Socrates
- 10 Jan 2004 10:34
Time now for all us Wiggins watchers to move with the times and start using Planestation, the new company identity. The name Wiggins Group plc has now disappeared from the database at Companies House and Planestation is now listed on the LSE website.
So fellow travellers, forget Wiggins, the name of the game is now PLANESTATION. Lets hope it goes like an express train.
jeffmack
- 02 Dec 2004 11:35
- 967 of 1086
I must go read them for a laf
jeffmack
- 02 Dec 2004 11:37
- 968 of 1086
wow, 35% drop. Whatsthat in old money against the old share price, about 2p
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 11:42
- 969 of 1086
Could be a good buying opportunity here. Just scanned through the interims and on the face of it they aren't that bad. EPS has improved on last year. It's probably the director's forecast that the outlook ahead will still be tough that has caused this reaction. I shall watch this closely today and MIGHT jump in if I think its bottomed.
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 11:51
- 970 of 1086
They're begining to buy into it now.
jeffmack
- 02 Dec 2004 11:53
- 971 of 1086
DCB, watch for drop in about 2 hours
hlyeo98
- 02 Dec 2004 12:34
- 972 of 1086
Kamikaze for PTG...bail out now
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 12:43
- 973 of 1086
This drop is a bit of an over-reaction. Volume of trades is rather light considering the movement in the sp.
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 12:48
- 974 of 1086
Turning round now. More buys than sells.
hlyeo98
- 02 Dec 2004 12:54
- 975 of 1086
LONDON (AFX) - Planestation Group PLC six months to Sept 30 2004
Sales - 4.40 mln stg vs 4.51 mln
Operating loss - 6.52 mln vs loss 8.30
Pretax loss - 8.65 mln stg vs loss 5.34 mln
Loss per share - 5.9 pence vs loss 7.9
Div - none declared
OVERALL POOR PERFORMANCE
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 13:02
- 976 of 1086
hlye098 - I would disagree with your conclusion. 1.3m of the reported group operating loss is PTGs share of EUjets operating loss and therefore can be considered as an exceptional. So the actual operating loss (due to PTG alone) is 5.2m versus 8m last year - a considerable improvement.
At the base line, the loss per share has shown an improvement of over 25%.
I would agree with you that the figures aren't brilliant, but they are not that bad either. It's not as if the figures were some kind of suprise. The company had warned of difficult times ahead and this has been reflected in its share price recently.
In my opinion, the dramatic drop is a kneejerk reaction and provides an opportunity for investment. Surely it can only go up from here.
imo, dyor, etc
Caveat: This from a muppet who topped up on Myflower the day before they went int administration :>{
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 13:10
- 977 of 1086
hlyeo98 - further: Your comparison of pretax loss figures are for 6 month periods (a fair comparison) but it is worth pointing out that the pretax loss by the group for the whole of last year was 17m. Therefore you could argue that if things don't improve, this years pretax loss at the worse would be comparable with last years. In other words, not really a decline.
Sorry to be pedantic :>)
partridge
- 02 Dec 2004 14:47
- 978 of 1086
It all comes down to cash and whoever provides a lifeline, if someone comes along, is surely unlikely to do existing shareholders any favours. Recent press release about secured overdraft was in hindsight a massive clue. IMO stay away but dyor.
StarFrog
- 02 Dec 2004 14:56
- 979 of 1086
partridge - i agree with you about the secured overdraft. This from their interims:
"On 9 November 2004, Wiggins Property Developments Ltd and Manston Car Parks Ltd
each signed a new facility agreement with the Bank of Scotland which together
provided a 3 million secured overdraft facility to the Group repayable by 5
February 2005."
It is interesting to note that the overdraft has been arranged with their own bankers and not from some other source. To agree to pay it back in what is a relatively short time span suggests that this is for some immediate project and that the company are confident to repay it. I wonder if it simply is to resurface the carpark? ('cos they're execting a lot of use!)
Interesting to see what happens.
tipton11
- 02 Dec 2004 16:49
- 980 of 1086
Ptg state they require 22m in their 19 month cash flow estimate now apparently property will produce something like 14m...does that mean they need to raise 22m - 14m = 8m plus of course repayment of the 3m, or the full 22m.
Perhaps as usual I've got it all wrong...anyone able to straighten me out?
hlyeo98
- 02 Dec 2004 18:33
- 981 of 1086
The share price is down by 50% today...so much for above if it is doing so well.
jeffmack
- 02 Dec 2004 18:39
- 982 of 1086
Only upside is at least with this management and their cost cutting excercises the share is still worth something. With Iny and his merry men men this would be bust now.
partridge
- 02 Dec 2004 18:42
- 983 of 1086
Starfrog - overdraft probably with own bankers because no-one else would look at it. Suspect they had no influence on term - bank would dictate all terms to them as they appear in decent asset position, but parlous cash position. Need is for risk capital equity funding rather than overdraft, but they have to pay the bills while they try to sort it out. Looks like they have bought a couple of months breathing space, but very high risk. DYOR etc
apple
- 02 Dec 2004 22:36
- 985 of 1086
WOW 50% down in 1 day OUTSTANDING!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
What a drop!