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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Kromek Group Plc | LSE:KMK | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BD7V5D43 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.05 | 0.72% | 6.95 | 6.70 | 7.20 | 7.00 | 6.90 | 6.90 | 1,666,297 | 15:15:48 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miscellaneous Metal Ores,nec | 17.31M | -6.1M | -0.0102 | -6.81 | 41.72M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
18/10/2016 16:02 | £8.8m revenue this year and a loss. Breaks even at £12m of revenue. Weak £/strong $ a small help. A BIG contract could happen at any stage in next 12 months that would blow it through £12m - further out its revenue should be >$100m. It is sole supplier to the eventually huge (c1million units at $500 each) Darpa programme and is now in similar development stage with US military which could be as big. | culford | |
17/10/2016 15:52 | Mkt cap £37m. Anyone got forecasts? | aishah | |
17/10/2016 13:52 | Excellent news again today; added another 20k. Bargain down here and the big US contract STILL TO COME! | philjeans | |
26/9/2016 22:09 | OK, found the answer to my question. [...] AMP have decided to sell KMK to pay principal and interest payments required on the drawdown mentioned in the above Proactive report. | gnnmartin | |
26/9/2016 21:42 | Trotters, reading back through the posts I saw yours (619) where you said "(AMP) sold KMK shares to cover a loan facility draw down.". Sorry to be thick, but what does this mean? Who is drawing down what from whom? Can I get a more detailed explanation online somewhere? | gnnmartin | |
28/8/2016 11:07 | I am not a holder yet of the shares, but Techno20 I don't think you need to worry about the difference in number of devices used in the pilot (re-100 versus 3000 units). We need to remember that New York is not the only city in the United States, and it's almost certain that the rest have gone to other locations of equal strategic significance. I think from memory the US Department of defence is taking around 1000 dirty bomb detectors per month over the first year. Additionally I understand the UK military/police are also trialling the D3S, as well as some other European countries, such as France who were also at the epicentre of the fight against Isis. | brummy_git | |
27/8/2016 21:54 | Hi TT - can't see the site I originally took the article from, but put DARPA and Radiation into Google and the piece gets quite a lot of coverage. Overall it's really positive, but I am surprised at the size of the pilot @ 100 devices. Think Kmk have supplied over 3000 units - so what's happened to the rest?? I'm a long term holder here and have been topping up regularly at close to the rights price. Still hoping for a multi-bagger, but think it might need more patience than I'd hoped. Hope I'm wrong! Techno. | techno20 | |
25/8/2016 13:37 | Nice T20, can you post the link please? | trotterstrading | |
25/8/2016 07:21 | Sounds upbeat on the pilot success, with larger scale test planned for Washington. Doesn't sound like mass roll-out is imminent however..... Ushering in a New Generation of Low-Cost, Networked, Nuclear-Radiation Detectors Wed, 08/24/2016 - 11:12am by DARPA A DARPA program aimed at preventing attacks involving radiological “dirty bombs” and other nuclear threats has successfully developed and demonstrated a network of smartphone-sized mobile devices that can detect the tiniest traces of radioactive materials. Combined with larger detectors along major roadways, bridges, other fixed infrastructure, and in vehicles, the new networked devices promise significantly enhanced awareness of radiation sources and greater advance warning of possible threats. The demonstration of efficacy earlier this year was part of DARPA’s SIGMA program, launched in 2014 with the goal of creating a cost-effective, continuous radiation-monitoring network able to cover a large city or region. Although radiation detectors have in recent years been installed in a number of key locations in the United States and around the world, the SIGMA program has sought to increase capabilities while lowering their costs, in order to network an unprecedented number of advanced detectors and provide a comprehensive, dynamic, and automated overview of the radiological environment. The demonstration was conducted at one of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey’s major transportation hubs where DARPA tested more than 100 networked SIGMA sensors. During the month-long test, the system provided more than a 100-fold increase in ability to locate and identify sources of radiation as compared to currently installed systems. All sources of radiation that SIGMA sensors identified were non-threatening, but the system proved how it could pinpoint the location and intensity of a source and specify, in each case, the type of radiation to which it was alerting authorities. Fulfilling the SIGMA program’s initial goals, the pocket-sized radiation “pager” sensors developed by DARPA and used in the exercise can be easily worn on a person’s belt, are one-tenth the cost of conventional sensors, and are up to 10 times faster in detecting gamma and neutron radiation. Moreover, the program achieved its price goal of 10,000 pocket-sized detectors for $400 per unit. “We are extremely pleased with SIGMA’s achievements to date in advancing radiation detection technology to fit in a portable, pocket-sized form factor at a price that’s a fraction of what current advanced sensors cost,” said Vincent Tang, program manager in DARPA’s Defense Sciences Office. “The ability to network hundreds, and soon many thousands of these smart detectors would make cities in the United States and around the world safer against a wide variety of radiological and nuclear threats.” The test with the Port Authority was the largest deployment of the sensors to date, but SIGMA has been refining the algorithms for improving the radiation-sensing technology in its devices based on experience over the past two years in more than 10 real-world deployments and exercises with local, state, federal and military units, including tests in the nation’s capital. A large-scale test deployment of more than 1,000 detectors is being planned for Washington, D.C., later this year. “A key feature of the SIGMA architecture is that it allows for automated, real-time detection, identification, and tracking of nuclear threats with