share, and certainlynone of the peopleon this board. So why would she seek to interfere with the market for shares in this company (which, in any event, is a criminal offence).
Please let us know what rational basis you have for making that assertion.
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Rational basis being that insiders including directors and EIG were offloading all the way down from 530p whilst an army of rampers were sent out to stock forums to regurgitate how “crazy undervalued” HBR was and how a “short squeeze is imminent” to create bagholders.
It has been quite typical for daily volume to be well below 1m which means the majority of shares trading hands were actually just buybacks from HBR Treasury.
There has been little to no institutional interest for a very long time and Harbour themselves have been the only big buyer in town since last autumn.
When the buybacks have stopped the share price crashes through major support, for example 297p last year then 270p and then finally 250p.
Given the extent of institutional investor holding in this share, why would she be "sending out ramping accounts"? This is a FTSE 250 share, not a tiddler on AIM. No private investor can influence this share, and certainlynone of the peopleon this board. So why would she seek to interfere with the market for shares in this company (which, in any event, is a criminal offence).
Please let us know what rational basis you have for making that assertion.
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Rational basis being that insiders including directors and EIG were offloading all the way down from 530p whilst an army of rampers were sent out to stock forums to regurgitate how “crazy undervalued” HBR was and how a “short squeeze is imminent” to create bagholders.
It has been quite typical for daily volume to be well below 1m which means the majority of shares trading hands were actually just buybacks from HBR Treasury.
There has been little to no institutional interest for a very long time and Harbour themselves have been the only big buyer in town since last autumn.
When the buybacks have stopped the share price crashes through major support, for example 297p last year then 270p and then finally 250p.