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TEN Tengri

1.125
0.00 (0.00%)
17 Dec 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Tengri Investors - TEN

Tengri Investors - TEN

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Tengri TEN London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 1.125 00:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
1.125 1.125
more quote information »

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 11/2/2023 09:03 by misca2
Tenaris S.A. (TS) Stock Moves -0.75%: What You Should Know

February 09, 2023 — 05:45 pm EST

Written by Zacks Equity Research for Zacks ->



In the latest trading session, Tenaris S.A. (TS) closed at $33.26, marking a -0.75% move from the previous day. This move was narrower than the S&P 500's daily loss of 0.88%. Elsewhere, the Dow lost 0.73%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq lost 4.59%.

Prior to today's trading, shares of the company had lost 2.98% over the past month.

This has lagged the Industrial Products sector's gain of 3.63% and the S&P 500's gain of 5.83% in that time.

Tenaris S.A. will be looking to display strength as it nears its next earnings release.

In that report, analysts expect Tenaris S.A. to post earnings of $1.38 per share.


This would mark year-over-year growth of 119.05%. Our most recent consensus estimate is calling for quarterly revenue of $3.6 billion, up 74.87% from the year-ago period.

Any recent changes to analyst estimates for Tenaris S.A. should also be noted by investors.

These revisions typically reflect the latest short-term business trends, which can change frequently.

As a result, we can interpret positive estimate revisions as a good sign for the company's business outlook.

Our research shows that these estimate changes are directly correlated with near-term stock prices.

Investors can capitalize on this by using the Zacks Rank. This model considers these estimate changes and provides a simple, actionable rating system.

The Zacks Rank system ranges from #1 (Strong Buy) to #5 (Strong Sell). It has a remarkable, outside-audited track record of success, with #1 stocks delivering an average annual return of +25% since 1988.

The Zacks Consensus EPS estimate has moved 2.7% higher within the past month.

Tenaris S.A. is currently a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).

Looking at its valuation, Tenaris S.A. is holding a Forward P/E ratio of 6.3. This represents a discount compared to its industry's average Forward P/E of 14.31.

We can also see that TS currently has a PEG ratio of 0.28.

This popular metric is similar to the widely-known P/E ratio, with the difference being that the PEG ratio also takes into account the company's expected earnings growth rate.

The Steel - Pipe and Tube was holding an average PEG ratio of 1.69 at yesterday's closing price.

The Steel - Pipe and Tube industry is part of the Industrial Products sector. This industry currently has a Zacks Industry Rank of 4, which puts it in the top 2% of all 250+ industries.

The Zacks Industry Rank gauges the strength of our industry groups by measuring the average Zacks Rank of the individual stocks within the groups. Our research shows that the top 50% rated industries outperform the bottom half by a factor of 2 to 1.
Posted at 28/11/2016 13:24 by bckttsim
TEN12.1% of company shares only on the market.RTO any minute now .Every big investor paid 5p for their shares.Altogether, what does that tell you.Watch this space.
Posted at 20/2/2015 11:36 by swizz
Media presentation in relation to the latest drilling results.....GL S
Posted at 20/2/2015 11:11 by swizz
w5, not that I have picked up on, news and research around these guys is fairly scant, that said John Levings since his appointment does appear to be raising the profile, below is an article from a few weeks back when he was interviewed by Minsite and I am expecting further interviews to be circuited in the days ahead, on the back of yesterday's drilling update........GL S



Tengri Resources Establishes A Serious Copper-Gold Footprint In Kyrgyzstan


Mining fleet at Taldybulak



By Alastair Ford

There’s been a fair old shuffling of the decks lately as far as development assets are concerned, and outlying frontier countries like Kyrgyzstan have been at the forefront of that dynamic.

It’s not that anyone doubts that the country has the resources. Quite the contrary. Kyrgyzstan lies slap bang in the middle of the famous Tien Shan Gold Belt, host to some of the largest gold mines in the world, including Kumtor in Kyrgyzstan itself, weighing in with a hefty 18 million ounces of gold, and Murntau across the border in Uzbekistan, which boasts a whopping 110 million ounces.

Prospectivity then, is not the issue. Rather we are talking about where best companies think they can get bang for their buck. In an environment where gold is no longer pushing north to US$2,000 per ounce, and in which the copper price is falling, such questions assume an even greater urgency.

