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AFE African Eagle

0.275
0.00 (0.00%)
01 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
African Eagle Investors - AFE

African Eagle Investors - AFE

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
African Eagle AFE London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 0.275 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
0.275 0.275
more quote information »

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 12/6/2014 15:10 by jane downs
Sorry o/t guys this is being missed bought 180k in 2 trades yesterday thought mkt would have had an rns today.Was priced 2 go bust not anymore.

Going to multi bag guys 360p highs just out rebranded a 1p share get real.

HOTEL CORP (LSE:HCP) , A few early punters could be checking into the Hotel Corporation the investor in four star provincial hotels could just be getting the attention of larger hotel chain

Puma Hotels Collection rebrands to The Hotel Collection (HCP)
CEO of The Hotel Collection, Fredrik Korallus.

"Since taking over the management of the collection, we have achieved strong revenue growth predominately driven by the resurgence in the meetings and events market, as well as strong leisure demand."
Today, 1:03 PM
Posted at 10/6/2014 14:40 by fenseal3
Just spoke to a few investor friends, they say they want to buy but are waiting for a better price, i told them what price they said not sure but just hoping to get in cheaper...i said what if it does not drop and carries on rising, they said, we will have to jump in, the gamble would of back fired, if it was me i would take the plunge now, that's me we're all not the same, good luck to them!!
Posted at 10/6/2014 10:25 by fenseal3
sal, if hum has bought in then that would be the biggest turn around in the shortest time ever, all he has done this week and last is slag this share off...he will now say how clever he is by making out this was a dog just so he could get in at a lower price....most sophisticated investors know this is going forwards not backwards, PMSL!!!!!
Posted at 01/6/2014 20:13 by saloba11
Anglo are definately finished so will see what Coburg do from here. Need the new board to release a plan going forward which should attract new investors. I guess alot of going to depend if the Dutwa project is commercial and what NC's intention is for this project.
Posted at 01/6/2014 19:47 by fenseal3
Going off the last spike there are a lot of investors in this over the 0.45p range, if the selling has stopped i reckon this could get back to around that level, any news out of the blue and it's positive then who knows.
Posted at 26/5/2014 20:57 by josephrobert
I never understood why Dutwa - 'world class' - as it was once described wasn't funded. Rolling stock? Nickel price? Tax? Something else? And why wasn't it kept on care and maintence? Why would such an apparently strong bunch of new recruits invest their own money, time and reputation for something that went so wrong? Surely for something that wasn't on the RNSs.

People had more questions than answers when Rose Petroleum was a sixth of the share price it is now. In fact they had written it off and the number of trades per day was pitiful. No hope was seen a mile off. People invested in Rose at much lower levels because of what the cornerstone investors were doing and not why. Not many though. It's not rocket science to take a risk for the potential of a large gain. KK and NC are not in it it for modest gains after all.
Posted at 14/5/2014 13:04 by fenseal3
Bad Robot don't leave it too long to buy, other large investors are mopping these up!!


14 May 2014

African Eagle Resources plc

("African Eagle" or the "Company")

Major Interest in Shares

African Eagle announces that the Company has today been notified that on
13 May 2014 Coburg Group plc purchased 2,500,000 ordinary shares of 0.1
pence each in the issued share capital of the Company ("Ordinary
Shares") at an average price of 0.239p per Ordinary Share.





