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AAZ Anglo Asian Mining Plc

76.80
1.30 (1.72%)
02 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Anglo Asian Mining Plc LSE:AAZ London Ordinary Share GB00B0C18177 ORD 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  1.30 1.72% 76.80 73.00 78.00 75.50 74.60 75.50 42,303 16:35:03
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Miscellaneous Metal Ores,nec 45.86M -24.24M -0.2122 -3.56 86.25M
Anglo Asian Mining Plc is listed in the Miscellaneous Metal Ores sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker AAZ. The last closing price for Anglo Asian Mining was 75.50p. Over the last year, Anglo Asian Mining shares have traded in a share price range of 36.50p to 95.00p.

Anglo Asian Mining currently has 114,242,024 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Anglo Asian Mining is £86.25 million. Anglo Asian Mining has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -3.56.

Anglo Asian Mining Share Discussion Threads

Showing 78026 to 78046 of 147450 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
23/6/2020
06:30
Welcome Cinoib. You're our first incel ??Lots of loveOne of the tarts
iconista
23/6/2020
00:29
As for tarts
Quite fancy a Bakewell.
... with or without custard?

2sporrans
23/6/2020
00:23
LLB

I used to invest a fair bit in linkers; an asset class tailor made for heading into and through stagflationary times.
Although the income case might no longer deliver much, I guess the capital gains may do.
As the 2nd article you kindly posted deliberates, the baskets of goods and service that make up inflation indices need an overhaul in respect of weightings.
Gilt Linkers have always been governed by RPI rather than CPI but it might be that some of the services components are better classified as RIP these days.

2sporrans
22/6/2020
23:50
Unintelligible and unintelligent generalist waffle.
Quite a combination.
Offensive and filtered.

gutterhead
22/6/2020
23:00
Learn your history ... then talks about tarts. Someone is at the bottom of the glass.
spidertricks
22/6/2020
22:29
Someone's been drinking. Filtered.
qazwsxedc69
22/6/2020
21:55
lefrene, certainly not the bloke in charge there just now. Ji Jing what ever is just taking China backwards as far as I can see as he is a right Maoist and like him has taken control for himself till death do him part, which isn't right in any country and just when China was emerging into the 21st century after a 1/4 century in the dark ages, but Chinese women, well there lies a different tale. As far as gold goes I will stick my neck out and call 1800 by close on Friday and 2000 by Xmas.
Gold finger, you ever learn history at school, or better still did you go to school. If so you should know that the majority of yank are wiffs strays and criminals from all over Europe, cousins, not of mine they're not. As for their women I wouldn't touch with a ten foot barge pole, tarts the lot of em. I'll take 1 Chinese against 100 yanks any day of the week. Am not into tarts just a dam good woman and I can find those in China and have. I'd put my wife against a yank tart any day of the week. Learn your history before balling people out.

cinoib
22/6/2020
20:56
Wasn’t the Karimov’s up to no good with OXS, seem to recall reading something about them in the distant past?
riggerbeautz
22/6/2020
20:38
Sorry, Bumpa, our messages crossed. I don't mean to be agressive, and I comment that this has been the most friendly board I've ever found, and would not wish to change that. I am the outsider, not you, and I feel like a guest here. Please accept my genuine humble apologies for any offence I may have caused. Let's chat positively. I focused on OXS, and not WHI. My knowledge there is zero, to be honest, so I obviously touched a raw nerve. Sorry.
pantsonfire
22/6/2020
20:36
Bumpa33

I hear you about WHI....and that is why I mentioned the Hardman Broker Note.

And we both agree let's see what the drill says.

