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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
---|---|---|---|
Tersus Regs | TER | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
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0.55 | 0.55 |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 13/9/2010 15:12 by asparks I know Tang is related to TERbut these companies listed above seem to have no connection. What is the connection if any? |
Posted at 21/9/2009 09:11 by asparks This could be good for TERSunday Times Financial section page 3 Chinese start carbon scheme. Details will be outlined this week at a UN conference. Report ends as follows: If China installs a scheme to cap emissions from it's industries, it would create huge demand for new environmental projects, significantly increasing the value of the market. |
Posted at 22/9/2008 16:12 by asparks has anyone got any idea of the current matched price for TER shares? |
Posted at 26/8/2008 17:30 by tiredoldbroker Well, sore bottoms all round for the shareholders, quite astounding that the directors were paying themselves £285,000 p.a. for this situation - and to quote, "as I tried to tell you at a much higher price than this, whoever makes money out of TER it won't be the shareholders". |
Posted at 13/8/2008 09:13 by asparks brokerdont agree - I have made money here in the past, albeit now sitting on a paper loss. BUT TER have many investments, which if their value is realized will I believe put the share price into double figures |
Posted at 29/4/2008 09:54 by tiredoldbroker A quick look at the gross and net takes a lot of the shine off.That half a mill loan from December not only carried interest at 9%, it had 6 million 1p warrants attached; if you think TER is worth 4p now, that gives the warrants a profit of £180,000, or 36%. Pretty expensive, for 4 months money. Also, TER has received US$3.64m gross in distributions - call it £1.82m; after paying back the half a mill loan, they're left with around £700,000 after settling "deferred liabilities" which from the announcement seems to include a major bunfight for the directors - of maybe £620,000 ? You're left with a company which will have 44m shares in issue, mkt cap £1.76m at 4p, and the smell floating in the air of directors who are very keen to extract their salaries. Oh, and busted flush Chancre6 creeping back from Carey Street to claim "another" success. |
Posted at 27/3/2008 19:55 by chancer6 Just a little positivity: British Bulls..after Close Tonight:BUY CONFIRMED 2.0000 +0.5000 +33.33% TER Tersus Energy PLC Daily Commentary Our system posted a BUY CONFIRMED today. The previous SELL recommendation was made on 11.03.2008 (16) days ago, when the stock price was 2.6300. Since then TER has fallen -23.95% . |
Posted at 26/3/2008 08:41 by tiredoldbroker You all seem to be ignoring the fact that when Peter Gyllenhammar provided £500,000 in a rather short-term loan, in December 2007, the terms weren't just repayment in 15 months and a 9% interest rate. He also got 6 million warrants, exercisable at 1p.Now, if you think TER is worth 6p, the implication is that for a half-mill short-term loan, the directors gave away £300,000 (6m x 5p), along with a toppy interest rate and security over all the company's assets. Effectively a 69% financing cost, for a 15-month facility. Do you still think they're on your side ? Or maybe, TER is only worth 1p a share, hence the pricing. Look at the actual figures - in the 6 months to 30 June '07, admin costs were £1,086,236; in the previous year, £2,826,543; but this is a minute company, with a tiny investment portfolio. Doesn't it occur to you that someone is doing very well out of it, but that "someone" isn't the shareholders ? I'd suggest that the current share price reflects a mixed bag of investments, one or two successful and the others no longer talked about much, minus the market's evaluation of what another 18 months' "admin costs" will do to the balance sheet. |
Posted at 19/12/2007 17:18 by ivor hunch According to my calculations, PG would have over 30% of TER if he exercised his options. In November he acquired 6 million shares which according to the company represented 15.8% of the equity which is just over 38 million shares. So a further 6 million would put him at 31.6% of the capital.I agree with Dell that a 9% interest rate on a commercial loan is absolutely standard in today's market. In fact it's lower than many banks are asking. Personally I think PG is in the for the long term. Some weeks ago I posted a piece about PG's interests in a company involved in wind farms which can be seen at I reckon he sees money in wind farming and alternative energy and will take Tersus forward down this route. He's been pretty astute so far buying into Tersus and I guess his next move will be onto the board. He talks about rebuilding shareholder value and when you consider that TER was launched at 50p (I think) there is a hell of a long way to go in rebuilding it. If the share price rises a bit more I might top slice, but I intend staying in for an interesting ride. |
Posted at 26/11/2007 11:01 by asparks some of you TER holders were also posting on the IMTK board recently. This may be of interest:Imaginatik's speculative appeal Although sales fell in the first half at Imaginatik, a software provider that enables large corporations to tap into the 'collective genius' of their staff, long-term prospects improved as the company switched its focus from smaller projects to large. A 'tougher-than-expect Increased momentum in the second quarter, with new US business wins including Xerox, Kellogg's and Philip Morris and new pilots in the UK including BSkyB and Merrill Lynch, has continued into the second half, with the company's collaboration with IBM starting to reap rewards. A previous deal with IBM, whose activities in the area it calls 'ideation' are well known in corporate America, was upgraded to a global reselling agreement in August. No impact was reflected in the interim figures, but in October IBM's sales team was trained up to sell Imaginatik's solution, which should dramatically increase prospects. In the second half, four one-off 'ideation' projects have already been signed and CEO Mark Turrell is working with IBM to sell more long-term contracts. The London-based company's efforts to increase recurring revenues saw it sign eight long-term deals in the first half, giving it 40 clients that now pay some form of annual fee. Together, Imaginatik and IBM have around 70% of a booming market and house broker WH Ireland predicts 70% sales growth this year and next. Volatile since listing at 7.5p in December, Imaginatik has speculative potential with bids a possibility. Share price 5p Market cap £5.83m Ticker IMTK Recommendation Speculative buy |
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