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SRB Serabi Gold Plc

70.50
0.00 (0.00%)
24 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Serabi Gold Plc LSE:SRB London Ordinary Share GB00BG5NDX91 ORD 10P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 70.50 70.00 71.00 70.50 70.00 70.50 126,965 08:00:15
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Gold Ores 63.71M 1.14M 0.0150 47.00 53.39M
Serabi Gold Plc is listed in the Gold Ores sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SRB. The last closing price for Serabi Gold was 70.50p. Over the last year, Serabi Gold shares have traded in a share price range of 21.25p to 72.00p.

Serabi Gold currently has 75,734,551 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Serabi Gold is £53.39 million. Serabi Gold has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 47.00.

Serabi Gold Share Discussion Threads

Showing 11451 to 11472 of 22650 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
24/4/2020
10:03
Remember 60p?

Sell in May and go away, production halt and back to 60p in the summer?

trader365
24/4/2020
09:50
TradeWrong - the virus doesn't affect Markets - remember you moron
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
09:38
Kenny the clown, Im flattered, you are obsessed with me. Virus cases are doubling every month in Brazil, huge risk of a SRB production halt in the next couple of months
trader365
24/4/2020
08:44
Should be way through a quid on this certainty IMO...DYOR and POG remaining high ....DYOR
qs99
24/4/2020
08:41
Totally agree. The price is too low for Palito alone. Add Coringa and then exploration. It's a misnomer.
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
08:36
Hard to believe this won't see new highs very soon. Really still very excited by this share and is hard to believe the market cap at the moment is still only around £50mm.
ppvn
24/4/2020
08:33
(Don't encourage the clown back though)
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
08:33
Printing cash at the moment so let’s hope new efficiencies can produce the ounces
kennyp52
24/4/2020
08:28
Spot on Kenny
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
08:26
🤷‍a94;️ What’s all the fuss ? Everyone with half a brain , a calculator and some balls can see the future value in this one . Excludes that trader365 guy then 😂
kennyp52
24/4/2020
08:23
People don't dive in because buying a sizable chunk costs more than offer, however, at this MCAP isn't gunna get taken over. This will gap to 150 soon. Who cares if you buy at 85 when offer is 83.
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
07:43
Hi PPVN; yes, great RNS, it can now play out with this flexible arrangement through the year-end (clause 4). We will be able to see the PoG/cash generation trajectory and thus the fundability of the Coringa M&E Capex ($20m - $25m?) and the resumed exploration around SC. .Once the Security Package has passed to Greenstone one wonders about if/when a New Loan is feasible/required to part fund the above Capex? If PoG remains at current levels my hunch is that no new loan will be required - need to do some sums!.A ray of sunshine in a troubled world, tightfist
tightfist
24/4/2020
07:28
Reverse the calc, if we clear US$600 / ounce we will generate cash equal to our MCAP if output is 90,000 ounces. Hence after one years production we'd have US$54M cash - today's MCAP. Hence be worth double MCAP. Another year later, triple. This excludes exploration success. We WILL NOT stay at these levels for long. I see adjustment to near 200p soon.
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
07:18
We are in a rock solid position. Having our cake and eating it. 100,000 / year a when, not if. This is massively under valued. Crazy crazy stupid mad price......gold rising to boot. Our profits in two years will be twice our MCAP now. It's truly ridiculous.
borisjohnsonshair
24/4/2020
07:08
Seems you got your wish, tightfist! Good RNS.
ppvn
23/4/2020
20:10
👍👍👍👍 8077;
ironstorm
23/4/2020
16:57
Yesterday the price of gold reach an all time high in both GBP and BRL.

In BRL the price of gold is up by nearly 90% over the past year - 85% of SRB costs are in local BRLs.

loganair
23/4/2020
15:43
Agreed but it's not too complicated to come true
borisjohnsonshair
23/4/2020
15:22
BJ. And I thought I was bullish in my suggested 2 year forward price @ circa £5 lol.
Whilst I agree if every single duck possible got in our line £15 in 5 years is possible but as we have said before there will undoubtedly be hurdles and pitfalls along the rocky road

millwallfan
23/4/2020
14:21
Assuming very disappointing exploration results. Highly unlikely.
borisjohnsonshair
23/4/2020
14:20
If this is correct in two years if we produce 100,000 with AISC of US950, will make US$205M a year! Easy US1B company or 1,500p a share.
borisjohnsonshair
23/4/2020
12:33
MoneyWeek - Will gold really hit $3,000 an ounce in the next 18 months?

