We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
---|---|---|---|
Connaught | CNT | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
---|---|---|---|---|
16.65 |
Top Posts |
---|
Posted at 05/11/2010 12:59 by 0verzeal envirovision,It is looking less likely CNT will be returning to the market at 30p. |
Posted at 13/9/2010 16:48 by ladyboyblap I don't think these assets will be sold off.The banks will write off some of the debt and CNT will return to the market. 30p on the cards. Dividend around 3p. |
Posted at 10/9/2010 09:43 by greater things are yet to come >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>david.susies - 10 Sep'10 - 08:24 - 5065 of 5074 Does this mean 140M (shares in issue) /28M (price paid for company) = 20p per share? YYeeeessss, less the debts, administrator fees/costs etc etc etc = to around minus 20p per share ! Will you pay 20p per share you hold to the adminstrators and country for the debts your holdings have incurred upon the system ?? 0p >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Boffster - 7 Sep'10 - 22:54 - 4936 Why how constructive of you boffster to waste such time. That'll change the entire country and system will it ? LOL !!! Clearly you were one of Gordon Browns most loyal followers.. LOL ! Remain clueless and Blind to the Truth. >>> 0p, along with all the other russian roulette sets dogs of the corrupt LSE casino markets for addicted gamblers attracted to the same, losing all their "borrowed" money on stupid spread bet gambling.. PET, RPT, SCHE, TAN and so so many others all on the same path... LOL sapper2476 - 10 Sep'10 - 08:48 - 5073 Yes more or less. Its called Wealth redistribution. Read The New Economic Disorder by Dr. Larry Bates. CNT is just a mini example of the banks, construction firms and more recently Oil giants like BP. (Over 75 Billion stolen from the mcap value or redistributed. To who in their case ? EXXON and the US as Exxon soon will emerge with their 500p per share bid to steal the rest of BP.) The entire system being headed for 0p, except for the 1% who are collating your wealth and money. Current price of Gold should be a clue. Following the armegeddon collapse very soon, Gold will jump to well over $3000.. Only Gold is real money or finance. And only real paper money in your possession is money spendable now. Everything else, especially shares held is fleeting worthless value, which as proven in CNT can go from 320p to 0p in less than 4 months. When the economic collapse commences very soon all markets and equity holdings will lose 35% to 60% in so called paper value within 1 to 4 days. The system having at best until around mid 2011 to perhaps late 2012. Trying to make so called money from shares is a never ending mirage of deception... If all that has happened since September 2007, through 2008 and 2009 hasn't been enough to warn you to get out of the markets whilst you still can, then clearly nothing will, until it is too late when everything collapses completely very soon. |
Posted at 09/9/2010 09:19 by the_doctor I posted before that political implications regarding not lending to businesses and job losses that could result, might have pushed banks (via govt pressure) to lend to CNT if the business was sufficiently viable. Clearly the latter may have turned out to have been the case.This view was shot down by monte, who claimed that jobs would not be lost because contracts could just be transferred and that there would therefore be no political implications. I highlighted that even if all contracts were transferred, the new owner would most likely look to cut down overlap. In today's papers, KPMG will keep the property maintenance arm trading while contracts are transferred and around 4,400 people face redundancy The smaller compliance and environmental divions will be unaffected by the administration and employ 3,500 people. [Those divisions will be sold off, resulting in more synergistic cost cutting] Overall therefore, you're looking at something like 5,000 job losses |
Posted at 01/9/2010 18:49 by swaganeer Lins, keep your head in the sand then. It retraced when I said it would, as Warwick acknowledged.Mel: on the contrary, I let profits run in boring stocks but this share excites so much greed and fear one has to take profits at the peaks - which I did today. Very satisfying to jump ship before a dip, would have been a perfect day had it spiked down to fill my 16.5 buy order. Hoping to re-enter CNT tomorrow at a lower price than today's closing share price Good luck to all you CNTs, no matter what your trading/investment strategy. |
Posted at 01/9/2010 09:21 by fiat lux cfc1what is interesting is that CNT's major creditors are banks partially owned by the taxpayer. Added to that the fact that CNT have contracts with public sector organisation then one can see why they would be pulling out all the stops to rescue something here ie employment etc |
Posted at 31/8/2010 16:00 by pieceopie t1psEK August 4th 2010 - "I see that Barclays have flogged their debt (c. £15m odd) in Connaught (CNT) at 37% of face value. Whilst bank managers are arguably the laziest and silliest of specimens of humanity, even they are able to reckon which side their bread is buttered on in a case like this. Speed up your run to the exit" EK August 16th 2010 - "Some people seem to have developed the idea that Lloyds by not selling its debt due to it by Connaught (CNT) is supporting that company. However, it seems to me much more probable that a buyer cannot be found. Lloyds is sitting there like a stuffed prune." |
Posted at 25/8/2010 09:19 by mellious7 warwick, Woolworths were loss-making for years prior to them going down, along with debt to boot, whereas in normal circumstances as in past years, Connaught has been profit-making be it less than they have previously published due to them being naughty with the year-end figures! As an example the year-end dividend shows profits and current assets were never that high as the dividend yield was less than 1% consistently! Implying they had a weaker cash-flow then declared! |
Posted at 22/8/2010 14:27 by comedy propane i'm not telling anyone to buy... and if shorting is happening which seems likely with the posting...plus the share price action all of last week has the action of someone pushing the share price down each day from afternoon onwards...then in the morning there is a mini bounce and then the process is repeated again in the afternoon...which has happened all of last week and brought share price down to fridays close...now question is...is it the funds selling the rest of their shares which has pushed share price down and will we get holding rns next week showing they are no longer have any stock??? or is someonelse shorting it with either the game plan cnt is going to be finished? or trying to keep share price low to take a big stake for recovery? plus as i dont short and gone with the hunch cnt will survive..so my best interest is let the shorters short and no one buy and share price hits a new low...take another decent amount and top slice the bounce...and hold the "free shares" for long term recovery...we seem to be getting a repeat of jan 2009 in certain stocks.. ps 1 thing is certain cnt survive and the owners of stock will have a multibagger from current levels....also the silence from the company is deafening and imy hunch is this week we will get at least 1 rns which will have to give funding for next month or not...so d-day approaches... lol now you know why i am here...question is why are you here??? last time round the shorters crying the most switched and went long and then sang long and hard how they had made massive on the short and now were making on the long...??? |
Posted at 13/8/2010 13:30 by 5huu For all you bottom fishing on CNT, risking iminent D4E etc, you should take a look at Micro Focus (MCRO). An earnings downgrade has spooked the market but EBITDA remains on track due to ongoing cost cutting. Blackrock stakebuidling too on the recent slide. Defo worth a look for all you bottom fishing! IMHO & good luck with CNT, (CNT too risky for me!!) |
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions