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DEMG Deltex Medical Group Plc

0.135
0.005 (3.85%)
Last Updated: 09:18:03
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Deltex Medical Group Plc LSE:DEMG London Ordinary Share GB0059337583 ORD 0.01P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.005 3.85% 0.135 0.13 0.14 0.135 0.13 0.13 130,555 09:18:03
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Electromedical Apparatus 2.48M -1.15M -0.0006 -2.17 2.4M
Deltex Medical Group Plc is listed in the Electromedical Apparatus sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker DEMG. The last closing price for Deltex Medical was 0.13p. Over the last year, Deltex Medical shares have traded in a share price range of 0.095p to 1.55p.

Deltex Medical currently has 1,846,653,348 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Deltex Medical is £2.40 million. Deltex Medical has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -2.17.

Deltex Medical Share Discussion Threads

Showing 18326 to 18348 of 22675 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
04/7/2016
09:16
Yes, we should perform multi centre controlled trials on everything before forming a view.
wigwammer
04/7/2016
09:07
On a general point, this is the sort of nonsense we get from people trying to make points on both sides - the art of argument died years ago:

"WHY IS THE EUROZONE SUCH A JOB DESTROYING MACHINE AND WHY SHOULD WE HOOK OURSELVES TO IT?"

(a) There is a lot of youth unemployment in some countries.
(b) There is a thing called the EU
(c) Therefore the EU caused the unemployment

Discuss. Or laugh. Or cry.

Here's one from the other side:

"The EU has maintained the peace in Europe for 50 years"

Complete nonsense, as you can't do the other experiment to see what would have happened without the EU.

There should be a compulsory GCSE in logical reasoning. Otherwise we may as well go back to worshipping trees and listening to birdsong to make decisions.

That's my last post on it, the old oak at the green said I should give it a rest.

yump
04/7/2016
07:22
Cisk,

In the end, I thought I might as well join the others and give it some!

Enjoy! Lol!

bigt20
04/7/2016
07:08
BigT20, whilst everyone is entitled to their views, please respect this board and keep postings directly related to DEMG.
cisk
04/7/2016
03:01
I'm expecting a typical Euro fudge re immigration and we'll be trading like buddies.

Rest assured Mrs Merkel will get it sorted out.

Keep calm and carry on!



OK., I'll give you a break...............

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:59
I dont know if this is true but the CEO. of Lufthansa is rumoured to have said:
Please dont leave us to the French!

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:57
According to Ipsos, a polling firm, the share of Italians reporting that they have confidence in the EU. was 40% in January 2016 (Source FT 17/3/16 page 29).

--> No wonder the Five Star movement won the mayor of Rome election recently

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:55
Raoul Ruparel (Co - Director, Open Europe): 'Yes, there are huge problems in the eurozone; it is an economic disaster.'

(Source: Oral evidence being given to the Business Innovation and Skills select committee 24/5/16 Question 31.)

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:53
Chris Grayling MP stated that the Chief Economist at the World Bank thinks our trade situation will improve - we will sell more - if we leave the EU.

(Source: Sunday Politics about 4 mins 50 secs into Sundays (12/6/16) programme.)

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:49
From the EU thread:

guy_fawkes 22 Jun'16 - 18:52 - 2917 of 2924 0 0

Now Italy’s 5-Star Wants Vote on Euro, Joining Wave of Referendums



The fact that Britain is holding a referendum on whether to remain in the European Union showed the bloc was flawed and Italy needed to rethink its relations to the EU, 5-Star’s Luigi Di Maio, vice president of the lower house of parliament, said.

Marine Le Pen, has said she wants a vote on EU membership.
“All EU countries should have a referendum,” she told TF1 television. “The EU is in meltdown, it’s falling apart.”

Britain leads the way followed by Italy, France and the rest is history

--> Hungary has already stated that if we vote out, they will have a referednum.
I suspect Greece would leave if it wasnt for the Germans having them by the gonads!

People are unhappy but the "leadership" in Brussels is asleep on the job and instead of being proactive they can only act in response mode.

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:24
From the UKIP thread:


cutandpolished61 22 Jun'16 - 21:22 - 62576 of 62601 3 0

BBC Asian news reported that China and other Asian countries are keen to do speedy trade deals with the UK if we leave the EU. Shame that wasn't on prime-time TV.
The potential is enormous if we free ourselves from the shackles of the EU.

