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Quoted Micro 30 December 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Valereum (VLRM) is making strategic enhancements to the GATE token strategy. It has brought in a tokenomics expert who will help to refine and enhance options. The changes could include a community voting mechanism for participatory decision making, interactive feedback sessions and transparent decision-making processes. There will be further information in the first quarter of 2025.

WeCap (WCAP) investee company WeShop Holdings has submitted a draft registration statement to the SEC. This is part of the process of obtaining a US listing, which will help the retailer app to be launched in the US and other markets. WeShop has 1,500 retailers signed up and testing in the UK has generated gross sales of £100m. WeCap owns 16% of WeShop.

Vinanz Ltd (BTC) has published the prospectus for its proposed move to the Main Market, which is planned for 13 January. This will be on the Transition Category. The cancellation of the Aquis Stock Exchange will be on 10 January. The bitcoin miner has received commitments totalling £1.5m at 14.5p/share conditional on the market switch.

Broker VSA Capital (VSA) increased interim revenues from £1.05m to £1.68m, which enabled a swing from a loss of £1.82m to a pre-tax profit of £298,000. The £57m fundraising for Invinity Energy Systems (IES) helped. The number of employees has reduced. NAV was 10.4p/share at the end of September 2024, although this does include intangible assets. Cash in the bank improved to £939,000. There are 29 retained clients. The deal pipeline is apparently growing, but timing is uncertain.

Mendell Helium (MDH) is continuing to make progress with an admission document for when it takes up its option to acquire M3 Helium. Production from the Nilson well has reached 127Mcf/day. The cost of bringing Rost into production could be reduced to $300,000. There is funding interest from local oil and gas companies in Kansas and this could be non-dilutive. This could fund further development of wells in Hugoton.

Lift Global Ventures (LFT) investee company Trans-Africa Energy is in talks with a Southern African state investor and the redemption date of the loan to the company has been extended to 31 January 2025.

Mental health treatments developer Shortwave Life Sciences (PSY) announced the pre-launch of a crowdfunding campaign on Crowdcube. The company has a psilocybin-based combination drug and proprietary buccal film delivery platform to improve outcomes for anorexia nervosa patients.

TruSpine Technologies (TSP) hopes for more news on the FDA submission for its medical devices for spinal care. The interim loss increased from £363,000 to £410,000. There was £51,000 in the bank at the end of September 2024. Finance options are being reviewed.

Adsure Services (ADS) director Peter Hammond has bought 65,000 shares at 21p each. He owns 7.17%. Coinsilium (COIN) has raised £65,250 through the exercise of warrants at 3p each. Chief executive Eddy Travia exercised 1.675 million shares taking his stake to 7.44%.

AIM

Maritime tracking technology developer Windward (WNWD) is recommending a 215p/share bid from an acquisition company formed by FTV VIII. The offer values the marine tracking technology company at £216m. The bidder wants to gain greater exposure to the maritime compliance market and believes it can help to accelerate growth. The management team will be retained. Windward joined AIM on 6 December at 155p/share.

Logistics Development Group (LDG) says Nash Squared has sold its NashTech division, which means that the AIM company’s investment of £10m in February 2024 has been redeemed for £13.1m. Logistics Development Group has £44m in cash. A tender offer at 19p/share is contemplated. That will distribute up to £21m. The plan is to distribute 50% of any further realisations and NAV will be published every quarter. The share price moved up 30.2% to 14p, which values the company at £73.4m. NAV was £99m at the end of May 2024.

Retailer Quiz (QUIZ) announced on Friday evening that it intends to leave AIM. The general meeting to gain shareholder approval will take place on 23 January. This is part of plans to reduce costs. Tarak Ramzan, who owns 20.4%, has offered a £1m loan facility and more cash will be needed next year. JP Jenkins may offer a matched bargain facility. Following the announcement, Amraj Gill’s stake has risen from 8.17% to 10.1% and Tajveer Gill’s stake has increased from 8.1% to 10.3%. Interim results show a tripled pre-tax loss of £4.7m, or £4.1m before exceptionals. Revenues continue to decline. National Insurance and living wage changes will add an annualised £1.7m from April. Net debt has reached £3.5m.

Michael Ashcroft has launched a requisition bid for a general meeting at data and marketing services provider Jaywing (JWNG). Michael Ashcroft wants Jaywing to leave AIM by 1 March 2025. He owns 29.5% of Jaywing and Lombard Odier is the next biggest shareholder with 18.9%. The directors own less than 6%. DSC Investment, which is associated with Michael Ashcroft, and Lombard Odier have jointly lent £11.9m to Jaywing. Net debt was £14.8m at the end of September 2024, which was before the latest £1.1m increase in the facility.

Premier African Minerals (PREM) announced an amended offtake and prepayment agreement with Canmax Technologies for the Zulu lithium and tantalum project after trading ended on Christmas Eve. The settlement options for Canmax Technologies have been adjusted in respect of prepayment amounts that are outstanding on 1 April 2025.  If Premier African Minerals does not deliver the required product of provide cash settlement, Canmax Technologies is entitled to a direct stake in Zulu lithium at a valuation of $100m. The alternative is settlement in Premier African Minerals shares.

Maritime surveillance systems developer and installer SRT Marine (SRT) has signed the $9m Middle East coast guard contract and implementation has commenced. The is a ten-year contract for an upgrade to a 2016 installation. There should be $7m of revenues recognised in the year to June 2025 and the following year combined. There could be further upside from the contract. This contract adds to the $213m Kuwait coast guard contract, where implementation has also begun. Two other contracts totalling around $250m are near to signing and could start their implementations before June 2025. Management says that 2025-26 should be “significantly profitable”, but Cavendish has yet to reinstate forecasts.

Sunrise Resources (SRES) says Tolsa USA Inc has decided not to exercise its option to acquire the Pioche Sepiolite project in Nevada. There was no agreement on the terms of a continuing royalty for Sunrise Resources. Tolsa says it was difficult to correlate specific grades from holes drilled.

Orosur Mining Inc (OMI) has received assays from the fourth hole at the Pepas prospect in the north of the Anza project. There was a composite intersection of 40.2 metres @ 3.75g/t from 23.5 metres. Including 6.8 metres @ 9.02g/t. The results are good, but there are complexities. Part of the plan for the drilling is to resolve the complexities. Pepas has exceeded expectations.

Digital mental health company Kooth (KOO) has won a pilot contract in New Jersey and launched a share buyback programme of up to £1.5m to cover share-based rewards. The New Jersey contract is worth $1.45m in the pilot year. It covers 50,000 students between 13 and 18 years old. There are talks for a second US pilot.

Gemfields (GEM) says recent emerald and ruby auctions were disappointing. There is an oversupply of Zambian emeralds and emerald mining is being suspended by Gemfields. There is also civil unrest in Mozambique following elections. Ruby mining operations at Montepuez Ruby Mining have not been hampered, but risks have increased. There has been lower production of premium rubies. The focus is constructing a second ruby processing plant and other capital investment has been suspended, including the gold project. Options for the Faberge brand are being assessed.

Mitsubishi Electric is investing £26.2m in Seeing Machines (SEE) for a 15% stake and the companies will collaborate on opportunities in the design and manufacture of automotive technologies, particularly in Japan. There will also be access to the Mitsubishi distribution channel. The investment is at a 12% premium to the 30-day weighted average price. Mitsubishi intends to take its stake to 19.9%.

Property services provider Fletcher King (LON: FLK) improved interim pre-tax profit from £50,000 to £85,000 on revenues up from £1.33m to £1.6m. There is no interim dividend. Net cash was £3.77m at the end of October 2024. The second half tends to be more profitable, but the markets remain uncertain.

MAIN MARKET

Cash shell Pineapple Power Corporation (PNPL) has found another potential reverse takeover candidate. Hamburg-based FUSE-AI develops medical artificial intelligence products. It has developed Prostate.Carcinoma.ai software that enables radiologists to save time analysing MRI images and reduces the error rate. Distributors are being signed up. FUSE-AI is an investee company of Xlife Sciences. FUSE-AI would be acquired in an all-share transaction. This is still subject to due diligence. The deal to acquire Ilios Hydrogen is not going ahead.

Harworth Group (HWG) has completed the sale of 278 acres of land at Ansty, Warwickshire for £53.5m. Contracts were exchanged three years ago and planning permission has been granted.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 23 December 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Surgical procedures provider One Health Group (OHGR) increased revenues 22% to £13.3m, while pre-tax profit improved from £560,000 to £845,000. The interim dividend was raised 2% to 2.07p/share. Cash in the bank was £4.89m at the end of September 2024. There have been record referrals by the NHS since the end of the period and it wants the company to increase its capacity. A retrospective increase in the NHS tariff should boost profit by £250,000 this year. A planning application will be submitted for a surgical hub.

Business assurance provider Adsure Services (ADS) increased revenues 19% to £5.06m and it moved from a loss of £30,000 to a pre-tax profit of £330,000. The latest dividend is 0.786p/share.

Marula Mining (MARU) is planning a strategic partnership with the Mining Engineers Society of Kenya, which will provide expertise to the company. Marula Mining will provide annual financial support. Gathoni Muchai Investments bought 250,000 shares at 4.65p each and 500,000 shares at 4.56p each, taking the stake to 8.85%.

Skincare technology developer Incanthera (INC) reported a flat interim loss of £620,000. There was cash of £1.06m at the end of September 2024. There is no additional news on the litigation that prevented the launch of the Skin + CELL skincare product range. There is £1.24m of inventory and work in progress in the balance sheet that was built up for the launch.

Valereum (VLRM) has signed non-binding heads of terms for raising £13m at 10p/share with DMC Markets Inc. Valereum has also signed a binding option with an investor for raising £2m at 10p/share. This investor is building its own digital asset ecosystem, which could fit with Valereum’s interests. The additional cash will help to accelerate growth.

