ADVFN Logo ADVFN

We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.

Trending Now

Toplists

It looks like you aren't logged in.
Click the button below to log in and view your recent history.

Hot Features

Registration Strip Icon for alerts Register for real-time alerts, custom portfolio, and market movers

VRS Versarien Plc

0.106
-0.00025 (-0.24%)
24 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Versarien Plc LSE:VRS London Ordinary Share GB00B8YZTJ80 ORD 0.01P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -0.00025 -0.24% 0.106 5,589,307 16:35:08
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
0.103 0.109 0.11 0.102 0.11
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Chemicals & Chem Preps, Nec 11.64M -8.07M -0.0244 -0.04 330.78k
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
14:57:37 O 55,500 0.103 GBX

Versarien (VRS) Latest News

Versarien (VRS) Discussions and Chat

Versarien Forums and Chat

Date Time Title Posts
24/4/202417:22VRS The world lead in real Graphene (Nanene)152,266
24/4/202416:05Versarien - Bulls and bears thread18,736
03/4/202422:51The lol thread60
14/3/202423:55Versarien Developing advanced materials and enabling engineering exploitation24,729
14/11/202318:33Christmas 🤶 competition 1

Add a New Thread

Versarien (VRS) Most Recent Trades

Trade Time Trade Price Trade Size Trade Value Trade Type
2024-04-24 13:57:390.1055,50057.17O
2024-04-24 13:53:510.102400.24AT
2024-04-24 13:28:180.1110,00010.85AT
2024-04-24 13:27:080.11453,578488.05O
2024-04-24 12:41:090.10745,000763.63AT

Versarien (VRS) Top Chat Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 24/4/2024 09:20 by Versarien Daily Update
Versarien Plc is listed in the Chemicals & Chem Preps, Nec sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker VRS. The last closing price for Versarien was 0.11p.
Versarien currently has 330,779,690 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Versarien is £330,780.
Versarien has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -0.04.
This morning VRS shares opened at 0.11p
Posted at 10/4/2024 10:32 by pwhite73
The falling share price is a completely different subject from the company going bust.

Due to the appalling reputation NR left behind the MM would only take the risk with a new CEO and heavily discounted placings.

Now that there is no issue of the company going bust, reputation has been restored and joint ventures are resulting in licence agreements there will be a steady increase in the share price from hereon.

That's it from me. You had your opportunity to put 'difficult questions' but needless to say you couldn't because you are simply not in my class.
Posted at 09/4/2024 13:47 by pwhite73
zydecoco - "So when you said there are no competitors to VRS, you were actually saying there is no market, therefore nobody is in the market, not even VRS!"

I can accept that as an interpretation.

So moving forward from here companies like First Graphene or your Concrene are not competitors of VRS yet because the starting pistol has not been fired.

I thought I'd made this clear throughout my numerous postings when I partially exonerated NR for the demise of VRS and its share price because there was no graphene market for him to sell VRS products into so he effectively had to make up MOUs, LOIs and JVs to keep the company afloat.

With net zero a global target the market for VRS is now more favourable.
Posted at 05/4/2024 11:12 by kemche
"The last placing was at 0.125p. I did not expect the price to drop below this"

Don't beat yourself up Font. How were you supposed to know that VRS was the rare company to defy the market observation that 99.99999% of AIM companies that do a fundraising experience a rise in their share price to that above the placing price. And you, of all people, a market veteran of years with an intelligence greater than the aggregate of all posters on ADVFN.

The question now is "Will the price dip below the next placing price?" What say you?
Posted at 03/4/2024 15:40 by pwhite73
Festario - "The point you so deliberately ignore is that for people who bought at the height of the ramping, at 185p"

The other thing is this losses are not about the share price but about the money. If someone invested £10,000 in VRS at 180p everything is now gone at 0.10p. However if they took a chance today and invested £1000 in VRS the price could easily multibag to 1p and they have got their losses back from the NR days.

