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VRS Versarien Plc

0.0675
0.001 (1.50%)
26 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Versarien Plc LSE:VRS London Ordinary Share GB00B8YZTJ80 ORD 0.01P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.001 1.50% 0.0675 0.065 0.07 0.07 0.065 0.07 202,539,290 16:35:03
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Chemicals & Chem Preps, Nec 5.45M -13.53M -0.0091 -0.08 989.63k
Versarien Plc is listed in the Chemicals & Chem Preps sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker VRS. The last closing price for Versarien was 0.07p. Over the last year, Versarien shares have traded in a share price range of 0.058p to 1.90p.

Versarien currently has 1,488,169,507 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Versarien is £989,632.72 . Versarien has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -0.08.

Versarien Share Discussion Threads

Showing 92401 to 92423 of 204650 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
25/4/2019
07:05
Dafad
How odd I have just been researching Gnanomat and their progress ect prior to your post .
Looks like they are busy behind the scenes .
Ff

forestfred
25/4/2019
07:05
Nice one DAFAD

Patent granted to Gnanomat
por Gnanomat | Abr 10, 2019 | News & Media, Uncategorized
Gnanomat S.L. («GNA») has been awarded a patent by the Oficina Española de Patentes y Marcas, the Spanish patent office, covering a method of obtaining nanomaterials composed of carbonaceous material (e.g. graphene) and metallic oxides.
The patent covers a key element of this production process, allowing GNA to combine materials such as Versarien’s graphene with metallic oxides in a liquid medium at moderate pressures and temperatures. These compounds can be produced in industrial quantities and the patented process allows the physical and chemical properties of the nanomaterials to be fixed by controlling the synthesis parameters.
It is the intention of GNA to extend this patent to cover territories including, amongst others, further European countries, the USA, Canada, China, Korea, Japan and India.


EDIT: See comments below re date

grabster
25/4/2019
06:37
Not sure if this patent for Gnanomat has been posted
dafad
24/4/2019
22:19
The debates make me smile. It's great to see the conjuring up of potentially false information churned around until it becomes a belief in the minds of some.

One line stood out

'An announcement of a meaningful order would be a significant impetus to the share price at this time.'


That makes buying shares when everyone else is a difficult task.

Personally I think the likes of Aecom (and others) when it fully evolves means tonnes of the stuff, not grams or kgs and not one project either.

superg1
24/4/2019
21:35
Have been a little busy for a few days constructing a play area for my grandchildren, a Plum Woodland adventure treehouse, swing, slide etc and just finished laying down 500Kg of green rubber chippings. Job done!

I was due to finish yesterday, but like some Versarien customers, the M.D. (wife) decided she wanted in a slightly different position about 1.5 metres away. A couple of friends helped to man handle it, however if proved to be unstable in that place.

I must admit, we did have a few words.

So this morning we moved it back to near where it was, screwed tines to the legs and concreted it in place.

Even the best customers can make changes to products, in some cases it can be due to additional applications being discovered, so the projects increase in size.
I have a feeling the same is happening with some Versarien customers.

Share price has has dipped a little, but I suspect that we will receive an rns when we least expect it. Then there will be a scramble to buy.

Still very confident.

rogerbridge
24/4/2019
20:14
Rockraven - I should of put my sentiment across in the way that you did. I agree entirely. Anyone that suggests they don't agree with that is most likely fooling themselves.
billwave
24/4/2019
19:59
We might just become part of history folks ?
Many have made more than they initially expected and are still here ....with big dreams !

It’s Certainly possible ?
Ff

forestfred
24/4/2019
19:47
May not have been a good day if all you were looking at was a small shot in time on the share price of a great emerging British company....
woodpeckers
24/4/2019
19:42
Yawn, .....Twitter, excuses, and downward pointing charts with red numbers.Not a good day.
festario
24/4/2019
19:32
21 waterway avenue was the tweet location. Not sure if that is Patrick's new office?
clint fleecewood
24/4/2019
19:08
Re Patrick’s pic - I think the draft Collaboration Agreement on the laptop bears the 2-Dtech logo and I’m sure I’ve seen the guy with the plaster on a VRS-related photo or video somewhere recently. The other guy featured (as a ‘potential client’) in a photo tweeted by Patrick on 5 April.
graphenejen
24/4/2019
18:54
Take a minute food for thought .

Just read the Rns again folks !!

Look at the journey and story so far .

Governments involved large globals too !

That in itself is amazing and not easy doors to open .

Show me any company with such amazing potential supported by a great CEO and team that are aligned with their share holders .