Healthcare IT provider DXS International (DXSP) wants to expand into a new territory in the EU or elsewhere in 2025. There are 22% of NHS Integrated Care Boards using the new Aios SMART Referrals software and more will be converted. The first commercial sale of ExpertCare therapeutic management software was in October.

Broking and wealth management business Oberon Investments (OBE) grew revenues by 74% to £4.8m in the six months to September 2024. The loss was reduced from £1.59m to £1.24m. There was £2.26m in the bank at the end of September 2024. Corporate broking increased revenues by 124% to £1.54m. There are 21 retained clients and there are private capital fundraisings expected in 2025. The launch of the Oberon AIM VCT is expected in the summer of 2025.There are also plans to take on more experience staff.

In the year to June 2024, fintech company Tap Global Group (TAP) grew revenues 31% to £2.65m, although the core business was not part of the group for the whole of the previous year. Those revenues were 6% ahead. In the first five months of the new financial year revenues were 24% with the latest month 77% ahead. The company introduced its XTP token locking feature for UK customers. Tokens can be locked for 12 months.

Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) is appointing John van Kuffeler, who founded Non-Standard Finance, as executive chairman. Marc Howells will be appointed chief executive. Dr Richard Leaver is becoming a non-exec, and he will provide AI expertise. Investment Evolution Credit is assessing potential acquisitions that could provide it with a UK lending licence, as well as loan book purchases. There are plans to expand in the US and internationally. The 15% IEC bond is no longer being offered to investors and the focus will be institutional debt funding.

BWA Group (BWAP) recently completed exploration drilling at the Dehane 2 rutile sands permit in Cameroon. Total heavy minerals raw sample grades are up to 20.4% over two metres thickness. This has increased the confidence of management that there could be a commercial project. Geological modelling is planned.

Oscillate (MUSH) has started fieldwork on its Minnesota hydrogen interests, while land access permitting ongoing. There will be a detailed review of regional surface geology.

Igraine (KING) investee company Fixit Medical, where it owns 20%, has confirmed that it plans to pursue FDA approval and CE marking for its Cingo product, which prevents catheters from twisting. It is also launching three new medical device products. Two IP grants have been received.

EDX Medical (EDX) has launched a range of test for determining hereditary risk of cancer and heart disease. Revenues remain minimal and the interim loss rose from £1.34m to £1.7m. There was cash of £2.31m at the end of September 2024.

Crypto investor Kasei Digital Assets (KASH) realised £220,000 profit in the year to July 2024. NAV increased from £2.31m to £3.42m. There are investments in a range of Crypto currencies and tokens, including Bitcoin.

A person associated with IntelliAM AI (INT) chief executive Tom Clayton bought 8,660 shares at 80.763p each and 2,280 shares at 87.5p each. He owns 24.8% of the AI company. Chris Wragg, divisional head of lubrication and applied sciences, bought 1,668 shares at 87.5p and he owns 4.38% of the company.

Shepherd Neame (SHEP) has appointed Marion Sears and Meg Lustman as non-executive directors.

WeCap (WCAP) has raised £172,000 at 0.85p/share. Global Prime Partners increased it stake from 9.69% to 11.3%. Hot Rocks Investments (HRIP) raised £60,000 at 0.4p/share. A stake has been built up in Oscillate and there is a potential digital payments investment.

Ananda Developments has changed its name to Ananda Pharma (LON: ANA).

AIM

AIM newcomer Amcomri Group (AMCO) ended the week at 57.5p, having raised £12m at 55p/share. That valued the engineering business at £39.5m. Amcomri was set up to undertake a buy, improve, build strategy in the engineering and industrial sectors.

Retailer Shoe Zone (SHOE) says the recent National Insurance increase have increased costs, and it is closing stores are not considered viable. Consumer confidence is weak. The focus is bigger, more profitable stores. The company has halved its 2024-25 pre-tax profit guidance to net less than £5m. Although profit estimates for the year to September 2024 are unchanged at £9.5m there will be no final dividend.

Cavendish is raising its forecasts for Filtronic (FTC) following its latest trading update. Space and defence demand are propelling growth. Filtronic is providing E-band power amplifiers for ground stations to SpaceX and first half demand was particularly strong. The UK defence review could generate opportunities later in 2025. The 2024-25 pre-tax profit forecast has been raised from £7.7m to £9.6m.

Active Energy Group (AEG) shares returned from suspension following publication of interims and the potential for a resurrection of the business. Shareholders previously voted against liquidating the company and Zen Ventures provided a loan of £200,000 to enable the publication of 2023 accounts earlier in December and the subsequent interims have been released. Zen Ventures will appoint two directors. The plan is to commercialise the CoalSwitch technology.

Energy optimisation and assurance services provider Inspired (INSE) is improving its balance sheet via a placing raising £21.25m at 40p/share and a retail offer raised £410,000. There is also an issue of £5m of 12% convertible loan notes, which are convertible at 80p/share. The shares come with warrants exercisable at 80p each.

Surgical Science Sweden is bidding 13p/share to Intelligent Ultrasound (IUG), which values the ultrasound simulation company at £45.2m. The bid is recommended by the board. Intelligent Ultrasound will benefit from becoming part of a larger group and it enables the bidder to obtain a UK operation. Intelligent Ultrasound was going to return cash to shareholders following the sale of its clinical AI business. There was cash of £39.6m in November, which covers most of the bid value.

Tribe Technology (LTRYB) revealed that its accounts will be delayed, and it plans to leave AIM. The autonomous mining equipment developer is in talks with potential provider of finance, and it believes that leaving AIM will make it easier to raise money. Trading in the shares will be suspended on 2 January. Neometals (NMT) is cancelling its AIM quotation and concentrating on the ASX listing. It joined AIM in 2022, but it has been difficult to raise funds. Trading volumes on AIM have been low. The cancellation will be on 3 February. Retailer Quiz (QUIZ) is also planning to leave AIM. Shareholders approved plans for Webis (WEB) to lave AIM and this will happen on 3 January.

Synairgen (SNG) wants to raise up to £19m at 2p/share to fund a phase II study for respiratory drug treatment SNG001. The largest shareholder TFG Asset Management has conditionally underwritten £18m of this. However, there is a placing and open offer to raise £6m and the TFG subscription will be reduced by the amount raised over £1m. However, if the placing and open offer does not raise at least £2.9m the AIM quotation will be cancelled.

Tiger Royalties and Investments (TIR) is changing strategy to become a technology incubator. It is acquiring Bixby Technology Inc, which is run by Jonathan Bixby, for £325,000. A fundraising at 0.1p/share will raise £3m. New shareholders include Premier Miton, Zeus and Jupiter. Toro is subscribing £325,000 worth of shares. The company is retaining its core resources investments, and it will consider other natural resources investments.

There was a reassuring update from Feedback (FDBK) concerning first half trading, but more was generated by the Bleepa medical imaging communications product. There are talks with Integrated Care Boards about further contracts. Net cash was £7.3m at the end of November 2024 and there were £500,000 of retail offer proceeds to be received. That compares with a market capitalisation of £7.3m.

Duke Capital (DUKE) increased recurring interim revenues by 4% to £12.7m. Fewer exit premia meant that total revenues dipped to £13.5m, from £14.1m. There have been £15m of follow-on investments in the period. Despite the £3.5m fundraising at 27.5p/share, the debt level is still significant with £69.1m forecast for the end of March 2024. Duke Capital provides important financial backing for small businesses through a combination of debt and equity and generates a steady income stream from those investments with longer-term upside.

Electronic and electro-mechanical components supplier LPA Group (LPA) has won three major contracts worth £4m. They are with French rail operator SNCF Voyageurs for interior LED lighting, Siemens Mobility, also for LED lighting, and seating manufacturer Grammer for eat electronics and lighting for trains in France. The SNCF contract last five years while the others are deliverable in 2025 and 2026.

Provexis (PXS) is purchasing a further batch of Fruitflow heart-health functional food ingredient inventory from dsm-firmnech to satisfy increasing demand for Fruitflow. The royalty based on gross profit will be paid to dsm-firmnech in shares. The total payment for inventory and royalty is 82.95 million shares at 0.68p each. DSM Venturing owns 10.9%.

Scholium Group (SCHO) managed to gain enough shareholder support for the plan to leave AIM. It required 75% of votes and it got 79.3%.

Digital media publisher Digitalbox (DBOX) has bought EastEnders for £50,000. It has 475,000 followers on the associated Walford East Facebook page. This adds to the recently launched Emmerdale Insider.

Nioko Resources is making a recommended offer of 2.68p/share for Hummingbird Resources (HUM). This is the same as the price of the debt-to-equity swap previously announced.

MAIN MARKET

Rockpool Acquisitions (ROC) revealed the potential acquisition of European Lingerie. The exclusivity period lasts until the end of June 2025.

Media Concierge has launched a recommended bid for National World (LON: NWOR). The 23p/share offer values the company at £65.1m.

London Finance and Investment Group (LFI) plans to wind itself up and return cash to shareholders. This could be 70p/share.

Acceler8 Ventures (AC8) is planning to acquire Verifyyed Inc, which has developed a royalty platform providing rights holders with greater transparency to drive revenues. California-based Verifyyed Inc has operations in Europe, and it will cost £96.8m in shares. A placing to raise up to £20m is anticipated.

The 79th GRP plans to invest £2.18m in First Class Metals (FCM) in two stages. It will end up with 51.2% of the enlarged share capital. The cash will be invested in projects in Ontario and there are potential synergies for project acquisitions.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 16 December 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Manchester-based Zentra (ZNT) switched from the Main Market to the Access Segment of Aquis on Wednesday.  The former One Heritage Group has discontinued its co-living and in-house construction services. The focus is high quality apartments and housing, as well as work for local authorities and housing associations. A portfolio of properties was sold for £7m after the end of June 2024. There is a conditional contract to sell land for £400,000. So far, £3m has been reinvested in a 30% stake in One Victoria, a residential and commercial development, in Manchester. It is scheduled for completion in the summer. Prior to the move Zentra director Jason Upton bought 141,806 shares at 3.5p each.

