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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ceva | LSE:CVA | London | Ordinary Share | COM STK USD0.001 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 1,200.00 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
18/11/2009 21:08 | Shouldn't be any problems selling US certificates through a normal full service broker e.g. the banks. You might need to fill in a bit of us tax exemption paperwork but should be relatively straightforward. | mbaxter | |
18/11/2009 19:09 | Hello Mr Monday! You may have read a few posts back that I think I've found a way to sell the shares through a company in London. However, I'll hold a while just in case Ceva find themselves on the the wrong end of a billion+ takeover, leading to another jump in the share price quoted in London. Ever the optimist. One thing does puzzle me, though. Why is the spread in London so bloody massive?? Is it that they still want peeps with very small parcels of shares, from Parthus days, to just give up and sell??? I can't recall ever seeing a spread so large with any other share. Mind you, I'm just a small punter, that got cleaned out in the post-2000 bubble bursting, who now fiddles around with a few thousand quids worth only. And two of my shares are well under water - my wonderful, wonderful "Titanic" portfolio!!!!! Keep posting and best regards. | dyfiman | |
18/11/2009 17:46 | Thanks to all of the above for keeping this thread alive, i have 90 of these from memory in the same US cert format as you dyfiman, I'd all but written this slow burner off, its nice to see some potential light to this one after all this time.. here's hoping... Regards to all. | i8mondays | |
04/11/2009 16:29 | 12USD is the highest ceva has gone i will sell when that happens,however the potential is good, and it is an Israili company. I think if it continues to incrase market share then it should go above 20usd a share easily. it is making excellent progress even in a recession, that is something. i dont think any shares are traded on the london market so no point looking at it. | binladin | |
04/11/2009 16:01 | Hello Mr Binladin, was very interested in your comment about Ceva being a $1b company due to its 24% hold in its mobile markets niche. Did you mean it's worth that money now, or going to be soon/in a while/sometime whenever? Having held a small amount of shares, via Parthus, since 2003 I wondered, in the light of your comment, whether to hang on and hope for a mini-Microsoft rating of Ceva in the next three years. Would love to see any more data you have on Ceva's status and future potential. Thanks and regards | dyfiman | |
04/11/2009 15:15 | IT 22%UP HERE AND 1% UP IN US. | binladin | |
04/11/2009 14:36 | OK, boss.... I'll update as and when. Regards. P.S Anyone else out there in the same position as me? Or someone who has managed to find a way to sell a parthusceva/Ceva share certificate and get some loot back?? | dyfiman | |
04/11/2009 14:32 | It was a long time ago. Cert was £28 or so which was a high % of the shares' value at the time. Emailed Ceva and was passed on but too long ago to remember. Will be interested to hear what you find out. Regards, Dafrog | dafrog | |
04/11/2009 14:03 | Hi, Dafrog...... you say you tried to get a UK certificate. Who did you speak to and what was the sum involved? Mine seems to be a US one that says I can sell it through Capita in London. Have looked at their website and there is a seemingly easy way to get through to a company broker to sort out a sale. Doesn't say you have to have a "UK" certificate. On the other hand, my cert may well be a UK one. It was sent by Charles Swaab's London office that was taken over by Barclays Stockbrokers. I'm still confused over the US/UK thing though. Perhaps I'll just ring Capita, speak to someone, and try and sort out what's what. Regards | dyfiman | |
04/11/2009 13:29 | dyfiman, did try to get a UK cert but they wanted more too much money for it. You have more shares than me! | dafrog | |
04/11/2009 13:26 | Dafrog..... just been looking at my share certificate, issued when the company name was parthusceva. It says, "The shares represented by this certificate are transferable at the offices of American Stock Transfer & Trust Company in New York and Capita IRG in the United Kingdom". I'm going to explore this further, though I've read what Mr Binladin says and wonder how right he may be when he says Ceva could be worth a billion dollars rather than its quoted market cap of 200m USD. I've only got 62 shares and think it may be worth hanging on to them for another three years or so. Wonder what any of the other few remaining share holders in UK think??!! Regards all. | dyfiman | |
04/11/2009 13:03 | earnings up 25%. from 2008... but the real mover is CEVA has sold its technology to 24% of all mobiles sold world wide.... i reakon this could be worth a billion dollars it is only 200m usd market cap... | binladin | |
