bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
maestro
- 23 Sep 2006 09:34
- 20267 of 27111
FROM III.CO.UK
e: HUGE CORRECTION ONE YEAR EARLIER Keep it simple
"On November 1, 2006, Wal-Mart will introduce a packaging scorecard to more than 2,000 private label suppliers. This is a tool that will allow Wal-Mart buyers to have all the information about packaging alternatives or more sustainable packaging materials in one place, allowing them to make better purchasing decisions."
INDUCTION MECHANISM, SO NOT ONLY WAL MART BUT THE ACTUAL CONSUMERS ARE GOING TO END UP PUNISHING THOSE COMPANIES THAT DO NOT USE BIODEGRADABLE FDA APPROVED PACKAGING FROM GUESS WHO, THE MORE I READ IT I CANT BELIEVE IT, WONDERFUL TRULY EXCEPTIONAL PLANNING NO WONDER WAL MART IS TAKING OVER THE WORLD AND SEO JUST HAPENED TO BEWITH THE RIGHT TECH AT THE RIGHT TIME AND WITH THE BEST STORE IN THE WORLD, I FEEL A HEART ATTACK COMMING BETTER LOG OFF.
maestro
- 23 Sep 2006 09:35
- 20268 of 27111
LOOKS LIKE WE COULD ROCKET MONDAY ON THIS NEWS...WILL BE BUYING MASSIVE AT 8AM
cynic
- 23 Sep 2006 10:09
- 20269 of 27111
maestro .... i thought i was "King Prick" round here, but clearly you are the true pretender to that title ...... even if "the stockmarket is one big sham", the money involved is very real, and as is well known "money makes the world go round" ..... so if you think it all a joke, and therefore presumably do not participate, why do you not just take a long holiday with sex ...... and lest you are so unobservant, i have no axe to grind on SEO, for i do not and never have held this particular share, nor even shorted it, though that was a strong temptation.
KingKonggb
- 23 Sep 2006 10:15
- 20270 of 27111
Cynic,
From what I understand Maestro is a racist plonker who ramps any share that he/she wants to go up.
King Prick is being too kind for such a person!!
Kong
cynic
- 23 Sep 2006 10:21
- 20271 of 27111
racist? where does that come from?
perhaps he is just a refugee from ADVFN, which seems full of his ilk, which is why i walked away from it after just 20 minutes trial
tweenie
- 23 Sep 2006 16:32
- 20275 of 27111
maestro - 23 Sep 2006 09:34 - 20267 of 20274
I FEEL A HEART ATTACK COMMING BETTER LOG OFF.
we live in hope.
maestro
- 23 Sep 2006 19:11
- 20276 of 27111
tweenie...that was a respected poster's comment on iii.co.uk...sorry to dissapoint
maestro
- 23 Sep 2006 19:55
- 20277 of 27111
Stanelco : the new Tetrapak..Evolution securities BUY
http://www.stanelco.co.uk/documents/Evo%2024-03-05.pdf#search=%22tetrapak%20share%20price%22
waveydavey
- 23 Sep 2006 20:38
- 20278 of 27111
maestro that link is dated 2005. FFS stop peddling yesterdays news/crap
Haystack
- 23 Sep 2006 20:41
- 20279 of 27111
This will be sub 1p and then bust in spite of maestro's ramps.
maestro
- 23 Sep 2006 20:51
- 20280 of 27111
wavey...so what?...businesses take time to reap the rewards....fill ya boots or regret forever
andysmith
- 23 Sep 2006 21:21
- 20281 of 27111
Been away but Oh Dear, the need to raise cash was obvious months ago and still we await, even a deal now will not bring immediate revenue to prevent SEO going bust. I will re-state, FORGET Greenseal in short-term, it will not happen quick enough. Starpol is the only life-saver in the locker and IF SEO can convince somebody with credible information that they have deals in the bag then that is the only way they will get the dosh to continue as credibility with the investment community must be zero, millions has been thrown at SEO with no outcome but each time deals were imminent. If they get the dosh, a flutter might be worthwhile, companies have recovered from equally bad situations, other alternatives would be BUST or a take-over if the market cap gets much lower. The problem here was getting into packaging without real experience and the people they employed just didn't deliver. I have no regrets about tipping the potential at 4-5p as it was there and then about selling at 21p due to delays. Markets love potential but hate the reverse, its that simple and whilst iii was annoying at times he turned out to be right due to SEO's poor management of this project and investors including brokers got caught up in the hype and possible mis-information which I think should be investigated. Masterson needs a kick in the knacker satchel for somehow leading people into false belief that he knew deals were in the bag etc but they only have theirselves to blame at the end of the day. I sincerely hope that they survive but hope lessons have been learnt here, you cannot afford (literally) to fall in love with a share.
