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SAND Sandvine Corp.

123.00
0.00 (0.00%)
26 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Sandvine Corp. SAND London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 123.00 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
123.00 123.00
more quote information »

Sandvine Corp. SAND Dividends History

No dividends issued between 27 Apr 2014 and 27 Apr 2024

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 15/2/2013 07:40 by b1ggles
Well, that was unexpected. What does the cancellation of the AIM listing mean for holders?

I know I can talk to Barclays about transferring my holding to the Canadian listing but, otherwise, what happens to someone who holds SAND on cancellation day - do they get paid out or will it be essential to sell before then?
Posted at 08/1/2013 15:44 by gymfit
uki,



No notes to the accounts. Doesnt seem to meet UK standards
Posted at 10/11/2011 07:55 by masurenguy
03 November 2011
Vox Telecom Selects Sandvine and Core2Africa For Usage Management Solution
South African subscribers to benefit from choice of service plans
Posted at 16/5/2011 10:29 by sandbank
mrx9000 - 16 May'11 - 01:03 - 107655 of 107669

NAKED TRADER SHARESCOPE FILTER - updated 16-05-11

I have compiled Robbie's general criteria together into a Sharescope filter.

I did the screener and it filtered them down to only 3 stocks, at time of testing these are
VTC (which he is a holder)
BQE (which he is a holder)
TTG (which he has held late in 2010)

Switching off the last result (PEG) produced another 10 stocks. There are
BHY (held in 2009)
GRG (held in 2008)
MTC (a current short of his)
OCN (held late 2010)
PRV (nice stock of his, still has a holding)
RNK (he has never bought before)
RPS (he has never bought before)
SVS (he has shorted this before)
TTG (held late 2010)
ZTF (helf late 2010)


Criteria:
- Mkt Cap compared to Pretax Profits - max of 15.
- Net Debt vs Pretax Profit - max of 3.
- No AIM companies (he does pickup the odd few in his SIPP though)
- Mkt Cap minimum of 10m and a maximum of 600m
- PE between 12-20
- Pays a dividend (would like to put criteria in to check for falling dividend but as far as I know Sharescope doesn't do this)
- Cashflow per share higher than EPS
- PEG under 1 (I have left this last as this is not a strict rule of his and switching if off you can see quite a few more of his stocks).
- Volume spikes, can incorporate a check on volume for x trading days to present quite easily however at present haven't incorporated this as the filter only gives us a few results

--
ShareScope filter file (550) - ASCII datamining filter

Warning: This is a formatted file and should only be modified with care.

FILTER _Naked Trader,1,0,0,39,16,compiled by MrX;
CRITERIA 22,0,2,0,65535,1.000000,1.000000,56834,56972,0,CapVsPreTax;
CRITERIA 22,0,2,0,65535,1.000000,1.000000,56834,56972,0,NetBorrowVsPreTax;
CRITERIA 11,0,2,0,65535,10.000000,600.000000,56323,56644,0,;
CRITERIA 3,3,2,0,65535,12.000000,20.000000,56323,56912,0,;
CRITERIA 12,1,2,0,65535,0.010000,995.000000,56323,56702,0,;
CRITERIA 22,0,2,0,65535,1.000000,145.000000,56834,56972,0,CashOverEPS;
CRITERIA 4,4,2,0,65535,0.000000,1.000000,56323,56874,0,;

--

Copy everything in between the -- lines, paste into wordpad and save as _Naked Trader.flt and then just goto sharescope and goto menu file/import/import a filter
OR download it from the sharescope data mining forum.

It utilises the Capitalisation vs Pre Tax Profits script and the Net Borrowing vs Pre Tax Profit (in fundamental columns) available here


It also utilises the Cashflow per share/EPS script (in technical analysis columns) available here


Download the 3 scripts and put them into
c:\sharescope\sharescript\columns
(for default install of sharescope) or download them from within sharescope.