continuous situational awareness via web-based command and control interfaces,” Tang said. “We’re continuously improving the system and evaluating it in laboratory and operational settings. The user feedback and support from our Port Authority collaboration, as well as government partners such as the Department of Homeland Security’s Domestic Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO) and the UK Home Office, have been invaluable for SIGMA’s development.” Ultimately, Tang noted, SIGMA is expected to provide foundational capabilities for a range of detection approaches, including two under development by DNDO: the Radiation Awareness and Interdiction Network (RAIN), which is being designed to monitor highways and roadways for vehicle-born threats, and the Mobile Urban Radiation Search (MURS) project, which aims to provide an advanced mobile detection capability that could adjudicate detection alarms encountered by SIGMA or RAIN. In addition to the handheld devices, large SIGMA prototype detectors with increased capabilities and reduced costs that can be deployed at fixed sites or in vehicles are also coming on line. For example, large SIGMA neutron detectors have now shown twice the sensitivity compared to existing neutron-detection drive-through portals. Multiple vendors reached the price target of $5,000 per unit, which is approximately one-tenth the cost of today’s comparable large neutron detectors, while achieving or exceeding this required performance. Hundreds of large SIGMA detectors are in the process of being networked for gamma and neutron radiation detection at a number of critical locations and on vehicles. DARPA is planning to demonstrate SIGMA’s full city- and regional-scale, continuous wide-area monitoring capability in 2017 and to transition the operational system to local, state, and federal entities in 2018. Below is a listing of the DARPA performers funded by the SIGMA program: Detectors Kromek Group plc (Stockton-on-Tees, U.K.) SCI Technology Inc. (Huntsville, Alabama) with St. Gobain and Bridgeport Instruments LLC Proportional Technologies Inc. (Houston, Texas) Arktis Radiation Detectors Ltd. (Zurich, Switzerland) Silverside Detectors Inc. (Cambridge, Massachusetts) Algorithm Development, System Modeling and Analysis Physical Sciences Inc. (Andover, Massachusetts) Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (Livermore, California) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley, California) Los Alamos National Laboratory (Los Alamos, New Mexico) Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Oak Ridge, Tennessee) Network, Algorithm Integration, and Deployment Lead Invincea Labs (Arlington, Virginia) with 3Pillar Global, Eucleo, and Berkeley Applied Analytics Additional Support University of Maryland-National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START) (College Park, Maryland) Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (Laurel, Maryland) TRX Systems Inc. (Greenbelt, Maryland) | techno20 | |
12/8/2016 13:31 | Need to scale these contracts. Come on DARPA. | rochdale | |
12/8/2016 09:04 | The UK Ministry of Defence intends to let a contract to Kromek Limited for the supply of GR1-A Gamma Ray Detectors (initially quantity of 30 units with an option for a further 42 units) with an estimated value of GBP 318,246.40. It is considered that this contract can be placed using the Negotiated Procedure without prior publication of a contract notice in the Official Journal of the European Union for technical reasons pursuant to Article 32(2)(b)(ii) Directive 2014/24/EC (regulation 32(2)(b)(ii) of UK Public Contracts Regulations 2015). This is because Kromek is the only supplier capable of supplying detectors with the required level of thickness which is necessary to ensure consistency for further research activity in support of a joint MOD/Rolls-Royce development programme. A change in detector at this stage would result in disproportionate technical difficulties in carrying out the further research activities which would cause significant and unacceptable delay to the programme. | 2niffy | |
12/8/2016 03:07 | Looks like another contract on its way.... hxxps://www.sell2wal | techno20 | |
03/8/2016 19:40 | As I mentioned they sold to cover loan draw down facility. If they do sell a few more great I'll get a lower entry price! Not everyone is here for a quick buck on the AIM casino | trotterstrading | |
03/8/2016 17:38 | I pay attention everywhere in the markets......its my job. | chimers | |
03/8/2016 16:38 | Lol! AMP is not an Insti.. They sold KMK shares to cover a loan facility draw down. Glad to see your paying such an interest in KMK. | trotterstrading | |
03/8/2016 16:30 | Insti offloading!! | chimers | |
03/8/2016 06:58 | re usd and revenues, worth considering they probably were not going comando on existing contracts so have some hedges to run thier course or maybe an fx clause in a multiyear contract that allows them to adjust prices. gain on fx down from £398k to $156k Ye 15 to 16 | supaflyguy | |
30/7/2016 11:35 | Nice buy to finish of a week of steady progress. News has to be close now on extension of darpa deal but what many will have lost is that much of kromeks revenue is in dollars and results in sterling so with current orders and much of the target market either in dollars or euros it's an automatic currency gain on the end of year figures. Add in the much expected further erosion of sterling and they are looking more and more lucrative contracts. The 'feel' of the trading has also been very steady and nice slow progress in the share price I've added a few over the week as the current French situation will be prompting governments to look at kmk' product offering. Shrewdie | shrewdmole | |
25/7/2016 13:20 | Suspect coverage in the FT over the weekend drove the purchases this morning. And no, it wasn't the Folkestone Tribune! | techno20 | |
25/7/2016 09:00 | WOW!! you dont mean 'THE' Northen Echo ? | chimers | |
25/7/2016 08:13 | Strong buying this morning. Just a reminder the CEO said in an interview with the northern Echo in Feb they should know how big the next DARPA deal will be 'around mid year' me must be getting very close | trotterstrading | |
22/7/2016 13:24 | Dont let us keep you................. | chimers | |
22/7/2016 13:08 | So if you're so quick in and out, why are you here posting a page of empty rant to no discernible purpose? | supernumerary |
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