AI software developer IntelliAM (INT) has signed a letter of intent with SKF Lubrication System so the two companies can sell each other’s products. IntelliAM’s machine learning platform will be included in the latter’s products. If the acquisition of 53 Degrees North Engineering had been made at the beginning of the six months to September 2024, revenues would have been £1.61m and EBITDA £140,000. Annualised recurring revenues are £149,000. Chairman David Richards bought 7,142 shares at 70p each.

Vinanz Ltd (BTC) has received commitments totalling £1.5m at 14.5p/share conditional on a move to the London Stock Exchange. This will fund the purchase of more Bitcoin mining machines. The share price edged up 0.82% to 15.375p.

Time to ACT (TTA) subsidiary GreenSpur has developed a preliminary 15MW generator design that outperforms power density and space benchmarks. It is 30% lighter and 70%-80% smaller. Further improvements are possible.

Intelliqo (IQO), which provides marketing services to technology businesses, lost £145,000 in the six months to September 2024. Revenues declined from $558,000 to $224,000. The focus is the Langaroo App. Building up sales will stop the cash outflow. Cash has fallen to less than £12,000.

Mendell Helium (MDH) says M3 Helium, which it has an option to acquire, has increased production to 100Mcf/day and is rising by 2Mcf each day. This enhances the potential value of the farm-in to Scout Energy’s acreage in the Hugoton field. The option has been extended to the end of March 2025.

In the year to April 2024, Helium Ventures (HEV) had net assets of £24,000, including £56,000 in cash plus £250,000 long-term investment and £30,000 in short-term investments. Since then, the company has been issued a 19.4% stake in Trackimo following the £250,000 subscription. Creditors include deferred payments to directors of £130,000.

Capital for Colleagues (CFCP) has received the third tranche of consideration for the sale of shares in investee company The Homebuilding Centre to the company so that it can expand employee ownership. There was £114,000 received, which was above the minimum of £50,000, due to strong trading.

Igraine (KING) has formalised its investment rights with GEM and its battery storage project development subsidiary BES3. The first site has been chosen.

Marula Mining (MARU) is withdrawing from planned projects in Zimbabwe. It is also relinquishing its interest in the Nkombwa Hill project in Zambia. This enables focus to be placed on the Blesberg lithium and tantalum project and other core interests.

Ananda Developments (ANA) has raised £150,000 at 0.35p/share following positive results for cannabis-based treatment MRX1. There was a significant reduction in blood plasma levels of NT-proBNP (N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide) levels. This biomarker is used in diagnosis and management of heart failure.

SulNOx Group (SNOX) has raised a further £300,000 at 52.5p/share with a warrant attached. Unicorn AIM VCT has taken its stake to 5.39%. Wishbone Gold (WSBN) has raised £250,000 at 0.2p/share. Meme Vault (MEME) raised £271,000 at 0.02p/share. The shares come with two warrants each and the exercise price is 0.02p/share.

Inqo Investments (INQO) has declared a dividend of R0.07/share.

OTAQ has left Aquis.

AIM

Sports consultancy and data analysis business 4GLOBAL (4GBL) is refocusing its strategy. The new focus is North America. In the six months to September 2024, revenues fell 3% to £1.7m. The loss increased from £1m to £1.08m after a much higher foreign exchange loss. Annualised recurring revenues are steady at £1m. North American revenues rose by 161% in the period. There was cash of £287,000 at the end of September 2024, but also borrowings of £583,000 following the securing of an additional borrowing facility of £500,000 during the period. Management believes it has enough cash for its requirements, including continuing to spend on developing the data analysis technology.

Equals Group (EQLS) is recommending a bid from a bid vehicle owned a consortium comprising TowerBrook Funds, JC Flowers Funds and Railsr shareholders. The 140p/share cash offer values the multi-currency payments company at £283m. The bid is 135p/share in cash with a special dividend payment of 5p/share.

NWF (NWF) offset the decline in the food distribution by stronger trading in fuels and feed. Fuels margins improved despite flat volumes. Overall operating profit improved, but higher interest costs mean that pre-tax profit will be lower. Feeds volumes improved due to a higher milk price. Lower throughput and costs of relocating stock to the Lymedale site mean that its profit contribution fell. The winter is important to the full year outcome.

Automotive connection systems supplier Strip Tinning (STG) says that the lifetime value of nominations has risen 12% to £107m. That is mainly due to the major battery technology contract for cell contact systems from £43m to £56.8m. Higher National Insurance costs will be offset by cost savings. Capex spending will be lower than expected over the next two years, so net debt will not rise as rapidly, although it could be £9.3m by the end of 2026. A £3.7m loss is forecast for 2024. Although the 2026 forecast has been lowered, Strip Tinning is set to move into profit in 2027. There is 80% visibility of forecast 2027 revenues of £27m.

Ceramic and fragrance products supplier Portmeirion (PMP) trading has been weaker than expected and the 2024 pre-tax profit forecast has been cut from £4.5m to £1m. South Korea and the US have been weak markets. Christmas stock was delivered late to the US and there were order withdrawals. Net debt is expected to be £7.4m. An unchanged dividend of 5.5p/share is anticipated. The fragrance business is the bright spot.

Electric Guitar (ELEG) subsidiary 3radical is being liquidated and Electric Guitar has become a shell. The uncertain financial position means that trading in the shares remains suspended.

Roebuck Food Group (RFG) intends to raise up to £8.5m via a bookbuild to finance the purchase between 35% and 38.7% in GlasPort Bio, which is developing technology to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, with an option to raise this stake to 94.5%. The company is also buying a 13% to 16.7% stake in GlaspOrt Rumen Tech, which has developed ruminate feed additive RumenGlas, that reduces carbon dioxide emissions.

Autonomous vehicles developer Aurrigo International (AURR) raised £5.25m at 44p/share. The retail offer raised an additional £68,000. The cash will fund an increase in production capacity, as well as engineering.

Helix Exploration (HEX) has made a commercial helium discovery at the Darwin#1 well at the Rudyard field. It is 1.1% helium with the rest primarily nitrogen and the flow is sustainable. The Rudyard field could support multiple production wells, and each could generate $4m in cash/year. The company could begin to be cash generative in 2025.

Trading in Aura Energy (AURA) shares has been halted pending a capital raising. An assessment of future capacity expansion at the Tiris uranium project in Mauritania. The production target update in September increased the mine life from 17 to 25 years. Options to expand production capacity in the third year of operations from the initial plan to produce to produce 2MIbspa U3O8 to produce up to 4MIbspa U3O8. At 3MIbspa U3O8 NPV8 would be $544m, while at 4MIbspa U3O8 it is $521m. Tamesis has been AIM appointed broker.

Orosur Mining Inc (OMI) has received assays from the second and third holes of the current drill programme at the Anza project in Colombia. There was a composite intersection of 77.3 metres @ 7.68g/t gold from surface at the second hole and 75 metres at 5.6g/t from surface at the third hole. This shows a continuing trend to the North West. The fourth hole is completed.

Orcadian Energy (ORCA) has revealed heads of agreement for a farm out deal for the 145bcf Earlham/Orwell project in the North Sea. A joint venture led by Independent Power Corporation is earning a 50% stake and Orcadian Energy is fully carried to first gas. The joint venture, which has also acquired the $1.5m Shell loan, will be repaid this free carry spending through an additional 30% share of project revenues until the cost is covered. Orcadian Energy is also selling 50% of HALO Offshore UK to Independent Power Corporation, which is securing £5m of acquisition finance for gas field buy outs. Orcadian Energy has a 50% interest in the P2634 licence in the North Sea that has been acquired by Serica Energy (SQZ) from Parkmead (PMG).

Kazera Global (KZG) 70%-owned subsidiary Whale Head Minerals has secured an offtake agreement with Fujax South Africa for an initial 100,000 dry tonnes of heavy mineral sands from the Walviskop project in return for 80% of the anticipated final sales price less certain costs. Production recently started. Fujax will make a prepayment of $600,000 in two tranches in December and January.

Industrial monitoring and maintenance systems supplier Tan Delta Systems (TAND) says delays in orders mean that 2024 revenues will be lower than expected at £1.2m, down from £1.5m last year. The loss will be £1.2m. Net cash will be £3m.

Business recovery services provider Begbies Traynor (BEG) is benefiting from relatively high levels of insolvencies. In the six months to October 2024, revenues were 16% ahead at £76.3m, including organic growth of 11%. Underlying pre-tax profit was 16% higher at £11.5m, while earnings were 12% ahead at 5.1p/share. The interim dividend is raised 8% to £1.4m.

Seed Innovations (SEED) investee company Inveniam Capital has secured a strategic partnership with UAE-based AI company G42 to develop a platform for the financial markets. Seed Innovations owns less than 0.2% of Inveniam Capital.

MAIN MARKET

Kitchenware retailer ProCook Group (PROC) reports an increased underlying interim loss of £2.8m after a small dip in gross margins. Like-for-like revenues were 4% ahead with ecommerce growth faster than that of high street stores. There were 315,000 new customers buying in the period. Net debt is £4.2m due to deliberately increased stock levels. Management admits pre-Budget spending was subdued, but he business is second half weighted and there should be an improved full year outcome.

Investment company Thalassa Holdings (THAL) intends to raise cash to finance acquisitions. It believes this is an ideal time to pick up businesses at attractive valuations. The final price is being decided via a Dutch auction.

Alteration Earth (ALTE) has gained shareholder approval for the acquisition of Pri0r1ty AI. The company has developed a platform called Priority Adviser, which collects customer data for use in PR/investor relations. The enlarged company will move to AIM late in December.

Aura Renewable Acquisitions (ARA) is proposing the all-share acquisition of Zero Carbon Technologies, which plans to develop lead-acid and lithium-ion battery recycling operations in Europe. It is acquiring land in Spain. The target is raising at least £10m ahead of the acquisition, while Aura Renewable Acquisitions intends to raise up to £2m.

