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AAZ Anglo Asian Mining Plc

67.00
3.40 (5.35%)
03 May 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
  3.40 5.35% 67.00 67.00 70.00 69.50 63.50 63.50 271,461 16:35:01
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Miscellaneous Metal Ores,nec 84.72M 3.66M 0.0320 21.41 78.26M
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 63.60p. Over the last year, Anglo Asian Mining shares have traded in a share price range of 36.50p to 121.50p.

Anglo Asian Mining currently has 114,242,024 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Anglo Asian Mining is £78.26 million. Anglo Asian Mining has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 21.41.

Anglo Asian Mining Share Discussion Threads

Showing 144176 to 144195 of 144600 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
23/4/2024
11:48
Wan' having checked the RNS again it was the 14th of March when the Azari's got all the paperwork they had asked AAZ for.
So it will work through all the burocratic departments slowly.
Then I think it will be presented to the El Presidente for a sign off !! Now have a realistic guess as to when eventually we will get the RNS with the TD news ??
Remember how long we had to waite for the PSA to come through??
LOL :-) amazing how slowly the time passes when we are waiting for certain important news from a government.
In the meantime the shareprice will bounce around whatever. Traders wouldn't want to hang around that long. Perhaps I will accumulate a bit more cash to do another top up. :-) :-) depending upon the share price.

2cmb
23/4/2024
11:05
20k BUY in the auction at 65p .... Buyer was willing to pay up to 66p for them
mattjos
23/4/2024
10:52
MJ’s comment is exactly the issue many on the PXC thread were trying to deny, funding wouldn’t be a problem because the prospect was so good; well time moved on. I’ve noticed PoF is back posting and we’re coming into an anticipated news period and funding is still required. 🤔

Bumpa I’m with you, I’m sure there’s a trade coming though and DP put simply when you’re on the payroll, anything you say has to be considered ramping because you defend everything the company does.

riggerbeautz
23/4/2024
10:44
My favourite Non-AIM Recovery stock / Infrastructure play is Costain LSE:COST. Summed up well in the Sunday Times this week...

Share tip: Costain is building itself up again
Builder is leading the resurgence in the construction sector

Sunday April 21 2024, 12.01am, The Sunday Times

"The construction sector is picking itself up out of the rubble. Last year, more building companies went bust than in any other industry — a record 4,400 collapsing due to supply chain disruption, high material prices and labour shortages. The larger players stayed the course — most had improved their risk calculations after the liquidation of rival Carillion and Interserve’s rescue by its lenders. Now, more stable interest rates, easing inflation and more contract tendering are boosting construction’s appeal.

The City has noticed, to an extent: Kier and Costain’s shares are 20 per cent higher than at the start of the year; Balfour Beatty and Galliford Try are up about 7 per cent. But they’re still a long way from their past peaks. Costain, for example, is now trading at 75p, less than half its pre-pandemic share price of 194p, while back in May 2019, its shares changed hands for £3. Since then, the firm, founded in Liverpool in 1865 has been punished for booking expensive charges for badly priced energy and road contracts, and diluted by a £100 million rights issue at the start of the pandemic, required to secure the balance sheet.

But Costain is a vastly improved outfit from the housebuilder it was long ago. It has been transformed into an infrastructure contractor with tentacles in many a sector. It works with most of the major water suppliers on pollution-kerbing upgrades, with National Highways, Transport for London and National Rail, on the government’s contracts to decommission first-generation nuclear sites, and in defence. Costain looks poised to benefit from the UK’s likely Labour-led investment in more infrastructure projects. As Joe Brent, head of research at Liberum, explained: “We are optimistic about the outlook for infrastructure and believe Costain is the purest trade on this theme.”

Last month, the firm posted a 10.5 per cent rise in adjusted operating profit to £40 million for 2023. This year, more than 80 per cent of its revenues have already been booked. Chief executive Alex Vaughan pointed out that the value of this is about three times last year’s earnings. This confidence helped Costain bring back its annual dividend. Its cashflow is smoother due to recent cost-cutting tinkering: for example, its pension fund contributions were dramatically slashed following a review last year. Net cash stands stronger at £164 million, from £124 million a year ago. The relatively small gap between those cash reserves and Costain’s £217 million market capitalisation hammers home its good value.

