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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Green & Smart Holdings Plc | LSE:GSH | London | Ordinary Share | JE00BYTQ7945 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 2.85 | 2.70 | 3.00 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
17/3/2009 13:13 | AIM rule 41.. I fully support IC article on page 24, wro AIM rule 41 and delisting of shares from the exchange. The current requirement of 75% of the votes required to delist should be upped to 90%. It is not only the problematic comapanies delisting but the better ones as well. Delsiting requires some funds to sell, as a requirement for not holding private comapanies, hence forth, a complete destruction of SP, and if a matched bargain facility is in place, after delisting, it tends to be "fractions of fractions" in terms of share price .. Saffy.. | safman | |
17/3/2009 13:08 | This does stink, especially the bit about ISH voting against a resolution to tender for the shares. Question is, as a shareholder, what do you do ? Take whatever money is available, hold on and keep the virtually untradeable shares in the hope something happens with them or hope something else comes up in the meantime e.g. the intention to cancel off AIM is withdrawn. | phil200 | |
17/3/2009 12:34 | I would like to see ISH stand in front of a room full of shareholders and defend his actions and explain how they benefit all shareholders. | davidosh | |
17/3/2009 12:31 | Fortunately not a shareholder here - just a watchlist company. "Mr Scarr-Hall has also notified the Company of his intention to vote against any resolution proposed by the Directors of GSH for the purposes of the Company tendering to buy GSH shares from other shareholders prior to the cancellation becoming effective." That is scandalous and there should be some change in the AIM listing rules to prohibit any shareholder maintaining more than a 50% stake in any listed company without being compelled to make an offer for the whole business. | masurenguy | |
17/3/2009 11:37 | Carry on ISH: | simon gordon | |
17/3/2009 11:33 | Lots of directors have resigned or played musical chairs in the recent past. This company is really putting AIM listing and regulations to shame IMO. What are the institutional holders doing about it ? What are the NOMADS doing about it ? | davidosh | |
17/3/2009 11:11 | Word on the street all Directors have already left :- pmsl I wonder why? | donaceaceace | |
17/3/2009 11:10 | Will ISH be attending the EGM ? Does he live in the real world where shareholders and investors need to live on the returns from their investments ?? The directors and Nomads should resign on point of principle. | davidosh | |
17/3/2009 10:08 | Raped and plundered. May he burn in hell! | geovest | |
17/3/2009 09:49 | Bandit attack!!! | simon gordon | |
25/2/2009 17:48 | ISH really screwed up, he could have off loaded a sack full of shares at £4.00+. It looks probable that the share could head to a quid. | simon gordon | |
06/12/2008 20:31 | Courant, I am long: ~USD via XUSD. ~Norwegian Bond March 2009. ~2046 & 2036 Gilt. ~GBP Cash. I am looking at some Euro's. I can't buy Yen Bonds in my SIPP, which is a pain as it could go to parity. I am not into Gold as I don't see it doing too much in a deflationary bust. I hold no equity. I don't fancy the Swissie due to UBS & CS. I think the best hedge right now is Long Dated UK gilts, as Quantitative Easing and ZIRP (zero interest rate policy) should mean that the 30yr. could come down to 3% and below - as long as UK plc doesn't go bust and GBP falls by 50% against USD & Euro, a la Iceland. Then currency exposure either neutral or government paper = USD, Euro, Norwegian Krona. USD looks the best right now, could see parity = 30% upside. Long dated German Bunds look good. All the best... | simon gordon | |
06/12/2008 19:49 | Simon, I take it you're 100% invested in short term Swiss/Japanese/Norwe Courant | courant | |
06/12/2008 12:11 | It is a dog's dinner. I once thought GSH to be a stable, quality company, that idea got quickly trashed by ISH and his stewardship of GSH as a plc. It is sad to see another UK company be so badly managed. In the depression we shall see so many Small Caps. implode due to pathetic management. Styles & Wood was a good example of a company living in la la land. I can see GSH under two quid as the economic collapse intensifies. How far do you guys reckon GDP could fall for UK plc in 2009? Consensus is 1% to 2%. What if it is 4%+. I think we are heading into a depression and GSH will come under intense margin pressure. It is going to be brutal, only the warriors will survive unscathed. GSH with all its mad changes is going to find it very hard. It floated at £1.50. | simon gordon | |