All the best
g

goldrush
22/6/2020
20:32
I had a good laugh when I read your response. "Unlucky". I always remember a message I was taught when I was young. "Isn't it funny how the harder I work the luckier I get." I learned that the hard way with OXS. A gold mine in Uzbekistan. Producing a steady flow of gold bars out of the country. No one would want to steal that, would they? In retrospect, I should have known better. Now why didn't I just investigate and understand the risk properly?
With PXC, I have made detailed research. I'm determined not to make the same mistake twice.
So when you say "unlucky" it has a different meaning to me. I say now, not unlucky, but I did not do enough research, and I blame myself.....
Now you define it your way, and I'll define it mine... But I've learned, and I'm investing in PXC because I believe they have looked through the risks, I've done the research, and I think PXC is going to be a winner.
May I suggest you look again? You may find it pays you back for your losses at OXS? (If you're lucky).

pantsonfire
22/6/2020
20:17
Goldrush - I remember the Oxus story well, I recall that no one sane gave them a cat in hells chance of winning arbitration - in no small part due to the Uzbeks doing exactly the same thing to Newmont a few years prior. Some made good money ramping the hell out of the share in the interim period between arbitration starting and the final $10m award nailing the coffin shut on OXS.


Let’s see what the drill says.

bumpa33
22/6/2020
19:55
Bumpa33

Before I invested in PXC I talked the OXS problems through with the Directors. It became very apparent why they decided to put PXC together in Idaho. I had some searching questions with the CFO Luckily I was not invested in OXS but I could use this experience to ensure to me that the main failings in OXS would not happen again.

I have been invested in PXC for a couple of years and there have been one or two small glitches along the road but they cannot be blamed for the price falling out of the copper market.

They now have a driving force in the USA, the Chief Executive Ryan McDermott, a local professional miner, who has good links in the community, who found the property in the first place and is the company geologist. He has also brought in an impressive environmental specialist who is again a well connected local person. He has the company primed IMHO.

As regards WHI, Hardman also prepared a Broker Note.This was done by Paul Mylchcreest, who has also done 2 for AAZ. He is one of the better analysts around and many of us like what he has done for AAZ.

They raised extra money recently to expand the drill program following indications that Ryan and the Team liked what they were seeing.

It is now up to the drilling results on Red Star to have followed the vein and show us what they have, and then to fast track development. Again IMHO.

goldrush
22/6/2020
19:21
I said they were unlucky, unless the definition of unlucky has changed since I last looked, I’m guessing it still means, well - unlucky.
bumpa33
22/6/2020
17:37
bumpa, you condemn OXS, but do not give the whole picture. I was also a large shareholder in OXS, and did lose a lot of money there. But the directors were most certainly not to blame, since the company was stolen from them by the government of Uzbekistan. Indeed the directors came out very well in the administrator's report, and clear of any fault. Before the theft happened, they moved the share price up from 5p to 70p, or so, from memory. That was incredible to do in the region. Only 2 of the directors from OXS are on the board of PXC. Now you know the reason that the jurisdiction is so important to us shareholders (and the BoD), as we do not want another repeat. I think the most telling thing about this question is that many of us shareholders from OXS continue to believe in these people, and are again invested heavily. I am there, and I believe Zaphod is another. Please post your question on PCX and see the feedback you will get. But if you have specific complaints against anyone, then please post it, so we can hear. If you have any other question about OXS, I'll try to help.
pantsonfire
22/6/2020
17:03
ODR - hence my ‘unlucky’; comment.

Let’s leave it at that, if they come up with great grades, then all well and good.

bumpa33
22/6/2020
16:57
Bumpa .. although it didn't end well for Oxus from memory didn't the share price spectacularly multi bag before regional politics tripped them up which is always a risk whoever you are.

And current PXC project is in Idaho USA, so different ball game altogether.

onedayrodders
22/6/2020
16:46
Gold at $1760. yum yum.....
gutterhead
22/6/2020
16:27
GF1 "What the share did between 2016 -2018 has nothing to do with it"

I think you'll find that isn't true. What happened in those 2 years set many of us up for life.

Now if you know of a gold share that has debts and is able to produce gold with good margins and are increasing their production I suggest you invest because they will benefit more from gold rising than AAZ. That is why POG has been a better investment over the last year compared to AAZ and may continue to be over the following year as well.

jaspoland
22/6/2020
16:24
you've got until 5 today to submit your questions for tomorrow-via aaz website
gutterhead
22/6/2020
16:22
I hear you bumps, but I keep hearing that there is a big gold resource there which can be used to finance the copper...who knows
donald pond
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