Buying shares?

EVO interestingly poised has a history of the occasional surge and Lenigas has demonstrated his promotional credentials recently

not sure if they need a placing but would not expect much of a discount from here

Lenigas might try to promote it and then place so scope for fast money traders

big.chart
 
XTR has reacted quite well to that placing at 0.15

might be one where it is better to travel than arrive so news needs to be watched closely
 
new ISA season so thinking about what to use my new allowance on

REH looks an interesting chart set up waiting on planning permission for a 80MW wind farm which could net them a huge windfall for a microcap

big.chart


been mentioned before when it had a one day run of multibagging

moving today
 
I don't believe in anything this [MENTION=107620]s28[/MENTION] says, I forgot his real name but he was ramping that PHE (Powerhouse Energy Group) to no ends and we all saw how that turned out, made me lose 2K.
 
[MENTION=138908]Orbis[/MENTION] - I find your comment quite rude. The poster s28 has made a lot of people heaps of money. His views on stocks are only intended as educational and not meant to be taken as hot tips. You are responsible for your own investment decisions. I usually don't post on here but cannot stand such sore loser remarks. If it makes you feel better S28 loses money on some of his stock picks too. Rant over.
 
[MENTION=138908]Orbis[/MENTION] - I find your comment quite rude. The poster s28 has made a lot of people heaps of money. His views on stocks are only intended as educational and not meant to be taken as hot tips. You are responsible for your own investment decisions. I usually don't post on here but cannot stand such sore loser remarks. If it makes you feel better S28 loses money on some of his stock picks too. Rant over.

Which is why I fell for that trap, because I read through many comments and loads of people were praising him i.e. Nokia. But you must understand from my point of view, when someone ramps shares like PHE and it causes you to lose money because of the trust you placed in them, it can leave a bitter taste in the mouth.
 
In this game you make money, and you lose money sometimes. Did it ever occur to you that maybe you should research a company for yourself. I'm sorry if this comes across as harsh but the only person you have to blame is yourself. I can list stocks that have multi bagged
 
In this game you make money, and you lose money sometimes. Did it ever occur to you that maybe you should research a company for yourself. I'm sorry if this comes across as harsh but the only person you have to blame is yourself. I can list stocks that have multi bagged

[MENTION=138908]Orbis[/MENTION] is right. Invest in index funds; anything else is just speculation, and not too far from gambling. For one, stock markets tend to be quite efficient and finding undervalued stocks is extremely tough. Additionally, you will not get the required diversification from individual stocks needed to protect against potential disaster. Why do you think 80% of professionally managed funds under-perform the market in the long term? Because there is no science to beating the market, only guesswork. The only redeeming quality is that markets tend to trend upward over time, and hence, you can easily match them and still get decent returns. This is the safest and only sure way to invest.
 
[MENTION=64559]chaiwala[/MENTION] good post. I have invested so far in trackers related to oil price and also shares (made quite a bit already on BG and Petrofac).

I'm looking for my next opportunity, I think miners are the way to go, I bought some Glencore at 280 and looking at the big miners in either BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto or Anglo American.

Regarding your comments on index funds, they do pretty much guarantee profit (as long as nothing catastrophic occurs and/or you buy at a dip), but they do require patience and are long-term investments. Me personally having had a gambling background in sports arbitrage, I look for short-medium investments.

Completely moved away from AIM shares (which I think are called penny-stocks in the States), not purely invest in FTSE 100-250 companies.

Which funds have you invested in? S&P500?
 
"As a bull market continues, almost anything you buy goes up. It makes you feel that investing in stocks is a very easy and safe and that you're a financial genius."

~ Ron Chernow
 
[MENTION=64559]chaiwala[/MENTION] good post. I have invested so far in trackers related to oil price and also shares (made quite a bit already on BG and Petrofac).

I'm looking for my next opportunity, I think miners are the way to go, I bought some Glencore at 280 and looking at the big miners in either BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto or Anglo American.

Regarding your comments on index funds, they do pretty much guarantee profit (as long as nothing catastrophic occurs and/or you buy at a dip), but they do require patience and are long-term investments. Me personally having had a gambling background in sports arbitrage, I look for short-medium investments.

