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EBTM Ebtm

0.09
0.00 (0.00%)
14 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Ebtm Investors - EBTM

Ebtm Investors - EBTM

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Ebtm EBTM London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 0.09 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
0.09 0.09
more quote information »

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 02/4/2009 20:36 by dixi
Website back on-line under new ownership - aren't investors supposed to be advised of this?

maybe it will all finally come good - minus the shareholders!!!
Posted at 12/2/2009 19:17 by loverat
Share price 0.14p

Any investment tips should be taken as a pointer to highlight a stock.

Investing in the first place and deciding when to sell is entirely a decision for the individual investor. Keeping hard earned in this piece of crud and not selling at the first sign of trouble is no one elses fault.

There is a hard core of apparently intelligent people who continue to chuck money
down the drain. Just like the directors of the banks.
Posted at 12/2/2009 07:19 by trigger45
Has that made you feel better abc125 getting that off your chest?

Or maybe it was an attempt at humour?

Investors have lost out because the people supposed to be running this company have proved to have been extremely poor at developing a great concept.

If anyone invested on the stregnth of any of Lloyds posts without doing their own research,deserve to lose every penny they invested IMHO.

Assuming you have lost money get over it and move on. If you haven't, why bother posting at all.
Posted at 07/1/2009 12:35 by radarlove
Willie,

This may explain it!

(Psychiatric Weekly)

"It has come to our notice that a patient from the London Maudsley Psychiatric hospital, has been contributing to a financial bulletin board for the last 6 months. This patient suffers from 'delusional grandeur', believing he is a major and very important Stock Market investor as well as an influential businessman. Do not believe a word he writes. Everything stated is a lie and reflects his mental illness.

"It has also come to our notice that the same individual writes on a variety of other bulletin boards where he claims to be an eclectic group of people from a British MI5 spy to a recent lottery winner."
Posted at 08/11/2008 12:21 by radarlove
dixi,

Having sold my EBTM stake back in the Spring, after being a previously optimistic investor, I can only warn present shareholders to be careful. The steep rise and then fall of the share price this week is classic MM manipulation and common amongst penny shares. A case of 'eeking out some action' from investors whether buy or sell, as it lyes becalmed, while using 'the placing' as the excuse.

I was attracted to EBTM, initially, due to the ASOS connection. The idea that the company would emulate or at least offer some mirroring of the online fashion retailer's magnificent growth story was an attractive proposition. But ASOS, I now realise, is a one-off success story with a one-off 'once in a blue moon' Chairman Nick Robertson.

Quentin Griffiths and Richard Breeden are not in the same league, in my view, and appear to be going through all the growth pains, errors and disappointments that lesser more common mortals experience. Add to this an impending deep recession and the future doesn't augur well.

Disappointment is my word to describe EBTM. Initially, so full of promise, yet a reality check offers nothing more than a typical struggling young company with the recessionary odds well and truly stacked against them.

Meanwhile, another one of Quentin Griffith's online companies, ADILI, is surely doomed to fail in a recession given the "Fairtrade" nature of its products. During recessionary times, when saving money is all important, will the public give two hoots about ethical trading when you're paying two, sometimes three times less money for a similar non-Fairtrade item?
Posted at 07/11/2008 07:06 by trigger45
EBTM plc, the online retailer of music inspired fashion, has conditionally raised £850,000 before expenses through the placing of 85,000,000 new ordinary shares ('Placing Shares') with institutional investors at a price of 1p per share the ('Placing').




The Placing will take place in two instalments. The first instalment will be in respect of 40,000,000 of the Placing Shares ('the First Placing Shares'). Application will be made for the First Placing Shares to be admitted to trading on AIM with admission expected to take place on 12 November 2008 ('the First Placing'). The issue of the remaining 45,000,000 Placing Shares ('the Second Placing Shares') is conditional on the passing of resolutions at a Annual General Meeting of EBTM to be held on 18 November 2008 to grant the necessary authorities to the directors pursuant to the Companies Act 1985 ('the Second Placing'). Application will be made for admission of the Second Placing Shares which is expected to take place on 19 November 2008 subject to the passing of the resolutions put to the AGM.




The Placing Shares represent 31.6 per cent. of the enlarged share capital of the Company. Following the issue of the Placing Shares, the Company will have 354,097,744 ordinary shares in issue.




These funds will be used to underpin the continued growth of the online retail business.




