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AMC Amur Minerals Corporation

0.09
0.00 (0.00%)
24 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Amur Minerals Corporation LSE:AMC London Ordinary Share VGG042401007 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% 0.09 - 0.00 01:00:00
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Mineral Royalty Traders 0 -3.01M -0.0022 -0.41 1.25M
Amur Minerals Corporation is listed in the Mineral Royalty Traders sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker AMC. The last closing price for Amur Minerals was 0.09p. Over the last year, Amur Minerals shares have traded in a share price range of 0.08p to 1.895p.

Amur Minerals currently has 1,392,872,315 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Amur Minerals is £1.25 million. Amur Minerals has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -0.41.

Amur Minerals Share Discussion Threads

Showing 59076 to 59091 of 68425 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
09/3/2020
13:53
No placing eh?Great week for news eh?PMSL!!!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
13:49
PLACING TIMEBOMB - NOW TRUELY ARRIVED
__________________________________________________

DON'T BE MUGGED BEFORE NEXT IMMINENT PLACING DILUTION IN A MATTER OF DAYS
__________________________________________________


RNS of 4 NOVEMBER 2019

"Company has agreed not to make any further drawdowns under the convertible loan facility with a Riverfort for a minimum period of three months...……"

THATS FEBRUARY 2020 - MARCH 2020 RIGHT NOW - NOW TRADING ON FUMES OF LIMITED BANK FUNDS.



AMC have a $1 billion funding gap to fill before resource can even start to be mined in 10 years.

