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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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 0.13 | 0.12 | 0.14 | 0.13 | 0.13 | 0.13 | 100,000 | 08:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Electromedical Apparatus | 2.48M | -1.15M | -0.0006 | -2.17 | 2.4M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
25/7/2016 17:24 | Does anyone recall Deltex suggesting their growth plans were being scuppered by difficult trade relations with Europe, US or anywhere else on the planet? There was me thinking it was the British bureaucracy that stuck the spanner in the wheel.. | wigwammer | |
25/7/2016 17:15 | "EUREXIT will be the dismantling of a political project which lacks democratic accountability as there is no European Demos."I look forward to seeing the startling change in policy, and empowerment of my once in five year choice between two parties (which have looked an awful lot like each other for at least the last 20 years).The cliches about democracy and self empowerment don't always make sense, particularly when they come at a high price. | wigwammer | |
25/7/2016 10:56 | Dog - if............ that happens then agreed. Meantime - plenty of lost cash. Let’s hope it is a loss leader | gavapentin | |
25/7/2016 09:27 | EUREXIT will be the dismantling of a political project which lacks democratic accountability as there is no European Demos. BREXIT will lead the way in revising European institutions so that sovereign states can act together in a European forum to increase prosperity, security and well-being of their citizens. No more top down directives from Europe. | doglover2003 | |
25/7/2016 08:32 | BREXIT is about as good as this company - aka a crock of sh1t A great way to lose money! FACT! | gavapentin | |
20/7/2016 10:25 | 52 percent? That's a familiar number... hxxp://www.thedailym yump (8234) "Although the very idea of any sort of accountable accounting is I realise, hopelessly idealistic." Indeed ... on the stock market we've seen many accounting .. er .. anomalies. When politicians are involved it can only get worse. | arf dysg | |
20/7/2016 10:15 | Small sell order to keep cap on sp, then later 25, 50, or 100k buys, expecting 6p within next 7 days, dyor | djgrantb | |
20/7/2016 08:29 | Needs positive newsflow to help push to 6p. Hopefully will be soon. | ramnik007 | |
19/7/2016 23:10 | At the very least, I would expect after all the fuss about the money which 'they' (the baddies) take from us (the goodies), that the government will account for where the money that went to the EU, will end up being distributed. In theory, we should have more shouldn't we ? Although the very idea of any sort of accountable accounting is I realise, hopelessly idealistic. | yump | |
19/7/2016 22:59 | Oh well that's all right then - here we are in this, the best of all worlds ;¬)) On the other hand, I've been looking around for clear unambiguous good news resulting from the vote, and I'm struggling to find it, while bad news seems to be everywhere. Is it just me? | supernumerary | |
19/7/2016 22:43 | The UK pays a NET 10.5 BILLION pounds over to Brussels which the UK never see again, they get rebates, some of which is never sent to Brussels, then there is about 4 BILLION pounds that is used on EU projects in the UK, you'd have seen the big billboards outside universities, etc saying funded by the EU, which is contradiction in terms, because in reality its UK taxpayer money. | grannyboy | |
19/7/2016 22:02 | So the UK contributes to the EU, and the EU uses some of the money to create a transnational structure, where an influential and respected elite is essentially bought off, their loyalty being to the European project. It's very similar to the colonial method of maintaining control by means of a comprador bourgeoisie. The recipients of the grants will of course justify their stance by saying that they are helping humanity, but really, it's a case of self-interest. Having said that, 850 million isn't so much money. It's about 7% of the Overseas Aid budget. | february 30th | |
19/7/2016 21:55 | They might receive it from the EU, buts its UK taxpayer money, and why are they saying they're losing this funding?, because at the moment all dealings with the EU are as is...Article 50 has not being invoked as yet, and there would be another two years once that is done... In my mind its all propaganda by those pro-eu media outlets, miffed at losing the referendum.. | grannyboy | |
19/7/2016 21:21 | doglover - further to our earlier exchange - it's becoming clear that my friend was just a canary in the mine. Bye bye ARM (and the dividend flows that were going to fund more than a few pensions) courtesy of the new cheaper 'more competitive' pound, and hello not much at all... Just weeks after the UK voted to leave the European Union, researchers are losing grants. BBC News has spoken to several research groups and small businesses who say they will soon have to scale down operations and lay off staff. Seven national academies have called on the government to ensure that research is protected in Brexit negotiations; the President of the Royal Society has told the BBC that the future prosperity of the UK is at stake. British universities, in collaboration with small businesses, receive £850m in research grants each year from the European Union. [...continues... sadly] | supernumerary | |
19/7/2016 14:26 | Yep it's usually because of cash flow, they wouldn't be paid for the invoice for 3-6 month terms. I don't think DM will go down this route, they've been in business for a long time and now there almost cash generative it would be crazy, it was just an observation. I see an American firm buying out the company very soon and investing in expanding its products. | djgrantb | |
19/7/2016 13:12 | djgrantb, yes I thought the company would lose a percentage of the invoice, but (roughly) 10% of revenue is a lot to lose, so they'd have to have a good reason for it. | arf dysg | |
19/7/2016 12:04 | Not necessarily Arf Dysg, some big companies factor their invoices, but you give away anywhere between 8-12% of your invoices value. It depends on how much profit margin you have, DM doesn't have that luxury. Someone nibbling at the company because they see the true potential. | djgrantb | |
19/7/2016 11:50 | If I understand what factoring is, a company only does that when it's absolutely desperate and it really needs the cash immediately to stay afloat. | arf dysg | |
19/7/2016 11:28 | The share buy by Andrew Muir is in his personal name not for the Rainbow Seed fund. I personally hope that DM continue to strive for break even cash flow alone, and don't involve an investment funds company, it has parallels with factoring invoices for small companies which in my mind is not good for business in most cases. | djgrantb | |
19/7/2016 10:14 | Nice upward momentum in sp, almost full ask being paid for 100k, still believe someone is building a holding for whatever reason, guess RNS will confirm in the fullness of time... | djgrantb | |
19/7/2016 04:54 | Well, Andrew Muir doesn't seem bothered. Did he buy the shares personally, or as a representative? If it's a personal investment, that would suggest some confidence. Is this him? rainbowseedfund.com/ | february 30th | |
19/7/2016 01:41 | I'm amazed that people are so relaxed about the £2m+ cash outflow during 1H16. | bigt20 | |
15/7/2016 20:16 | Placing of 10,465,116 ordinary shares - RNS dated 1/7/16 Interesting that there was a transaction for 4,234,355 disclosed on the 4/7/16 for 4.3p and some 100,000 transactions. | bigt20 | |
15/7/2016 16:46 | RNS Number : 3706E / Deltex Medical Group PLC / 15 July 2016 Andrew Muir / transaction 14 July 2016 / notified 14 July 2016 Thresholds crossed 3%, 4% GB0059337583 OLD:_ 4,634,355 NEW: 13,649,471 (4.79%) | arf dysg |
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