Completely moved away from AIM shares (which I think are called penny-stocks in the States), not purely invest in FTSE 100-250 companies.

Which funds have you invested in? S&P500?


My goals are primarily long term. My asset allocation is roughly the following:

Vanguard Total Stock Market Index 62%
Vanguard Total International Stock Index 28%
Vanguard Total Bond Market II Index Fund 7%
Vanguard Total International Bond Index 3%

I live in the US, so every year I max out my Roth IRA, and match my employer's maximum contribution. In my 401(k), I do not have access to the above funds, so I invested in the equivalent Fidelity funds (which still mostly had low expense ratios). I also have a few short term investments in the form of employee stock options. This is my only deviation from index funds because, as an employee, I receive a 15% discount from the market price.

Right now I invest about 25% of my annual savings. Whatever remains after expenses, taxes, etc. goes to my savings account. Doing this much should hopefully ensure that I have plenty of money after retirement. And when I have a family (I'm 23), this will also help with paying for a house and any college expenses I would need to support. Beyond that, I do not bother much about my investments (except for re-balancing my allocation around twice a year).
 
Let me clarify, I invest about 25% of my annual salary, not savings. Stupid edit funciton :facepalm:
 
In essence what you are trying to say is that those who spend hours, and peruse through countless reports/publications. They discern intrinsic value, and unearth undervalued stocks that others quite easily overlook. They are gambling? I think not. There are people who invest in small caps and quite frequently make a killing. These people make calculated decisions. Luck may play a part but it's sure as hell not gambling. It's good judgement and nobody knows what the market is going to do. You have to make an educated guess sometimes.
 
In essence what you are trying to say is that those who spend hours, and peruse through countless reports/publications. They discern intrinsic value, and unearth undervalued stocks that others quite easily overlook. They are gambling? I think not. There are people who invest in small caps and quite frequently make a killing. These people make calculated decisions. Luck may play a part but it's sure as hell not gambling. It's good judgement and nobody knows what the market is going to do. You have to make an educated guess sometimes.

I am saying it is extremely difficult and time consuming to do, and incurs a fair amount of risk for potentially little gain. Even Graham in The Intelligent Investor conceded that an enterprising investor might not outperform the defensive investor in the long term. I prefer Bogle's passive investing philosophy. And personally, I do not find the time and effort spent worth the risk and potential reward. With decent contributions from a young age into index funds, you should see millions (in $) by retirement time anyways. What more could you ask for?
 
[MENTION=64559]chaiwala[/MENTION] - I'm talking about people who don't have to work for a living. They aren't wage slaves. These people can afford to lose several thousands, and it won't affect their lifestyle. They wake up 7am sit at their desktop computer with cup of coffee and that's all they do look for undervalued stocks. We are talking about experts. These people are few and far between but do exist. I'm a cordial person and do not wish to engage in any dispute. Good luck with your investment approach. I hope it works out for you.
 
I do not think the average viewer of this thread would fall under that category. And even still, I am skeptical about such people. We could say they are comparable to the mutual fund managers, who get paid professionally to beat the market for the fund investors. But the vast majority of these fund managers fail to the market in the long run. I am not saying it is impossible; but it's just not a good strategy for the average person, who does not have the time or skill to consistently do this over time. But anyways, thanks for the wishes. I am not looking for a dispute either, just wanted to share my philosophy.
 
Despite being force-fed the 'diversification' mantra, it only works if you're in the market for long-term (15-30 years).

If you want to make $$$ in the short-term, you have to do your research and take some calculated bets. Just be prepared to lose all your money. But when you win, you win big.
 
I get the impression, that everyone on here seems to think that they are an authority on the subject. I find that mildly amusing.
 
I work in this field and s28 is seriously talented at this game. No one will consistently make you cash- otherwise he wouldnt be posting on here. S28 also seems to go for small companies which are always risky, silly to take his word as gospel

Chaiwala- if I were you I would invest only in Europe and Japan at the moment. QE is leading to serious gains, especially in Europe and right now other markets, especially fixed income and UK are going to lag behind.
 