During the first 24 weeks of the current financial year online revenues have increased by 17 per cent. compared to the same period in the prior year with sales conversion rates touching record levels and improved margins. As previously announced, trading conditions for the wholesale division remain challenging. The Company expects to make a small operating loss in the first half year, which is in line with management expectations. As in prior years, the bulk of sales and profits are expected in the second half of the financial year. The directors remain confident that, as the key Christmas period approaches, the online retail business is well positioned to deliver accelerated growth rates.
Posted at 23/10/2008 09:41 by dixi
Well maybe EBTM can make a good go of this, maybe they will eventually flourish once they have got the business fettled and running ok - but at what price to existing holders. At the current cap it would not be hard to imagine 100% dilution as an eventual possibility. I think they will need to be doing a bit better than ok to raise funds at anything less than a big discount. Maybe the banks are not supportive of the business? Clearing the debt would probably be a wise move rather than spending on trying to expand?

Too many 'maybes' in my post. Think my time is up to be honest!

Best of luck to LLOYDEBTM - I suspect you are up to your neck in EBTM - your great faith deserves to be rewarded. I have seen so many posters get trashed by a shock announcement from a company, it could easily happen here.

To me the greatest problem is that EBTM's last fundraising spoke very confidently of the future, the next RNS was the sale of Lowlife and a more guarded outlook, so whats next? There have been issues raised about the stock levels and the shape of wholesale - EBTM are giving little away to investors - suffice to say selling Lowlife gives a good indication of the state of play.
Posted at 10/10/2008 18:30 by malkie
granny - IMV Greatland will go down a totally different route. They area sitting on £1.8m and are doing minimal resource development. They are trying to conserve cash.

There is almost zero chance of a JV - this is just lip service to shareholders. Firetower is too small anyway.
The only realy value in GGP is the £1.8m in the bank.
It costs them around £150,000 a year to maintain their AIM listing and they cant raise any more funds in London. so no point in remaining listed.
They have no commitment to this country- Management is Australian - one is permenantly over there and one flies back & forth. No office leases as they share the offices of RGM/RRR - nothing to keep them here.

In addition to this the ASX is now starting to get back into gold stocks. and i expect them to re-list in Australia sooner rather than later and start buying up some destressed Aussie ground.

I am pretty sure this will happen - there is talk around such moves from some guys very close to the company down under.

With Miners you need to do a lot of research - not all is as it seems.

I sold most my GGP in July at a loss - will sit on the rest and sell on any bounce. First thing you need to do is make sure that your broker will let you trade on ASX.
or you will be stuck with them.

In the mean time i will stick with AAU an dkeep adding as and when - its my only AIM gold play and unlike a lot of companies i could mention - the management are doing everything they promise. The rest of my gold stocks are on TSE/X.

here is something to cheer you up!

By Lawrence Roulston of Roulston Opportunities



We have all heard enough about how bad the financial situation is. There is no question that the markets are in a terrible mess. The U.S. credit crisis is serious, it is spreading, and it's not going to get better over night. The situation is worse than nearly anyone imagined.
However, there are some bright spots and those bright spots represent investment opportunities.

As so often happens, the markets act like pendulums, swinging from one extreme to the other. A year and a half ago, the U.S. economy was booming, fuelled by a fraud of gigantic proportions that pushed housing prices and debt to absurd levels. The bursting of that housing bubble saw the pendulum swing to the opposite extreme as investors panicked and sold everything.

There may be a long period of transition as the various bailout measures kick in and get the economy back on track. But, let's not forget that the U.S. has been through a number of difficulties and always manages to muddle along and then recover to be stronger than ever. I don't believe that the U.S. will ever regain the level of supremacy that it once held in the financial world but the current crisis will pass, as it has every time before.

Look, the U.S. economy is not going to drop into some great black hole in the ground and suck the rest of the world in as some would have you believe.

As far as the rest of the world is concerned, it doesn't really matter a great deal if the U.S. economy grows by 1 or 2% or shrinks by 1 or 2%.

Looking at the metals: China has been and continues to be the most important driver in the metals markets. Headlines are now screaming out that the Chinese economy is slowing. Those few investors who read beyond the headlines will see that China's pace of growth has slowed from more than 11% a year to just over 10%.

If you think about it further, you will realize that 10% growth, coming on the larger base, actually represents the same amount of real growth as last year. India is still growing strongly, as is much of Asia. Similarly, the pace of growth is slowing, but is still at a pace that developed countries can only dream of.

