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INFI Infinis

184.50
0.00 (0.00%)
24 Jan 2025 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
INFINIS ENERGY Investors - INFI

INFINIS ENERGY Investors - INFI

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Infinis INFI London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 184.50 00:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
184.50 184.50
more quote information »

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 24/10/2015 09:50 by billywhizz1
Well Topvest, if you are an investor you will know that given a platform we can all pretty well make a plausible argument to suit whatever our point of view is at the time. That's why I always try to stick to actual facts and you will see from my thread that, that is the case. I TRY TO TAKE A VIEW WHICH IN MY OPINION
IS BASED ENTIRELY ON THESE FACTS AS EMOTIVE WHIMS SHOULD NOT INFLUENCE WHAT I WOULD TERM AS BALANCED JUDGEMENT(as opposed to views)
Posted at 23/10/2015 12:09 by billywhizz1
1. Guy Hands (Terra Firma) own Monterey
2. Monterey own 68.50% of Infinis Energy
3. Guy Hands drives the share price down as far as decency will
allow, blaming the UK Government's abolition of the Renewables
State Aid Scheme.
4. Magically and without State aid, the last two big wind farms are easily
financed privately.
5. Almost immediately after the successful conclusion to the above deal, Hands
drops the bombshell.
6. Result... Terra Firma P/E Holding Group effectively own both Infinis and
Monterey, leaving them free, seven months ago, to manipulate the share
price of Infinis to enable them to eventually buy the remaining 31.50%
of the shares through Monterey at the lowest price they can achieve.
In other words they are sweeping up connived and engineered cut-price shares at the expense of the 31.50% of private investors shareholding in the open market.

You may ask yourselves, 'Is this Criminal', the answer is Legally ....NO.
Morally....YES. It would be nice to know whether or not the respective directors
receive any of these shares as bonuses or so called 'performance payments' after the buyout is concluded.
All the above, in my opinion, has, or will, come to pass in due course, UNLESS OF COURSE THE FSA DO THE JOB THEY ARE PAID TO DO AND ROOT OUT ANY POSSIBLE SELF INTEREST MAL-PRACTICE BY THE RESPECTIVE COMPANIES. Keep your fingers crossed.
Posted at 22/10/2015 16:14 by stewartf
Monterey could have offered any price they liked, but they didn't. They offered a price that, in the view of the Independent Directors of Infinis advised by Barclays Bank and RBC Capital Markets, is considered to be fair and reasonable. They need to be mindful that they will need the support of a further 6.5% of the votes in order to achieve the 75% required to make the offer unconditional.

I think there will be quite a few shareholders who will be glad to be able to exit somewhere around breakeven. Up until this morning I thought I was going to be locked into these for years to come if I didn't want to take the loss. Now I've calculated that I will get out in December with a negligible profit of about a hundred quid. So I'm not too disappointed by the announcement.

I also think that current Government policy regarding renewables is largely responsible for the decline in the share price. Announcements by Infinis have warned that there would be a negative impact on profits and that the dividend policy would have to be reviewed. I take that to mean a dividend cut, which income investors like me would have not been happy about.

Of course, if all the small shareholders band together and threaten to reject the offer, they may sweeten it a bit to ensure they do get the 6.5% of acceptances they need. I wouldn't be unhappy about that either.
Posted at 22/10/2015 11:55 by m welsh
I guess all us small investors rejecting the offer would make no difference !!. Would be nice to see it rejected, only to see if they would increase there offer price
Posted at 22/10/2015 08:56 by 4seeaproblem
Kingpin...my thoughts entirely.

The Board have stuffed all the original investors including myself. They should all consider their positions.
Posted at 15/7/2015 07:47 by salpara111
Sold this morning for a truly epic loss.
I actually bought a bigger stake in this than I normally do given how "safe and boring" it was supposed to be.
That is me done with floats.
I did the sums last night and I have lost money over all the floats that I invested in over the last 3 years while I have made over 25% on the rest of my portfolio.
Clearly I am unable to determine what is going to be successful when it comes to floats.
I put the money into doubling up my holding in ETO which dropped 10% this morning when their biggest institutional investor offloaded 9% of the business causing a mini crash. These occasions are usually good buying opportunities as was the case with my most successful investment of the last 3 years, Moneysupermarket which I am now out of.
Posted at 13/7/2015 09:55 by jonwig
Terra Firma wound up?

News to me, and nowhere on their website that I can see, nor the FT.

Any links to that news, please?

Apart from INFI, they have been a very successful investor.
Posted at 22/6/2015 19:48 by osirisra
I'm hoping a large slice of them will be sold of to the wider market. A relative of mine works for Investec and he has expressed concerns over share liquidity and has reservations about so much being held by one fund/institution. If the stake was broken up or as I say, sold into the wider market that could see more investors taking a stake in INFI. He certainly didn't have any concerns over the business model.
Posted at 02/6/2015 10:08 by salpara111
They are about to be relegated to the small cap from the FTSE 250 which is part of the reason for the recent weakness.
This is undoubtedly the most confusing share I own, the divi is confirmed as being 10% but like most people I agree that it will be difficult to maintain going forward.
The other thing dragging back the share price is the massive overhang Terra Firma have created. They will be seriously out of favour in the city if they dump their huge stake even at the current price given what they sold to institutional investors 18 months ago at 260p.
Until the TF situation is resolved the share price is going to circle the drain so they really need to get their act together and sort it out.
I am holding for the moment as the divi is huge and I cant find another better home for the money right now.
Posted at 18/5/2015 00:08 by cyfran101
Even if investors get the divi do you think the share price will hold up ex div?

With landfill gas dwindling and the wind sector to be hammered by Conservatives "emotional hatred" of onshore wind why would you hold?

I was looking forward to reading the details on Infinis. However this cash cow came groaning onto the scene overburdened by debt and with a tacked on wind vision to show why investors should overpay and get Hands out of an EMI nightmare.

Until Infinis have sold out, the debt is brought to a level that could survive a rate shock and a more robust future is mapped out I'm still prevented from investing.

I was thinking that future may lie in solar rather than wind as that tech' has the greater potential for advances in pence per kwh but will wait and see.

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