Gold Fields for one has answered them by pulling out of several of its more far flung ventures. And it’s not alone. Where Gold Fields has pulled out Kyrgyzstan, AngloGold has pulled out Ethiopia and Newmont has been wavering in Peru.

But one man’s exit is another man’s entrance, and in the case of Kyrgyzstan Gold Fields’s departure has provided a golden opportunity for Tengri Resources.

Tengri now controls the old Gold Fields assets in Kyrgyzstan following a succession of transactions involving the once-listed but now private Robust Resources, which is Tengri’s major shareholder. Robust initially took over the Gold Fields assets for just US$5 million, and then flipped them into Tengri alongside some other Kyrgyz assets in a deal that was worth – on paper at least – £27 million.

Along the way Tengri and Robust have had to establish a fairly wide-ranging set of social programmes, as both Gold Fields, and Kentor, which sold Robust the Andash project, encountered significant and vocal opposition to the idea of mining.

For now though, with the change of ownership, that all appears to have died down. Initially, Tengri focussed on Andash but then, when the Gold Fields properties came into the company, the focus switched.

“Andash is a medium-sized, fairly high grade porphyry”, says Tengri’s Non-Executive Director John Levings. “But Taldybulak is ten times the size of Andash, even though it’s a lower grade deposit.”

During the summer the company conducted a significant amount of drilling on Taldybulak, and is now planning to move onto a feasibility study next year. The idea, says John Levings, is to build an open pit with a gravity circuit to take advantage of significant quantities of free gold.

The capital requirement is likely to come in at somewhere between US$50 million and US$100 million, depending on the results of the feasibility and how exactly the mine plan for the existing resource of 6.7 million ounces of gold and 1.67 million pounds of copper develops.

“In the top 200 metres there’s a million ounces of gold”, says John. “That will be the production total. Whether it’s all in phase one is to be determined.”

But if Taldybulak can be brought into production there will be knock-on benefits for Andash too, which would then be able to piggyback off the Taldybulak infrastructure 20 kilometres away. That would please the villagers near Andash, worried about having a tailings dump in their back yards.

With the local issues largely dealt with, John is confident that Tengri can proceed towards the construction phase. That’s a bold claim to make in the current uncertain climate, but Tengri has an ace up its sleeve.

“We do have a strategic investor with deep pockets”, says John. “With that knowledge we know this project will succeed.” The investor in question is the Salim Group, Indonesia’s largest multinational conglomerate whose business interests include a mining investment vehicle. Salim holds its interest through a 40 per cent stake in Robust, which in turn owns 87 per cent of Tengri. For what it’s worth, Gold Fields also still owns a small percentage.

What it all means is that John’s funding worries are not as acute as those of some of his peers. “There’ll be a small raising in March”, he says. “And then a larger one later in the year. Because I think this project will go at current prices.”
Posted at 05/1/2015 18:35 by guycep
Investor presentation from last month:

hxxp://www.tengriresources.co.uk/cms/data/files/investors%20and%20media/presentation/141203_Mines-Money-Presentation.pdf
Posted at 16/8/2014 19:25 by hedgehog 100
"What 10-Baggers (and 100-Baggers) Look Like

Jeff Clark, Senior Precious Metals Analyst

Now that it appears clear the bottom is in for gold, it's time to stop fretting about how low prices will drop and how long the correction will last-and start looking at how high they'll go and when they'll get there.

When viewing the gold market from a historical perspective, one thing that's clear is that the junior mining stocks tend to fluctuate between extreme boom and bust cycles. As a group, they'll double in price, then crash by 75%... then double or triple or even quadruple again, only to crash 90%. Boom, bust, repeat.

Given that we just completed a major bust cycle-and not just any bust cycle, but one of the harshest on record, according to many veteran insiders-the setup for a major rally in gold stocks is right in front of us.

This may sound sensationalistic, but based on past historical patterns and where we think gold prices are headed, the odds are high that, on average, gold producers will trade in the $200 per share range before the next cycle is over. With most of them currently trading between $20 and $40, the returns could be stupendous. And the percentage returns of the typical junior will be greater by an order of magnitude, providing life-changing gains to smart investors.

What you're about to see are historical returns of both producers and juniors during three separate boom cycles. These are factual returns; they are not hypothetical. And if you accept the fact that this market moves in cycles, you know it's about to happen again. ...