Of course, the firm remains vulnerable to the ebbs and flows of contract-awarding mandarins, as has been seen with HS2. But analysts predict its pre-tax profit will exceed £52 million next year, and Costain’s shares are trading on just five times earnings for this year. It has a packed order book of blue-chip customers and has rebuilt its reputation: Buy Costain."

someuwin
23/4/2024
10:34
DP has at least aligned himself with what does appear to be a decent project opportunity.
Obviously a very long road still ahead for the company & anything possible.

mattjos
23/4/2024
10:23
On another note, there were only 727 companies in the LSE AIM market in February !! A few more have delisted since then!! I rember a time when there were well close to 2,000 Co.s in the AIM if I am not mistaken!

BMN,PHI, ext,ext will be out too before too long !! LSE is going down the pan IMHO.
PHE, is a classic example of a co. that is still pulling in punters!!!
16/17 CEO's and FDR's have resigned over time !! Makes one wonder !!

Anyways let's see what the future holds for AAZ.

2cmb
23/4/2024
10:18
Agree, I respect Bumpa and hope to prove him wrong on PXC but as Matt says it highlights how tricky bringing a mine into production can be.
donald pond
23/4/2024
10:14
LOL Bumpa always calls a spade a spade,with expressive language
DP is an excellent cotribuer as well.
This is a debate,not a fight. Great logical arguments and points put forward by both parties. I enjoy being a sideline spectator. This is what makes this thread an excellent thread.
Digger18, perhaps you should stick to your large mining company threads !!

2cmb
23/4/2024
10:13
PXC just highlights how incredibly difficult it is for any junior explorer to get a project off the ground, even based in an investor-friendly jurisdiction such as the USA.

PXC has recently fallen back and filled the April 2020 12-13.5p Gap & now showing some signs of life so (irrespective of its business prospects) there are some valid technical reasons to be long in it right now

mattjos
23/4/2024
10:05
IQE bouncing off the 13 EMA today, wanobi
mattjos
23/4/2024
10:03
We’re having a debate, they’re sporadic, they happen, they end. And whilst I hugely disagree with Donald on PXC I consider him a “good contributor” here. If you don’t like my delivery then fair enough, it ain’t for everyone - just stick me on filter.
bumpa33
23/4/2024
09:41
I'm paid to communicate facts and expectations. You may sometimes think the expectations are not going to be met, but I never present expectations as facts. Anyway, let's see how it plays out.
donald pond
23/4/2024
09:29
Bumpa, I've never ramped PXC. There's no attempt to hide the fact that until we have a proper economic model it will be hard to evaluate the worth of the mine and even then, it needs fundingWhat I will say is that the project has been refined to focus entirely on improving margins. That was the result of covid and the supply issues. It means that I expect the PFS to show a very attractive economic return. Then the copper bond structure means that the upside from the copper price is split between the company and the bond holders. The company will get 80-90% of the upside but if we enter a copper bull market everyone wins. So it is all still to play for imo.
donald pond
23/4/2024
09:19
And no, any half decent trader will tell you to only short spikes on the junk mkt.
bumpa33
23/4/2024
09:10
As I said, 2 views!Out of interest, are you short at the moment?
donald pond
23/4/2024
08:45
Takes 2 views to make a market. Let's agree to disagree
donald pond
23/4/2024
08:43
This is AIM after all, where fairy tales come to die…!
bumpa33
23/4/2024
08:40
…there’ll be twists ‘n turns for sure.

But zero is where it’ll end.

bumpa33
23/4/2024
08:38
free stock charts from uk.advfn.com

although there an older one at around 3p..


free stock charts from uk.advfn.com


Cheers
Wan

wanobi
23/4/2024
08:31
Who is going to pay to extract the resources though DP if they can prove them unequivocally? There is going to be a big fundraise and investors are going to get rodgered. Those bonds they have pedalled for years are not going to happen that is obvious.
pogue
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