Ryan Mee, CEO of Fulcrum Metals, reviews FY23 and progress on the Gold Tailings Hub in Canada. Watch the video here.
This so-called investment has been dog extremely this year and is currently down nearly 25% on its 2021 high. Sometimes, this could be seen as a buying opportunity but I don't feel that with this pile of doggy-do's. Down again today, the same as nearly every day this year. Thankfully I only have a relatively small holding but it is by far my worst performer of 2022. Time these jokers got their fingers out and started earning their undeserved salaries.
Not quite ale. If enough people are vaccinated, the virus numbers will reduce because it won't be able to multiply in protected individuals, making it less transmissable. This will also reduce tha chances of mutations which lead to difficult variants. I am no virologist, but I do wonder if contracting the less deadly Omicron could provide immunity to potentially worse variants. We have been here before just after WW1. The pandemic 'Spanish' flu killed a lot of people, then disappeared after a couple of years.
May have been a bit keen, but just sold the lot at 22.p a share profit plus got a few hundred from the recent div. If I'm wrong, I still did pretty well. A very nice tickle in only a a few months. HNY.
Hard work, Too risky. Currently earning enough for a crust and half a beer once a fortnight. Don't want to upset that applecart.
I first bought GSK in 2011 (at £13.02) and have increased my holding substantially on dips, of which there have been a few. I justified it by watching the divs come rolling in four times a year and now I can't really justify selling until I know what the immediate future holds. But I did some calcs over the weekend and in 2020 (tax year here in Jersey is Jan to Dec) and GSK is currently earning me about 6% yield with no capital gain (No CGT in Jersey so I like it a lot). LGEN are earning me nearly 9% plus about 30% CG mainly because I bought a shed load during the pandemic dip. Funds, of which I have a few, have collectively earned 14% (all CG, no income) this year and 11% last year. I avoid very high risk. Individual shares also in profit but I can't be a_rsed to work it out. After considering the wise words of 'no guarantees in the future' and so on, GSK ain't looking good, but LGEN aside , the boring get rich slow funds have outperformed everything. However the split pans out, I reckon my GSK money would be better invested elsewhere..
That may be true. I was only ever really here for the div before covid. Luckily I sold out at £1.78 in the summer and bought back 3 times as many at £1.49 a few weeks ago just before XD day. Who says you can't time the market. Reckon I just got lucky. Am hoping for a good trading update and a decent div announcement but may not hold long term. Has been a nice profitable dabble though so far. The housing marjet seems to be holding up OK and I know of a TW development in Birmingham which has sold well.
Not so. Not unless they are shorting billions. Which they aren't. That was the shortest lived rally ever. I thought it was a bit overblown because they only just beat expectations but if I really had conviction I would have sold. And I didn't. So I'm a tiny bit richer than I was this morning and quite a lot poorer than I was at lunchtime. More wine garcon.
If shorting is so obviously profitable, why don't you do it instead of whining about people that do? If you believe that shorters never fail to make a huge profit, you are deluded. You buy shares because you are betting against the person selling them. Shorting is the same, just the other way round. People who whine about it generally don't understand it.
@Pokerchips.
What he said. Not sure why people have such a downer on shorting. You would think shorters are stealing the profit from the mouths of the babies of regular investors. Shorting is risky and doesn't always lead to profit. I rarely short anything (Carillion was the last and who exactly did I hurt by shorting them?) but I would if I had conviction. I find the stress of it not to be worthwhile tbh.
Anyone who takes "advices" from anyone else on these boards deserves to lose their money. The lack of knowledge or understanding is staggering. The last post is a good example. Why on earth would HMRC be interested in he number of shares? They only care about income or capital gain.
Reading all the posts below, I really do question whether people who don’t understand how dividends work should even be investing in shares.
Having sold out of TW a fortnight ago at £1.64, it seemed like a good idea to get back in with three times as many at £1.51 this morning with an XD tomorrow. WTF do I ever know?
I'm with Nuri. I would prefer buybacks to a special div. A div would just mean the SP goes down by the same amount and would 'reward' carpetbaggers. As a LTH, it would be preferable to increase EPS via buybacks and debt reduction. Nice figures though.
Badly managed for a decade? Did I say that out loud?
Rather unedifying to see that bloke from the Sunday Times money pages ramping ITM in his column at the weekend while neglecting to mention the 30% drop over recent weeks. He must be getting worried about his pension. A good example of Do Your Own Research if ever there was one.
Or take it.
buy the bonds instead 5.25%
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Given the average level of investor expertise on these boards, it's probably unwise to offer investment advice.
Bought myself 22,000 shares as a birthday present to myself in mid may and was intending to keep them for a while. However, have made enough in a month to buy my daughter an electric car. Guess they could keep going up for a while, but if they do, I'll just ask her to drive me down the pub. Might come back in next time the SP drops. GLA.