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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
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Starvest Plc | SVE | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
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11.70 | 11.70 |
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GENERAL FINANCIAL |
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Posted at 16/6/2024 14:06 by plasybryn join ARIANA RESOURCES PLC's Investor Q&A session TOMORROW at 12:00pm - Click below to register. #AAU ArianaResourcesJ |
Posted at 05/2/2024 22:41 by stu31 Silver One Expands Its Land Position to Cover Potential Porphyry Copper Systems and Areas of Silver Mineralization at Its Phoenix Silver Project, ArizonaDecember 19, 2023 Vancouver, BC, December 19, 2023; Silver One Resources Inc. (TSXV: SVE; OTCQX: SLVRF; FSE: BRK1 – (“Silver One” or the “Company” Greg Crowe, President and CEO of Silver One commented: “The staking of these new claims is an affirmation of the company’s commitment to seek and take advantage of opportunities to grow. We are not only continuing to explore the silver anomalies in the central and northern parts of the property, which includes the drill-permitted area covering the potentially very high-grade silver targets, but we are also expanding our land position around magnetic anomalies identified to date. The magnetic anomalies constitute promising copper targets in a region holding immense potential for porphyry copper systems. These anomalies, along with the select vein samples that returned high-grade copper values in the southern part of the Phoenix Silver project (see Figure 2) are strongly suggestive of a copper system at depth. Silver One is looking forward to fully exploring the property and to unlocking value for our investors.” Highlights: The Phoenix Silver property has expanded in size and scope to cover the original very high-grade silver vein targets and the more recently outlined areas of potential porphyry copper targets. The Project now covers 6,141 hectares (15,175 acres) along the northeastern extension of a 30+ km long system hosting past and current producing silver and copper mines. This belt is the focus of new exploration efforts by several companies to potentially outline new porphyry copper and silver related targets. Silver One is planning on drilling the potentially very high-grade silver targets, which are already permitted, in 2024. The Company also plans to conduct sampling and geophysical surveys to better outline potential porphyry copper targets in the southern part of the property. |
Posted at 14/11/2023 17:44 by plasybryn Will investors hold onto their GGP & AAU shares out of interest. Do investors feel adequately informed about the investment stories at both Co's? |
Posted at 27/10/2023 10:59 by bigglesbingham Good news for holders getting into Ariana at this price, so much positive news around corner with second mine up and running H1 2024 plus excellent exploration results at their license 17km north of hot maden which sold for 500m . Suggest investors look at recent presentations and rns from June this year. I'm heavily invested in Ariana and have direct exposure to Greatland too but research will answer any questions. |
Posted at 12/9/2022 08:43 by zedder Well if Newcrest's plan had been to buy out GGP on the cheap, the 2 RNSs this morning have almost certainly scuppered any chance of that happening.3 x Big Hitters appointed to the Board with options at 45% above the recent cash raise price of 8.2p.A major investment also at 8.2p with that investor having warrants at 10p.It all suggests GGP will head back to 12p+.And then the gold will start rolling in and GGP will pocket 30% of the profits. |
Posted at 18/7/2021 10:48 by jonny wilkinson Article from Telegraphnvestors urged to buy gold as inflation surges higher The precious metal is still the best inflation hedge – and it’s on sale By Sam Benstead 18 July 2021 • 5:00am Gold Gold is out of favour but still belongs in a portfolio Experts have urged investors to buy gold to protect their portfolios against a surge in inflation as the reopening of economies around the world unleashes pent-up demand. Investment banking giant Goldman Sachs has advised clients to snap up the precious metal, viewed as a bulwark against rising prices, while fund managers said investors needed an “insurance policy” for their portfolios. Inflation reached a 13-year high in America, the US Department of Labor reported last week, climbing to 5.4pc in June and shocking economists who had expected the pace of price rises to slow. In Britain, the consumer prices index measure of inflation hit 2.5pc in June, rising further above the Bank of England’s 2pc target. Gold trades at around $1,800 (£1,300) an ounce, but Mikhail Sprogis of Goldman Sachs said it should be worth at least $2,000 today – and more if central banks such as America’s Federal Reserve failed to react to a continued surge in inflation. ADVERTISING “It has the potential