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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Greystar | LSE:GSL | London | Ordinary Share | CA3979132030 | COM SHS NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 210.00 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
30/1/2006 10:53 | Thanks , I've e-mailed GSL just to check , but think that it's just my broker being lazy/stupid. | bionicdog | |
30/1/2006 10:51 | bionicdog Greystar is in my Barclays PEP. Flagon | flagon | |
30/1/2006 10:45 | I've been struggling to work out whether the primary listing is on the TSE or AIM and hence whather GSL is ISAable in the same way that ACU is. Any help would be appreciated. | bionicdog | |
30/1/2006 07:53 | Minesite: Canadian and AIM listed Greystar Resources hit an all time high of C$9.50 before closing out the week at C$9.44, up C$1.43. Investors continue to like the progress being made on its plus 10 million ounce gold resource in Colombia. | lasata | |
27/1/2006 21:53 | those distant hills | gardenboy | |
27/1/2006 21:42 | another article, Colombia gold again luring miners 1/3/06 Toronto Globe and Mail By Paul Harris The kidnapping of a Canadian mining contractor by Colombian guerrillas was the last straw for Vancouver-based exploration junior Greystar Resources Ltd. Like many other miners, it packed up and abandoned the country in 1999, amid increasing danger and a plummeting gold price. But Greystar knew there was gold there, and with a rising gold price, Mr. Felder returned with his exploration team in 2003 to find it. Greystar now has eight drill rigs working and the company's successful return has made it something of a poster child for Colombian authorities keen to show that the country is safe for investors and ripe for investment. Since he was elected in 2002, President Alvaro Uribe has re-established government control through much of the country with hard-line military intervention. Murders and kidnappings have declined dramatically - and the miners are returning. "Colombia will be attractive for investors," Mr. Uribe told a mining industry conference in Medellin in November. "Colombia is ready to be a major mining country." Colombia is beginning to catch up with its Latin American peers. Direct foreign investment grew 34.7 per cent in 2004 to $2.4-billion (U.S.), better than Peru and Venezuela but behind the growth rates of Mexico, Chile, Brazil and Argentina, according to ECLAC, the United Nations' Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. It is "very probable that there exist large undiscovered reserves," says Archak Bedrossian, an international gold consultant and trader. Good geology is seldom enough to attract mining investment. Miners want stable business conditions and a favourable tax regime, aspects Colombia has been working to improve. A new mining code in 2001 aimed to "bring legal conditions for mining in Colombia in line with world trends ... to obtain better competitiveness as a nation with other Latin American states," says Beatrice Duque of Colombia's Ministry of Mines and Energy. Mining institutions have also been overhauled. For example, the government has created Ingeominas as an agency to regulate the industry. It unites resource administration and geological services in the same office to improve efficiency; as well, more services are being made available on-line. Mr. Uribe, the country's President, has implemented some of the most competitive taxation conditions in the world, not just Latin America. "Congress has approved a law so that we can form tax stability agreements with investors and we are working to reduce taxes," he said at the Medellin mining event. Mr. Uribe's efforts are already bearing fruit. Colombia jumped seven spots in the World Economic Forum's 2005 Global Competitiveness Report, to 57 of 117 countries, placing it above emerging mining nations, such as Russia, Mozambique, Indonesia and Mongolia. Among Latin American countries, it ranks behind Chile, Uruguay, Mexico and El Salvador . Good geology is seldom enough to attract mining investment. Miners want stable business conditions and a favourable tax regime, aspects Colombia has been working to improve. A new mining code in 2001 aimed to "bring legal conditions for mining in Colombia in line with world trends ... to obtain better competitiveness as a nation with other Latin American states," says Beatrice Duque of Colombia's Ministry of Mines and Energy. The first major producer to engage in Colombia is South Africa's AngloGold Ashanti Ltd., which has amassed a "huge land package" in Antioquia and Bolivar departments through subsidiary Sociedad Kedahda, says exploration manager Chris Lodder.But it is a Canadian junior Greystar Resources that is in the vanguard of Colombia's gold mining renaissance, as it puts the troubles of the past behind it and works toward a feasibility study for its 10-million-ounce Angostura gold property near Bucaramanga, in Santander department, having so far spent $48-million on the project. "It is always good to be in a country that has been overlooked," Mr. Felder says. | gardenboy | |
27/1/2006 19:35 | Ah, that is more like it. I should get out more often, eh Rambutan? | wassapper | |
27/1/2006 16:26 | Rambutan: Thank you. good to be able to talk to the Yanks/Can. | lasata | |
27/1/2006 16:25 | see above ! | gardenboy | |
27/1/2006 16:24 | I seem to be talking to myself which is a worrying sign! This chart looks perfect for further gains. | lasata | |
27/1/2006 16:24 | lasata, try this, | gardenboy | |
27/1/2006 16:12 | Rambutan: How do you look on a canadian board please? | lasata | |
27/1/2006 10:32 | from looking on the canadian board it sounds like the intrepid kit casey tipped this (again) earlier this week - would account for jump up perhaps. | rambutan2 | |
27/1/2006 08:19 | Too cheap over here compared to TSE. | lasata | |
26/1/2006 10:29 | This share price chart is potentially explosive. Surprised volumes traded are so slim. Attracts more attention over the water. | lasata | |
25/1/2006 18:30 | well a good day all round. what has specifically prompted the GSL rise (apart from the fact that it is undervalued)? | wassapper | |
25/1/2006 18:25 | sell half keep half sounds fair enough to me. with three quarters of a million quids worth mr rodvig must be confident of joining the millionaires club this year. | rambutan2 | |
25/1/2006 16:19 | classic breakout right on cue. Expect more of the same. | lasata | |
25/1/2006 16:02 | that was a no brainer rise if ever there was one. | rambutan2 | |
25/1/2006 15:53 | It is now , for no reason that I can see yet. | bionicdog |
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