Number of Number of
Ordinary % of issued Ordinary % of issued
Shares held share capital Shares held share capital
prior to the prior to the following the following the
Name Purchase Purchase (%) Purchase Purchase (%)

Coburg Group
plc 95,580,999 10.97 98,080,999 11.26


For further information please visit www.africaneagle.co.uk or contact
the following:

Enquiries:
Posted at 13/5/2014 15:54 by fenseal3
Nice shake there for some lucky investors who are buying @ 0.245p....i have got high hopes for this share 8-)!!
Posted at 08/5/2014 08:26 by fenseal3
Look out for a rise today or tomorrow, a lot of investors in my club are looking to buy in today or tomorrow, this was trading @ 0.45p 3 weeks ago and a few have spotted that the next rise is due, GLA!!!!!!
Posted at 02/7/2013 14:06 by atino
Awesome stuff Bam Bam:-))) [...you here too buddy?]...so you saying...about 0.75p then:-)))...[even 'better':]]]



But yo...(check this out)...EXCELLENT NEWS (..for everyone 'concerned' on AIM) ^__^

AIM shares finally join the ISA club
By Ian Lyall and July 02 2013, 1:17pm AIM-listed ASOS is now eligible for incusion in a stocks & shares ISAAIM-listed ASOS is now eligible for incusion in a stocks & shares ISA

AIM-listed shares are finally eligible for inclusion in tax-exempt Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) after the Treasury rubber-stamped a proposal floated in this year's Budget speech.

Shares listed on London's junior market were initially deemed unsuitable for a savings product aimed squarely at Joe and Josephine Public. The original idea was to protect the less sophisticated and financially literate investors from the riskier shares traded on the junior market, which is a laudable goal.

However, AIM stocks have long been allowed in self-invested personal pension schemes (SIPPS), and are other inconsistencies come to light when you take a close look at what the Treasury considers an eligible exchange for ISA purposes.

So, you could add stocks from the lightly-policed Malta, Colombo and Cayman Island stock exchanges to your individual savings account but not equities from UK's alternative market, an exchange that includes £1.3bn valued Gulf Keystone (LON:GKP) and £3.4bn valued ASOS (LON:ASC) among its members.

The contradictions became even more apparent when you realise AIM shares that also trade on recognised bourses such as the Australia's ASX and the Toronto exchange instantly became ISA-eligible by dint of that dual listing.

So, the lifting of the ban on AIM shares is long overdue in the opinion of many, although it is unlikely to have a dramatic effect on the savings industry, where only some 16% of the ISA market is stocks and shares driven, despite cash ISAs currently offering interest rates that are little better than stuffing the money under the floorboards, where it might at least provide some insulation and reduce heating bills.

The move does, however, open a whole world of choice to investors who use stocks and shares ISAs to protect their income and capital gains from the taxman.

Currently there are more than 1,300 UK equities eligible for ISA inclusion, but that figure has risen by another thousand or so now AIM stocks have joined the fold.

The Treasury's decision to abandon its objections to AIM stocks in ISAs may inject some much needed vitality into a market that is meant to be an incubator for Britain's most promising early stage companies, although the most recent update from small companies specialist Allenby Capital does indicate that the market is picking up after a slow start to the year.

The broker says £351mln of new capital was raised on AIM in May, the biggest monthly total of the year so far.

"In the first five months of 2013, £1.26bn has been raised through primary and secondary placings – essentially in line with the amount raised in the first five months of 2012," Allenby said,

Six companies joined AIM in May, and half of these were overseas companies, indicating London's junior market still retains its appeal to foreign companies looking to raise capital.

Will it appeal to investors, though, now that AIM shares can be tucked away in a tax-wrapper?

The enduring advice of "buyer beware" still applies (as it does to all investments). Investing on AIM is challenging on the best of days and downright toxic on the worst.

That said, not all AIM stocks are alike. The AIM 100 index contains a number of big dividend payers, and, as mentioned, several that are over the £1bn mark; ASOS, the online retailer, is big enough to challenge for a berth in FTSE 100 proper.

In fact, there are plenty of established, profitable and cash generative groups on AIM offering an alternative to the binary bet miners, junior oil explorers and biotech firms that seem to obsess the get-rich-quick brigade.

When deciding whether to invest, it is best to remember the advice of the sergeant in the TV series "Hill Street Blues": "Let's be careful out there."

hxxp://www.proactiveinvestors.co.uk/companies/news/58594/aim-shares-finally-join-the-isa-club-58594.html

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