Similarly, the popular press trumpets the fall in the oil price. It is only down when stacked up against the spike earlier in the year when speculators pushed it briefly to $140. When measured against the level of a year ago and two years ago, the oil price is up. Huge amounts of money are flowing to oil exporting nations which, like the Asian nations, are building infrastructure.

We constantly hear about the bursting of the commodities bubble. Yet, metal prices are still well above long term trends. Iron ore prices are still rising sharply: and definitely not driven by speculators. The prices are set by producers dealing directly with users.

When President Bush and the Treasury Secretary were trying to sell the bailout package, they painted a picture of dire consequences if the measure did not pass. That message seems to have been taken literally by many investors who are now even more terrified than they were before.

Whether the U.S. grows by a couple of percent, or shrinks by a couple of percent, other parts of the world continue to grow. It is important to note that the emerging markets are far more intensive users of metals that the developed world. The U.S. is more of a service-oriented economy, whereas China and the other developing nations are more heavily involved in building factories, housing, infrastructure and other things that use a lot of metal.

The net result is that world-wide demand for metals continues to grow. New sources of supply are needed to match that growing demand and to replace older mines as they are depleted. Much of the mining industry investment in this cycle has been directed to buying existing production.

The major producing mining companies are being valued on the basis that metal prices will fall hard based on a U.S. recession impacting the rest of the world. That hasn't happened, and will not happen. And that means that the mining companies are being valued at exceptionally low levels in relation to actual and projected earnings. Teck Cominco represents exceptional value.

The majors have suffered, but the smaller companies have been beaten down to absurdly low levels. We are already seeing takeovers as the larger companies go bargain hunting. The smaller and mid-tier companies are beginning to merge. Those deals will be accretive to shareholder value as they will create larger and stronger companies.

Recovery in the junior mining sector will not be the same for all companies. Those companies that need to raise money in the near term will continue to face real challenges. Many will have to look to joint ventures, asset sales and mergers to find the money they need to move forward.

There are many small companies with defined metal deposits, strong management, and cash. Those companies will come back early in the recovery.

Some commentators worry that there will be no money for mine development. Clearly, if a junior walked into a bank tomorrow and asked to borrow a few hundred million dollars to develop a mine, they would get a rather chilly reception.

However, the smelter companies, the metal trading companies, and the majors are awash in cash and are seeking new supplies. Baja Mining recently completed an $800 million financing package to develop a mine in Mexico. They worked with a consortium of Korean metal companies. The market seems to have missed the fact that Baja's project is now funded and well on its way to production. Base metal companies are out of favour, making advanced-stage deals like Baja excellent investment opportunities.

Once the panic subsides, there will be a great many banks and other investors who welcome the opportunity to invest in tangible assets instead of the alphabet soup of financial hocus pocus that was on offer for the past few years.

I believe that the current financial mess will result in a return to more fundamental-based investing and that move will benefit mine developers. It won't happen overnight, but it will come.

The message here is that those juniors that hold metal deposits that can be developed into mines will see a return to more rational values. Those companies that are still hoping to find a metal deposit at some time in the future may have longer to wait.

There is lots of cash available among the larger mining companies. Just looking in Canada, we see Barrick with nearly $2 billion, and Teck, Goldcorp and Inmet all sitting on more than a billion dollars of cash.

What I'm saying here applies equally to precious metals, base metals, minor metals and uranium. We aren't looking to gains in the commodity prices. We are looking to companies that are adding value to their assets.

The most immediate market action is likely to come in the gold sector.

The cost of the financial bailout in the U.S. is measured in the trillions of dollars. The latest bailout package was $850 billion, including the tax breaks thrown in to get it approved. Add in the earlier bailouts and recognize that nationalizing Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac added $5 trillion dollars of liabilities to the U.S. government, bringing the total debt to $14 trillion.

Don't forget the on-going wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the huge trade deficit. The dollar was falling sharply before the burden of the bailouts was added. European governments are also conducting bailouts of failed banks.

Ironically, the bailouts have hurt the price of gold. That is a short term reaction, as traders seem to reason: "OK, the U.S. financial system isn't going to collapse this week, I don't need to own gold", and they dump their holdings.

Anybody who takes a longer term perspective will realize that if a government simply keeps spending enormous amounts of money that it doesn't have on things that do not generate a return for the economy, then the value of the currency will decline.

The whole financial mess, for many investors, has destroyed confidence in the global financial system.

Right now, investors seeking safety are flocking to U.S. treasury bills. That is particularly ironic, as the dollar, in the longer term, will suffer the most from the bailouts and the plummeting confidence. In time, gold will be the biggest beneficiary.

