We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hollywood Bowl Group Plc | LSE:BOWL | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BD0NVK62 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-5.00 | -1.50% | 328.00 | 327.50 | 328.50 | 333.00 | 327.50 | 333.00 | 97,858 | 13:25:18 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bowling Centers | 215.08M | 34.15M | 0.1989 | 16.52 | 564.08M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
19/8/2020 20:56 | ... and that's what happens if I leave VRS boards alone is it? | festario | |
19/8/2020 16:56 | PET LSE:PET BOWL forming | cpap man | |
19/8/2020 08:43 | Of course .. | the hammer of fest | |
19/8/2020 08:17 | The ADME chart continues the bowl set up on the 1 year and 3 year charts.It looks potentially very lucrative in the next week or so. | festario | |
17/8/2020 16:25 | Very small hat, or VERY big head ?? 🤔 | frosty sparks | |
17/8/2020 16:25 | Its dead easy even I can do it, watch ... | frosty sparks | |
17/8/2020 16:24 | What time are you doing the pics Pete, the pics ? | frosty sparks | |
17/8/2020 16:21 | ADME continues to create the bowl, I wouldn't leave it too long. | festario | |
17/8/2020 09:27 | That post says a lot more about you than me. | yump | |
17/8/2020 08:58 | yump 18 Dec '19 - 12:39 - 230 of 277 Even at 300p at p/e of 20 its a nice easy hold for the future. | buywell3 | |
17/8/2020 08:53 | The idea is decent but timing in these markets very dodgy just now IMO Bubble markets everywhere on stimulus debt = a big fall coming soon | buywell3 | |
14/8/2020 02:05 | STOP PRESS: FEST FINALLY FLIPS .. (NSFW) | cancleux | |
13/8/2020 17:20 | I say again... ADME. Once again today, it formed a little more of the right hand side of the bowl.... I'm targeting a surge to 15p or 16p. | festario | |
11/8/2020 07:33 | Yes.... but you're meant to tell us BEFORE it's had the big rise.... that's the point. PALM has completed the bowl, we can't make money.ADME is on the cusp of forming the 2nd part of the bowl.Even if it leads to more fundraising etc... I still see 200% or so to come for anyone brave enough to stick funds in. | festario | |
11/8/2020 07:30 | PALM has done a bowl | plasybryn | |
10/8/2020 16:44 | Kazera Global (KZG) 0.675p Market cap. £5.11M. "Risked conservative NPV suggests upside of over 200% Our conservative valuation shows the potential. We initiate coverage of Kazera with an initial target price of 2.50p and Conviction Buy stance." | hedgehog 100 | |
10/8/2020 12:27 | RBW - nice bowl forming on the breakout | imnotspartacus | |
10/8/2020 08:05 | KAV LSE:KAV KAV Transcript of interview with Mike Moles Today The report was done by Dr. Pendergrast who was a consultant for us when we first started and he looked at the core of previous workers and he was the person who flagged the whole concept that we might be looking at a Norilsk style magmatic sulphide situation. So, what we have done now as a result of the drilling that we did in November we have given him some more samples of drill core that we have actually produced and asked him to do a report on that. So what he has done is look at the petrology. So the petrology is looking at the rocks and the minerals that compose the rocks which he has done through examining slides, thin section slides so that he can see what the rocks look like under a microscope. He has also been looking at the mineralogy which he is only able to do by looking at the whole rock geochemistry. The idea is he will be able to see what the rock is composed in terms of the number of atoms that exist in the rocks. What he hasn’t been able to do is specifically look inside the individual minerals to see what they are individually composed of. That is now going to be done at the University of Leicester by Dr David Holwell and those sample have gone to him. The real breakthrough about all this and what we are really excited about is that Dr. Pendergrast has come up with two things that are really important. One is that the copper and the nickel that are in the rock, virtually all of the copper is in the form of sulphides and a large proportion of the nickel is also in the sulphide which means that the sulphur has been extracting all the metals that we are interested in and drawing them into sulphides and no longer residing in the silicates. The other thing that is also very important is that in one of the samples there was a huge amount of sulphur 18,700 ppm which is 1.8% no you do not get that in a gabbroic rock unless the magma has incorporated sedimentary sulphur into it. That has always been our contention that particularly coal measures have been incorporated into the molten rock and provided the sulphur necessary for the formation of metal sulphides. So I would just like to take you back to the start of the whole process. We have got molten magma down right down several kilometres below the earth’s surface. It’s in a molten form, it’s rising up through vertical cracks and fissures within the earth’s crust and as it comes up you can move horizontally into sills and very close to the surface those sills have intruded into these sulphur rich sediments which are recognized by coal measures. These are sulphur rich. What happens now is that there is a small amount of copper and nickel and cobalt and all sorts of other metals in the magma. They in themselves are not concentrated enough to form a deposit so what it needs to do now is to concentrate and it’s the sulphur that does that. We know that the sulphur is there now in large quantities it will extract the copper and the nickel and prevent it from going into the silicate rocks which it would otherwise do. The metal sulphide is now quite heavy and dense so the liquid then sinks to the bottom of the sill and imagine also at the same time the magma is moving along the sill it is being transported through a plumbing system so that eventually it will come out on the surface. Now we know the mechanism works what we need to imagine there is huge amounts of magma so we know from studies from elsewhere that thousands of cubic kilometres, If you can imagine what a cubic kilometre of lava looks like we are talking about thousands if not millions of cubic kilometres of lava passing through this system. So we only need small quantities of metal sulphides to be trapped and accumulated in trap zones or in areas where the sill is thicker and deeper to form a magmatic sulphide deposit. So, what this report really tells us is that the whole mechanism is there, what it hasn’t yet done, what we haven’t yet confirmed is where the metal sulphide will have been deposited. And that is a job that is now ongoing. We’re running a computer generated 3D model which is based upon all the work we have done over the previous years to construct this model which will show us the geometry of these sills and once we have identified those sills which have thicker portions, where there is a keel or a trap zone where metal sulphide liquid may have accumulated that’s where we are going to find the magmatic sulphide deposit. So, once we have identified those target zones we will then go out into the field and do what they call a low frequency EM surveys which we anticipate will pick up the metal sulphide deposits at depth. Of course, we can only go down 300m or 350m I am sure there will be metal sulphides much deeper than that but it’s not going to be viable from an expiration point of view. So you know we are very excited about this because it’s a major step forward and leads us into the next phase of our exploration. Summary of rest of interview – Back working on the ground in Botswana hopefully within the next two to three weeks. | cpap man | |
06/8/2020 22:24 | XSG (Xeros Technology) ......... getting there | toby hall |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions