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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Oxford Cat. | LSE:OCG | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B11SZ269 | 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% | 160.00 | - | 0.00 | 01:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
10/1/2013 23:29 | When I think not a few months ago this share had a daily volume of less than my holding it sound like prehistory... | pablo666 | |
10/1/2013 20:24 | Gac141, you are invested in all three. Linc, OCG and ? Are you talking about AFC? | piadda | |
10/1/2013 15:54 | £10 million ( 5% on the market cap ) traded today - am not used to ! | dmor | |
10/1/2013 13:30 | Just out... | gac141 | |
10/1/2013 13:20 | Linc Energy share price tripled since November lots of chatter on Aus BB's about links with Velocys...? | gac141 | |
10/1/2013 12:42 | Invesco Limited now holding 7.64% | someuwin | |
10/1/2013 09:37 | Count Chris Thanks,you are right. I didn't explain very well. I should have made it clear that the feedstock is MSW. from OCG website - It will convert 500,000 tonnes per annum of London's waste, destined for landfill, into 50,000 tonnes ..." So the 80 lorries per day still stands :-) | wes1 | |
09/1/2013 21:44 | gac141 Excellent stuff. Thanks for that | mirabeau | |
09/1/2013 21:37 | Re post 1194 the bio waste wouldn't be headed to landfill - its separated off (by the diligent use of different coloured wheelie bins) to avoid just that and the resulting charges. Certainly my local council still manages to get charged by local farmers to have the waste taken off their hands (even when every household in the area is obliged to give them something for free that manage to turn it into a liability) so I'm sure your argument still stands though the costs aren't as high as you suppose. | count chris | |
09/1/2013 18:56 | Hi, another company based in Oxford. Look at your chart, same as ours.!! PTO Digitise Libraries in China. £15M market cap. Stupid. What would you charge the Chinese to do that with your world beating brand new digital software.?? | tara7 | |
09/1/2013 18:29 | Check the price of LINC Energy after Romanov's investment - it retraced a bit, but not much, found a new level and is now onto new historic heights. The same will happen here - 2-3 more contracts to confirm, and tye market will start noticing the massive future potential. I'd hope now for a 150-170 consolidation. | pablo666 | |
09/1/2013 17:12 | Saw this on another website... | gac141 | |
09/1/2013 16:55 | Two buys for a total of £700,000 this afternoon and the price drops? | piadda | |
09/1/2013 16:10 | Mirabeau This may be what alerted your attention. Ventech has applied modular design and construction most recently in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq. A large-scale expansion to a refinery in Kurdistan started during 2010, with Ventech providing a 20 000 b/d modularised crude processing plant that was added to the existing 20 000 b/d refinery. Made up of 26 modules, the new crude unit was designed and fabricated at Ventech's Pasadena fabrication site. The modules were shipped to the port of Mersin, Turkey, then transported by truck to the project site in Kurdistan, where the refinery was erected in 16 weeks. The refinery has continued to expand in a modular fashion; once completed in 2013, total capacity will be over 185 000 b/d and it will remain the sole producer of unleaded gasoline in Iraq. In all,Ventech has provided modularised crude distillation units, naphtha hydrotreaters, catalytic reformers, isomerisation units, demercaptanisation systems, gas plants and supporting utilities to this three phase project. Modularisation has made the difference in this geographically and politically challenging location, enabling expansion work to be accomplished quickly. | gac141 | |
09/1/2013 14:20 | Are these guys now in Kurdistan through Velocys? | mirabeau | |
09/1/2013 12:02 | That last paragraph is a bit vague: There's an opportunity of being the dominant player in the new market, because (following the context of the preceding pages) the oil supply is getting tight and the gas-to-liquid market could be huge. More interesting is the preceding paragraph, in which it is stated that there are 12 customers in engineering stages, only two of which (BA and Calumet) have been announced. Continuing backwards, there will be no cheap takeover yet. Board and major shareholders agree on that, as the business is at such an early stage that the true value isn't apparent yet. | arf dysg | |
08/1/2013 22:55 | dmor- you can always email me on... (deleted) However I will always try and make as much info available as I can. | gac141 | |
08/1/2013 20:04 | george , hope you're not put you off posting information of interest older longs may miss ?! | dmor | |
08/1/2013 18:14 | I don't think 75p is too much for good info. However I think Oxford Catalysts could have spent the couple of hundred of quid that this will earn and put the article on the Web site. That way it is available to all shareholders. 75p is OK but next time it could be £100 or £1000 limiting access to those that can afford it. | piadda | |
08/1/2013 16:19 | was thinking of paraphrasing that last 'step up' para but would not want to deprive people of the complete excellent interview... | 43rick | |
08/1/2013 14:49 | Yes, the link was posted a page or two back, thanks. Why is this last paragraph so exciting? " Digital Content Resource Insight owns all rights to its digital content and no part of these products may be copied stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form by any means, electronic, mechanical, recording or otherwise (except as permitted), without written permission from Resource Insight. By downloading this report you are agreeing to our Terms & Conditions, which can be found on our website: " | arf dysg |
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