NOTES:
The Script: Cash over EPS minimum should be 1 and the max to the max.
Posted at 12/2/2011 11:37 by sandbank
FRM MRX ON TNT THREAD 12-2-2011

JIM SLATER - ZULU PRINCIPLE

I came across this article from 2005.
www.companynews.co.uk/star/icnewsletter.pdf

It's investors chronicle share screening and on page 4 it lists Jim Slaters screener, so I have updated my old screener to this one in Sharescope.

--
ShareScope filter file (550) - ASCII datamining filter

Warning: This is a formatted file and should only be modified with care.

FILTER _Jim Slater Zulu,2,9,0,1,16,;
CRITERIA 3,1,2,0,65535,1.500000,20.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 4,1,2,0,65535,0.000000,0.750000,56323,56592,0,;
CRITERIA 5,4,2,0,65535,-100.000000,15.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 22,0,2,0,65535,0.000000,1700.000000,56323,56874,0,CashOverEPS;
CRITERIA 14,23,2,0,4,-8600.000000,50.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 16,1,2,321,65535,0.000000,100.000000,262145,56873,0,;
CRITERIA 14,14,2,0,4,12.000000,16000.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 20,20,2,21248,4,0.000000,1.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 11,0,2,0,65535,10.000000,1000.000000,56323,56592,0,;
CRITERIA 14,67,2,0,4,0.000000,10.000000,56323,56874,0,;
CRITERIA 13,2,2,0,13,0.010000,520.000000,56323,56874,0,;
--

Copy everything in between the -- lines, paste into wordpad and save as _Jim Slater Zulu.flt and then just goto sharescope and goto menu file/import/import a filter

It utilises the Cash over EPS script available here (in technical analysis columns)


Download the Cash over EPS script and put it into
c:\sharescope\sharescript\columns
(for default install of sharescope) or download it from within sharescope.

I did the screener on all shares which were 5158 of them and it filtered it down to 25 stocks. All the criterion are pure Slater. The Rank to Operating Margin criterion I have left on 0 (this is slaters profit margin above average or median to market) as I don't know what a above average figure to put in here is. Henry?

Also the bottom criterion for dividend is not essential but a positive dividend is Slaters preferred.

I have got all the investors chronicle screeners so I shall be going through them and doing ones for STAR and Petroski etc.
Posted at 24/3/2010 14:59 by shroder
What's your thoughts on SAND Cambium?
Posted at 25/7/2009 08:28 by grupo guitarlumber
Wall 'could stop desert spread'
By Jonathan Fildes
Technology reporter, BBC News, Oxford

A plan to build a 6,000km-long wall across the Sahara Desert to stop the spread of the desert has been outlined.

The barrier - formed by solidifying sand dunes - would stretch from Mauritania in the west of Africa to Djibouti in the east.

The plan was put forward by architect Magnus Larsson at the TED Global conference in Oxford.

A 2007 UN study described desertification as "the greatest environmental challenge of our times".

"The threat is desertification. My response is a sandstone wall made from solidified sand," said Mr Larsson, who describes himself as a dune architect.

The sand would be stabilised by flooding it with bacteria that can set it like concrete in a matter of hours.

North African nations have promoted the idea of planting trees to form a Great Green Belt to prevent the spread of the sand.

A similar proposal - known as the Green Wall of China - has also been proposed to stop the spread of the Gobi Desert.

Ballooning idea

In 2007, the UN issued a report that said that one third of the Earth's population - about two billion people - are potential victims of desertification.

" The idea is to stop the desert using the desert itself "
Magnus Larsson
It is concerned that the slow creep of the sands will displace people and put new strains on natural resources and societies.

Problem areas include the former Soviet republics in central Asia, China and sub-Saharan Africa.

"It affects about 140 countries," Mr Larsson told BBC News.

Mr Larsson showed pictures of a village called Gidan-Kara in Nigeria which had had to be moved because of the creep of the dunes. He said it was one of many examples.

The architect's proposed wall across the desert would be a complement to, rather than a replacement, of the Great Green Belt proposal.