Nanoco (NANO) shareholders overwhelmingly voted against the appointment of two additional directors.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 9 December 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Invinity Energy Systems (IES) has launched its next generation flow battery ENDURIUM. This has higher efficiency and is designed to be manufactured in Scotland in high volumes. This new product is likely to be the main source of orders from now on. There are already orders for ENDURIUM. Invinity Energy Systems is expected to move into profit in 2026.

Equipmake (EQIP) has launched a strategic review that could lead to the sale of the company. The company is still waiting for the final agreement for a $6m licence with a commercial vehicles manufacturer. It is running short of cash with £1.9m currently in the bank. That should last until March. A further share issue or a strategic partner will be required if Equipmake is to remain independent. VSA has been appointed as corporate adviser.

Vinanz Ltd (BTC) intends to move to the Main Market. This depends on the FCA approving the prospectus. Shares will be issued to all option and warrant holders.

Cooks Coffee (COOK) has entered an agreement with Dairygold Agri Business in Ireland to operate four Esquires cafes within Co-Op Superstores owned by Dairygold. The initial period is for 10 years and there are 24 other stores owned by Dairygold.

Ormonde Mining (ORM) investee company TRU Precious Metals has announced positive results of exploration in the Golden Rose project. Some of the samples showed high grades.

CRUSHMETRIC Group (CUSH) has raised £100,000 at 12.5p/share. China-based subsidiary Star Collaboration has reached a settlement with a distributor and it will pay £166,000.

Marula Mining (MARU) says contract mining should begin at the Blesberg lithium and tantalum mine in South Africa during February 2025. There is a planned leasing agreement for support vehicles.

Coinsilium (COIN) has appointed Oberon Capital as its joint broker. The company has entered a strategic advisory services agreement with TAND3M.io.

Cannabis-based medicines developer Ananda Developments (ANA) says its MRX1 drug candidate has passed through drug stability timepoints ahead of a phase 1 and two phase 2 studies.

Kondor AI (KNDR) had a cash outflow of just over £1m during the 12 months to September 2024. There is £611,000 in cash left in the balance sheet.

Fuel additives developer SulNOx Group (SNOX) has raised £1.875m via subscription at 46.6p/share and an exercise of warrants at 29p/share. A subsidiary of McQuilling has invested in the subscription and it is the preferred partner in the US market. Ora Technology (ORA) raised £255,000 at 8p each. Marallo Holdings has acquired a 27.6% stake.

EPE Special Opportunities (EO.P) is commencing a share buy back programme.

Silverwood Brands (SLWD) executive director Andrew Gerrie bought 26,572 shares at 22.556p each.

AIM

Warpaint London (W7L) is bidding 48p/share in cash for Brand Architekts (BAR), valuing the company at £13.9m. There is a share alternative. Warpaint London believes that its relationships with retailers will help to boost sales of the health and beauty brands, such as Skinny Tan and Super Facialist, owned by Brand Architekts, which has high overheads compared with its revenues. The acquisition should be earnings enhancing in 2025. Warpaint London is raising £14m at 510p/share with up to £1m more to come from a retail offer.

K3 Business Technology (KBT) is selling its UK SYSPRO business NexSys to SYSPRO owner Advent for £36m. This business generated 109% of group EBITDA and 28% of group revenues. K3 Business Technology intends to return cash to shareholders. The company’s remaining operations are K3 Fashion and Pebblestone, the IKEA software business and other retail software.

SDX Energy (SDX) plans to leave AIM because of the costs of the quotation and the greater flexibility as a private company. Potential investors would prefer to invest in an unquoted company. It is the intention to put in place a matched bargains facility. The strategy continues to be to become a vertically integrated gas and renewable energy producer in Morocco. If shareholders agree, then the quotation will be cancelled on 9 January. SDX Energy joined AIM in May 2016 at 18p/share.

Photonics company Gooch & Housego (GHH) had a better second half, but full year profit was still lower. In the year to September 2024, revenues were 1% ahead at £136m. A decline in industrial revenues, due to weak product sales for semiconductor manufacturing and other industrial uses, was offset by higher aerospace and defence and life sciences revenues. Underlying pre-tax profit slipped 22% to £8.1m. The total dividend was raised 1.5% to 13.2p, which is 1.9 times covered by earnings.

Technology company adviser and investor EMV Capital (EMVC) raised £1.5m at 50p/share, which was a 15% premium to the previous day’s closing price. The cash will fund investment in reporting infrastructure and hiring of additional staff. It will also provide money for additional investments. Management is targeting recurring annual fund management fees of more than £1m so that it can reach breakeven. In the ten months to October 2024, core income was £2m, up from £1.2m, including £500,000 of recurring fund management fees. This excludes subsidiary portfolio companies.

Condor Gold (CNR), which is developing the La India gold project in Nicaragua, says that Metals Exploration (MTL) and Calibre Mining Corp have made bid approaches and negotiations are at an advanced stage with Metals Exploration. Calibre Mining Corp says it will not make an offer. Metals Exploration has entered into a £5.5m bridging loan facility with Drachs Investments No. 3, which has a 18.4% shareholding. This is repayable at the end of January or when talks end. Galloway is lending £475,000 to Condor Gold. Metals Exploration owns the Runruno gold project in the northern Philippines.

Bigblu Broadband (BBB) is selling Australian broadband business to SKM Telecommunications for up to £25.7m, which values the business at more than double the total cost of investment. The initial cash payment is £15.4m and £6.8m in shares in SKM, with a further £3.5m in cash due in one year. This requires shareholder approval at a general meeting on 20 December. The company will still have operations in New Zealand and a subsidiary involved in the distribution of Starlink, plus a 2.8% stake in Quickline. Revenues are forecast to be £1m in 2024-25.

Bars and leisure operator XP Factory (XPF) continues to grow both of its brands. Escape Hunt interim revenues were 7% ahead at £6.5m and management believes that this part of the business could be bigger than originally anticipated. Boom Battle Bars revenues were 56% higher and more of the franchise outlets are being acquired. Group like-for-like revenues were 4% higher. There was a small underlying pre-tax profit before contract termination and other exceptional costs. Net debt was £1.3m at the end of September 2024. Medium-term targets have been set. The plan is to increase sales by 50% and double underlying EBITDA by March 2028. That means a revenue target of £90m with a March 2028 run-rate of £100m and EBITDA margins of 15%.

Construction disputes and property services provider Diales (DIAL), formerly Driver Group, has completed its rebranding and the benefits of cost cutting will show through in the current year. Interim revenues edged up from £42.6m to £43m. A decline in European and North American revenues was offset by growth in the other markets. The Middle East returned to profit and the Asia Pacific loss was lower. Overall pre-tax profit improved from £1.1m to £1.2m. The total dividend is maintained at 1.5p/share, although it is still not covered by earnings. The net cash of £4.3m (7.9p/share) enables Diales to add more fee earners, which might come from small acquisitions that may add to the range of services and sectors that can be addressed.

SRT Marine (SRT) reported revenues of £14.8m in the 15 months to June 2024. The loss was £13.8m. Transceivers generated most of the revenues with the major systems contracts with international coastguards potentially starting in the next few months, hopefully at last one of them by the end of 2024. New finance has been obtained since the end of the period.

Floorcoverings distributor Likewise (LIKE) in contrast with some companies had a strong October and November when sales were 11% ahead. Year-to-date growth is 7.5%, which represents an increase in market share. Margins are also improving. Zeus has maintained its 2024 pre-tax profit forecast at £2m, although sales are ahead of expectations.

Investment company Seed Innovations (SEED) says MAV was £10.6m at the end of September 2024, including £3.52m in cash. That is 5.5p/share. This NAV is after the £2m cash distribution to shareholders. The main quoted investment was Alaska-focused oil and gas company Pantheon Resources (PANR) and the share price subsequently rose from 16p to 22.91p. The company sold the shares, adding £101,000 to NAV.

Semiconductor designer EnSilica (ENSI) has won another long-term design and supply contract. The total contract value for the deal with an industrial test equipment provider will be more than $30m over ten years. This comes with an upfront payment to help the cash position.

Interim figures from telematics supplier Trakm8 (TRAK) show reduced revenues from £8.54m to £8.31m, following a reduction in recurring revenues from £5.23m to £4.51m. The pre-tax profit slumped from £119,000 to £15,000. Net debt was £6.66m at the end of September 2024. Full year expectations have been reduced. The insurance market remains tough. There could be some improvement next year, but the outlook is uncertain.

Fashion retailer Quiz (QUIZ) has been hit by falls in online and stores revenues, although there was an improvement in international revenues, in the four months to the end of November. There was a sharp decline in November. Overall revenues fell 6% to £24.9m. Annual costs will be increased by £1.7m as a consequence of the Budget. Net debt is £2.8m and the £4m of bank facilities could be fully utilised by early 2025 and additional funds will be required. The company’s founder has offered a £1m loan.

Rockwood Strategic has increased its stake in film vehicles and services provider Facilities by ADF (ADF) to 4.4% stake and related investment entities still have a further 7.6%, Chief executive Marsden Proctor has bought 79,947 shares at 31.6p each.

Cannabis-based medicines developer Celadon Pharmaceuticals (CEL) has finally received the balance of £150,000 from the May 2024 subscription at 105p/share.

MAIN MARKET

Compliance technology developer RegTech Open Project (RTOP) plans to leave the transition category of the Main Market. Trading should end on 31 December. A new chief executive is being sought and there are plans to raise cash. The company has also promised to find an exit opportunity for existing shareholders.

Tissue engineering company BSF Enterprise (BSFA) has raised £500,000 via an oversubscribed placing at 2.5p/share and each new share comes with a warrant exercisable at 5p. There should be enough cash for more than 12 months.

