Mr Market

47 days ago

Tom Winnifrith Bearcast No 1: Mr Market has Satsuma so completely wrong

I discuss today's news from Satsuma (SATS)., Its shares are now either 70% or 100% overvalued as it is forced to dump almost half its bitcoin at a loss.

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414 days ago

Tom Winnifrith Bonus Bearcast: Mr Market the manic depressive, Kefi and TrakM8, the latter is a zero, it is surely insolvent

I look at the nature of manic depression and Mr. Market and comment on Kefi Gold & Copper (KEFI) and then in detail at TrakM8 (TRAK) the former glory stock now down almost 99% from peak as some of us warned. I look in detail, at why it is insolvent and why it is a slam dunk zero.

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709 days ago

Tom Winnifrith Bearcast - is Verditek going bust? Mr. Market thinks so and so do I

In this podcast I discuss the damascene conversion of the Mrs on a couple of issues and I say “thank you” to those donating to Woodlarks on the Christmas grotto appeal. We are now almost 75% of the way to target so if you can spare a fiver ( or more) please do so today HERE. I look at Verditek (VDTK), Tern (TERN), Red Rock Resources (RRR), mention Skinbiotherapeutics (SBTX), Cellular Goods (CBX) and have a look at Parkmead (PMG) where i am not convinced that Peter Brailey is right to be just so bearish.

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1194 days ago

Letter to AIM Regulation: suspend Argo Blockchain until it clarifies its financial position

Mr. Market is telling you that there is something horribly wrong at Argo Blockchain (ARB) and that could well be a looming insolvency. A company that really was going to raise £24 million at 27.6p as Argo promised it would on October 7 would not see its shares languishing at 12p to sell. I have written to AIM Regulation as this is, one way or another, a false market.

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3246 days ago

Finding Value in Natural Resource Stocks - two old timers chinwag

Whitney George, portfolio manager of the Sprott Focus Trust, is a career-long value investor who has described himself at times as a "Buffett groupie" reflecting his long-standing admiration of the legendary investor. Like Buffett, George seeks to capitalize on the manic depressive behavior of the aggregate stock market, a group author Benjamin Graham memorably referred to as Mr. Market—the fictitious business partner who impulsively offers to sell his share of the business or to buy the reader's share every day.

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