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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
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China Africa | CAF | London | Ordinary Share |
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Posted at 16/3/2017 10:11 by scotty666 I think very likely but folk are a little put off by the fact it will in all probability be suspended for a short time once an RTO is announced.No issue my side but AIM investors are a fickle bunch with a very limited timeframe hence why it has slowly dropped over recent sessions imo. I have 400,000 shares now and will just sit on them and let the new team do their work. Good Luck |
Posted at 17/2/2017 16:20 by paleje Agreed dixi.RW misled WTI investors repeatedly at Weatherly, I asked PJ about him at the Walsall presentation a few weeks ago, he wouldn't be drawn but to my mind he was uneasy about the set up. I don't know what has happened to cause today's news but it doesn't have a good feel to it and if Webster's orchestrated it I'd be cautious. I was dithering whether to buy back having held them once from an in-specie divi, but I don't think so now. |
Posted at 20/1/2017 15:22 by soulsauce Good bit of consolidation today, should be some excitement build up to the investor evening. |
Posted at 30/12/2016 08:59 by soulsauce Interesting:-The Company has a broad pipeline of new opportunities identified from the management team's network. At present we have a potential pipeline of twelve opportunities which include African and South American uranium; North American lithium; European lithium and cobalt; and African and Australian copper. The intention of the Company is to become an operating natural resource business following a Reverse Takeover. It is possible that the Company will seek to acquire more than one interest to provide diversification for investors and inherent risk management for the Company. |
Posted at 20/12/2016 13:41 by soulsauce From the LSE site:-@Share_Talk Coming to Manchester – 28th Jan 2017 share-talk.com/share |
Posted at 15/12/2016 22:10 by keya5000 Uranium Exploration: The SRK Exploration PerspectiveSince 2005 SRK Exploration Services (SRKES) has been a global player in project origination, appraisal and management for uranium exploration. The team has worked on 10 of the 12 major deposit classes and was one of the pioneers at resurrecting interest in the exploration of Saharan Africa. Back in 2005, in a bid to re-evaluate prospects in the context of modern methods and a burgeoning new market, the team visited the Ministries of Mines in Niger and in Mali, and dusted off historic reports detailing the work that had been done in the 1970s by the Japanese and French. SRKES ran a number of reconnaissance missions and identified a small surface resource in northern Mali on behalf of a client. Northeast Mali represents a near mirror image of the geological situation of the famous Arlit uranium deposits of northern Niger. The French company, AREVA, is actively mining through its interests in the Arlit open pit and Akouta underground mine. In 2007, production in Niger had a total output of 3,720 tonnes or 8.2 million pounds of U3O8. Here, the sandstone-hosted uranium resources are all contained in the sediments of the Tim Mersoi basin, which lies on the western flank of the igneous complex constituting the Air Massif. In Mali, the intrusive and volcanic centre is that of the Adrar des Iforas, and the potential host rocks are the sandstones, conglomerates and phosphate deposits of the Tilemsi Basin. Elsewhere in Africa, SRKES implemented and managed two successful uranium drilling projects in Cameroon and Madagascar. While one project has been sold to a major, the other is ongoing and continues to provide exciting results. In South America, SRKES set up and managed a large ground survey exploration program in Colombia, a project with also caught the eye of a uranium major. In Central Asia, the company has been active in the due diligence of 8 concessions in the CIS, including sites adjacent to the historic Marly Su mines of Kyrgyzstan (where the British allegedly mined uranium in the 1940s), and in evaluating the potential of the former underground mines of northern Kazakhstan. More recently, SRKES has been involved in evaluating the exploration and mining sector on behalf of financial institutions and fund managers interested in taking advantage of the potential undervaluation of many players, which has resulted from the current economic slowdown and uncertainty. One such study, a comparable transaction analysis of uranium properties, looked at some 140 transactions that occurred over the period 2007-08 when projects changed hands for sums up to half a billion dollars. This flurry of activity was spurred on by the uranium pricing peak of July 2007, when U3O8 spot prices hit US$136/lb. This level was, in fact, the highest the yellow commodity has achieved, the last great spike in pricing occurred at the end of the 1970s when prices reached US$43/lb. Adjusting for inflation, this was equivalent to almost US$115/lb in terms of 2007 dollars. Whilst much of the speculative action and ‘re-flogging of dead horses’ that occurred during the price build-up and over the price spike have died away, there is still a strong core of investors following the commodity. The current, relatively-low spot price has little bearing on miners or near-term producers, who will have secure future sales and price contracts with their electricity-generati Nick O’Reilly: noreilly@srkexplorat |
Posted at 30/8/2013 12:56 by soulsauce From Money Morning, 31.7.13 by Dominic Frisby -"Zinc and lead are going to be in short supply. However, that spells opportunity for investors. "As a rule of thumb, for supplies of a metal to be sustainable, miners need to find about twice as much of the mineral as is currently being mined. "So if a thousand units of metal are mined a year, the industry needs to find another two thousand a year (bearing in mind that not all of this will be recoverable). Otherwise there will be shortages. "But if there's no money for exploration, there'll be no new discoveries. "Looking at current discovery rates, Shodde has done his sums on which metals will face the biggest supply shortfalls. He reckons that, in the next decade, copper discoveries will amount to about 1.7 times production. That's tight, but broadly balanced. "Uranium discoveries will sit at twice annual production, and so are in balance. Gold supply is a little tighter, with discoveries amounting to 1.5 times production. "But the discovery-to-product "This means more money will have to be spent on exploration and with more success at finding metal this time. Trouble is, there is no appetite for exploration investment at present. Too many people have had their fingers burned. "Sure, all it will take is for a couple of winners to emerge, and the appetite for risk will bounce back. But and here's the vicious circle someone will have to fund those winners in the first place. "What's most likely to encourage investment is that lead and zinc prices will rise, due to the pending shortages. Rising metal prices usually lead to more investment in exploration. And so the boom-bust cycle that has blighted mining for all eternity continues to turn. "So get ready to buy lead and zinc, folks!" |
Posted at 05/3/2013 15:19 by siddle Yep max I can buy is 5000 at full ask.Not really the kind of investor for such small amounts but we shall see.. |
Posted at 08/2/2013 23:36 by christianf12 M42.3m shares in free float minus what anyone owns so far including directors, institutions, funds, private investors etc. 2.3m shares is not much to go around everyone, especially when there will be demand from upcoming news regarding the JORC. Only takes 10 people owning 200k shares each and all the shares are gone. 40p was seen as 'ground floor' 25p seems a steel to me. |
Posted at 08/2/2013 11:27 by christianf12 JORC is due in Q1Investors realising how cheap the co is considering it came to AIM at 40p which was referred to as the "floor" by two big investors owning 90% of the shares. Only positive progress has been made since 40p yet the share price languishes at 25p. No dilution since listing and quietly getting on with building shareholder value imo. |
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