This is why I suggest that if you haven't done so already at least consider VRS at these very low prices. That is not a tip just a reasoned point.
Posted at 03/4/2024 14:58 by pwhite73
Festario - "None of you seem to be alarmed at the fall from 185p to 0.11p"

When the share price was 180p in September 2018 there were 152 million shares in issue giving a market cap of £273 million.

Was Versarien ever really worth £273 million?. With the benefit of hindsight the answer is clearly no.

To regain a market cap of £273 million the share price would need hit 18p (18p x 1.5B shares).

If graphene takes off like we all hope it does then that's not an impossibility
Posted at 28/3/2024 08:46 by verger
The VRS financial situation has been reported on and discussed for months. Today’s results hold no bad surprises. They simply give the actual figures behind the ongoing debate. Having read these reports for some years, I actually appreciated the candid and clear comments from our CEO, CFO and Chairman. The path ahead has been set out, and all three strike an optimistic note.
We all know how the share price has fallen. We all know the very low share price ant the moment and the need for further finances until we are profitable. The best way, in my opinion, to consider VRS is to see it for what it is today. Invest, or not, depending on how you see the future rather than harping on about the past.
Posted at 26/3/2024 13:09 by fuji99
PWhite: You guessed the right tricks. Do you remember when NR was spreading the gospel ? "Watch my lips" - "You ain't seen nothing yet" and some tricky tweets chanting the beauty of graphene, nanene, China, traveling with MP's, Cambridge, Manchester, etc. etc. - all of this fashionable makeup is released from a golf course - of course... For the buying of shares, each time they launch some hints about "agreement" coupled with "turnaround thingy", the share price rises probably by manipulation. Today we see the naked truth: There is no China, no Manchester, no MP's, no manufacturing, no 3 ton machines, no money and the share price is less than Epsilon. This is unfortunately the true sad story and the end of this Ponzi Scheme which came all the way down from 185p to ZERO p. Unfortunately, the strange thing is that many still continue losing money intentionally or blindly by buying more wind.
Posted at 26/3/2024 12:48 by pwhite73
The Cronk

There are only two types of pumping.

1. The spreading of rumours that something positive is about to be announced so causing the share price to rise.

2. The buying of stock so raising the share price to give the impression something positive is about to be announced.

Which one of these is the pre-placing pump?.
Posted at 22/3/2024 15:00 by pwhite73
CS - share price gets its financial information from the same source as you which is the unaudited interims and audited full year results. The only difference is one of spin.

AIM companies will present the results to shareholders as if it's on the verge of profitability, cutting losses, efficiency savings, reducing staff, increased sales etc. This is to encourage PIs to invest in the shares. However they will always without fail report losses to Companies House so they don't have to pay any corporation tax.

The reality is that most of these AIM companies operate profitably from PI money because they don't have real businesses the money goes straight into the directors pockets. That's why so long as there are enough PI mugs year in year out these loss making AIM companies can keep going for decades.

SP challenges whether these companies have any real businesses at all and are in reality nothing but executive lifestyle companies until they run out of other people's money.

SP has called VRS right over many years. On the verge of going bust VRS had to take drastic action. The CEO was forced to resign and they brought in turnaround specialists Prompt Strategies.

I for one believe the current team genuinely want to make a success of the business and be pioneers in the UK graphene industry. Unlike share price I don't believe they are simply picking up where NR left off.
Posted at 22/3/2024 08:20 by pwhite73
It's not the price that's important it's the percentage discount to the current share price.

For example if the share price is 2p and the equity raise is at 1p that's just as destructive for shareholdings who were buying at 2p. This is what the CEO wants to avoid. They want long term investors in the company that would accept a 20% reduction in an equity raise for further share price growth when the discount shares have been absorbed and further commercial news has been announced.

The turnaround strategy is dependent on the support of various parties including PI shareholders. If there is no alignment between the two then the whole process falls apart.
Versarien share price data is direct from the London Stock Exchange

Your Recent History

Delayed Upgrade Clock