Value Collector
Have courage, and be kind.
- Joined
- 13 January 2014
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But let's not ahead of ourselves and be happy with $1 a share.
What do you guys think about the recent plunge in MRM shares?
Operationally nothing surprising... things are challenging and will remain so for some time. That has been the prevailing condition so not really unexpected.
However, the update highlighted difficulties in selling MRM's fleet to repay debt, putting pressure on the balance sheet. It mentioned that it is in discussion with lenders which is never a good thing to mention. The operational cashflow will be a key thing to watch.... namely, can they fund the operations and the financial obligations without more equity / debt? If not, perhaps there will a capital raising (forced by the banks may be) in the near future.
Trav
So I went over and checked news on the Share.
Looking for a reason for the volume spike.
There has been a new substantial share holder
come into play.
So Id have this on watch. With no other news
the new holder must have some confidence in
growth from somewhere. If something pops up
we will see it in price. Until then I personally would
just watch it from the side.
I don't concern myself with oscillators--they are simply a
consequence of price action not a leader to it.
For those interested with MRM's development...
Halom sent a complaint to the Takeover Panel a day after MRM's board decided to raise new equity and (not at all) dilute Halom's current holdings.
MRM came back saying that well, since the panel haven't (had the time) to issue any decision, we've done the institutional raising so that's too late. And until there's an order, we're going ahead with the retail offer, so suck on that.
Here's my theory... Halom is going to wait until the cash from the raising settles into MRM's account, then it'll make a takeover offer for the whole company at, say 30 cents a share. pump it up a bit more to ease shareholders pain.
Hopefully the M.E shareholders currently at 5% would want to counter offer, maybe they'll just work with Halom and divvy up... In the end, Mr Kum will get to kick Weber in the azz for trying to be smart and make a fool out of his Halom.
The games and ego of the big boys ey.
...another scenario could be the big buy in could be to have the $$ to keep selling it down to a below bargain basement price and just scoop it up. No idea, just a concussed brain musing!
The chart looks weak, stuck under the 100% fibonacci line with only 0.13c support coming from back June the 25th 2003 which was when it was just coming out of its churning stage. (churning is when stocks aren't actually trading they sort of just stay alive by small sales and buys sometimes daily sometimes less. A churned stock has a different look to a traded stock. I will show you all one day. Probably sooner rather than later if I have time and feel up to it).
View attachment 90577
...another scenario could be the big buy in could be to have the $$ to keep selling it down to a below bargain basement price and just scoop it up. No idea, just a concussed brain musing!
The chart looks weak, stuck under the 100% fibonacci line with only 0.13c support coming from back June the 25th 2003 which was when it was just coming out of its churning stage. (churning is when stocks aren't actually trading they sort of just stay alive by small sales and buys sometimes daily sometimes less. A churned stock has a different look to a traded stock. I will show you all one day. Probably sooner rather than later if I have time and feel up to it).
You know, if what I have imagines turns out to be true and it does disappear like a Mermaid underwater, it could kill a lot of sailors who are onboard, so to speak! I have no idea if it is, it is just me looking at it thinking there may be something to look at here. Maybe by the Federal Police, don't know who, if it does shuffle off this mortal coil. I am thinking if people look at this and see a 'real business' that can be understood as Buffet describes and suggests stay in it for life, there will be a lot of people who will buy into this and stay there. I bought into this when it was doing a long sideways consolidation, then it got dumped fast. It fell below my exit line so I buggered off. Didn't get too badly hurt, made me remember it though.
So what I am seeing in my vivid and concussed imagination is a company with a great product, assured of success raises heaps of money by public company, buys all it needs and then slowly sells the company down to nothing, gets taken over by a private concern and steps back on shore with a big smile while all the sailors have dived over board to join the Mermaid.
What I thought I would do was to add the names of the directors and their purchases .....just for the record......in case they disappear.
