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I doubt it was news - today was an option expiration day and the climb started at 3:00 which is when options brokers tend to start making trades to cover naked sales. People who bet on the stock being below $3 had to buy at any price to cover their positions.Looks like SENS is moving on some Patent news...
- Origin Materials is a disruptive materials/chemical company that uses wood residue (timber feedstocks) to create carbon negative materials cost effective with oil-based products. Funds are to scale production.
- Origin's materials are used for clothing, textiles, plastics, packaging, car parts etc. Origin's decarbonizing technology addresses a ~$1T market opportunity, already with ~$1 billion in product reservations.
An overview of electric bus companies including Proterra A Look At The Listed Electric Bus Sector As Biden Moves To Electrify America
Previously discussed starting here: What other tech stock to consider?
Stock getting hit for some reason, only thing I see is this which doesn't seem negative American Battery Metals Corporation Establishes New Development Center at the Nevada Center for Applied Research
Any thoughts on this Spruce Point Capital overview/report on ABML and LODE. I know a lot of people on here (myself included) have some ABML holdings.
OK, this post is for all you non-US investors out there. Just came across an interesting US based company, that has recently listed on the London AIM market. TinyBuild (tinyBuild GAMES - Indie Game Developer And Publisher) is an indie game publishing company. From what I've been able to learn from public articles about them, I like their philosophy and plucky startup vibe.
They raised £154 with a market cap of £340. IF this company succeeds (and with their new war chest and management, sounds like they can), then this seems like a bargain, if risky.
Unfortunately, since they haven't done any US SEC filings, US investors are barred from investing, and indeed, cannot even see or download any listing documents. If a US person tries to click on the Investors tab on their website, they get a blocked message. While I cannot invest in them, I wouldn't mind reading their Admissions Document just to keep tabs on them since they will eventually list on the NASDAQ when they get big enough and/or get their financial act together. So if such an Admissions Document ended up in my TMC inbox, I will erase it immediately. So don't PM me a copy
Anyways, I would also be curious to know how easy it is for even UK investors to purchase shares in it, since it seems liquidity is still tiny. More info on the listing:
Video game maker Tinybuild debuts in record £340m Aim listing - CityAM
Video game maker Tiny Build has become the largest ever US company to list on Aim after its shares debuted on London’s junior index this morning.www.cityam.com
Seattle-area game publisher tinyBuild valued at $474M after IPO on London Stock Exchange
Bellevue, Wash.-based indie video game publisher tinyBuild today completed an initial public offering on the London Stock Exchange’s AIM market, at a market capitalization of £340.6 million ($474 million). The… Read Morewww.geekwire.com
So I would urge all potential investors to do DD. Here are some things to think about:
While they raised £154M on the public markets, TinyBuild only got £28.6M of that. The rest went to selling shareholders and commissions. Two VC fund investors are selling during this IPO (which isn't terribly unusual, although more normally, VCs would wait until a 6 month or 1 year lockup expires post IPO before selling). But more worryingly, the CEO and COO are also significant selling shareholders. The CEO sold about 1/3 of his shares during this IPO, netting him about £50M, while the COO sold about 1/2 of his shares netting him about £22M (napkin math on my part, I could have made mistakes). By itself, this isn't a red flag, just something to think about. I too sold shares during my company's IPO way back when, but it was only like 5% or less of my shares. These guys have been building TinyBuild for eight years, so I can cut them slack on this.
On the positive side, TinyBuild is nicely profitable with a large backlog of titles coming out, looks like they deliver true value into the market, and I like their business strategies. I'm pretty sure I would invest if I could.
Incidentally, to do real DD on this company, you really should play a couple of their games, check out their multi-media, etc. I can't invest in this company, so I haven't gone to that level of detail.