[MENTION=134250]wasimjunior[/MENTION] - QE is just getting started in Europe. Second quarter will present great opportunities to make hay whilst the sun shines!
 
[MENTION=134250]wasimjunior[/MENTION] - QE is just getting started in Europe. Second quarter will present great opportunities to make hay whilst the sun shines!

Certainly where my cash is going. Unfortunately I havent built up enough cash or a risk appetite to start dealing in single line equities but anything you like in particular?..

Love pharma myself and have liked euro pharmas like novo nordisk and sanofi for a long time. I think all the chat about defensive equities is seriously overrated for the time being (i.e dont go defensive when market does well). Whats happening imo is that risk averse bond investors such as those that would invest in a bunds are being forced to go into equities and thus they are pumping more demand for traditional defensive equities such as pharmas/tobaccos.

Lumped alot of my cash in a euro fund recently- got a battering last week but good times ahead hopefully.
 
i do not usually feel the need to defend my record here because most of the advice here is meant in the manner of shared research and experience so we can all learn

p.php


in instance of PHE it was first mentioned january 2013 at less than one penny within months it had gone up several hundred per cent

HERE > http://www.pakpassion.net/ppforum/s...es&p=5501637&highlight=Powerhouse#post5501637

I SAID : "PHE - weird one but wondering whether it is worth a pop like buying just 1 share ?"

How do you lose 2k buying 1 share for 1 penny ?
 
[MENTION=107620]s28[/MENTION] - There are more than enough people on here, that can attest to your credibility. Enough said!
 
wasimjunior

i used to work as an investment analyst with a small hedge fund doing plain vanilla equities with a specialism towards small cap resources sector
 
Anyone who loses money on here has only themselves to blame. There have been more than enough caveats on here to do your own research, not to blindly follow the crowd, and be prepared for losses as these are smallcaps largely driven by investor sentiment rather than fundamentals.

s28 is not a sage. He is not infallible. He is a part-time (previously professional) trader that puts in the hours of his own time into research. Unlike most traders, he chooses ot share that research on this thread. If you choose to blindly punt £2k on one of his many suggestions, then frankly you have more money than sense and deserve to get burned.
 
[MENTION=107620]s28[/MENTION] and others

what are your predicitions regarding global oil prices
 
[MENTION=107620]s28[/MENTION] and others

what are your predicitions regarding global oil prices

Too many factors. While I don't foresee a sudden jump in demand, and considering only until a few weeks ago the US was supplying oil to the market at record-high levels, I'd take my bet for oil to hover around $60/barrel.

The only major event that could break oil from its current range in the next 6 months or so is a change of stance from OPEC.
 
Too many factors. While I don't foresee a sudden jump in demand, and considering only until a few weeks ago the US was supplying oil to the market at record-high levels, I'd take my bet for oil to hover around $60/barrel.

The only major event that could break oil from its current range in the next 6 months or so is a change of stance from OPEC.

any long term targets?

i dont think it will ever go beyond $80 tbh.

right now the shale boom has dissipated but i expect the US engineering and technology to catch up and lower the cost curve to the point even $60/bbl would be profitable

i would be highly surprised if it ever goes close to $100 again
 
any long term targets?

i dont think it will ever go beyond $80 tbh.

right now the shale boom has dissipated but i expect the US engineering and technology to catch up and lower the cost curve to the point even $60/bbl would be profitable

i would be highly surprised if it ever goes close to $100 again

Never say never, especially when it comes to oil prices. Oil went as low as $20 and then almost touched $200 in about twenty years.

Long term depends more on global demand than supply. Hence, it comes down to your perspective of expected growth of the global economy. It's mostly demand shocks that cause a break in trend as supply takes time to adjust - either when pumping more or shutting down. I also believe the oil market has factored in and adjusted to any challenges they see to the supply from conflicts in the Middle-East.

If I have to pick a number, in the next 2 years I would expect oil to rise around $100 as supply adjusts, and demand starts rising gradually, primarily from the American and the Asian markets, and European markets to some extent if QE works as intended.

Another factor that will exert downward pressure on the prices is the influx of Iranian oil on the market if the deal with the US goes through.
 