--> I had heard this on TV too. I also understand that some US Senators would push for a trade deal with the UK if we leave

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:22
Richard Fuller MP: ....The unemployment rate in Japan is 3%; in the US, it is 5%; in the UK, it is 5%. In the eurozone, it is 10%. We have a big problem in the UK with youth unemployment, which is at 16%, but in France, it is 25%; in Italy it is 43%; in Spain and in Greece, it is one in two (i.e. 50%).

WHY IS THE EUROZONE SUCH A JOB DESTROYING MACHINE AND WHY SHOULD WE HOOK OURSELVES TO IT?

(Source: Oral evidence being given to the Business Innovation and Skills select committee 24/5/16 Question 28.)

bigt20
04/7/2016
02:19
You lot have asked for it!


Jonathan Reynolds MP: .....'We always seem to be saying we need to complete the single market in services. Why is it so incomplete, compared to the single market for goods?


Raoul Ruparel (Co - Director, Open Europe): It is much more about non tariff barrier regulations and regulatory harmonisation, which is inherently more complex than simply free movement of goods between different jurisdictions. There are also very tightly held cultural and historical issues here. If you look at Germany, it has a number of protected professions and protected services, and breaking down these barriers is very difficult. That is then multiplied by 27. You have a huge number of different specific cases of protected services, and that makes it very hard to have that single market. Unfortunately, not every country is as competitive or has as competitive a services sector as the UK. That is why it has proven so difficult, and it will probably continue to prove so in the future.


Professor Brad MacKay (Professor of Strategy, University of St Andrews): I would agre with that absolutely.'

(Source: Oral evidence being given to the Business Innovation and Skills select committee 24/5/16 Question 8.)


--> Does anybody seriously think that Germany is going to allow reform of the services sector? Talk of reform within the EU. is laughable!

bigt20
03/7/2016
18:23
O/T

Sterling has fallen against the US $ and the Euro.....reminds me of the time when we dropped out of the ERM. Export boom on its way!



Last weekend (last one of June), on BBC Dateline London, Thomas Kielinger of Die Welt (about 20 mins into a 30 minute programme) described: 'Juncker as yesterdays man........ Juncker is going to be removed......he better watch his back.......people will get their daggers out.'

This weekend I have read an article where Mrs Merkel is not very happy with him: ww.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/angela-merkel-to-oust-jean-claude-juncker-as-europe-splits-deepen-over-brexit-response/ar-AAi1D6y?li=BBoPWjQ&;ocid=mailsignout



---------------------------------------------------------
On topic;

The fall in the £:US$ and £: Euro should generate a bit of extra revenue in £ terms for Deltex.

bigt20
01/7/2016
12:29
Well, the new issue is 3.7% of the enlarged shares issued, so we should be seeing a TR1.
fozdad
01/7/2016
11:55
An existing shareholder...The Count?
barman92
01/7/2016
11:40
'you could take the view that Deltex should take any opportunity to get more cash' - that certainly seems to be their view. I thought they'd at least wait until they'd established that long-promised cashflow break-even. Old habits certainly die hard.
supernumerary
01/7/2016
09:08
Well, you could take the view that Deltex should take any opportunity to get more cash, because there isn't going to be another opportunity to raise more money at a decent price any time soon. Not because of the company itself, but because of the stock market. I don't buy this post-Brexit recovery, and at some stage central banks are going to lose their ability to prop up the market. Brexit was a big deal, because of its consequences for Europe and for global currencies. Yesterday Europe was downgraded, yet the market went up. I'm sure the drop is going to happen, and Deltex will almost certainly be affected, like everything else.
february 30th
01/7/2016
08:59
Just carries on.....
ramnik007
30/6/2016
14:32
If you are thinking of selling, would that be Deltexit?
barman92
30/6/2016
14:31
How sad should we feel for Boris Johnson? The blonde buffoon has been stabbed in the back by Michael Gove. What treachery! Never mind, a little suffering is good for the soul.

Here, have another poisoned chalice. I heard Ian Duncan Smith a few days ago saying that there would be a few contenders for the Tory leadership, and his exact words were: "Frankly, they're welcome to it."

But oh, look! The share price is up!

arf dysg
27/6/2016
23:13
Is this thread about DEMG or Brexit. I'm confused. Deltex has a robust product which in IMO will survive market turmoil (of this type anyway)
casablanca4
27/6/2016
19:42
Anyway, what impact on Deltex will Brexit have?

Will the extra US costs be compensated for by the increased pound value of US and European sales?

Lower pound, cheaper take-over target?

february 30th
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