"It would provide physical support for the trees," he said.

Crucially, he said, it would leave a barrier even if the trees were removed.

"People are so poor in these countries and these regions that they chop them down for firewood."

The wall would effectively be made by "freezing" the shifting sand dunes, turning them into sandstone.

"The idea is to stop the desert using the desert itself," he said.

The sand grains would be bound together using a bacterium called Bacillus pasteurii commonly found in wetlands.

"It is a microorganism which chemically produces calcite - a kind of natural cement."

Mr Larsson got the idea for using the bacteria from a team at the University of California Davis, which had been investigating its use for solidifying the ground in earthquake prone areas.

Mr Larsson envisages injecting the dunes with the bacteria on a massive scale or using a barrage of giant bacteria-filled balloons.

"We allow the dune to wash over this structure then we would pop the balloon," he told BBC News.

The scheme would also have advantages for nearby populations, he said. For example, it could be excavated he said to provide shade, shelter or as a structure to collect water.

However, Mr Larsson admitted that the scheme faced numerous practical problems.

"There are many details left to explore in this story: political, practical, ethical, financial. My design is fraught with many challenges," he said.

"However, it's a beginning, it's a vision; if nothing else I would like this scheme to initiate a discussion," he added.

TED Global is a conference dedicated to "ideas worth spreading". It runs from the 21 to 24 July in Oxford, UK.

Story from BBC NEWS:


Published: 2009/07/24 12:03:27 GMT
Posted at 29/8/2008 07:37 by sandbank
ow what? Technically, the global market drop since November qualifies as a bear market - down over 20%. I don't see a meaningful difference between down 19% and down 22% - but technically, this qualifies.

And yet, I've wrongly remained upbeat throughout. Since my long career began, I've anticipated the last three bear markets: 1987, 1990, and the long bear beginning in 2000. (My bear market calls are documented in my Forbes columns - 5 October 1987, 14 May 1999, and 6 March 2000.) This is the first I've missed. That doesn't lessen my disappointment.

Still, I remain confused. In over 36 years of investing professionally, I've never seen anything like this. Crashes, bears, bulls, corrections, and bubbles? Sure. Irrational euphoria? Definitely. I saw that easily in 2000. Yet this - folk are persistently, irrationally morose - is new to me. Investors, market pros, and journalists - all doggedly dour and dire.

The bull market didn't peak until last November and by then folks were already pessimistic. For most of 2007 and ever since the same old scare stories replay endlessly. Mortgages, financial meltdown, housing, autos. Over and over again. Not normal. Usually,
a sensational story causes a stir, then quickly loses power to sink shares. It gets replaced by the next and different sensational story. In investing, old news is no news. Yet, today it's basically the same stories as 19 months ago, recycled. There's little new!

Fact is, the world's in better shape than imagined and that's likely to continue. Folk think we're in recession. We're not! UK Q2 GDP just got revised down slightly to flat, but the UK is just 5% of the world economy. In America, recession has been long heralded, yet GDP growth actually accelerated the last two quarters - Q2 was a far better-than-expected 1.9% - and with inventories down far more than expected. Not blistering, but not recessionary. But even the US is too small - just 26% - what matters most is the world, and the world continues to grow. IMF projects 2008 world growth to be 4.1% this year, thanks to brisk emerging markets growth.

Slower global growth

We are in slower global growth mode. We have big pockets of strength and ones of weakness - everyone just fixates on the negatives, ignores the positives. Outside Financials, global earnings have beaten expectations. Stocks remain exceedingly cheap compared to bonds - even more so globally than in America or Britain - no-one notices! Globally, cash-based mergers continue near record pace - wouldn't happen in a real credit crisis. Cash-based transactions reduce stock supply. Add an IPO dearth, and stock supply is constricted globally. (Econ 101: Constricted supply leads to higher prices eventually.) Large firms are awash in cash. Consumers keep spending, despite headlines proclaiming their death. There are weak areas - always are - but these real positives are simply ignored.

