And have been adding during this expected Xmas selling. |
Important news was that the IRIS 2 head contract was signed by the European Space Agency on 16th for 10billion.IMO EnSilica is in the box seat to deliver in a 290 satellite contract and already has a working relationship with key consortium members. They probably have already been asked to bid.I expect this to be the big news for Q1 2025. |
Fairly quiet over the last week , will they close out the third deal before Christmas. Here’s wishing everyone a good Christmas and New Year , see you in January Paraone signing off until then |
Agreed, any direct shareholder returns should be a long way down the list of uses of capital for years to come. Likewise debt should be increasing now and for a few years; it is how companies grow. Investors in the UK seem to have forgotten how growth works, though perhaps generations growing up with the megacaps will be more tuned into the mechanisms and concepts.
Many jaded local investors seem unable to distinguish the different types of non-self-funding companies, putting all smalls into the same bucket. Those that have growing revenues and product or products with traction are totally different to those with no sales but a promising idea. Nor are either like the lifestyle companies which many of the latter turn in to. In this day and age that early stage companies shouldn't be on the stock market at all, it is for VC to take on that risk.
Back to ENSI - the market clearly liked the mention of upfront payments, and the "doing what we said we were going to do" in terms of contract awards. The mountain of gravy(!) that is the supply period is really starting to build. The portfolio is expanding and success breeds success, where companies find it much easier to award contracts to established providers.
Looking at the chart I would think the correction is over with very likely clear progress over the low of January this year when we come to lap. The March high is a tougher hurdle and that is going to be very dependend on broader economic conditions and London market sentiment. |
Yump would love to see an very large share price , if it happens dividends are a by-product of the share price and represent a percentage of profit, larger the price , bigger the profit equals dividends , larger pension |
I don’t want dividends. I want them to grow enormous first. Just copy the US. Occupy the space. Become the go-to business. The share price will be much more impressive than dividends. |
Nice to see an uptick in the share price on the the RNS released this morning . Slowly building momentum in the Revenue base , no doubt they will be looking to bid on larger contracts in the future , so looking good for the future , possibly Dividends within 2 to 3 yers |
Exactly. Nice momentum and generally the company is delivering on what it said it would do. And it seems to be growing in confidence - "we look forward to building on our robust new contract momentum in the remainder of the financial year and beyond." |
Nice contract again anyway. I can’t think of many (any?) other small stocks regularly adding long term revenue contracts. |
All we need is a takeover at this time , when we have to pay our Socialist Government 20% of any accrued profit at no cost to themselves , legalised robbery |
If the market doesn't start to move on price this is going to become a takeover. All that lovely contracted revenue would sit very nicely on the balance sheet of a larger company valued by PE at 20x or more. |
It's all future money in the bank though. Meanwhile the contracts and partnerships keep coming. Happy to hold and add on weakness as previously said. Sometimes the sprint turns in to a marathon - with mini sprints in between :) |
Good snapshot Dean. I expect costs are best case so I expect more drawdown, but the more contracts locked in the more likely an extension to the line of credit so I am pretty happy to stay onboard and accumulate if any sell off. |
Decent contract.
The issue is they are still burning a lot of cash due to the high investment in R&D.
In FY25 they are forecast to burn £5.2m in cash.
They are drawing down an extra £2m in bank loans and £1.3m of the last raise was received in FY25. Therefore the cash balance decreases by £1.9m in FY25, but they finish the year with £6m in Bank loans. |
New $30m contract over 10 years announced.
"The Contract will commence imminently, with NRE revenues falling into EnSilica's current and next financial years, underpinning current consensus market expectations."
"Out of the three prospective design and supply contracts in the negotiation stage that were referred to in the Company's announcement on 5 November 2024, two have now been secured and announced by EnSilica. These contracts come with significant upfront payments."
""We are very pleased to have secured our fifth design and supply contract this financial year, demonstrating our strong market reach and technical offering." |
Ah but they’ve spent a lot of time and hard effort on their CV’s.
I must try harder not to be cynical.
Anyway, quite happy with my investment here, although thats easy to say as I didn’t buy until quite recently. |
Yump (852) - To add to your comment - I wonder how many Fund Managers / Portfolio Managers have mortgaged their houses to raise cash to start a Fund? These people risk other peoples money on investment ideas they have, get rewarded handsomely when the hard working people within the business deliver and also get rewarded handsomely when they pick a loser (through annual management charges etc.). I am still looking for a Fund that does not make a charge if they lose you money :) |
I know the origins are often at personal risk, but by the time of listing imo things have often changed. Probably for the better for the businesses, as larger operational skills don’t always fit the startup skill set.
I think I’ve become cynical as a result of loss-making floats claiming that their float is to enable amazing expansion when they don’t even have a viable business.
Or debt-ridden businesses courtesy of VC. |
Yump you would be surprised how many listed companies start with what the US call a mom and pop or family and friends fundraiser, usually the VC funds and brokers expect this to have happened before they get first visit. I did a due diligence on an arms manufacturer who turned out to be a guy who built a Gatling gun in his garage with a cash advance on his credit card. He ended up with a few million from a euro vc fund and then listed for a while. |
ducatiman - of course your comment couldn't possibly apply to Ensilica, because we know that the company had unsecured debt facilities before it floated.
yump - Ian Lankshear started the company in 2001. I do not know if he had to mortgage his house to do so, but surely the track record for the following 21 years is more important? |
You may very well think that; I couldn't possibly comment. ;-)
I do think that AIM is probably very short of any CEO's or BOD's that have actually gone through the process of mortgaging their houses to start up a business previously. Or perhaps they have and thought it would be safer to write at length for a multi-page prospectus and float next time. Especially if they know the right people and connections.
I don't think there's been many Alan Sugars around for years. |
Profit is vital, peterrr3. If you are making a loss raising finance is a tough gig. But if you are generating operating cash flow and profitable but need cash for growth then finance should not be an issue. And I completely disagree with your statement that "anyone can engineer an accounting profit as easy as a tax loss... " but all I ask is that you please use terms correctly, "break-even" is a term used in analysing profitability (even a quick internet search demonstrates that). |
Well if R&D is capitalized, then best to ignore ebitda figures for starters.
You can float just an idea and the share price can reflect what in other businesses would require a few years decent profit.
It is always “buyer beware”. That doesn’t imply anything about the way a company presents itself, but more what sort of valuation it warrants on float.
Apart from the frequent Walter Mitty CEO’s of course. |