How to Capitalize on This Cycle

History shows that precious metals stocks move in cycles. We've now completed a major bust cycle and, we believe, are on the cusp of a tremendous boom. The only way to make the kind of money outlined above is to buy before the boom is in full swing. That's now. For most readers, this is literally a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. ...

March 7, 2014 1:49pm"
Posted at 12/8/2014 17:40 by hedgehog 100
MEN also more than five-bagged from its consolidation-adjusted low of below 9p last summer.

An investor from that price could have sold a third of his holding, taking out his initial investment and a tidy profit as well, with his remaining holding in for free.

The rise could also have continued if MEN had got the oil and gas properties that it was pursuing ... perhaps they went to ZOL instead? -

Mentum, A new start - Oil and Gas properties pursued........ (MEN)


ZOLTAV RESOURCES - From Russia With Love (ZOL)
Posted at 27/12/2001 17:36 by modo
Abbo (post 106)

Have to agree on DIR. The risk is the Feb 2003 bank loan repayment - however, there are a lot of things that can happen between now and then. The share is sitting at 6p - well below the year high. Was recently tipped in Investors Weekly, and if the company starts to announce figures to accompany the deals that have been done, then this stock could rocket!

(I hope so anyway, as I am in at 5.75p)

Good luck to all!

Modo
Posted at 26/12/2001 17:38 by news
BigT20-
1) If warrants are issued at a premium, OF COURSE the holder will only convert when they're in the money.....at which point I'm also in the money! So saying this is a negative is nonsense It simply doesn't matter if they are a little dillutive when they're exercised as this implies that the share price will rise above the exercise price.....which doesn't bother me! You're also wrong to say that cash on the BS doesn't matter....It does if the company can make a return on it!
2) As I already pointed out to you, I realise the effect warrants have on EPS when exercised...But you give me an example of a company that's had warrants exercised all at once equal to or greater than 20% of the market cap......As I've already pointed out, this will not happen unless there is a ready market for the shares....Which will only be possible if the company progresses significantly from where it is today. Honestly, I've explained my veiw, and it comes down to valuing the company INCLUSIVE of any expected future dillution..I have done this above and demonstrated that the ONLY dillution we need worry about is the warrants ALREADY in issue at 5p....These, I accept, are very dillutive..
What you don't appreciate is that when you issue new shares, it is for the one and only reason of INCREASING EARNINGS. BR+JW will not want to exercise their warrants until a second fundraising has been completed that brings in investors at a higher price. They MUST stabalise the company before converting bucket loads of warrants. To do this they will seek to issue shares at the highest possible price, and I'm sure lots of deeply out-of-the-money warrants will help get the issue away OK! Once there's more money in the bank with the operational stability this brings, THEN they'll tentatively exercise a few warrants here and there...
Let me explain the two fold benefit of having more cash. A) Projects undertaken are in almost direct proportion to the company's cash resources. Up the balance, and you also increase the business volumes. B) It's already been said that the company will be extended credit by its UK suppliers once it is seen to be operationaly stable and have a decent cash reserve...thus for the equipment only contracts, business can be grown at almost NO extra cost..
This leaves us with a company capitalised at £10m, with over £2m cash, and a MASSIVE proven market which provides fat margins and lots of repeat business. Current projections of £500k (2002) and £1m (2003) don't assume new funds and they are already exceeding these targets. Privately I think they could smash 2002's forecast with just one or two major contracts (which IMO they are in a position to win). Look around at similar investments and this looks cheap.
Look, this is a risky investment, and all the warrants issued reflect the fact that the owners expect the business to be grown very quickly with NEW MONEY - NOT THEIRS!....With these warrants they ensure control in the foreseeable future, and new investors will have be convinced that the opportunity is suitably huge that they can tolerate the warrant issue. ALL they will look at is the expected fully-dilluted EPS in five years time, which IMO could make a mockery of the £10m market cap I outlined above. They could be EARNING £10m in five years..
Posted at 25/12/2001 02:22 by johndee
I'm pleased that many others see the potential in BATM Adv.Com(BVC). Also of course its good to be reminded of BILLAM(big buys today by small investors-2 @ 500,000).They were 2 pence soon after they reinvented themselves, and it won't take much to reach that price in the next four months.

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