Folk will bicker with me (always do) - but I still see this as a long, big correction. Technically, I'm wrong. Doesn't much matter - all that matters is what you do now. Volatility-weary folk want to bail on shares. Wrong move. Too late! Of the 10 bear markets since World War II, six dropped less than 30%. We're almost there! This is no replay of 2000-2002, 1973-1974, or 1968-1970. Those also had big global recessions - today, the world continues to grow. This is the recession-less bear.

Seems likely we're most of the way through - whether you think this is a massive correction or a smaller bear. When either ends, the initial share surge is fast and furious. Get out now, you risk missing it. You'll be whipsawed - in for the decline and out for the reward. Think you feel bad now? You'll feel much worse then. Patience pays. And so should these market-leading shares in the next 12 to 24 months:

Anglo American (AAL), an international, UK-listed mining giant run by the able Cynthia Carroll has 40% of the world's platinum market. It also produces iron ore, nonferrous base metals like nickel and zinc, industrial minerals like lime and also coal and diamonds. Unless there's a big, global recession, the firm will earn more than $2.60 a share this year, and the share, at 10 times that sum, is a rare, cheap, quality buy.

Oil's fallen lately, but I believe long-term, energy prices should trend up. Italy's giant Eni, is well positioned with massive reserves and broad diversification within the energy field. At less than eight times 2008 earnings and with a 6% dividend yield, this share allows investors to be patient.

Dutch firm CNH Global (CNH), listed in New York, makes farm equipment like tractors, balers and combines, as well as light-construction equipment like forklifts, backhoes and mini-excavators. In the latter category, strength overseas more than makes up for US housing weakness. CNH's brands include Case, New Holland, Kobelco and Steyr. It's cheap at 50% of annual revenue and nine times my estimate of 2008 earnings, which will be up.

Ken Fisher is founder and CEO of Fisher Investments.
Posted at 01/4/2008 17:33 by seanmiller
Sandvine Named Finalist
Date : 01/04/2008 @ 12:00
Source : RNS Non-Regulatory
Stock : Sandvine Corporation (SAND)
Quote : 88.5 5.0 (5.99%) @ 15:44
Posted at 14/2/2008 16:02 by andrbea
BARCELONA, SPAIN, Feb 11, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX News Network) --
Sandvine, (TSX: SVC)(AIM: SAND) a leading provider of intelligent broadband network solutions for DSL, Cable, FTTH, 3G wireless and WiMAX providers, today announced that it will demonstrate its powerful Policy and Charging Enforcement Function (PCEF) at Mobile World Congress 2008. Sandvine brings a wide range of policy-based solutions to enhance service delivery for mobile data providers. With three major wireless wins announced last month, Sandvine provides a robust 10-Gigabit Ethernet solution for handling large subscriber volumes in mobile networks.

"Worldwide consumer adoption of new mobile data services into work, home and play has advanced carrier rollouts of 3G / 3.5G and WiMAX networks to attract consumers with the same performance, quality and open Internet access of their residential broadband service. Sandvine provides the granular policy control to help wireless operators create innovative service plans, consistently deliver high-quality services and optimize the use of valuable radio spectrum and backhaul networks," said Tom Donnelly, Sandvine Executive Vice President, Marketing and Sales.

Sandvine's PCEF identifies subscribers and tracks detailed data application usage in real time. Mobile data providers can determine subscribers' usage quotas and notify subscribers via a captive portal that allows them to monitor usage and purchase additional quota. This functionality lets mobile data providers monitor and charge the subscriber for application usage, track historical usage and monitor the network for congestion, especially during peak hours.

Visit Sandvine in the Canadian pavilion, C58 Hall 2_1 and take a closer look at:

- Unprecedented visibility into application and subscriber traffic;

- Opportunities to promote mobile data usage and monetize traffic;

- Manage congestion and plan for growing capacity;

- A demonstration on real-time subscriber-centric policy enforcement and charging.

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