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- 24 December 2005
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And 8 months later they are quietly throwing money (lots of money and plant down time) to get that number down.and with the benefit of some time it is not for me to say that first load may have been special - 1.27% is the running average (as expected by those who invest time in thinking about this stuff).
I'm not at all convinced with this stock.
A nice run up from 67c to 88.5c on high volume but that takes it to an area with a lot of congestion on the chart over the past year or so and now it's back down to 79.5c which is lower than yesterday's close.
Funny business lithium,
Hey, bit too windy for boatingThat was a very timely call back in March Smurph …..It has gone down ever since!
L Stocks have done it tough … I did some dough on a couple of "Spec"ulations and decided to stop trying to pick the bottom.
In saying that, if you overlay the PLS chart with the Lithium spot price chart, they are basically carbon copies except the spot chart has actually worked off its lows since late August where PLS is basically still at its lowest point.
They are in the throws of raising $100 million at 30 cents which is predominantly going to Deep pockets ($36.5 million) and Chinese Co. CATL $55 million - 8.5% of the Co.) … $20 million offered to current S/H's.
It never ceases to bemuse me that Companies see fit to give away large portions of their net worth to the "big boys" at the absolute share price lows …..
I wonder how Gangfeng Lithium feel since they invested $50 million back in March at 64 cents. I assume they will have to buy more to keep their percentage up.
Technically it should move up from here as a trade, but the net value of the Co. has been severely eroded with 16% offered at 30 cents per share
they all eventually turn.
Smurf jinxed the entire sector I reckon.
Simple - look at the last words in that post of mine.what were you thinking Smurph!!!
I reckon you might have powers that even you do not understand. Be careful where you wave that thing buddy.Simple - look at the last words in that post of mine.
"Do not hold".
and I will raise you an A40 in that hand ......Lol ….. yeah its obviously @Smurf1976 's fault … what were you thinking Smurph!!!
From a purely trading point of view …. it looks relatively low risk for a punt …
Although, once the Chinese get involved you can sometimes need copious amounts of time on your hands to realise a profit.
I would not be buying on any 'higher than average up bars' other than for a short term trade.
This has already been a good "short term" trade … I now see it as risky ..
Price trading as expected.
And 8 months later they are quietly throwing money (lots of money and plant down time) to get that number down.
Funny business lithium, the one with the best numbers is off-limits, and the one with the second best numbers is in administration.
company announcements for PLS numbers.
i have nil interest in any of this anymore (miners, small caps, ipo, bio's etc) due to estate planning so the following is off the top of my head (just trading out of everything on spikes like IMU, BOT and BDC recently)
initial numbers came from 1st shipment (they were especially good it turned out), revised numbers in later updates. Obviously it is better to have lower impurity levels (fe or mica or whatever) but also the month to month supply needs to be consistent. The problem for the converters, apart from initial quality, is when the supply varies as it mucks about the lines.
(not a fan of catl being on the board)
Greenbushes can do outstanding numbers that put pilgangoora stuff into the shadows <0.8% fe from memory, sc6 or sc7. Alliance (Bald Hill) were sending some to the glass makers in europe before going bust (which says product is very good)...... but that is another story.
latest ORE ann shows spod price still decreasing, not sure that general lithium production costs can decrease much more.
Pilbara Minerals ended the June quarter with a cash balance of $86.3 million, down from $108.2 million at March 31.This landmark refinancing of our long-term debt facilities is an outstanding achievement for Pilbara Minerals, representing the first time that a lithium raw materials player of our size has attracted conventional, syndicated project financing at such a competitive cost, CEO Ken Brinsden said. The new facilities are offered on very competitive terms, putting us in a very strong position to ride out the current soft market conditions and capitalise on the rebound in the lithium market, when that inevitably occurs.
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