ebomber
09/3/2020
13:44
ebomber is a proven liar, deceitful, desperate, fantasy hindsight trader..He is only on this thread as a childish attempt to damage an investment that Duxy is in..He promised a placing to back at the end of Jan, his 1.2 was nothing more than picking a number lower than the share price was back then..Total scum
crazytowner
09/3/2020
13:30
Give it a rest Giz.... it's bad enough reading the news each day thanks
madengland_
09/3/2020
13:14
Yep he was and a placing has to take place in the next few weeks as they must almost be out of cash by now I would have thought, market conditions haven’t helped that’s for sure but at this rate it will be a 1p placing.
twigs3
09/3/2020
13:05
SO EBOMBER WAS CORRECT ALL ALONG....HE SAID 1.20P 4 WEEKS AGO.
russian turnip farmer
09/3/2020
10:42
Terd is going sub 4p idiot doorman!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
10:24
More Death spiral financing coming.....rip amc
gizmohican
09/3/2020
08:46
Terd is going under!!!!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
08:38
YOU DA MAN EBUMBER!!!!YOU DA MAAAAANNNNN!!!!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
08:30
Terd is down 20%!!!!!Well done!!!!!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
07:39
BOOOOOOOOMMMMM!!!!!
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
07:39
From the experts at Shareprophets:With markets in turmoil over the corona virus, it is a terrible time to be rattling the tin for cash-guzzling AIM stocks. And that brings me to jam-tomorrow Iot investment company Tern (TERN): how much cash has it got left and when's the placing?In theory, the answer should be that it has plenty of cash. After all, at its last set of number (to June 2019) it was boasting £1.4 million of cash on its balance sheet then raised £1.75 million in a placing and has just announced a portfolio sale to bank another £100,000 or so. So it is awash with cash?Not so fast! As I pointed out at the time, the position last June was that whilst current assets sat at £2.15 million, £0.78 million of that was trade and other receivables which in the past referred to monies due back to Tern from its investees which had little to no hope of being repaid. Meanwhile on the current liabilities side there were £468,000 of bills stacked up to be paid. So I would suggest the number in one's mind for remaining cash should have been £0.9 million at that time.The interims also recorded approx. £0.7 million in outgoings from Admin and other costs which I doubt will have changed very much and so just over eight months on I would suggest our tally should now sit at more of less zero.Since the interim period end Tern added £1.75 million from a placing. I would normally knock of 5% for expenses for that, but the cashflow statement from last year's interims shows that Tern actually coughed up 10% from its earlier placing to raise £1.5 million during the first half. That's a heck of a lot of coke and hookers. So shall we call the £1.75 million placing perhaps just £1.58 million after crony capitalists' costs? Add on the £0.1 million from the disposal announced last week, and Tern had £1.68 million to spend.The company told us on 12 November 2019 that since the interim period it had invested £1.1 million in its portfolio companies and last week we learnt that Tern had taken part in funding further loans to Device Authority which on past form will have cost it $0.3 million, or about £0.23 million – not that Tern has 'fessed up to that in an RNS yet (although I note that following my jibes over a loan secured over tax credits to Device Authority, Companies House now records that the loan is settled with the relevant filing submitted on 4th March – pleased to be of help!)In theory that leaves just £350,000 for Tern to play with although that £1.1 million may or may not include £0.5 million of loan note conversions and there will surely have been further outgoings to its investees since 12 November. But let's be uber-generous and call it £0.8 million, Except that figure will be falling by over £100,000 every month in admin and other expenses on past form, and one would assume there will be further payments of around £0.25 million per quarter to Device Authority.So I suggest that Tern will be all out of cash perhaps by the half year at the end of June unless it gets a placing away.In the meantime, Tern's FY numbers are due – which will mean demonstrating to the auditor that it has a year's cash in the tin in order to be signed off as a going concern. That'll need around £1.4 million just to cover admin and general costs – not to mention that its investment portfolio (including Device Authority) is still guzzling cash at a rate of knots.As such, it seems that a fundraise of at least £1.4 million is needed pretty urgently and I would suggest perhaps as much as £2.5 million would be needed, if I were the auditor, to sign this crock off as a going concern.The problems don't stop there. Tern's last placing were at 11.15p last October (following a disgraceful non-confirmation of a funding round for Device Authority which never happened, but which sent the shares temporarily skywards), 8.5p last April and 26p in July 2018. Now the shares are just 7.75p and markets are all in a spin over corona virus.That is going to be hard to sell –unless the discount is huge. 5p anyone? Less? Or will Tern be forced once again into the hands of death spiral funders – and we know what happened last time with that.In short, Tern is still – as per my tip of the year – a SELL
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
07:39
From the experts at Shareprophets:With markets in turmoil over the corona virus, it is a terrible time to be rattling the tin for cash-guzzling AIM stocks. And that brings me to jam-tomorrow Iot investment company Tern (TERN): how much cash has it got left and when's the placing?In theory, the answer should be that it has plenty of cash. After all, at its last set of number (to June 2019) it was boasting £1.4 million of cash on its balance sheet then raised £1.75 million in a placing and has just announced a portfolio sale to bank another £100,000 or so. So it is awash with cash?Not so fast! As I pointed out at the time, the position last June was that whilst current assets sat at £2.15 million, £0.78 million of that was trade and other receivables which in the past referred to monies due back to Tern from its investees which had little to no hope of being repaid. Meanwhile on the current liabilities side there were £468,000 of bills stacked up to be paid. So I would suggest the number in one's mind for remaining cash should have been £0.9 million at that time.The interims also recorded approx. £0.7 million in outgoings from Admin and other costs which I doubt will have changed very much and so just over eight months on I would suggest our tally should now sit at more of less zero.Since the interim period end Tern added £1.75 million from a placing. I would normally knock of 5% for expenses for that, but the cashflow statement from last year's interims shows that Tern actually coughed up 10% from its earlier placing to