boldtrader
- 23 Sep 2006 21:33
- 20282 of 27111
Are you a teacher Andy?
andysmith
- 23 Sep 2006 21:45
- 20283 of 27111
I wonder if Tetrapak could be interested in loaning dosh to SEO or even buying them? Market cap is low and IF SEO have a money making product in Starpol that Walmart are really interested in then Tetrapak might also be interested, afterall, sustainable packaging is high on agenda's and SEO are in deep shit.
Just a thought, no evidence.
garyble
- 23 Sep 2006 21:46
- 20284 of 27111
Maestro,
Appears to be a tad inaccurate {edit: conflicting reports see link at bottom} on the Wal-mart scorecard announcement:
http://www.turkishpress.com/nw.asp?s=u&i=060922185559.ernt37kr&t=Wal-Mart+to+cut+packaging+in+environmental+initiative
"
Starting in November 2007, Wal-Mart will introduce a "packaging scorecard" to help Wal-Mart buyers to have information about packaging alternatives or more sustainable packaging materials in one place to make better purchasing decisions"
http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/09-22-2006/0004438124&EDATE=
"
On November 1, 2006, Wal-Mart will introduce a packaging scorecard to more than 2,000 private label suppliers. This is a tool that will allow Wal-Mart buyers to have all the information about packaging alternatives or more sustainable packaging materials in one place, allowing them to make better purchasing decisions"
maestro
- 24 Sep 2006 09:57
- 20285 of 27111
Branson link?
The Sunday Times - Business
The Sunday Times September 24, 2006
Rake in the profits from a greener future
THE green issue is drilling down into the business community much quicker than it is making political headway. Businesses are adapting fast to the challenges of global climate change, and in many cases it is the staff and consumers who are driving the changes to encourage renewable energy and waste recycling.
Here are just three examples of how businesses are changing. Even in the opaque world of investment banking, the staff now want to know what the emissions policy is. One chief executive I spoke to last week said he was regularly e-mailed with questions ranging from are we in a carbon- efficient building? to the use of recycled paper.
The property industry is also at the cutting edge of change. One developer told me that when he wants to let a building, it is now standard to first show round the human resources director to check all the green boxes are ticked. Only after that will a deal proceed to the next stage.
And as my colleague Matthew Goodman explains on the opposite page, it is the consumer who is driving the supermarkets to sell greener goods. The result is a green race similar to that experienced with the arms race.
Companies that have not formulated a green policy will have to learn fast, and heres the reason. It is another differentiator that can give a competitive advantage in attracting the brightest graduates.
Many of these graduates have grown up in a home environment where separating their weekly rubbish is part of family life. And now they want to ensure their future employers share similar values.
What is equally significant is that there is now a greater investment appetite to pump money into green technology. As The Sunday Times first revealed two weeks ago, Sir Richard Branson is pouring hundreds of millions of pounds into environmentally friendly investments.
Bransons decision is based on a business, rather than a charitable rationale. He needs to find an alternative biofuel to replace conventional petroleum products. Branson says what has killed these technologies before is the fluctuating price of oil the price comes down and they cant compete.
However, with petrol still above $60 a barrel (and likely to stay that way), the need to find alternative fuel is imperative. Even if the oil price slipped back to $40 a barrel the green momentum would probably slow down for a bit, but it would not stop.
Part of Bransons road-to-Damascus conversion to green came after reading The Weather Makers by Tim Flannery. He is now telling every business person to read it.
Some of the smart hedge funds such as Lansdowne Partners have already built up a spread of small investments in renewable energy. Someone will make a lot of money, although identifying the future winners is still a lottery. In most cases, the businesses lack scale and the management and the technology have not been sufficiently tested.
blackdown
- 24 Sep 2006 10:41
- 20286 of 27111
As predicted, massive equity dilution on the way.