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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eagle Eye Solutions Group Plc | LSE:EYE | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BKF1YD83 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-17.50 | -3.11% | 545.00 | 540.00 | 550.00 | 562.50 | 545.00 | 562.50 | 17,097 | 09:42:02 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Computer Programming Service | 43.2M | 1.19M | 0.0404 | 134.90 | 160.19M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
09/4/2019 14:32 | Being still 33%down here, I hope your reading plays out as drawn! Incidentally, SCSW said "+ive ebitda in current H2, so buy". | napoleon 14th | |
09/4/2019 08:28 | The downtrend broke in January. This was my guess at the new uptrend yesterday. free stock charts from uk.advfn.com | aleman | |
09/4/2019 08:12 | Hard to buy online now Buying 5,000 EAGLE EYE SOLUTIONS GROUP PLC ORD GBP0.01 shares A firm electronic quote is not currently available for your order | onjohn | |
09/4/2019 08:06 | ohhh la la | onjohn | |
09/4/2019 07:43 | Eye Eye Eye | onjohn | |
09/4/2019 07:08 | 200-day average turning up | aleman | |
08/4/2019 09:17 | ready to bang into it some more | onjohn | |
08/4/2019 07:26 | Stormin normin | onjohn | |
24/3/2019 20:08 | infinity7 - I was looking at underlying operating cashflow. Working capital changes from year to year. Some growing businesses generate some cash but use it up buying extra stock for a bigger business next year. Similarly payables and receivables grow with a growing business - if they always balance that does not matter, but sometimes they move out of balance and free up cash or consume it. Some businesses have positive payables cashflow as they grow - supermarkets usually sell for cash stuff they might not have to pay for until a couple of months later. Open a new shop and the first couple of months will give a shop chain loads of cash (but a rise in payables and ignoring other outlays). Some companies have negative cashflow from working capital as they grow if they have to fund lots of work in progress. To find the underlying trend - how much profit or cash the company would have if stocks, payables and receivables had remained constant through the year - you work through the cashflow table and stop before working capital changes. It gives a much better picture of the company's underlying progress. You can find my approximated figures in the cashflow table - the numbers above the changes in payables and tax (no stock changes in this case). Just add them up (I've not typed out their 2nd, 3rd and my 4th column to save time): H1/19 H1/18 FY/18 (FY-H1=)H2/18 -1893 +205 +916 +349 -8 +137 =-294 =-1431 =-2006 =-575 So the last 3 half years saw underlying operating cashburn of £1.431m, £575k and £294k before changes in working capital, which in this case were mostly payables and receivables. The last number is reflected in this comment: The GBP2.1m movement in net debt reflected an operating cash outflow of GBP0.6m (including GBP0.3m of working capital outflow expected due to the profile of billing),... The -£294k becomes -£0.6m after the working capital took another £0.3m. IF(!) underlying H2 improves by £1.137m like H1 did, then H2 will generate £562k cash before changes in payables and tax. Now it won't do that exactly but it might be something like that. The working capital swing in H2 might wipe that out again but that it is not a bad thing if you have more and more customers owing you money in a growing business. The underlying cash generation shows EYE is growing nicely and might be generating significant amounts of cash in H2 at the operating level if it were not being held back by waiting for more customers paying up each year. Their main customers are typically big companies who are well known for not paying up for a few months - but they WILL pay up eventually in all but exceptional cases AND the operating cashflow should quickly outgrow this drag on overall cash generation fairly quickly, anyway. I just break it out for a better picture of how the company is improving beneath the ebb and flow of some of the other factors that cloud it a bit. It's a good growth trend. EYE looks like it should be generating cash at the operating level around now and should be generating free cashflow in a year or so. It does not look likely to need to find external funding on current trends as the headroom on its existing facility should now cover it - though who knows what the future holds? | aleman | |
24/3/2019 11:07 | Aleman, could you please clarify how do you come from Operating loss of 1764k to 300k? Why do you add working capital? | infinity7 | |
24/3/2019 11:06 | Aleman, could you please clarify how do you come from Operating loss of 1764k to 300k? Why do you add working capital? | infinity7 | |
22/3/2019 10:15 | Eagle Eye Solutions Group (EYE) H1 results presentation 13.3.19 By Tim Mason CEO & Lucy Sharman-Munday, CFO Great overview of the business. Where they’re at. Where they’re headed. With comprehensive detail on the financials at half year. | tomps2 | |
13/3/2019 11:03 | Great results. Only about £300k loss at the operating level after adjusting for working cap (£1450k loss last H1 and £550k H2) so H2 will likely be positive. This company is essentially operating at breakeven cashflow this year but has amazing margins and "new tech" levels of sales growth which should start funnelling loads of cash into the business from here. It's a share that could rocket and should have probably risen on today's numbers - but then nobody seems to be watching it if posting is anything to go buy. We'll have to wait and see what analysts say and see if it attracts any new investors in. The numbers should go down well at Mello2019. | aleman | |
13/3/2019 10:00 | Overall a good update IMO, but in the final analysis we need to remember: Turnover is vanity, profit is sanity, cash flow is reality. | napoleon 14th | |
20/2/2019 09:33 | Decent buying this morning and still looks to be only modest amount of stock on offer (around 7500 typically). Could be a good run up to Interims - can't see a mention of a date in the rceent TU but they were on 13 March last year. Good call re buying in 130s btw matt :) | gleach23 | |
19/2/2019 16:13 | Also had a nibble via a spreadbet when I saw the uptick earlier and an apparent shortage in supply | gleach23 | |
19/2/2019 15:42 | Bought some back in the high 130s. | matt123d | |
29/1/2019 10:16 | 130p area would be a good level to look to buy back. | matt123d | |
23/1/2019 09:04 | Trimmed some as well | matt123d | |
23/1/2019 08:07 | Exited at the open. | aishah | |
22/1/2019 13:41 | 225p looks possible technically after some profit taking at 200p. | matt123d | |
22/1/2019 11:39 | Incredible rise lately. There's just been no stock around. I'm out now but good luck if you're sticking with it. | gleach23 | |
22/1/2019 10:44 | Strong momentum now with share price above 20,50 and 200 SMAs | aishah | |
21/1/2019 10:29 | Wonder if anyone has eyes on making a bid. | matt123d |
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