Ryan Mee, CEO of Fulcrum Metals, reviews FY23 and progress on the Gold Tailings Hub in Canada. Watch the video here.
Not me dude I'm small fry but Evil Kneivil on the other hand.
https://masterinvestor.co.uk/evil-diaries/evil-knievil-justice-in-action/
"Yesterday Amigo (LON:AMGO) announced that, so far, creditors of AMGO have voted massively for the Scheme of Arrangement. However, AMGO also announced that the FCA, its regulator, thinks that creditors are not getting enough and, consequently, are putting up counsel to ask the judge on 18th May to set aside the Scheme. The consequence of such a decision would probably mean that AMGO goes bust and the creditors get nothing at all. I cannot see the wisdom of this.
On the announcement I bought 200,000 AMGO at 26p and was a bit surprised to see the shares close at 23p. On the other hand, markets were generally weak, and punters tend to take recent good profits in such a market. Further, creditors have had months to put up an alternative Scheme. The fact that they have not supports my view that the judge next week would have to be potty to support the FCA’s application. Mind you, I have come across quite a lot of potty judges in recent years. So I had best be cautious."
Subprime lender Provident Financial on Monday confirmed it plans to get out of the home credit business one way or another, placing the division into run-off and considering a sale.
Bradford-based Provident earlier this month had said its review of the business was nearing completion, following press reports that it would wind-up both the home credit unit and online lending arm Satsuma to focus on its credit card business, Vanquis Bank, and its car finance operation, Moneybarn.
Pubs, restaurants and bars which reopened on Monday have said their sales were more than double the levels seen before the coronavirus pandemic struck, according to new figures.
Hospitality data specialists at CGA said that like-for-like drink sales jumped by over 100% on the first day of outdoor trading, compared with the same day in 2019.
Hospitality firms in England welcomed customers again on Monday after at least three months of closure due to the latest set of lockdown measures.
Depends how broken it is! I mean I could smash it to bits and it ain't ever going to be right once a day or like my Boss watch the hands fell off it that ain't going to be telling the time ever again.