Publisher National World (NWOR) says it would be minded to recommend the enhanced 23p/share bid from Media Concierge. The offer is subject to due diligence.

R8 Capital Investments (MODE) is not going ahead with the acquisition of Redwood Partners. A fundraising is planned.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 2 December 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Incanthera (INC) has been accused of potential patent infringement in the formulation of its Skin + Cell skincare range. Even though Incanthera believes that there is no merit to the accusation, but the launch of the Skin + Cell range of products has been delayed. There is cash in the bank following a £2.6m subscription at 15p/share.

WeCap (WCAP) has converted £7.75m of loan notes in WeShop Holdings in return for 3.21 million shares, which is 1.33 million shares at 300p each and 1.875 million shares at 200p each. This increases the shareholding to 16.2%, including shares owned by 235%-owned Community Social Investments. WeCap says that the value of the shareholding is £24.6m, based on the last fundraising share price of 476p. WeCao has extended the discounted capital bond issued to Hawk Holdings for 18 months. The total owed is £6.18m.

Electric vehicle technology developer Equipmake (EQIP) increased full year revenues by three-fifths to £8.1m. Bus repowering revenues grew fastest, but this is labour intensive at low volumes. The loss increased from £5m to £9.1m. The cash outflow from operations declined from £9m to £6.29m. Costs are being reduced. There was £2.5m in the bank at the end of May 2024. A potential licensing agreement could provide cash flow over the next two years.

Water sector installation works provider Field Systems Design Holdings (FSD) improved annual revenues from £13.8m to £17.8m, with a small contribution from power generation. This enabled pre-tax profit to increase from £287,000 to £490,000. There was £2.59m in the bank at the end of May 2024.

KR1 (KR1) had net assets of 57.79p/share at the end of October 2024, down from 62.15p/share at the end of the previous month. There was nearly £600,000 of income generated from digital assets during the month.

Tectonic Gold (TTAU) reported a fall in the full year cash outflow from operating activities from £171,000 to £55,000. Net debt is £86,000 at the end of June 2024. The sae of assets has raised $150,000, as well as a R and D tax inflow of A$173,000.

Inqo Investments (INQO) reported full year revenues improving from R7.37m to R8.2m. There was a movement from loss to profit.

Essentially Group (ESSN) has terminated its retainer with broker Clear Capital Markets.

In the year to June 2024, there was a cash outflow from operating activities of £375,000 at BWA (BWAP). Further exploration drilling is underway at Dehane and sample analysis results should be available in the near future. Chairman Jonathan Wearing has subscribed for 40 million shares at 0.5p each.

SulNOx Group (SNOX) has appointed Fuelonomics Hydrocarbons Innovations as distributor of SulNOxEco fuel conditioners in Nigeria.

Vinanz Ltd (BTC) has received the initial order of Bitcoin miners and they are up and running in Nebraska.

Arbuthnot Banking Group (ARBB) chairman and chief executive Sir Henry Angest has bought 116,000 shares at 900p each. He owns 58% of the voting shares. Barry Hersh has reduced his stake in Global Connectivity (GCON) from 6.97% to 5.96%. Newbury Racecourse (NYR) chairman Dominic Burke has bought 7,500 shares at 540p each.

Wishbone Gold (WSBN) has appointed Tony Moore as chairman and Jack Sun as finance director. Invinity Energy Systems (IES) has hired Adam Howard as finance director. He was previously at the National Walth Fund.

AIM

Frasers Group has taken a 6.4% stake in electricals retailer Marks Electrical (MRK). Frasers has a record of taking stakes in other retailers and it also has shareholdings in AO World and Currys. Canaccord Genuity has reduced its stake from 5.24% to 2.4%. Founder Mark Smithson still owns 73.8%. Rockwood Strategic (RKW) has built up a 4.54% stake in Kooth (KOO). This follows Canaccrd Genuity cutting its stake from 8.97% to 3.38%. River Global Investors recently nearly doubled its stake to 10.1%.

Bars operator Loungers (LGRS) has agreed a 310p/share cash bid from Fortress Investment, which values it at £338.3m. Irrevocable acceptances are 40.2%. Singer does not believe that this fully values the business and thinks 375p/share is a fairer value. Interim pre-tax profit grew 51% to £5.95m, while net debt was £12.2m. Like-for-like growth in revenues has been 3.9% so far in the third quarter.

Rare books dealer Scholium (SCHO) intends to leave AIM and believes this will save at least £75,000/year. In the six months to September 2024, underlying pre-tax profit improved from £43,000 to £221,000 on revenues that improved 30% to £4.97m. A matched bargain facility will be provided by JP Jenkins. The AIM cancellation is likely to be on 6 January. NAV is 74.6p/share.

In the six months to September 2024, TPXimpact (TPX) revenues fell from £41.6m to £37.8m, but underlying pre-tax profit improved from £600,000 to £1.1m. Most of the benefits from £3m of annualised cost savings will come through in the second half and next year. Net debt is £7.9m. The forecast 2024-25 revenues are already more than 90% underpinned by the current order book. Pre-tax profit should improve from £1.8m to £5.5m.

Trading at sustainable wood materials supplier Accsys Technologies (AXS) improved in the first half and full year figures will be better than expected. Interim revenues were 1% higher at €72.2m and there is also an initial contribution from the US joint venture of €1.9m. Arnhem plant volumes grew 5%. Underlying EBITDA rose from €1.6m to €4m. There was an exceptional charge of €20.8m due to the winding up of the Hull plant and the share of the joint venture loss jumped from €1.2m to €6.1m. Net debt was €40.2m at the end of September 2024. Full year EBITDA of €10m is forecast.

Gift wrap supplier IG Design (IGR) reported an 11% decline in interim revenues to $393.1m with North America still a problem area. Elsewhere, revenues fell at a slower rate. Stationery and party-related sales both fell by more than one-fifth. Higher sourcing and freight costs hit gross margins and there was a knock-on effect on operating margins. Pre-tax profit was 62% lower at $13.3m. The second half is the most important part of the year and even though full year revenues are set to fall, pre-tax profit is still forecast to improve from $25.9m to $32.7m.

Helix Exploration (HEX) reports that the Amsden formation at the Clink#1 well in the Ingomar Dome in Montana has sub-economic grades of helium. Amsden was always thought to be a small proportion of the potential resource. The more important Flathead formation at the same well had 2.5% helium. The company believes that there could be helium below the Amsden formation and there will be appraisal testing of the Charles formation.

Strix (KETL) says that the kettle controls market has weakened, particularly in higher margin markets in the UK and Germany. The positive signs in the first half did not continue. This is due to poor consumer confidence, while there are also cost pressures. Zeus has reduced its 2024 pre-tax profit forecast from £23.6m to £17.5m.

Nativo Resources (NTVO) owns 50% of Boku Resources, which owns the Tesoro gold mine. Boku has entered an agreement to sell vein material from the Bonanza mine to a local processing plant. It will receive the spot price minus 20-30%. Production is about to be built up and the cash from the deal will help to finance this.

Electric Guitar (ELEG) is placing its main subsidiary 3radical into administration after it failed to raise additional cash. The fall in the share price and apparent lack of liquidity before trading was suspended meant that the digital media business could not gain funding.

i-nexus Global (INX) intends to leave AIM. The cloud-based software provider says poor share price performance and liquidity has led to the proposal. There should be direct cost savings of £250,000. The business has been consistently loss making. There is a three-year growth plan. i-nexus Global raised £10m at 79p/share when it joined AIM in June 2018. The cancellation will happen on 27 December if shareholders agree.

Firering Strategic Minerals (FRG) announced a maiden JORC compliant mineral resource estimate for the quicklime project in Zambia. This shows a near-doubling of the resource tonnes compared with the 2017 estimate. There is 145.2Mt at 95.7% CaCO3, including 11.8Mt in the measured category. This could provide more than 50 years of production. There is growing demand from copper and industrial clients.

Ultrasound simulators developer Intelligent Ultrasound (IUG) has court approval for the capital reorganisation that will allow distribution of cash generated by the AI technology sale. There is £39.6m in the bank. Ultrasound revenues have fallen from £8.4m to £7.4m in the period to 22 November. The rate of decline has slowed in the second half.

Mercia Asset Management (MERC) has unchanged NAV of 43.4p/share at the end of September 2024. Income more than covered costs before any investment valuation movements. The interim dividend is 0.37p/share, up 6%, and there is £46m in cash on the balance sheet. The strategy is to grow assets under management to £3bn, from the current level of £1.8bn.

In the six months to September 2024, Cloud-based services provider Iomart (LSE: IOM) reported flat revenues of £62m, with a like-for-like decline when acquisitions are excluded, and a slump in pre-tax profit from £7.6m to £4.3m. The dividend has been reduced from 1.94p/share to 1.3p/share due to the lower earnings. The £57m purchase of Atech broadens the range of services provided and deepens the relationship with Microsoft. Atech provides fully managed and security services for mid-market business and enterprise customers. Net debt was £29.8m, but it is expected to rise to £79m in March 2025 following the payment for Atech.

In the six months to September 2024, thermal insulation and acoustic material manufacturer Autins Group (AUTG) was hit by a 17% drop in revenues, but gross margins improved. Underlying EBITDA fell 46% to £400,000. Net debt is £1.18m but there are more than £3m of available borrowing facilities.

Building services provider Northern Bear (NTBR) interims show a small improvement in revenues from £36.9m to £37.6m, but higher overheads meant that pre-tax profit dipped from £1.68m to £1.54m, although this was slightly better than expected. There was an operational cash inflow of £2.2m. Net debt is £1.4m. Hybridan forecasts a dip in full year pre-tax profit from £2.14m to £1.84m, although there is potential for an upgrade.

Cyber security services provider Shearwater (SWG) improved interim revenues by 8% to £11.3m and it is on course to be profitable for the full year. There has been an increase in demand for on-premises cyber security, which Shearwater can provide. Net cash should be £6.8m at the end of March 2025.