to rally significantly in the event that the global recovery is hampered or inflation picks up strongly and the Fed underreacts,” he said. “In this scenario, gold prices should benefit in the same way as they have done during prior periods of excessive inflation.” Gold is seen as a store of value when inflation rises, in contrast to currencies, which lose their value in real terms. John Chatfeild-Roberts of Jupiter, the investment firm, said: “If there is sustained inflation, gold will hold its value. “But gold has done well over the past 20 years, even when there has been no inflation. It also goes up when other investments go down – that’s why it is still important to own it to protect a portfolio.” Despite the rise in inflation this year, gold has so far performed poorly in 2021. It has fallen by 3.5pc in value while British and global stock markets have delivered double-digit returns. However, Catherine Doyle of Newton Investment Management said it should still form a central part of investors’ portfolios. “It’s a currency that cannot be manipulated by central banks, with limited supply and good inflation hedging properties,” she said. Gregory Perdon of Arbuthnot Latham, the wealth manager, said the gold price had suffered this year because investors had been selling bonds, sending their yields, which move in the opposite direction to prices, higher. “The key to the gold price over short periods is the yield on 10-year American government bonds,” he said. “When it rises, as has happened this year, investors sell gold.” Mr Perdon cautioned that he expected bonds to continue falling in value when central banks started to withdraw bond-buying stimulus efforts launched to limit the economic damage caused by the pandemic. The cryptocurrency Bitcoin has also sucked up some of the demand for gold this year, particularly among DIY investors, according to Ms Doyle, who dismissed its credentials as an alternative to the precious metal. “Bitcoin has no intrinsic value and regulators could clamp down on it,” she said. “Even if cryptocurrencies survive, it behaves more like a risky stock than a defensive investment, so we would not buy it as a portfolio stabiliser like gold.” Mr Sprogis agreed. “We think that cryptocurrencies are a long way off becoming a defensive long-term store of value,” he said. Ms Doyle downplayed the risk of inflation continuing to surge over the next 12 months, however. “We don’t expect there to be a long inflationary period because there are powerful deflationary forces at play, such as an ageing population and high debt burdens,” she said. The simplest way to invest in gold is to buy a fund rather than the metal directly. Peter Sleep of Seven Investment Management recommended the $13.6bn Invesco Physical Gold ETC, which costs 0.15pc a year and is backed by real gold. BlackRock Gold & General is another option. The £1.3bn fund invests in shares in gold-related companies, which tend to be more volatile than the price of the precious metal itself. It costs 1.18pc a year. Similarly, the £720m Ruffer Gold fund invests in gold mining companies and charges a fee of 1.25pc per year. |
Posted at 22/6/2021 15:22 by comicartwork99 Shares on BloombergHargreaves L 840,461,132 Interactive investor 388,677,830 Halifax 285,880,618 Van Eck 231,211,201 Barclays 141,100,000 AJ Bell q 140,062,143 Calllum Baxter 99,572,951 Jarvis 73,790,000 Balckrock 80,690,000 Startvest 81,300,000 HSBC 80,216,275 Equinity Shraveiw 76,577,685 IG Markest 63,728,898 Royal Bak of Canada 61,775,550 Hedddle 35,500,000 Trading 212 34,840,559 Hawken AR 29,093,873 Freetrade 28,272,966 Sade Dj 27,240,049 Lothian Pension Fund 25,500,000 Fil Liited 23,736,420 UBS AG 23,299,462 Muller Robert 21,065,599 Paul Spokes 20,434,762 Charles Stanley Goup 20,298,652 |
Posted at 29/1/2021 07:35 by rose_by_another_name Stig- GGP is not a miner and is not going to be.They will be selling their remaining stake in Havieron to the miner who is already a major partner and has a running processing plant nearby. So it won't be two years before the payoff. This is more like the Canadian explorer that found the huge Fruta del Norte deposit in Ecuador and was bought out for a billion dollars by a miner, who then failed to mine it because of impossible demands by the Ecuador government. The investors in the explorer made out. Not intended as advice, just my musings. |
Posted at 30/11/2020 17:06 by plasybryn I would be interested to know how investors see Starvest paying out on its promise? Does it mean waiting for a GGP take-over to realise cash? If that is the case, that surely isn't going to happen any time soon.Any thoughts please? |
Posted at 19/6/2020 18:47 by zooman P, I'm hoping that we don't see a repeat of 2008 after they introduced quantitative easing. Granted different circumstances. Below is a cut and paste overview.Lets hope we don't get a repeat albeit we still have the economic effects to kick in. Initially, after the financial crisis of 2008, quantitativ |
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