A tall order indeed .
Nothing more to add just basic stuff
Atb
Ff

forestfred
24/4/2019
18:48
Yep, couldn't quite make out the name on the business card!
cheek212
24/4/2019
18:38
He is a tease, did you manage to zoom in on his lap top?
66sequoia
24/4/2019
18:11
A picture of what? Poop rolling downhill?
germanicus
24/4/2019
18:03
Our man in the US has just posted a nice picture on Twitter.
cheek212
24/4/2019
18:00
I've stood at the bottom of that hill too many times - always poop around, just the depth that varies.. ;-)
whiteslice
24/4/2019
17:58
...and there was I, thinking that I was lying in a bed of clover!
Thanks whiteslice 😂

woodpeckers
24/4/2019
17:53
Very simplistic I know but delays to contracts are of no consequence to government (5 year mindset at best), little consequence to major clients - they usually get handover eventually , part of day-to-day business for main contractors - they love delay caused by others as they can cover their own inefficiencies but potentially catastrophic to SMEs - cash is king, no contract no pay day.
The higher up the food chain you are the less you worry about what's going on at the bottom or to put it another way - poop always rolls downhill.
Rant over - best ws.

whiteslice
24/4/2019
17:48
I have to say, I agree. I appreciate Neill wants to keep us as informed as he can but giving timelines has proven to be a mistake.
Wish he hadn't given the AGM as an approximate date to aim for for conclusion of BIGT...
Things will happen as soon as the BOD can make them happen and we all have to be big boys & girls and just accept that.
As I said earlier though, I don't see anyone coming up in the rear view mirror so all good.

woodpeckers
24/4/2019
17:41
Whenever an indicated timeframe expires (like the 2019/Q1 in which VRS and Aecom were expected to announce summat) NR finds himself having to respond to queries about the non-occurrence - 'beyond our control'... 'these things take time/often overrun' and it allows detractors to repeat 'another missed target' etc.

The delays might not be NR's fault - but the negative impact IS his fault. This has happened often enough for NR to have surely learned that a more cautious or flexible choice of wording would avoid the complaints. He chose to name Q1 as the timeframe for further Aecom/VRS news; he didn't have to do that - he could have said summat like "in the next few months" in which case critics would have less ammunition. And he keeps doing it!

I know he points out that "expect" doesn't mean promise. But it does mean expect - and life would be so much easier for loyal shareholders if he stopped giving critics ammunition by setting specific dates when there is no need to have done so!

rockraven
24/4/2019
17:12
The thing to remember is that the Brexit problem, if affecting us, will be affecting everyone else in the same way.
I believe that we are considerably more advanced than other graphene companies in our talks with global companies or they would have been shouting it from the rooftops if they had any collaborations of a similar calibre.
So frustrating as it is, and I bet Neill feels it even more than us, it is simply a matter of patience.

woodpeckers
24/4/2019
17:11
Some more on biam :) graphene included in 5 year plan it says. Then you see relevance of bigt and likely bgiti. Excited to see how this develops. Great positioning by neill and co. Aimo. Best ellis

25 July 2016

"Graphene partnership could deliver lighter planes."

Newsfacts:

'The strength, thinness and conductivity of graphene are of great potential to aviation.
Long-term partnership could attract UK aviation firms.'

A major Chinese investment in graphene research plans to deliver lighter, better performing aircraft and high-speed trains.

Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials (BIAM) and the National Graphene Institute (NGI) at The University of Manchester will carry out a five-year collaborative research project.

Research will focus on composites with enhanced performance in the field of mechanical, electric conductive and thermal conductive behaviour, as well as the compatibility of graphene and the matrix materials. In aerospace this might lead to applications of graphene in different materials and components, with weight saving accompanied by better performance.

As well as aircraft, the research could have an impact on high-speed trains and industrial equipment to replace traditional materials.

The deal was announced today on the opening morning of the European Science Open Forum in Manchester by Prof Robert Young, who leads the research project at The University of Manchester.

Speaking at a session called ’Science and Aviation’, organised in partnership with Manchester Airport and Hainan Airlines, Professor Young outlined how graphene could revolutionise the planes and trains of the future.

The announcement is being delivered in parallel to a senior delegation from Manchester – including one of the Nobel-prize winning scientists who isolated graphene – being in Beijing to promote the city and as world-leading destination for inward investment and tourism.

Graphene has been included in the latest Chinese five-year plan and the country is starting to develop their domestic civil aerospace industry and expect to improve their expertise on materials.

The project, which will run until 2020, will involve joint research on graphene projects, strengthening of the ties in graphene technology and the exchange of personnel between Beijing and Manchester.

The partnership is an extension of a project started last year, which is looking at creating graphene composites with metals such as aluminium. The success of the partnership led to this much wider, extended project.

It is also expected that other UK companies, particularly in aerospace, may become directly involved as the projects progress.

Dr Shaojiu Yan, the principal investigator of graphene projects from BIAM, said: ”The relationship between BIAM and The University of Manchester warms up quickly.

“We had a very good communication on the first collaborative project. Now a long term partnership would benefit us to broaden the research area on graphene materials, to enhance the collaborative research, as well as to exchange experience and expertise on graphene.”

Professor Young said: “BIAM have a rapidly developing research programme on graphene composites and we are looking forward to pooling our expertise with them to facilitate the use of these materials in aerospace applications”.

Sir Richard Leese, leader of Manchester City Council, said: "It is firmly established that Manchester has many distinctive strengths which make the city - and help make the North of England as a whole - competitive on the international stage.

"This partnership with the Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials will not only go a long way towards finding hugely significant commercial applications for graphene research, it will further strengthen ties between Manchester and China - ties which are ever more important as China emerges as a key player in the global economy. It is another vote of confidence in Manchester.”

ellissj
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