Quadrise (QED) has signed two long-awaited agreements. The deal with shipping company MSC and Cargill involves production of bioMSAR and MSAR fuels in Antwerp and will enable vessel trials on board the MSC Leandra. Cargill will supply feedstocks and sell the fuels to MSC. The trial should start in the first quarter of 2025. There is also an agreement with fuel supplier Auramarine to develop decarbonisation products in the marine sector. They will enable companies to comply with new environmental regulations.

Oracle Power (ORCP) has received the final batch of assay results for the drilling at the Northern Zone intrusive hosted gold project. These show high grades over an expanded area. A mineralisation report is expected by the end of November and then a mining lease application will be submitted. Cantor Fitzgerald has reduced its stake, and Mahfuz Chowdhury has taken a 3.72% shareholding.

MAIN MARKET

Packaging manufacturer and distributor Macfarlane Group (MACF) says revenues in the 10 months to October 2024 are 4% lower. This represents a steady performance in current markets with new business being won. Net dent is £4.7m. National Insurance and other budget measures will cost £1.5m/year.

Seraphim Space Investment Trust (SSIT) reported a decline in NAV from 96.2p/share to 93.96p/share over the first quarter to September 2024. A foreign exchange loss offset gains. The S/£ exchange rate has strengthened, and the value of the portfolio has increased by more than the first quarter loss. Shares in NASDAQ-listed AST SpaceMobile more than doubled in value during the period. There was £24.9m in the bank.

Cardiff Property (CDFF) grew NAV from 2844p/share to 2931p/share. The dividend was raised from 22p/share to 23.5p/share. Net cash was £2m at the end of September 2024.

Motor dealer Caffyns (CFYN) improved interim underlying pre-tax profit from £259,000 to £452,000. The interim dividend is maintained at 5p/share. Net debt is £11.5m. There is £38.4m of property in the balance sheet at book value and there is unrecognised surplus of more than £10m on top of that. Caffyns is selling a property in Lewes for an amount that exceeds one-quarter of the company’s market capitalisation of £12.3m.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 25 November 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Cooks Coffee (COOK) moved back into profit in the six months to September 2024. Revenues were 27% higher at NZ$2.74m with growth coming from new openings and existing sites. This income comes from fees from franchisees. Like-for-like growth in the UK was 6% and 3% in Ireland. Sales growth has accelerated in the second half with record sales per store in October. There were 83 coffee shops at the end of September 2024, and this could rise to 90 by next March. The company is moving domicile to the UK.

In the year to September 2024, Time to ACT (TTA) increased revenues from £958,000 to £1.67m. There was an underlying operating profit. There was a cash outflow from operating activities of £784,000 because of working capital movements. There was £1.17m in cash.

Global Connectivity (GCON) has had its stake in Rural Broadband Solutions diluted to £9.5m. The valuation of the stake has been reduced from £13.6m to £11.7m, which is equivalent to 3.2p/share. There is an agreement in principle for an investment in a new business.

Aquaculture technology developer OTAQ (OTAQ) has sent out the circular seeking shareholder approval to leave Aquis. The general meeting will be held on 10 December. Delays in orders mean that 2024 Dowgate forecasts a drop in revenues from £4.4m to £3.1m (previously £4.2m) this year and a £1.8m loss, up from £1.2m in 2023. There should be net cash of £100,000 by the end of the year. Convertible loan note interest can be capitalised with up to 75% of proceeds from the sale of certain inventory will be used to pay back the holders.

Lift Global Ventures (LFT) core financial information business Miriad made a positive contribution despite the tough financial markets. It generated £127,000 in cash. There was £163,000 in cash at the end of June 2024.

Invinity Energy Systems (IES) has sent a circular to shareholders to gain approval to move the domicile from Jersey to the UK.

Tap Global Group (TAP) has cancelled its long-term incentive plan and granted options to directors with most of the options vesting when there are increases in the share price. Peter Wall has been formally appointed as chairman.

Marula Mining (MARU) has appointed Morre Kingston Smith as auditor. Results from metallurgical testing work on ore from the Kinusi copper mine should be available in the first quarter of 2025. Further test shipments will happen before the end of the year. Sampling work of high-grade tungsten deposits at the Northern Cape lithium and tungsten project in South Africa is continuing. Tungsten concentrate could be produced next year.

Oscilate (MUSH) has identified areas to start hydrogen operations in Minnesota. Work is under budget.

Valereum (VLRM) has been admitted to the Apex segment of the Aquis Stock Exchange.

Vinanz Ltd (BTC) has added another 21 bitcoin miners to its site in Nebraska, taking the total to 56.

RentGuarantor Holdings (RGG) has launched an offer of £500,000 10% convertible loan notes lasting two years. This will fund an expansion of the workforce. The Renters’ Rights bill will increase demand for rent guarantor services.

SuperSeed Capital (WWW) reported a NAV of 111p/share at the end of September 2024.

Capital for Colleagues (CFCP) has disposed of more shares in investee company Computer Application Services and raised £299,000. It still owns 24.4%. Pipes and valves distributor TPS shares were sold raising £901,000. The remaining TPS stake is 16%. The cash raised will be invested in other businesses.

WeCap (WCAP) investment WeShop has appointed a US investment bank ahead of a flotation. Audited accounts for 2022 and 2023 have been signed off.

AIM

Rail optimisation software and services provider Tracsis (TRCS) had a tough year, but strong recurring revenues helped. One-off revenues the previous year meant that revenues were 1% lower at £81m. Underlying pre-tax profit fell from £14.1m to £10.4m. Total dividend is 2.4p/share. There should eventually be further investment in the rail industry, which will be good news for Tracsis. The timing of the spending is uncertain. There are already potential deals in the pipeline, though. The business has been rationalised so that management can focus on core operations and further acquisitions. There is £19.8m in cash that can be spent on acquisitions that will enhance earnings.

Telecoms enterprise software supplier Cerillion (CER) continues to beat expectations. Full year pre-tax profit was 18% ahead at £19.8m. There were record new orders of £38.1m. The technology helps telecoms companies to operate more efficiently. Growth is set to continue.

It was no surprise that telecoms testing equipment supplier Calnex Solutions (CLX) had a tough first half. Revenues dipped from £7.8m to £7.4m and the loss more than doubled to £1.3m. Even so, the interim dividend has been maintained at 0.31p/share. Cash was reduced to £8.6m.  New partners are starting to sell group products, and they are replacing Spirent. Second half revenues should be better than the particularly weak comparatives. This should enable a return to profit for the full year.

Semiconductors developer CML Microsystems (CML) improved interim revenues, but that was down to the Microwave Technologies business not being included in the comparatives. Like-for-like revenues were similar to the second half of last year. Pre-tax profit slumped from £1.9m to £800,000. The interim dividend is maintained at 5p/share. Net cash is £15m. There are potential property sales that will boost the balance sheet. The proposed move of Microwave Technologies to a new site will reduce the cost base. Existing and new products have good long-term prospects.

Frontier IP (FIPP) is raising £3m via a placing and subscription at 28p/share. A retail offer via Primary Bid could raise up to £1m. Minimum subscription is £250. The offer closes at 5pm on 25 November. Frontier IP made unrealised gains of £1.3m in the year to June 2024, but there was an overall loss of £1.3m. NAV is 79.7p/share. Despite that, there is a shortage of cash in the balance sheet and the additional cash should last 12 months as the company tries to generate some additional cash from investment realisations.

Helix Exploration (HEX) drilling at Clink#1 in Montana has been successful. There was 2.5% helium encountered in the Flathead formation, which was higher than expected, and 55% hydrogen in drilling mud. Testing is ongoing and there should be further news in the near future. The well could go into production next year.

Tavistock Investments (TAVI) is acquiring Alpha Beta Partners, which is an asset manager with £3bn under management. The business is focused on retail investors, and this will scale up the existing business of offering asset management services to third party advisers. Operating profit was more than £500,000 on revenues of £4m in the year to September 2024. The initial payment is £6m, with the maximum consideration of up to £18m. Two disposals have been completed and the initial payment of £22m will be received in early December. They could eventually generate £37.75m.

Iron treatment provider Shield Therapeutics (STX) says it will hit the 2024 target revenues of $31.5m, up from $13.1m, as revenue peer prescription has increased. Recruitment has been completed for an Accrufer phase III study in China. The proposed $10m investment by AOP Health still requires shareholder approval. Costs are being lowered by 10%. Cash flow breakeven should be hit by the end of 2025, if the sales growth momentum continues.

Chain and transmission equipment Renold (RNO) reported flat interim revenues of £123.4m and pre-tax profit of £11.3m. Spending on acquisitions increased net debt to £42.2m. There was a dip in chain revenues and transmission revenues were slightly higher with improved margins. North America should recover in the second half and destocking is ending in Europe. The Valencia factory being hit by flooding has hurt sentiment. There will be additional short-term costs of £4.8m because of this with insurance payments potentially coming through in 2025-26.

Webis (WEB) has decided to leave AIM. The US-focused gaming company will seek shareholder approval on 18 December. This will help to reduce costs. The operations remain loss making.

Churchill China (CHH) had a tougher second half than expected with a lack of seasonal uplift in the fourth quarter. This means that 2024 pre-tax profit will be well below expectations. Next year is expected to continue to be weak with hospitality businesses hit by higher National Insurance costs. There will also be a hit for Churchill China and costs are being reduced, but 2025 expectations are also downgraded. The balance sheet remains strong.

Scientific instruments supplier Judges Scientific (JDG) says order intake has reduced if the large Geotek contract is excluded. China is particularly weak, but other markets are also tough, and orders have been deferred. Zeus has cut its 2024 pre-tax profit forecast by 19% to £25m. Next year’s forecast has also been trimmed.

Ilika (IKA) has reached the D6 milestone through the testing of 10Ah cells in its Goliath solid state batteries for electric vehicles. These larger cells have been shown to be safe and the D7 version should be available to potential customers in the second quarter of 2025. This moves the company nearer to finding a partner for the Goliath battery.