06/12/2008 12:01 | Geovest - Prepare for more shake up, our list should include the MD. | euphoric dream | |
23/10/2008 08:56 | Well I bought a few back at 300p. Enterprise Value is only 4x free cashflow so a cash yield of 25% with a good (or at least stable) outlook and strong order book. As you say, if there was a bit more clarity on the board I'd buy a lot more. | wjccghcc | |
23/10/2008 08:04 | Great results with good outlook for further growth in tough economic circumstances. Sounds good, if only we could get clarity about the board shake-up/shake-out ow whatever it was. History Dec 07: Chairman retires and New Chairman1 appointed Mar 08: Chairman1 resigns, Chairman2 appointed Sep 08: CEO exits Oct 08: Joint CEO's appointed, Chairman2 plus non-exec (Hall jnr) exits. CFO appointed Temp Chairman3 Oct 08: CFO exits (although agreed to stay on for a year, sounding like a demotion) and Temp Chairman4 appointed It looks like major instability on the Board. It may however be a shake-up to strengthen the board as the company becomes bigger. The appointment of two Joint CEO's may signal that they will appoint an Executive Chairman. The concern is, who or what instigated the shake-up and who is pulling the strings. The fundementals are great, but I want to see the board settle down first. | geovest | |
23/10/2008 06:16 | PRELIMINARY RESULTS 2008 INTRODUCTION GSH Group plc ('the Group' or 'GSH') the international provider of bespoke facilities management and energy management solutions, announces preliminary results for the year ended 31 July 2008. FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS: Underlying profit* before tax rose by 37% to £11.1 million Revenue increased to £200.4 million, up by 27% Year end cash reserves stood at £15.0 million Operating margin increased to 5.6% (2007: 5.2%) Basic adjusted earnings per share of 36.6 pence, up by 19% Proposed final dividend of 7.6 pence Total dividend of 10.5 pence, up by 19% * Underlying profit is defined as profit before adjustments in respect of non-trading items. OPERATIONAL HIGHLIGHTS: Healthy growth across all operating divisions Order book at £757 million, up £148 million (2007: £609 million) Acquisition of Utilitec BV in July 2008 New contracts with General Motors, Corus, Archon, Advance Realty Group and The Royal College of Surgeons Extensions to contracts with HBoS, Thomas Cook, Pfizer and KPN Further investment in people and products Rob Painting, interim Non-Executive Chairman of GSH said: 'Once again we have demonstrated that the Group is in good shape with a solid set of results based predominantly on profitable organic growth in the period. Our overseas growth in particular is an exciting aspect and the Board believes that we are well positioned to capitalise on this and other new geographic markets.' An encouraging set of results especially considering the state of the economy. Cheers Th. | theophilus | |
17/10/2008 09:03 | The media and most pundits are saying recession. I believe they are wrong and by this time next year you will hear the D word more regularly. It will probably be called a 'soft' or 'shallow' depression but whatever, its a depression. The Dow could see a 6 in front of it and the FTSE100 a 2. I recommend you seek out the thoughts of Satyajit Das and Roger Bootle - these two guys are nailing it big time. Nouriel Roubini has been incredibly insync. | simon gordon | |
17/10/2008 08:53 | so we've gone from recession to depression in a week? | alter ego | |
17/10/2008 06:32 | Is it depression proof? I don't think any business is depression proof! A lot of corporates are going to go bust. GSH do work for the banks - they will be cutting costs incredibly. We have had the biggest boom in British history - now we will have the bust. Interest rates may go as low as 1%. Good fortune! | simon gordon | |
16/10/2008 23:39 | Actually, this is one of my holdings I'm least worried about: net cash & no debt; cash generative; strong forward order book; largely recession proof business, which may even benefit from corporate belt-tighening. Courant | courant | |
16/10/2008 14:28 | Looks like its going back to the flotation price. I expect it to go under £2 as we fall into a depression. ISH was a fool - he had a chance to get out at the top. Now he'll be lucky to get out at the bottom. Tough times ahead. Good fortune! | simon gordon |
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