04/11/2009 12:58 | Can't sell mine as they gave me a USA one. | dafrog | |
04/11/2009 12:48 | Holy smoke!! Ceva has some life in it after all. My measly share certificate is tucked away in a file somewhere and I'm now going to have a look at it. For old time's sake only. Regards. | dyfiman | |
04/11/2009 12:47 | Now they have these sparkling figs & oodles of cash in the bank still, why do they not fly higher? Too small to be noticed? | haydock | |
04/11/2009 12:31 | Oct 28 Ceva CEO Gideon Wertheizer said, "Our solid third quarter performance reflects a strong demand for our DSPs and technologies and a continued worldwide market share expansion in the handsets market which reached a record high of 23 percent. We are encouraged by the increasing demand for our newest technologies for the growing markets of LTE, MID, HD multimedia and Passive Optical Networks (PON)." For the fourth quarter, Ceva sees revenue of $9.4-10.4 million, and earnings per share of $0.08-0.11. For 2009 as a whole, Ceva expects revenue of $37.7-38.7 million and earnings per share of $0.38-0.40. This compares with a current analysts' consensus of $37.69 million revenue and earnings per share of $0.35. | andrbea | |
01/5/2009 14:33 | Must be some official LSE body we could complain to: Fat chance!!! | haydock | |
01/5/2009 10:50 | Hi Daf..... yep... they are listed. just been looking and the spread, as ever is huge. 300p to sell, 600p to buy. I have a certificate so can't deal on line. My plan is to drop into a stockbrokers office with it when next in the US and see if I can sell. Or, perhaps I'll hold on in the hope that CEVA will do a Microsoft and surge to something like 70 dollars a share. If.... then 62 shares will be worth something.I remember reading an article about Microsoft in which it referred to a woman who was a secretary there when it set up. She was given something like 100 shares... worth piddly little... but years later were worth a sack of dollars. Ah, well, just dreaming. Regards all. | dyfiman | |
01/5/2009 10:25 | Are there any actually listed on the LSE? People's here seem to be listed in USA. | dafrog | |
01/5/2009 10:04 | Agree dyfiman Why don't LSE tighten the spread and see what happens? The MMs would do well to play this stock more (encourage a flurry of trades), as it's propspering in the States, and has steady newsflow across the pond. And they would earn more in commissions on each buy and sell. To have no trades each month is a waste of a listing, especially when ceva is capturing market share | andrbea | |
01/5/2009 10:01 | Wow!! There's CEVA folk out there and we have.......discussio Hello to all and hope you're well. In the same spirit, can someone please explain why CEVA on LSE has such a monumental spread..... for a company in US that is actually doing very well despite the recession. Regards all. | dyfiman | |
01/5/2009 09:16 | ceva get a mention 27 April 2009 The choice of dsp hardware available has already impacted the market share of discrete dsps. Market researcher Forward Concepts sizes the 2008 global dsp silicon market at more than $27billion, of which discrete dsps account for 11%. "Standalone dsps will never be a major force in embedded applications," said Will Strauss, the company's principal analyst. Discrete dsps are adept at executing billions of multiplies and adds a second the mathematical crux of digital signal processing. But competition comes from risc cores from the likes of ARM with its Cortex-A8 architecture and MIPS with its Sheeva core that bolster dsp performance using single instruction, multiple data (simd) processing (see NE, 24 Feb 2009, p42). Such risc cores as well as 'pure' dsp cores from the likes of Ceva are used within SoCs for applications such as MP3 players and set top boxes. Indeed, SoCs dominate the dsp silicon market. "These are not dsps, but that is what they do," said Strauss | andrbea | |
01/5/2009 09:13 | I,ve today received notice and voting papers for the Annual Meeting of Stockholders. It's in New York so not going but will use my votes. | dafrog | |
01/5/2009 07:55 | This is on reflection a very strange case. I am no expert on shares or company law. but well aware that we were all sold down the river. The curious bit is that if you check the stock quote it is still traded on the LSE,or AIM. That must mean the comapny has to still pay for this? Look at another well known site & all the details of the stock are there, as if it was a U.K. traded stock, although no trades this year. Perhaps we should somehow manage to get together to pressure the company to deal in our stock, in the future perhaps when it has done a Berkshire H. I have known failed AUS stocks that mopped up directly. Anyway they know we are there as they communicate occasionally. It will perhaps take a lot of, it seems now possible share price growth to reach a stage where the shares can be of use one way or another, but they are no dead duck. That London price is a bit strange though. | haydock |
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