Like any diminishing resource, oil will increase in value.

Currently, Saudi has managed to lower the price of oil at a personal cost of $300m A DAY to its own economy. But with reserves of $900bn, it can afford to do this indefinitely. In addition, even at this price, Saudi is making huge profits as its cost of extraction is c.$2/b.

Its been a very clever game by Saudi Arabia. Shale was seen as a huge threat to conventional oil production, but nearly all production was undertaken by small, highly-leveraged operations. Once the price per barrel reduced to below $60, their financiers got nervous. Saudi has managed to decimate the emerging shale industry with just six months.

Now that Saudi has shown its power, not to mention 50% of shale production having stopped, we should see a return to $80/b in next 12 months, and higher if India and China continue to grow their economies.
 
OXS - on the move today

XTR - this should gain momentum prior to profitability news. (Plenty Newsflow due in upcoming months).
 
Slog-

Short term bearish oil. historically dollar getting stronger signals bad news for commodities. Along with that there is significantly bad geopolitical news from Libya, Nigeria etc. plus stagnant growth globally causes a decrease in demand for oil.

Yes long term it will go up but nothing of previous years is expected.
 
OIL no great insight into it myself

REH had a short term move on no real news so not going to chase it at this stage, would expect retest of some of the moving averages

the all important planning decision could come at any time but i would expect they would wait for local elections etc to be out of the way first
 
this thread is a gold mine

having entered the professional world last summer and with too much money (for a 23 yr old) and some time (little but I can make it work) I am thinking of actually getting into the investing game

ofcourse will have to follow it more and give more time but I already waste a ton watching sports and tv shows so need to sacrifice

how would you suggest a beginner to go about?

would USD 500 be a decent amount to start with. ill just treat it as sunk cost anticipating worst case scenario

only other experience I have is playing a fantasy stock based game but ofcourse doing it with real money would be sth ona totally different planet
 
how would you suggest a beginner to go about?

Like most ventures in life, you should do your research first. Read one of the following books:

"The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing" by Larimore, Lindauer, and LeBoeuf
"A Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton G. Malkiel
"The Little Book of Common Sense Investing" by John C. Bogle
"The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham

My personal favorite is the Bogleheads' book because it covers the basics and also endorses a very sound investing strategy. I honestly think this book alone could suffice your entire investing career. Graham's book is considered the bible for value investing, but it is not the easiest read for a beginner. It also differs somewhat in investing philosophy compared to the other three, but I included it because it is a revered classic.

For any specific questions or topics, Investopedia is a decent resource (although will not provide a holistic overview like a book).
 
Like most ventures in life, you should do your research first. Read one of the following books:

"The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing" by Larimore, Lindauer, and LeBoeuf
"A Random Walk Down Wall Street" by Burton G. Malkiel
"The Little Book of Common Sense Investing" by John C. Bogle
"The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham

My personal favorite is the Bogleheads' book because it covers the basics and also endorses a very sound investing strategy. I honestly think this book alone could suffice your entire investing career. Graham's book is considered the bible for value investing, but it is not the easiest read for a beginner. It also differs somewhat in investing philosophy compared to the other three, but I included it because it is a revered classic.

For any specific questions or topics, Investopedia is a decent resource (although will not provide a holistic overview like a book).

yea ive read the intellgent investor.

ill have a look at the other ones

thanks!!
 
this thread is a gold mine

having entered the professional world last summer and with too much money (for a 23 yr old) and some time (little but I can make it work) I am thinking of actually getting into the investing game

ofcourse will have to follow it more and give more time but I already waste a ton watching sports and tv shows so need to sacrifice

how would you suggest a beginner to go about?

would USD 500 be a decent amount to start with. ill just treat it as sunk cost anticipating worst case scenario

only other experience I have is playing a fantasy stock based game but ofcourse doing it with real money would be sth ona totally different planet

Slog where are you based?

Imo 500 usd wont get you much, youre maybe better off doing a virtual portfolio to get a feel for things and then investing with real $$ when you feel confident.

In reality, equities are risky and in a good year, large caps will not yield you much- its a long term play. The kind of stocks that are mentioned here by s28 are micro cap stocks and I would not touch them with my life unless I really knew what I was doing (which obviously s28 does, but you wont : ) ).