Property fund adviser and investor First Property (FPO) had a good first half with one-off profits from the trading of properties by a fund, where the company has an investment. There was also the early receipt of fees from disposal of properties in another fund. There was a swing from a loss of £650,000 to a pre-tax profit of £1.16m. Net debt was £18.7m.

Cannabis-based medicines developer Celadon Pharmaceuticals (CEL) has received a further £200,000 drawdown from the committed credit facility and the lender is committed to providing the remaining £500,000. However, it has to sell an investment to provide the cash. There is still £400,000 outstanding from a share subscription. Celadon Pharmaceuticals has enough cash to get it to January. Talks with another lender continue.

MAIN MARKET

Construction equipment hire company Speedy Hire (SDY) made a small profit in the first half with a recovery expected in the second half. Interim revenues fell 2% to £204m with flat hire revenues and lower fuel sales. Volumes are not being chased so that profit can be maximised. Pre-tax profit was £300,000 because of operational gearing, higher interest charges and a lower joint venture contribution. The Amey contract starts in the second half. Net debt is £112m.

J Smart and Co (Contractors) (SMJ) improved its full year pre-tax profit from £105,000 to £2.37m despite a higher loss on construction activities. The investment property business made a larger contribution. Investment properties are worth £70m and there is £7.5m of net cash. NAV is £126.3m. The total dividend is 3.23p/share.

Media Concierge has approached publisher National World (NWOR) about a possible offer of 21p/share. Media Concierge claims to have the backing of 72.2% of the share capital. Media Concierge wants the offer to be recommended by the board and to be able to complete due diligence. National World claims that entities affiliated with Media Concierge owe it £4.4m.

Technology consolidator Sealand Capital Galaxy (SCGL) is making its maiden AI investment. After evaluating suitable opportunities, the company has decided on EVOO AI (www.evoo.ai), which is a data platform with AI learning models incorporated. It provides insights to the luxury goods sector, such as market trends and consumer behaviour. The main product is Olive, a luxury e-commerce marketplace that offers personalised shopping. The company was incorporated on 15 December 2023. On 14 March 2024, EVOO AI had net assets of £848,000, including fixed asset investments of £800,000 and £1 in cash. The plan is for Sealand Capital Galaxy to invest in a convertible loan note. The first tranche is £200,000 and the second trance will be £100,000. The annual interest rate is 12% and the term is 18 months. Interest is payable on maturity. There will be a fee of one million warrants exercisable at €0.06/share. If the company floats at a lower share price the exercise price will match that price.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 18 November 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Aquis Exchange (AQX), which operates the Aquis Stock Exchange, is recommending a bid from rival exchange trading business SIX Exchange. SIX is mainly interested in the technology that Aquis has developed, but it suggests that there is potential to develop the Aquis Stock Exchange as a pan-European market. The offer for Aquis Exchange is 727p/share in cash, which values the company at £225m. There had been several previous proposals from SIX.

Aquaculture technology developer OTAQ (OTAQ) says delays in orders mean that 2024 revenues will be lower than expected. Dowgate forecasts a drop from £4.4m to £3.1m (previously £4.2m) this year and a £1.8m loss, up from £1.2m in 2023. There should still be net cash of £100,000 by the end of the year. The orders should fall into 2025. Costs continue to be reduced and annualised savings of £500,000 have been made. The board is seeking shareholder approval to leave Aquis.

Pubs operator Daniel Thwaites (THW) increased interim revenues by 5% to £63.5m and although pre-tax profit declined, excluding gains on interest rate swaps and property disposals or income on pension assets, it improved from £6m to £6.7m. Net debt was £71.2m at the end of September 2024 and it continues to invest in its pubs and hotels. The dividend was raised from 0.85p/share to 0.9p/share. There has been weaker consumer confidence since the summer. The National Living Wage and National Insurance hikes, along with the reduction in business rate relief, will hit the business and there is limited scope to increase prices. That is a problem for the next financial year.

Crypto app developer Tap Global Group (TAP) has appointed Peter Wall as strategic adviser, and it is intended that he will become chairman. He used to be chief executive of Argo Blockchain. In the year to June 2024, unaudited revenues were £2.67m and they continue to rise. Chief executive Arsen Torosian will take on the same role at the Gibraltar-based subsidiary once regulatory approval is received.

Asia Wealth Group (AWLP) moved back into profit in the first half. A loss of $94,000 was turned into a pre-tax profit of $13,000. The company is seeking investment opportunities in the UK and Asia.

Mendell Helium (MDH) has completed the sale of health business. M3 Helium, which Mendell Helium has an option to acquire, says the potential flow rates from the Rost 1-26 well in Kansas could exceed previous expectations.

Ananda Developments (ANA) chief executive Melissa Sturgess bought 2.02 million shares at an average price of 0.32p each. She has a 9.92% shareholding.

Transport electrification technology developer Equipmake (EQIP) says Tony Ratcliffe will leave his role of finance director at the end of the month.

EPE Special Opportunities Ltd (EO.P) had net assets of 294.9p/share at the end of October 2024.

AIM

Film vehicles and services provider Facilities by ADF (ADF) has been hit by filming delays and the cancelation of projects. It had appeared that there would a strong recovery in the second half following the Hollywood writers’ strike. Revenues have been reduced from £48.6m to £35.1m and margins have been hit by competition for limited contracts. This means that Facilities by ADF will not do much better than breakeven in 2024. There should be a recovery in 2025, but revenues have been cut from £67.3m to £56.8m – including a 12-month contribution from Autotrak. Rockwood Strategic has a 3.7% stake and related investment entities have a further 7.6%, while Octopus has taken a 6.49% stake. Downing and Otus have reduced their holdings. Chairman John Richards bought 200,000 shares at 30.5p each.

Duke Capital (DUKE) is asking for more money from shareholders. A placing has raised £17.2m at 27.5p/share, which is more than the initial amount sought. A retail offer could raise up to £3m more. The cash will be used for new and follow-on investments. There could also be some stakebuilding in existing investee companies. There will also be additional debt funds that can be used. The retail offer closes on 22 November.

Investment manager Tatton Asset Management (TAM) increased assets under management and influence by 13% to £19.9bn. It will be difficult to continue this momentum. Pre-tax profit was 29% ahead at £11.4m. This was held back by additional investment in mortgage business Paradigm. The interim dividend was raised by 19% to 9.5p/share.

Programmatic advertising services provider Nexxen International (NEXN) plans ask shareholder permission at its AGM for a departure from AIM and change its Nasdaq listing from ADRs to ordinary shares. Third quarter figures show 12% growth in revenues, while EBITDA is 49% ahead at $31.6m. The 2024 EBITDA forecast has been raised by 7% to $107m, which is still well below the 2022 level.

Phoenix Copper (PXC) says NIU Invest is reviewing the Empire mine project ahead of setting out a new drawdown schedule for the $80m corporate copper bond. So far, $5m has been drawn down. The company is talking to other potential bond investors. There is enough cash to reach the second quarter of 2025.

SRT Marine Systems (SRT) is raising £8.5m at 35p/share, including £5.36m from Ocean Infinity, which has also underwritten a retail offer to raise £2m of the cash. Ocean Infinity is providing a $21.4m guarantee for the performance bond relating to a $213m marine systems contract. There are other potential contracts in the pipeline and management says that SRT Marine Systems should be significantly profitable in 2025-26.

Great Western Mining Corporation (GWMO) says the anomalous copper zone at the West Huntoon porphyry copper prospect has been expanded from 2 square km to over 3 square km. There have been some high grades of copper, gold and silver in samples. The anomalous zone appears to trend towards the company’s M2 copper resource.

Deltic Energy (DELT) says Shell has provided an updated total well cost estimate of $48m for the Selene well site in the North Sea. Deltic Energy is carried for costs of up to $49m. There are plans for a second licence term as the partners move towards a final investment decision. This news and the full inclusion of tax losses has led Canaccord Genuity to increase its NPV10 share price target from 30p to 38p.

Gold explorer and producer Ariana Resources (AAU) has secured a $5m financing agreement with RiverFort Global Partners and $2m has been received. No new shares will be issued. This will fund feasibility studies for the Dokwe gold project in Zimbabwe. RiverFort Global Partners will be the cornerstone investor for the ASX listing.

There has been plenty of news from cancer diagnostics developer Angle (AGL) this week. The DNA analysis of circulating tumour cells using Parsortix has been shown to identify EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer patients that are developing resistance to treatment with AstraZeneca drug Osimertinib.  Uses of the Parsortix technology are being showcased at an American Association for Cancer Research special conference. Angle is presenting a talk on PD-L1 status in circulating tumour cells isolated by its Parsortix diagnostics technology from blood samples of lung cancer patients. Data produced has high analytical sensitivity and specificity and suggests that this technology can be used for personalised treatment of lung cancer patients. Additionally, there is a report on progress of developing a system to classify HER2 protein expression for breast cancer. This is being developed with BioView. Parsortix-based assays were showcased at the European Association for Cancer Research (EACR) Liquid Biopsies Conference in France.

Delays to defence orders have hit Solid State (SOLI) and profit will be much lower than expected this year. Cavendish has downgraded 2024-25 earnings by 58% to 5.5p/share and next year’s by 48% to 7.9p/share because it is uncertain when the order will come through. The UK government has paused spending on a major defence order ahead of a strategic defence review next summer. The dividend could be maintained at 4.3p/share.

Touch sensors manufacturer Zytronic (ZYT) has completed a strategic review and decided to sell assets and return any cash to shareholders. This might involve the sale of the trading subsidiary Zytronic Displays or its assets. Net cash was £3.3m at13 November. The share price

Power generator OPG Power Ventures (OPG) is being investigated by the Indian authorities for alleged non-compliance relating to the Foreign Exchange Management Act. This regulates foreign exchange transactions. Management believes that everything they have done have been in compliance with laws. The power plants continue to operate.

