Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
 
Register now or login to post to this thread.

stanelco .......a new thread (SEO)     

bosley - 20 Feb 2004 09:34

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=SEO&SiChart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=SEO&Si

for more information about stanelco click on the links.

driver's research page link
http://www.moneyam.com/InvestorsRoom/posts.php?tid=7681#lastread
website link
http://www.stanelco.co.uk/index.htm


hewittalan6 - 10 Jan 2006 16:29 - 14024 of 27111

Well someones confident,
800000 buy at 16.11p gone through.
No doubt ii or bling will explain it differently, but I'll take it at face value, thanks.
Alan

bhunt1910 - 10 Jan 2006 16:34 - 14025 of 27111

Almost 2m shares traded in the last half an hour. I just do not know what is happening anymore. Some might say I never did (thought I would say it before they did).

Will be an interesting start tomorrow methinks.

Clearly SEO did not think the toe up with the \indian company worthy of an RNS.

They definitely have turned over a new leaf

Baza

bhunt1910 - 10 Jan 2006 16:39 - 14026 of 27111

It is possible that the 500k sell afetr hours is a buy as it is more than 3 times NMS - so the notification could have been delayed an hour - in which case the offer price was 15.75.

Does that make sense - or is it just wishful thinking ??

driver - 10 Jan 2006 17:15 - 14027 of 27111

baz
You could be right, but that was a definite 800k buy just before it may have been tfc.

blinger - 10 Jan 2006 18:31 - 14028 of 27111

lol
if the offer price WAS 15.75p and the 500k WAS a buy then the bid is actually 15.5p- that will do me for a fall tomorrow.
Time you lot went on one of Bully`s free seminars.
If the deal was unusual , it would be marked so

explosive - 10 Jan 2006 19:16 - 14029 of 27111

Free Seminars with Bully, tell me more I'll have to attend and learn how to short.....

The courtcase won't make a difference, irrelevant to the potential of SEO....

Agree though bling, does seam very overbought.... Broker rating slipped also in last 6 months..... Also have a feeling Barrie Hozier may reduce his holding..

LIcom - 10 Jan 2006 19:28 - 14030 of 27111

from lemming investor.com

Buoyancy
the sharp effect on share price of recovery from a
reversible situation from accident, outside events,
or uncovering a rogue executive

Multi-baggers
The 'buoyancy effect' in a recovery is a much stronger upward driver of the
share price than good results in a stable and well managed company where
the visible future is already in the price.

A share price, which has fallen by 95% (it happens) and acquires 'dog status'
as the result of a reversible condition, has the potential of an eighteen
bagger- if and when the original status can be restored. It is rare to see share
price improvement of this size from a profitable and stable company because
future growth is usually closely monitored and already built into the market
price. That is why we are particularly keen at Lemming Investor to find 'dogs'
arising from reversible situations, which good management can restore to their
original level of performance and respect.

It is common knowledge that the market exaggerates the effect of good and
bad news. The 'dog' reputation is difficult to remove. It hangs on much longer
than the actual effect of the original fault or misadventure. So where a 'dog'
company retains high sales momentum, IP, know how, or other intangible or
tangible assets, the share price eventually offers a very cheap way in, long
after most of the downside risk has cleared..

A high level of sales can always be turned into an acceptable profit by cutting
overheads; and large assets can usually be 're-sweated' (to coin a word) to
produce a conventional return. Once the burned down buildings have been
restored, or the crooked FD sacked and replaced, or the price of spiked up
raw materials returns to average, the high sales level or the undamaged asset
can be brought back to normal yields and the share price eventually returns to
the status ante quo. In the process it becomes a multi-bagger.

We have seen this with Ashtead (AHT), and a few years ago at Powerscreen.
In both cases a senior executive had been falsifying the books in a subsidiary
without affecting sales or earning power, and these quickly regenerated profits
after the miscreant was fired.

Emerald Energy, (EEN)recovering from a drilling explosion, is, with oil
reserves relatively unharmed, currently in transition from 'dog' to hero, and
therefore severely under-priced.

BioProgress, (BPRG)damaged superficially by a particular CEO now
replaced, but with IP intact, is in recovery and the share price has doubled in
ten weeks.

An accident like the factory fire at Luton which damaged ASOS, (ASC)or the
spike in world copper prices which has mopped up profits at AFC (the former
Oystertec) until the competition raises prices or the spike subsides, are clearly
reversible And so is the mis-management now cleared up at MinorPlanet
(MPS), where the dog status is still set to linger for a while.

Note that in both cases there is, or previously was, a high sales level. A
professional Marketing Director will know that it costs a few tens of millions in
cash and ten or twenty years to build 100m sales. Find a dog with that level
of production and sales,, and competent management can restore profits to
somewhere between 5 and 20m. That will lead to a market cap of 50
-300m depending on market sector. For AFC (sales 105m) or MPS ( sales
once 100m now 20m - but still the market leader) that means multi-bagging
in each case.

blinger - 10 Jan 2006 19:31 - 14031 of 27111

seriously he does them, and they are free explosive, ask .

superrod - 10 Jan 2006 21:14 - 14032 of 27111

back to the good old days....opened a T10 monday afternoon......sold tuesday morning for 309 quid profit.....thanks again for the free L2 trial MAM. wish i could afford to hang on to this share for a few months.

bhunt1910 - 11 Jan 2006 07:55 - 14033 of 27111

Well I wonder what surprises we have in store for today?

Baza

hewittalan6 - 11 Jan 2006 07:59 - 14034 of 27111

If I told you, they wouldn't be a suprise!!
Alan

Bugz - 11 Jan 2006 08:28 - 14035 of 27111

Looks like none Baza. No news-again rumours proved wrong. Hopefully the essence is right but the timing wrong. What a dull wednesday-at least the skies are clear in Yorkshire!

hewittalan6 - 11 Jan 2006 08:34 - 14036 of 27111

Bugz, You're a Yorkshireman!!! I knew you talked a lot of sense!! Lovely day here in Leeds too.
Alan

bhunt1910 - 11 Jan 2006 08:36 - 14037 of 27111

Pissing down in Surrey

hewittalan6 - 11 Jan 2006 08:39 - 14038 of 27111

We'd call it a light shower, you soft southern jessy!!
;-)
Alan

jimmy b - 11 Jan 2006 08:44 - 14039 of 27111

Is it right you only get four hours of daylight up there Al .

driver - 11 Jan 2006 08:48 - 14040 of 27111

Pissing down in Hertfordshire.

hewittalan6 - 11 Jan 2006 08:49 - 14041 of 27111

In summer!! But the air is cleaner and less polluted. On a clear day I can see my sideboard.

BKK2 - 11 Jan 2006 08:51 - 14042 of 27111

Well HOT in Bangkok

hewittalan6 - 11 Jan 2006 08:51 - 14043 of 27111

Bloody southerners. You don't know what pissing down is till you've worked a 25 hour shift 7 days a week, up to your eyebrows ina puddle from the leaking roof in the mill, while you pass the spinning jeeny through the loom, then have to swim home to your mam for a bit of brown bread and butter for your tea.
Register now or login to post to this thread.