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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Graphene Nano | LSE:GRPH | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B9BBJ076 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 1.93 | 1.86 | 2.00 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
24/10/2017 10:33 | I have watched these for a few years now and in that time I have seen a lot of RNS reporting various sale contracts. However when the results are eventually published they have not made much impact on the bottom line. It's difficult to see what assets the company actually owns. Many believe it to be a gold mine whilst others think it may be another bubble. Your choice which you believe. One thing is important however and this time I make no apology for the capitals DARWIN CONTROL THE SHARE PRICE. Tom | tom.muir | |
23/10/2017 21:08 | Ta for the DARWIN insight guys. | bobsworth | |
23/10/2017 19:43 | Everyone and their dog claim to be able to produce Graphene. In fact to produce true graphene ( material with platelets of under 10 atomic layers ) is extraordinarily difficult and there are only a few companies in the world that can do it on a commercial scale. I am not convinced that GRPH is yet one of them. What GRPH do produce is probably mainly graphite, which is fine as an ingredient of lubricants but does not have the special properties associated with true graphene. | obbig60 | |
23/10/2017 17:55 | As a footnote to the my post above, Darwin have to date converted 70 loan notes of £25K each (total £1.75M ) into 85.19M shares. For some mysterious reason GRPH only gets 90% of the face value of the notes so Darwin have probably only shelled out £1.575M. This gives an average price per share of 1.85p for Darwin to break even. One cause for concern is that in the RNS of 23/12/16 the company talked about 3 Tranches of loan notes of 30 each = so 90 in total. There have only been 70 up to now so it might be possible for a further 20 loan notes to be issued. I hope not! | obbig60 | |
23/10/2017 16:38 | Tom, I did exactly the same as you. I bought at 135p following what has turned out to be a poor Questor tip in the Telegraph. I've averaged down a couple of times. Not investing further though. I think you are 'spot on' in your observations about someone here trying to ramp up the price. The only thing I will agree with this person on, is that it does sometimes put a spring into the shares where a 'quick' buck (often large) can be made, despite the chronic state of the company. I live in hope. | simon666 | |
23/10/2017 14:30 | Darwin convert loan note into shares at very low prices and sell as the price rise,s . They are known as the lender of last resort They are ruthless. I think there is a lengthy explanation if the way they operate earlier on this thread. | tom.muir | |
23/10/2017 13:31 | Tom You say " so long as Darwin are still involved" , as someone who is monitoring this share could you enlighten me on what your main concern is about Darwin. TIA | bobsworth | |
23/10/2017 12:01 | I have been an investor on and off since 2013 and I have lost a lot of money. I paid 135p for my 1st buy!! I still thing that graphine is a winner but not necessarily for GRPH. when the price reached 1.3p I decided to buy a few purely as a punt on the company not going bust. I am not tempted to add to that so long as Darwin are still involved. There is one poster here who I suspect to be a pump and dump merchant; and I identiy him in two ways (1) he uses CAPITAL LETTERS to emphasise certain words and (2)he no track record here. The ramper I am LOOKING AT joined here in late Sept 2017 Tom | tom.muir |
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