DATE DIRECTOR NUMBER PRICE AMOUNT
05/12/2014 Mark Bradley 250,000 $1.320 $330,000
19/11/2014 Eve Howell 40,000 $1.680 $67,200
19/11/2014 Mark Bradley 250,000 $1.660 $415,000
18/11/2014 Tony Howarth 100,000 $1.653 $165,270
29/09/2014 Mark Bradley 250,000 $1.980 $495,000
Those were all purchases, no sales.
Directors & Executives (current) *
NAME TITLE DATE OF APPT
Tony Howarth Non Exec Chairman 05/07/2001
Jeffrey Webber Managing Director 31/12/2002
Peter Raynor CFO 13/06/2005
Eve Howell Non Exec Director 27/02/2012
Mark Bradley Non Exec Director 22/09/2000
Andrew Edwards Non Exec Director 01/12/2009
Chiang Gnee Non Exec Director 05/07/2012
*Positions may have changed
These are the past directors in case these names require any scrutiny.
Directors & Executives (former)
NAME TITLE DATE OF APPOINTMENT DATE OF RESIGNATION
James Carver Executive Director 29/06/1998 15/07/2013
Jeffrey Mews Non Exec Director 12/08/1998 24/11/2009
Alan Birchmore Chairman 12/08/1998 14/02/2007
Peter Ming Non Exec Director 27/11/2002 24/11/2005
Chan Teun Alternate Director 27/11/2002 24/11/2005
Richard Reid Non Exec Director 22/09/2000 17/11/2004
Christopher Sutherland Non Exec Director 19/11/2003 04/03/2004
Derrice-Ann Dillon Executive Director 01/01/2001
I am not for a moment suggesting these people have done anything wrong. It is just when companies go ta-tas there is no record for us mere mortals to refer to. The brokers have a big book, which name escapes me for the moment, with all sorts of links and information which makes for fascinating reading. I spent hours reading it, OMG the information in it was simply amazing. It used to be in the reference section in the library but then it all went digitalized and none of this information is available for the mug punter like you and me now. In fact being digitalized I guess with every update all the past 'sins' are wiped out. But what is seen, can't be unseen!
....or looking at it the other way luu, he might have been assisting them to get the price down a bit and shake a few sailors overboard, without that dramatic dump I might still own it....who knows? Let me tell you, a bad case of concussion does wierd things to the brain. One is not allowed to think (critically as in learn something) so all sorts of thoughts do free-float.But to their credit, they managed to escaped the takeover and screw Halom at the same time. So that was quite impressive
....or looking at it the other way luu, he might have been assisting them to get the price down a bit and shake a few sailors overboard, without that dramatic dump I might still own it....who knows? Let me tell you, a bad case of concussion does wierd things to the brain. One is not allowed to think (critically as in learn something) so all sorts of thoughts do free-float.
I really hope so luu, I think the market needs quality business which are in for the long haul. I first bought it because it had a DRP (Dividend Re-Investment Plan), it actually had tangible assets and a real business going on and I had had every intention of staying in for the long haul and just let the DRP do its thing over the years. (Yeah OK, I always do a bit of fundamentals if I am actually going to buy into a stock, it isn't all TA with me). If our markets keep getting trashed by junk, pump and dumps that get promoted on forums like this, then the mumsandads will give up on investing in the markets, buy into an index fund and maybe lose all their money if it goes belly up. I shall be watching this one with interest and really hope the directors are in there doing battle against the bad guys. Time will tell.Yea, a fair few would have been burnt in the downturn. I was luckier in that I got in at 40c. Managed to average down to about 21c now... Cigar butt smoking can be bad for you
My thinking (prayers?) is that it'll come back up with a vengeance... soon... enough... any year now.
I think you noticed the "boats" rising with the tide. IMO your bias is for rising markets and that's what caught your eye on MRM.
After such a large fall in price there's going to be lots of overhead resistance. Are these old levels going to be relevant?
This company had to start again. New bankers, new investors, new business goals, new hopes. I'd treat this chart as new and delete those longer term lines.
Damn, that I can't use it for the June comp.
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