`Unproven`? Yeah that's why Shell got involved! Some people just make it up as they go along...Very Trump or Farage like. Trouble is many of us wern`t born yesterday. |
Sally
When you say unproven what exactly do you mean. |
Cop29 charade. Ridiculous now that, and all the private planes to the event. The irony. They could all sit on zoom and do nothing in the same way |
Thanks for that... tit.And I'm not even invested here! |
FY25 First Half Year Trading Update 05 12 24
FY25 First Half Year Results Announcement 30 01 25 |
You say a bid at 60p but even £200m mc for something that is only ever losing money seems expensive to me! As investors in unproven commercially viable companies you must square yourself with the fact that funds can all be lost or you can become wealthy but the former is more likely. Been their done it, most crumble and the rest lose you money.
Anyone who bought early doors I get it but people who bought this when the market cap was even higher than here were effectively gambling. |
Although saying that sector wide recovery that's due would be fun. And he will disappear |
Nows the time to weild the mighty axe |
At this low price a bid from somewhere must be being looked at and even a private investment company would be a good deal. At 60p would take this over. |
Gimme No one can argue validly against an authentic history. |
Ennismore Fund Management has further reduced its short position:
Ennismore Fund Management Limited 0.55% 20 Nov 2024
Ennismore Fund Management Limited 0.67% 7 Nov 2024
Ennismore Fund Management Limited 0.76% 6 Nov 2024
Ennismore Fund Management Limited 0.80% 1 May 2024 |
Anyone got the details of Helikon's short, etc? |
Annual Reports, over the years.
In 2019, Linde bought 95,000,000 New Ordinary Shares at the Issue price of 40p per share.
The Issue Price represented a discount of approximately 7.0 per cent to the closing mid-market price of an Existing Ordinary Share on 2 October 2019, |
I will eat my own principles and reduce the thread standards by doing this...
but has anyone seen the Share Price recently??
..back to where it was when I first laid eyes on Cooley and Co. Love at first sight.
Then..
Heartbreak.
Separation.
And we move on.
But if she's going cheap!
Well. |
No doubt market makers helped them close their shorts. AIM is a cesspit. |
Ennismore reduced its short on ITM again yesterday. That's the second time recently and it looks like they're about to drop off the reportable shorts table. As long-time shorters, I think they probably recognise this as the bottom of the chart for ITM's share price and the 'upside risks' are increasing. |
bmel; Do you know where has this got to? |
Well, it's attained a price whereby there are buyers to soak up the sells...let`s hope the buys continue. |
STRANDED RENEWABLE ELECTRONS NOT A GOOD OPTION
From Marcus Krebber, CEO RWE
At the beginning of this month, the German electricity supply reached its limits.
In the evening hours of November 6th, the price of electricity rose extremely quickly and extremely sharply — to more than 800 euros per megawatt hour. This made it around ten times more expensive than usual. There was a brief outcry, but it didn’t last long. Yet the whole situation was more than just a warning shot.
Phases in which wind and sun only produce a limited amount of electricity (a so-called Dunkelflaute, or dark doldrums) are normal. And they will always be noticeable, so we need to be prepared. To ensure stability — the stability of the system as a whole and the stability of prices in particular. After all, these high prices are an absolutely reliable indication of the state of supply security in Germany. They are the result of too little supply.
So let’s take a look at the figures from November 6th: Demand was around 66 GW. It was covered by domestic production (around 53 GW) and imports (around 13 GW). Almost the entire domestic supply was available (only around 4 GW was not available, which is not unusual). In terms of import capacity, only around 3 GW of interconnector capacity was unavailable (also not unusual).
In concrete terms, this means that the same situation would not have been manageable on another day with a higher peak load. For example, in January. The highest demand for electricity of the year was on January 15th, at more than 75 GW. Almost 10 GW more than on November 6th!
And in Germany, we have been acting (for years) as if the issue of adding secure capacity is something that can be postponed. Yet we can already clearly see today what happens when we switch off capacity and do not provide any backup for renewables.
No, we don’t have any more time, quite the opposite. Time is running out. The expansion is urgent. |
Hopefully he doubled down at 34p |