Bank of America is predicting that the gold price will hit an all-time high of $3,000 an ounce in the next year and half. John Stepek looks at just how likely that is.

Gold is set to hit $3,000 an ounce in the next 18 months. That’s about 50% more than its all-time high, set back in 2011. (It’s at about $1,700 an ounce just now).

You might be tempted to dismiss this as yet another hopeful-yet-hallucinatory outburst from the bulletin boards of one of the internet’s dedicated gold websites. But it’s not. This is a call from a major investment bank – Bank of America.

Are they right? And what does it say about where we are in gold’s current bull market?

A punchy call on gold prices:

Earlier this week, a team of commodity analysts at Bank of America, led by Francisco Blanch and Michael Widmer, put out a 15-page report discussing the reasons why they think that gold is set to hit $3,000 an ounce in the next 18 months.

The headline of the report sums up their rationale: “The Fed can’t print gold”. But let’s elaborate on that a bit.

First things first, the global economy has taken a massive hit from Covid-19 and the measures to contain it. Most countries with any sort of statistical competence or honesty are going to register double-digit collapses in GDP for one or more quarters.

That’s an extraordinary collapse, which requires an extraordinary response. And mostly, that’s what we’ve seen.

Governments and central banks are largely operating in tandem now. Governments are spending a lot of money to try to keep the economy in suspended animation, rather than in total collapse – you can’t force economies to close down without offering some sort of compensation for the people most affected by that.

(The efficacy of the measures and the question of whether the money is getting to where it needs to go is a separate issue, worth looking at, but it’s not relevant to today, so we’ll open that can of worms another day.)

With spending exploding at a time when tax revenues are going to collapse, someone’s going to need to pay for that. That’s what central banks are doing.

We can scamper merrily around the idea of whether this is “true” debt monetisation or temporary liquidity provision (which does matter, but only to an extent, and again we’ll park it for another day) – but in practice, central banks are pulling money out of nowhere to give to governments to spend.

So the straightforward argument is this: central banks will print money. Their currencies will be devalued as a result (the more you print, the less each bit is worth). But no one can print gold. That’s your bull case.

What might ruin gold’s party?

I’m not going to lie, when I see big, bold calls like this, I instinctively want to take the other side of the trade.

Gold has already done very well this year. As the BoA team points out, despite a sharp drop in March, in the year to mid-April, gold had returned more than 10%, a return only beaten by 30-year US government bonds and the highest-quality tech stocks.

So while I agree with the arguments for higher gold, what might ruin the bullish argument? The BoA report nods to the strong US dollar, a plunge in jewellery demand in India and China, and also “reduced financial market volatility”.

It’s this latter that I’d be paying the most attention to right now. Gold is a “risk-off̶1; asset. Ultimately, investors buy it when they’re worried that nothing else is going to hang on to its value.

That can happen when the financial system is at risk of collapse, which has been driven mostly by deflationary pressures in recent decades. And it could also happen if and when inflation takes off to the point where financial assets are at risk of losing their “real” (after-inflation) value rapidly and painfully.

But between those two extremes, there’s quite possibly a period in which it looks as though everything is getting back under control. At that point, do investors want to own gold or do they want to pile into equities?

I’m not saying for a minute that you should sell out of gold (we view it as a core holding in any portfolio). And in any case, I’m not sure we’ll get the “Goldilocks221; moment in this recovery.

This pandemic is going to have a lot of unanticipated consequences so regardless of how big a cushion central banks are trying to create, volatility is going to be higher than it has been in the past. (For more on this, listen to Merryn’s latest podcast with the excellent Alexander Chartres of Ruffer, right here.)

And in the longer run, there is one key factor that the BoA team also highlights, one that I just don’t think can be avoided. That’s the need for “financial repression”.

Why financial repression will drive gold higher:

What’s "financial repression"? It’s when governments across the globe try to hold real interest rates at as negative a level as they can get away with.

If you have cash savings in almost any bank account right now, you’ve already been experiencing it for a long time. Even if you’re earning 1% interest, that’s lower than the inflation rate. So the real value of your savings is being eroded, to the benefit of the person or entity that owes you this money (yes, savings in a bank account are basically a debt that the bank owes you).

Financial repression is all about paying off debt with devalued currency. In other words, it’s about a transfer of wealth from creditors to debtors. Or if you want to put it in a way that implies an entirely different power dynamic, it’s about taking money from savers to give to spenders.

So at the end of the day, I’m bullish on gold. I’m just trying to point out to the over-excitable that these things never go up in a straight line, and that there are plenty of good reasons why gold’s bullish run might be derailed for a short or even a lengthy period of time.

loganair
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