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DRUM Drumz Plc

8.75
0.00 (0.00%)
19 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Drumz Investors - DRUM

Drumz Investors - DRUM

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Drumz Plc DRUM London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 8.75 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
8.75 8.75
more quote information »
Industry Sector
GENERAL FINANCIAL

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 04/6/2023 15:02 by quietlife
Simon and Richard the founders of acuity did the RTO deal and accepted 45m shares for £3.1m which is 6.75p. This means everyone buying below 6.75p is getting it cheaper than the founders of acuity. DRUM pre RTO owned 25% of acuity and they now own 100%. Like for like share price pre vs post is around 14p. Free shares at these levels imo. Remember 5 investors hold 54% of the share register. Zak’s 12/13p target once it clears 7p confirms this. It’s really simple and primed
Posted at 01/6/2023 07:42 by quietlife
RNS this morning - TR1 holder adds and goes over 5% holding
5 investors with 54% of the share register
Big rerate is starting now as it’s very undervalued imo
Posted at 18/9/2022 15:21 by quietlife
Follow the money. 2 investors don’t buy £400k under the radar for no reason in my experience
Posted at 04/5/2022 13:57 by kemche
He's a canny investor.
Posted at 30/3/2021 13:17 by scotty666
Expecting plenty more to come thick & fast. Investors will catch on eventually- SAAS in this space is a great place to invest
Posted at 23/11/2020 13:42 by sunshine today
Let’s step back.

An investor wants a stock that he or she can purchase at less than its true value, and then sell it after that value has been realised.

All shares carry risk, but one wants to try and minimise that as much as possible.

Your still exposed to the general market, management, the product and the likes of unforeseen events, such as COVID.

Buying low cap shares reduces risk because it limits the total loss of an investor simply down to the fact he or she can’t build a sufficient stake at a given price.

Example

DRUMZ is valued at 1.7M and if you could get a 5% holding at today’s price, extremely unlikely, the cost would be £170,000

However if you bought a 5% holding in Apple it would cost Billions or trillions.

The max loss the DRUMZ shareholder if all went wrong is £170,000
The max loss the APPLE shareholder could make is Trillions.
Posted at 23/11/2020 07:46 by sunshine today
Let’s assume a very good return over the next 3 years would be 30% compound.

That would see the shares worth 1.2P in 3 years time, equaling a market cap of about £4M.

So investors have to judge it that can be achieved.

I believe it could be hit within 12 months because if it’s not , the recently issued warrants will be worthless.
Posted at 22/11/2020 11:16 by sunshine today
Found it !!!


The FTSE 100 began January at a level of 7,648 before falling below 7,000 in March. It then soldiered on, shrugging off everything else that was thrown at it (a little like Prime Minister Theresa May, one might say) and reached an all-time high in May of 7,877.

At the time of writing on December 12 2018, it has fallen to 6,895.

Cue the doom and gloom headlines – admittedly mostly from overseas: “UK stock market loses all 21st century gains.”

Yes, the FTSE 100 did start the millennium at 6,930. Yes, it is below that today.

This week’s Best in Class is, quite simply, the best performing UK equity fund of the 21st Century.
But the headlines miss an important point: the statement is only true if you look at price returns. If you take those all-important dividends into account, the FTSE 100 has still returned 91.5 per cent, according to data for total returns in sterling from FE Analytics, December 31 1999 to December 11 2018.

Albert Einstein didn’t call compounding the eighth wonder of the world for nothing.

The headline, although undoubtedly eye-catching, also misleads investors in my view, because it is just talking about the index.

There are a number of active UK equity managers out there who have made a lot of money by investing in some of the UK’s great companies, rather than blindly investing in them all. They have invested in tomorrow’s winners, not today’s, and it is for this reason I am all for active investing over passive investing.

Fidelity Special Values, for example, has returned 796.7 per cent for investors (based on FE Analytics data, December 31 1999 to December 11 2018). And fund managers did not need to be ‘punchy’ to get results: the much more conservative Rathbone Income fund has returned 328.6 per cent over the same period. Rant over.

This week’s Best in Class is, quite simply, the best performing UK equity fund of the 21st Century, according to FE Analytics data. Its returns of 972.5 per cent beat not only those of all other open-ended UK equity funds, but its investment trust peers too.

Marlborough Special Situations has been run by Hargreave Hale’s Giles Hargreave since July 1998. He has been assisted by Eustace Santa Barbara since September 2014, and also has the support of the company’s analysts.

Mr Hargreave and his team have a richly deserved reputation as astute stock pickers.

This flagship fund has a small- and mid-cap focus and it has held up well across a wide range of market conditions. By conducting their own primary research, the investment team believe they can exploit the market information shortfalls and inefficiencies associated with small- to mid-cap analysis.

Their investable universe includes more than 2,000 stocks from the FTSE AIM, FTSE Small Cap, FTSE Fledgling, and the smaller companies in the FTSE 250.
Posted at 22/11/2020 07:58 by sunshine today
If your interested in buying tiny micro caps:

Look for director ownership

Look for solid asset backing (value.)

Look for super fast growth.

If you get those ingredients and the company does well, very serious profits can be obtained by an early investor.

Then look what price you have to pay today, to get a slice of the future action.

DRUMZ M CAP is £1.7M
Posted at 07/9/2020 16:51 by sunshine today
DRUM has a market cap ITRO £2M.

It’s completely off the radar of the city, small investors, and day traders.

Today’s announcement, will, I believe, put the company on the map, for those wanting to gain exposure to very high growth, and thus profits, from a rapidly increasing DRUM share price.

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