If you're in the UK, you could invest in funds as the easiest method. They are the cheapest and most diversified way of investing for someone with less capital to put in. Its what I do myself, simply because to validate trading fees I need to commit more than im willing to in a position. Eventually will start doing single lines...
 
I've been following this thread for a few years. S28 and Jaspa888 are both with their informative and educational contributions not tipping stocks. They are teaching something. People try to run their posts down instead of learning. But I bet they keep coming back and reading everything these guys post. Great thread!
 
I've been following this thread for a few years. S28 and Jaspa888 are both with their informative and educational contributions not tipping stocks. They are teaching something. People try to run their posts down instead of learning. But I bet they keep coming back and reading everything these guys post. Great thread!

Yes of course. His stuff is fantastic..
 
Slog where are you based?

Imo 500 usd wont get you much, youre maybe better off doing a virtual portfolio to get a feel for things and then investing with real $$ when you feel confident.

In reality, equities are risky and in a good year, large caps will not yield you much- its a long term play. The kind of stocks that are mentioned here by s28 are micro cap stocks and I would not touch them with my life unless I really knew what I was doing (which obviously s28 does, but you wont : ) ).

If you're in the UK, you could invest in funds as the easiest method. They are the cheapest and most diversified way of investing for someone with less capital to put in. Its what I do myself, simply because to validate trading fees I need to commit more than im willing to in a position. Eventually will start doing single lines...

Im in the US.

Yes Ive tried virtual games before but maybe will do so seriously now
 
CNR getting panned by Tom Winnifrith

now sometimes Tom calls things right sometimes wrong

unfortunately in this case whilst some of his comments have merit i suspect the underlying motive is really to have a Vindictive go at someone who used to be a friend i.e. jim mellon a friend and investor of Mark Childs and CNR

also i suspect because CNR will present at the Master Investor show a rival to Winnifriths UK Investor Show

anyway...

http://www.shareprophets.com/views/11789/why-condor-gold-is-such-a-rotten-investment

Why Condor Gold is such a rotten investment
By Tom Winnifrith | Friday 24 April 2015


Disclosure: I have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from ShareProphets). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Condor Gold (CNR) has seen its shares slump from almost 200p to just 69p over the past two and a half years despite winning prizes for presenting to investors more often than almost any company on the AIM Casino. But even at 69p the fact is that it remains a truly rotten investment as it prepares for its next placing. And here is why.

The company insists that a placing is not imminent. Condor raised £6.41 million at the back end of last year and CEO Mark Child has been telling people that this money will be used to undertake a further drilling campaign (currently ongoing) and to continue to de risk the project by buying up land etc. around its flagship La India prospect.

He has also said that come the end of 2015, he fully intends to have at least $2m in the bank. Fine but having cash of £1.3 million at the year-end when you have spunked away £5 million in prior 12 months implies that your annual report will be qualified. And to avoid that it seems a slam dunk that Condor will look to do a placing well before Christmas. It is not like it is anywhere near generating cash is it?

I have pointed out before that Condor’s claim that its main asset is worth $110 million is based on the spurious assumption that one uses a $1250 gold price and a 5% discount rate. The company states:

“In terms of the gold price used for the PEA (US$1250), that was agreed between the company and SRK Consulting who produced the PEA. “

That really does not cut the mustard. Condor and SRK (paid by Condor) can agree to use whatever gold price they want and whatever discount rate they want. Heck why not use $1500 and 2%? But as an investor I know that is horseshit – I want to see what the NPV is using conservative assumptions ($1150 and 10%) as it sure ain’t anything like $110 million. If Condor ever tries to raise debt finance to get its hole in the ground into production, lenders will demand to see ultra conservative metrics used in an NPV and that does not mean whatever Condor agrees with SRK

But now to some more bear points which Condor glosses over.