raise £1.5 million during the first half. That's a heck of a lot of coke and hookers. So shall we call the £1.75 million placing perhaps just £1.58 million after crony capitalists' costs? Add on the £0.1 million from the disposal announced last week, and Tern had £1.68 million to spend.The company told us on 12 November 2019 that since the interim period it had invested £1.1 million in its portfolio companies and last week we learnt that Tern had taken part in funding further loans to Device Authority which on past form will have cost it $0.3 million, or about £0.23 million – not that Tern has 'fessed up to that in an RNS yet (although I note that following my jibes over a loan secured over tax credits to Device Authority, Companies House now records that the loan is settled with the relevant filing submitted on 4th March – pleased to be of help!)In theory that leaves just £350,000 for Tern to play with although that £1.1 million may or may not include £0.5 million of loan note conversions and there will surely have been further outgoings to its investees since 12 November. But let's be uber-generous and call it £0.8 million, Except that figure will be falling by over £100,000 every month in admin and other expenses on past form, and one would assume there will be further payments of around £0.25 million per quarter to Device Authority.So I suggest that Tern will be all out of cash perhaps by the half year at the end of June unless it gets a placing away.In the meantime, Tern's FY numbers are due – which will mean demonstrating to the auditor that it has a year's cash in the tin in order to be signed off as a going concern. That'll need around £1.4 million just to cover admin and general costs – not to mention that its investment portfolio (including Device Authority) is still guzzling cash at a rate of knots.As such, it seems that a fundraise of at least £1.4 million is needed pretty urgently and I would suggest perhaps as much as £2.5 million would be needed, if I were the auditor, to sign this crock off as a going concern.The problems don't stop there. Tern's last placing were at 11.15p last October (following a disgraceful non-confirmation of a funding round for Device Authority which never happened, but which sent the shares temporarily skywards), 8.5p last April and 26p in July 2018. Now the shares are just 7.75p and markets are all in a spin over corona virus.That is going to be hard to sell –unless the discount is huge. 5p anyone? Less? Or will Tern be forced once again into the hands of death spiral funders – and we know what happened last time with that.In short, Tern is still – as per my tip of the year – a SELL
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
07:38
From the experts at Shareprophets:With markets in turmoil over the corona virus, it is a terrible time to be rattling the tin for cash-guzzling AIM stocks. And that brings me to jam-tomorrow Iot investment company Tern (TERN): how much cash has it got left and when's the placing?In theory, the answer should be that it has plenty of cash. After all, at its last set of number (to June 2019) it was boasting £1.4 million of cash on its balance sheet then raised £1.75 million in a placing and has just announced a portfolio sale to bank another £100,000 or so. So it is awash with cash?Not so fast! As I pointed out at the time, the position last June was that whilst current assets sat at £2.15 million, £0.78 million of that was trade and other receivables which in the past referred to monies due back to Tern from its investees which had little to no hope of being repaid. Meanwhile on the current liabilities side there were £468,000 of bills stacked up to be paid. So I would suggest the number in one's mind for remaining cash should have been £0.9 million at that time.The interims also recorded approx. £0.7 million in outgoings from Admin and other costs which I doubt will have changed very much and so just over eight months on I would suggest our tally should now sit at more of less zero.Since the interim period end Tern added £1.75 million from a placing. I would normally knock of 5% for expenses for that, but the cashflow statement from last year's interims shows that Tern actually coughed up 10% from its earlier placing to raise £1.5 million during the first half. That's a heck of a lot of coke and hookers. So shall we call the £1.75 million placing perhaps just £1.58 million after crony capitalists' costs? Add on the £0.1 million from the disposal announced last week, and Tern had £1.68 million to spend.The company told us on 12 November 2019 that since the interim period it had invested £1.1 million in its portfolio companies and last week we learnt that Tern had taken part in funding further loans to Device Authority which on past form will have cost it $0.3 million, or about £0.23 million – not that Tern has 'fessed up to that in an RNS yet (although I note that following my jibes over a loan secured over tax credits to Device Authority, Companies House now records that the loan is settled with the relevant filing submitted on 4th March – pleased to be of help!)In theory that leaves just £350,000 for Tern to play with although that £1.1 million may or may not include £0.5 million of loan note conversions and there will surely have been further outgoings to its investees since 12 November. But let's be uber-generous and call it £0.8 million, Except that figure will be falling by over £100,000 every month in admin and other expenses on past form, and one would assume there will be further payments of around £0.25 million per quarter to Device Authority.So I suggest that Tern will be all out of cash perhaps by the half year at the end of June unless it gets a placing away.In the meantime, Tern's FY numbers are due – which will mean demonstrating to the auditor that it has a year's cash in the tin in order to be signed off as a going concern. That'll need around £1.4 million just to cover admin and general costs – not to mention that its investment portfolio (including Device Authority) is still guzzling cash at a rate of knots.As such, it seems that a fundraise of at least £1.4 million is needed pretty urgently and I would suggest perhaps as much as £2.5 million would be needed, if I were the auditor, to sign this crock off as a going concern.The problems don't stop there. Tern's last placing were at 11.15p last October (following a disgraceful non-confirmation of a funding round for Device Authority which never happened, but which sent the shares temporarily skywards), 8.5p last April and 26p in July 2018. Now the shares are just 7.75p and markets are all in a spin over corona virus.That is going to be hard to sell –unless the discount is huge. 5p anyone? Less? Or will Tern be forced once again into the hands of death spiral funders – and we know what happened last time with that.In short, Tern is still – as per my tip of the year – a SELL
seewhatlmean
09/3/2020
07:07
ebomber, you are obviously posting on the wrong thread.... Get ready for the drop on the poor Tern financing just announced
crazytowner
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