I can't tell you what the gold price will be tomorrow, or next week or next month. Nobody can. I can tell you with certainty that the gold price will be high enough that the major gold producers will continue to mine it. As long as gold companies are mining gold, they will be looking for new deposits to at least offset the amount mined each year. The juniors will continue to play an important role in finding and developing new gold deposits.

It doesn't really matter what the gold price is: a new discovery will generate big returns for shareholders of a junior gold company. Advancing a deposit toward production will generate returns for shareholders of a junior gold company.

It's not hard to make the case that the situation in the junior mining sector will improve in time. Of course, we all want to know precisely when the markets will turn around.

Just remember that the situation always looks bleakest at the bottom of the market and it looks rosiest at the top of the market. It requires a lot of nerve to invest contrary to what appears to be the right thing to do. At present, at least on the surface, this appears to be a really bad time to be investing. And that makes it the best time to be buying.

The greatest gains come from buying at the bottom of the markets and selling at the tops. That means buying when prevailing wisdom says it is a bad time.

We will never know exactly when the bottom is. Here are some things to consider at present. Over the past few weeks, Warren Buffet has invested $12.7 billion into the markets, including $5 billion into Goldman Sachs, one of the investment banks. The popular press thinks it strange that Buffet is investing at a time when things are so bad. But, that is precisely how he became the world's richest investor.

Other signs that the worst may be over: the U.S. bailout has been approved. It will take some weeks for the program to be implemented, but at least bankers know there will be relief coming. The failed banks are being snapped up quickly by other banks. In the latest deal, Citigroup tried to scoop up Wachovia within a day of its collapsing, but they were outbid by Wells Fargo.

Citigroup, which had the smarts to avoid the moves that led other banks into trouble, published a report last month that examined the commodities. They concluded: "It is important not to lose sight of the long term picture. We regard these conditions as a correction ... in a secular bull market. The drivers of the super cycle - urbanisation and industrialization in China and supply shortfalls are intact. Indeed the next up-cycle could be even more powerful than its predecessor."

If that report had come from one of the failed banks, I would not have paid much attention. Citi had enough smarts to avoid the mistakes that overtook so many of the other banks.

Investors are not going to suddenly rush back into the junior resource markets. But, those who buy the solid companies at the present severely depressed prices stand to enjoy big gains in the fullness of time.

The most immediate reaction will come from within the industry. Smaller companies will merge in deals that add shareholder value. The larger companies will be taking over smaller companies with good deposits.

To give an indication of the valuations: At present, major gold companies are valued on the basis of just under $200 per ounce of total gold resources. Juniors, on average, are valued at a mere $29 per ounce. At prices like that, the juniors must look extremely enticing to the larger companies. Obviously, there would be takeover premiums that would generate returns from the current price levels.

Companies like CGA Mining, which is close to production, look very attractive.Another interesting area is platinum: the price is down 60% from the $2,300 level earlier this year. Demand is growing and supplies are constrained. The market was clobbered by a big selloff by a platinum ETF. Eastern Platinum is making big profits even at the current price and will do very well with a rebound.

It's a similar situation for silver: development stories like Bear Creek, small producers like Aurcana and Great Panther.

Uranium is going to come back in the not too distant future. Hathor has made a very important discovery and is not getting full value. Soon enough, investors will again wake up to the fact there is an energy shortage and uranium stocks will again become popular.

Panic selling at this stage is definitely the wrong thing to do. Taking advantage of the panic selling of others could net you some good companies at attractive prices. Be selective. Be patient. The market will come back.
Posted at 09/10/2008 13:12 by malkie
you gotta laugh at the nerve of someone with a brand new ID, who calls himself "skinnyjeans" and only posts on this thread. no interest in any other company or investment.

This is a site for investors. Are you an investor? of course your not.

You are soemone with a grudge and thats the only reason why you are here.

Why exactly should I be careful???

suggest you read the terms of usage on this site. it is you that needs to be careful.

dixi I'm afraid you are very gullible!
Posted at 24/9/2008 14:22 by thfc 1
its no wonder the share price is in freefall, how as an investor can you feel confident, the site has for weeks on end been clearing out old stock at a fraction of the old price then offering further 20% discounts on top, there is no new product. to be honest it looks like the e-commerce equivilant of a B&M closing down sale, no words of reassuarance WHAT IS GOING ON as investors surely we should be informed a little better, the only reason i aint selling is whats the point now at 1.6

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