bosley
- 20 Feb 2004 09:34
jimmy b
- 23 May 2005 12:01
- 4624 of 27111
Ian Balchin, CEO at Stanelco plc, said
'Today's announcement takes Stanelco to the next stage of maturity as a business
as our technology enters full scale production. We are very excited by the
success of the trials for GREENSEAL, as are both ASDA and the supplier. The
commercialisation of the technology has been adopted at an unusually fast pace.'
Tony Ruane, Technical Manager Meal Solutions commented:
'With food safety being increasingly high on everybody's agenda, RF presents the
answers to many problems being experienced with current packaging technology.
ASDA and our selected suppliers have been very excited with the possibilities
that RF has to offer. The supplier has recognised the capabilities and benefits
of RF tray lidding for ASDA, themselves and more importantly, the customer.'
Chiva20
- 23 May 2005 12:25
- 4625 of 27111
Hi Ian,
Can you answer my site problems thread q?
Sorry to be off topic all ..
Bones
- 23 May 2005 12:27
- 4626 of 27111
I'd like to make a small point (as a neutral observer who holds neither SEO nor BPRG but has held both in the past). This is not meant as criticism of anyone but is stating a fact:
SEO is currently valued at in excess of 200M on the stock market.
SEO's last recorded turnover (per MoneyAM stats) was less than 2M (turnover, not profit!).
Consequently, I am a little sceptical of anyone who says the price isn't discounting everything but a trip to the moon.
Even BPRG never made it to this valuation and their potential market is even bigger and they have a 20 year contract already signed (just a shame about the management!). Just a thought.
I expect a lot of "don't talk rubbish" but that will confirm that this is mania territory for the share price. By the way, I am not knocking the potential, but that is all it is, as it is for BPRG.
IanT(MoneyAM)
- 23 May 2005 12:27
- 4627 of 27111
Chiva,
What thread is it on, and I will take a look into it,
Ian
jimmy b
- 23 May 2005 12:32
- 4628 of 27111
bones , i understand what your saying but i thimk that's what we are excited about , the potential, the possible US deals etc , they look a little closer now..JB..
Bones
- 23 May 2005 12:36
- 4629 of 27111
Jimmy, indeed, the potential. Is it not priced in yet?
I would say that anyone who has made a 5 fold + profit is to be congratulated. Only, you should remember to cash some of it in one day!
jimmy b
- 23 May 2005 12:47
- 4631 of 27111
Bones , yes some of the potential is priced in , and im not expecting a get rich quick fix here, but i think , along with the others that the potential especially the US is massive..
Bones
- 23 May 2005 12:48
- 4632 of 27111
Well, good luck with it Jimmy!
Sequestor
- 23 May 2005 12:55
- 4633 of 27111
er no driver,
a `penny share` is by definition defined by the VALUE at the time
of discussion NOT the underlying original "value" at issue, which continues to be shown ad-infinitum
As an example the new O2 plc shares issued in March this year show a value of 0.1p on the certificate, they opened from memory at 1.25.
Also a "penny share" really once was a around a penny, inflation has dictated that a share valued under a 1 is now one.
back to the hedging now the rain has stopped.
016622
- 23 May 2005 13:03
- 4634 of 27111
nothing like passing the time with a good bush trim
pisces
- 23 May 2005 13:27
- 4636 of 27111
There seems to be a lot of bitching going on today,so come on guys lets look at the positives.First of all we have now established a new support level,which if anyone had said would be 27-28p only weeks ago surely everyone would have been happy.Secondly, todays deal will hopefully be the start of many for stanelco and even if the news is already in the shareprice, so what!Is everyone suddenly saying there`s no potential anymore because if you are in any doubt about this share don`t go near it.It`s going to be an exhilirating ride but we all knew that anyway. Keep the faith.
aldwickk
- 23 May 2005 14:03
- 4638 of 27111
I think any news regarding a WALMART deal will come from the U S A, via a leak to a news agency, which will be confirmed by WALMART/SEO.
superrod
- 23 May 2005 14:17
- 4639 of 27111
driver
i think the generally accepted view of a penny share is a market cap less than 100milliom.
the ord price quoted bears absolutely no bearing on the market price. its a nominal figure.
just to nit pick......oil companies do indeed discover oil, diamond mines may or may not discover diamonds, but microsoft sure as hell didnt discover windows.
driver
- 23 May 2005 14:33
- 4640 of 27111
superrod
Sorry to disagree.
November:1983 Microsoft unveils Microsoft Windows, a variation of the MS-DOS operating system that lets users have multiple unrelated programs open at once by employing a window system. A user could also transfer data rom one application program to another.
http://wwwshs1.bham.wednet.edu/curric/socst/wa/tdhist.htm
Sequestor
- 23 May 2005 14:58
- 4642 of 27111
superrodd ,
this is becoming embarassing- again we agree,well nearly
the end of the world is nigh-repent!!!!!
lol
driver, you must believe what you believe, you are mixing up nominal figures and THE REAL share price, I have to say I never saw Unilever in The Penny Share Guide,or BT, OR SHELL, OR BP ,etc. etc.
Sequestor
- 23 May 2005 15:04
- 4643 of 27111
Home Subject index Bookshop Forum Tools Glossary Help I want to learn about Global-Investor.com > Incademy.com > Investing in smaller companiesInvesting in smaller companies
Introduction| Course| Q&As | Recommended reading| Quiz | 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 8. Penny shares and other speculative stocks
Penny shares, meaning companies whose share prices are below about 1, are not necessarily companies with small market caps, but often they are. They are worth mentioning briefly in this tutorial because:
investors often mistakenly equate penny shares with small caps
investors often mistakenly assume that because a share price is low, the shares are cheap
penny shares are often presented as high growth companies and treated by
penny shares are volatile
Richard Koch, author of Selecting Shares that Perform, says:
"Most penny shares are low quality, illiquid, expensive to buy or sell, and highly speculative. Many are in companies run by people of dubious repute. Some just represent the last resting place of once great companies before their formal burial."
Not a fan then.