Its proposed mine is high grade narrow vein. Do you remember Norseman? Heck, I won’t be allowed to forget that disaster. Ask any Australian about such prospects. It is often a recipe for disaster. I suggest that you look at the trench picture on the front page of the website that should be enough.
CEO Mark Childs is a banker who worked in Hong Kong before stumbling onto Condor. I am sorry but I want to back companies run by experienced veteran miners with a proven track record, not banksters.
The asset is high in the mountains with peaks and valleys and significant jungle with no services whatsoever - it’s a logistical nightmare.
So we have a narrow grade high vein asset in the middle of a mountain. There is a very good reason that the Russians abandoned it. This is a rabbit warren of tunnels chasing tiny veins, the idea of being able to construct a credible professional mine with an open pit and underground operation is not one that serious investors will ever buy into.
Last but not least, Mr Childs has been doing this PFS for 4 years since 2011, and now needs to do more drilling. If this asset was going to move into development it would have happened already. What has Condor been doing for the past four years and so why should we, after all that time, reckon that it has a credible plan?
There appears to be a scarcity of serious specialist mining funds among the key shareholders. That tells you something.
There are significantly better gold projects in Nicaragua and the world to invest in which is why the smart mining investment funds are there not in Condor.
And finally we come back to this issue of massive over-promotion. The reason Condor presents to investors on an almost fortnightly basis is that serious specialist investors are not buying into the story. Thus there is a need to get those who do not have specialist knowledge on board ahead of what is a quite inevitable next placing.
 
Thank Mining786,
I just broke even after six months, will sell straight away on monday.

Zed_Mann - I wouldn't sell on my account. The market cap isn't justifiable in my view and BMD stepping down rings alarm bells. On aim even crap stocks can have good runs. It depends what your time frame is and what are your expectations i.e. Risk/reward tolerance.
 
XTR was first mentioned on here by S28 along with many other stocks. The idea is to research the company further. Get in ahead of the herd, and either you stand to make £££ or lose. Either way there is always a takeaway, a lesson to be learned. Ultimately we are accountable for our own decisions and that's the way I look at things.
 
Zed_Mann - I wouldn't sell on my account. The market cap isn't justifiable in my view and BMD stepping down rings alarm bells. On aim even crap stocks can have good runs. It depends what your time frame is and what are your expectations i.e. Risk/reward tolerance.

I know mate, just on of those stock, don't want to take the risk with this one. As it have been mentioned on numerous times on this tread, people should buy/sell on own account, and not on other suggestion.

Personally I find everyone's comments (especially S26 and Jasper888) educational, learned alot from there comments. your comments are ALSO useful.... THANKS
 
I know mate, just on of those stock, don't want to take the risk with this one. As it have been mentioned on numerous times on this tread, people should buy/sell on own account, and not on other suggestion.

Personally I find everyone's comments (especially S26 and Jasper888) educational, learned alot from there comments. your comments are ALSO useful.... THANKS

Zed_mann, I'm always learning something new. It's normal to get impatient and buy or sell. It takes a of patience to wait, and watch a stock for a bit before making your decision. But we buy and then it falls, we sell and it goes higher. In my experience a good stock does come down its healthy for it to come down and then it goes higher. I usually try to wait and time my entry accordingly. You have to appreciate there is a lot of volatility in these speculative stocks.
 
Zed_mann, I'm always learning something new. It's normal to get impatient and buy or sell. It takes a of patience to wait, and watch a stock for a bit before making your decision. But we buy and then it falls, we sell and it goes higher. In my experience a good stock does come down its healthy for it to come down and then it goes higher. I usually try to wait and time my entry accordingly. You have to appreciate there is a lot of volatility in these speculative stocks.

Please excuse any typos. I am using my smartphone. I would like to also add that it takes a great deal of courage to buy low when others are selling. A lot you can only learn by losing money and seeing your portfolio down isn't pleasant but it's the nature of the beast. Take care!
 
a couple i am keeping an eye on at the moment

small market caps , recent placings at around these levels but crucially new management who may be able to act as catalyst for change in business fortunes or at least investor perception of the businesses

HNL - Hague and London used to be WSX Wessex Petroleum but new management who ran a successful oil and gas company previously. Mkt Cap about £1.5m and have about that in cash so no premium for assets or management.

AFPO - African Potash new guy in charge may do a kitchen sink exercise and bring in a better project going forward

big.chart


big.chart
 
CCE good RNS a small sale of their energy storage system but hinted at huge upside and scale of opportunity
 
a couple i am keeping an eye on at the moment

small market caps , recent placings at around these levels but crucially new management who may be able to act as catalyst for change in business fortunes or at least investor perception of the businesses

HNL - Hague and London used to be WSX Wessex Petroleum but new management who ran a successful oil and gas company previously. Mkt Cap about £1.5m and have about that in cash so no premium for assets or management.

AFPO - African Potash new guy in charge may do a kitchen sink exercise and bring in a better project going forward

big.chart


big.chart

Good call on AFPO it's on the climb this a.m
 
i'd like to see the MACD go positive and the stock to trade above the lower moving average before getting involved with more conviction

you can see from charts above otherwise the stocks tend to bounce off the moving average line as resistance

also news and volume might make me reassess whilst keeping in mind the nearby resistance levels
 
EVO interestingly poised has a history of the occasional surge and Lenigas has demonstrated his promotional credentials recently

not sure if they need a placing but would not expect much of a discount from here

Lenigas might try to promote it and then place so scope for fast money traders

big.chart

EVO looking more primed for action with MACD close to going positive and at the 50 day and 200 day Moving Average lines
 
i'd like to see the MACD go positive and the stock to trade above the lower moving average before getting involved with more conviction

you can see from charts above otherwise the stocks tend to bounce off the moving average line as resistance

also news and volume might make me reassess whilst keeping in mind the nearby resistance levels

Added to my watchlist
 
CPX a bit of a more punchy RNS from them

would be even better if they included some of their big customers names in the headlines as well like a Nike for example

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CAP-XX Thinline supercapacitors will support pulsed loads from radio frequency modules such as Bluetooth, BTE, Zigbee, Z-WaveTM and AntTMand can work with thin film, solid state and coin cell batteries, energy harvesting modules and inductive recharging systems.



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· Backup power for mission-critical applications



Commenting on the launch, CAP-XX Chief Executive, Anthony Kongats, said

"We are pleased to have launched the Thinline range of supercapacitors, which directly addresses the demands of developers of devices for the "internet of things (IOT)" including wearable devices, such as medical, fitness and health monitors, smart watches, and drug delivery systems."
 
CPX i get the impression they are building up towards a real blockbuster RNS where they announce a major deal with a big name partner

p.php
 
CPX from the 5th March


Another global Tier-1 automotive components company has approached CAP-XX to licence a patent and has tabled an initial offer involving an upfront license fee, plus a sliding scale royalty on sales. This opportunity is currently in active negotiation
 
CPX break the moving average resistance on volume and this could go nutty

people realising a £5m cap is far too low for a company with so much potential

big.chart
 
amazing volume and momentum behind CPX now

have always believed if they would just tell the story properly this can be a huge stock

if they deliver on the story it can be a huge company
 
amazing volume and momentum behind CPX now

have always believed if they would just tell the story properly this can be a huge stock

if they deliver on the story it can be a huge company

Thank for the tip S28, they are saying it could go to 10, 20p , what your view on that
 
I am a nutter when it comes to CPX

was interested in it since IPO at one hundred pence

they did a placing a couple of years back at thirty pence

i think ten pence about right now but on the right deals twenty pence plus easily achievable
 
[MENTION=107620]s28[/MENTION] and others,

Any websites/brokers allow international users? Specially newbies.

I went through the websites of a few listed on the front page, most were U.K./FTSE ones, but they don't allow someone from outside the U.K. to register and trade.

Same's the case with most U.S. brokers.
 
stopped clock is right twice a day

i will only be happy if it goes back to ten pence

there does seem to have been a rocket put up the managements posteriors with new broker new website more newsflow etc
 
Agreed. But reading forums, the wind seems to be behind the stock right now. If we get that blockbuster RNS with corporate names mentioned, this will quickly multibag from here.
 
Agreed. But reading forums, the wind seems to be behind the stock right now. If we get that blockbuster RNS with corporate names mentioned, this will quickly multibag from here.

S28 must be elated. He does it again!
 
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