MAIN MARKET

Ground engineering and piling business Keller (KLR) is trading in line with expectations, but it is cautious about European operations. Competitive pricing means that profitability has been hit. There is still one loss making problem contract. North America and Asia Pacific remain strong regions in most sectors.

Critical Metals (CRTM) says copper ore off-taker OM Metals has sent the first truck load of ore to its processing plant. Critical Metals has further extended the repayment of its loan facility. A $646,000 payment has ben deferred to 20 December and could be further extended until the end of January. Cost savings, including a voluntary salary deferrals of 25% for executives, are being undertaken.

Like-for-like foundry sales volumes were one-fifth lower at Castings (CGS) as European heavy truck sales declined. Interim revenues also fell by one-fifth to £89.2m and cost savings are not fully showing through so pre-tax profit was three-fifths down at £4.1m. The interim dividend is 2% ahead at 4.21p/share. There are opportunities in off-highway, wind energy and infrastructure and that would reduce reliance on heavy truck demand. The assets acquired from Chamberlin are profitable.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 11 November 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Cross border e-commerce technology company Samarkand Group (SMK) reported a dip in revenues of 22% to £6.3m, with owned brands increasing their contribution by 14% to £4.1m. The loss has been reduced even before the £1.08m gain on the disposal of a brand. Net debt is £2m. The switch to focusing on owned brands will continue.

Wind-based hydrogen production technology developer Hydrogen Future Industries (HFI) says turbine testing has been delayed because of a fault in the control unit. Replacement parts should arrive by the end of the month. Schneider Electric is providing software to help analyse data for the feasibility study at Whitehall in Montana. Concept testing of the electrolyser continues, and efficiency is more than 97%. Neil Ritson has become executive chairman.

Unicorn Asset Management has taken a 5.42% stake in Equipmake (EQIP).

Pitch Pit has changed its name to Meme Vault (MEME) and will become an investment company focused on cryptocurrency and Web3 technologies. A new subsidiary will be set up in UAE. Chandila Fernando and Judith Hough will no longer be joining the board. The planned £500,000 placing is not taking place, but there will be an alternative fundraising.

DXS International (DXSP) chairman Bob Sutcliffe bought 35,000 shares at 1.3p each and he owns 1.8% of the healthcare IT developer. Earlier in the week, Hybridan published updated research and said that “management is focused on cashflow control until new NHS sales resume, when there could be significant revenue growth”. It argues that this is not reflected in the current share price.

Mendell Helium (MDH) has an option to acquire M3 Helium, which has acquired 85% interests in three further wells on the western side of the Hugoton gas field in Kansas. Two of the wells are in production and the third could be used as a water disposal well, which will reduce costs. No consideration is payable. The wells are breaking even.

Fenikso (FNK) has doubled its convertible loan to AIM-quoted Coro Energy (CORO) to £500,000. Tom Richardson, chairman of Fenikso is also a director of Coro Energy.

Ormonde Mining (ORM) investee company TRU Precious Metals, where it owns 36.3%, has announced results of copper exploration at the Golden Rose project in Newfoundland. Copper grades were up to 3.7% and some samples included zinc.

Jack Keyes has decided not to join the board of Oscillate (MUSH) as technical director. He is still undertaking hydrogen exploration work for the company.

ProBiotix Health (PBX) company secretary Mark Collingbourne has acquired 80,000 shares at 5.5p each.

AIM

Fabless silicon chip designer and manufacturer EnSilica (ENSI) slipped into loss in the year to May 2024, but there are already contracts in place for a bounce back to profit this year. EnSilica generates cash from operations, but it spent £6.1m on capitalised development. Chip supply generated flat revenues of £2.9m out of group revenues of £25.3m, up from £20.5m in the previous year. Chip supply revenues should start to build up from this year and that will sharply boost profitability. It can take two years or more for chip supply to begin and then production is built up to its peak, so there is built in growth for many years. Singer forecasts a 2024-25 pre-tax profit of £2.7m, doubling to £5.5m next year.

Membrane free electrolyser developer Clean Power Hydrogen (CPH2) has entered into a licence agreement with Lisheen H2 Energy Park, trading as Hidrigin, for the rights to manufacture MFE220 electrolyser units for its own use up to 2GW. This could be worth multi-million Euros. Hidrigin owns the 122MW Lisheen solar park and has funding for other developments. The licence fee will be payable in stages. Separately, there is a sale of a 1MW MFE220 electrolyser unit.

This week there was good news from professional services firm DSW Capital (DSW) with its trading statement following the acquisition earlier this week of DR Solicitors for £6.1m in cash and shares, which will reduce dependence on M&A. DR Solicitors has a client base of doctors, consultants and primary care providers. The latest annual pre-tax profit was £1.2m. The deal should be hugely earnings enhancing. Trading has been gradually improving in the first half. First half profit will be slightly lower at £100,000, but the full year pre-tax profit is expected to recover from £500,000 to £1.4m. A further jump to £2.5m is forecast for 2025-26. The interims will be published on 27 November.

Shell company Selkirk Group (SELK) raised £7.5m at 2.4p/share ahead of joining AIM this morning. The focus is undervalued consumer, technology and digital media businesses. Executive chair Iain McDonald says: “We have chosen to IPO on AIM because, despite the prevailing negative narrative, AIM is still a very attractive market for small, fast-growing companies”.

Electronics and battery products supplier Solid State (SOLI) had a tough first half but it says trading is in line with expectations in the first half and the second half should be better. Interim pre-tax profit has slumped from £7.3m to £2.5m. The components market has returned to normal, and first half revenues declined. Political uncertainty has hampered defence system orders. Last year’s defence revenues were exceptionally strong due to early deliveries, and a decline was expected. That is why full year underlying pre-tax profit is set to fall from £15.6m to £10.1m.

Hummingbird Resources (HUM) has announced a debt restructuring and possible bid. Delays in ramping up production at Kouroussa have strained the balance sheet and $30m of debt repayments have been deferred. Net debt was $155m at the end of September 2024, while trade and other payables were $152m. Nioko Resources, which owns 41% of the gold miner, is proposing a partial debt-to-equity conversion at 2.6777p/share, which would take its stake to 71.8%, and potential bid and cancelation of the AIM quotation. Geoff Eyre has been appointed interim chief executive.

Feedback (FDBK) raised £6.1m at 20p/share, which was a massive discount to the previous market price, which fell to 19.5p. This includes £530,000 raised via a WRAP retail offer of up to £1m. The cash will finance the rolling out of the Bleepa medical imaging communications product and take advantage of a collaboration with a provider of primary care IT services that will use Bleepa to streamline referrals between primary care, Community Diagnostic Centres and community care. The nominal value of shares will be reduced to 1p.

Futura Medical (FUM) has completed two proof of concept studies on new products for the treatment of sexual dysfunction in men and women. Eroxon Intense is a range extension for the existing Eroxon topical product for erectile dysfunction. This provides a stronger sensation. A preferred formulation will be tested next year and regulatory approval is expected by the end of 2025. WSD4000 is a topical treatment for women that treats symptoms such as lack of desire and lubrication. The next stage is a home user study, and results are expected in the first quarter of 2025. A pre-submission meeting with the FDA has happened and there will be another to help design a clinical study. There are discussions with potential partners.

Broadband services provider Bigblu Broadband (BBB) admits that it is in discussions with alternative investment manager Salter Brothers on a possible sale of the SkyMesh subsidiary. The transaction is subject to final terms and financing. This would be the latest asset disposal for Bigblu Broadband.

CleanTech Lithium (CTL) says that the pre-feasibility study for the Laguna Verde project has been delayed until the first quarter of 2025. Additional engineering work is required due to the location of the carbonation plant in Copiapo. An option for onsite renewable power will also be included. Lithium carbonate should be produced from the pilot plant in November.

Digital media publisher Digitalbox (DBOX) has added to its portfolio of digital media brands by acquiring the entertainment business of GRV Media. The assets are CelebrityTidbit.com, RealityTidbit.com and TheFocus.news. They generated revenues of less than £800,000 and they fit with Entertainment Daily and The Tab.

Synergia Energy (SYN) has raised £632,500 at 0.05p/share. There has also been the conversion of £296,000 of loans and £83,000 of fees into shares. The shares come with a warrant exercisable at 0.1p each. This provides funding for the Medway Hub Camelot carbon capture and storage joint venture with Harbour Energy. Synergia Energy wants to farm out up to 25% of the project. There should be a significant increase in production at the Cambay PSC, where a farm out of a 50% interest to Selan Exploration has been completed, from the second quarter of next year.

Kodal Minerals (KOD) joint venture partner Hainan Mining says that the $15m owed to the Mali government should be paid by Kodal Minerals and not the joint venture that owns the Bougouni lithium project. Kodal Minerals disagrees.

Optimer binders developer Aptamer Group (APTA) continues to win new contracts and it has added contracts worth up to £471,000 in the third quarter. This is work from a number of clients and many are repeat customers. Some of the existing customers are reaching a point where they are considering long-term licences. Booked revenues have reached £1.2m for 2024-25. The potential pipeline has increased to £4m.

MAIN MARKET

Cybersecurity company Narf Industries (NARF) says 2024-25 revenues should be at least $5m and they could rise to $8m in the following year. In the 15 months to March 2024, revenues were $7.6m. The dip in revenues is due to a switch in focus to commercial sales rather than the dependence on government funded development, as well as delays in US funding. Thereby building recurring revenues.

Foams manufacturer Zotefoams (ZTF) revenues are accelerating with third quarter growth of 54% and year to date improvement of 23%. Footwear sales are fuelling this growth, helped by the Olympics boosting Nike demand, but other parts of the business are also growing.  Operational efficiency is increasing margins.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 4 November 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Rebel shareholders failed to win any of their three resolutions, including the removal of the chief executive, at the requisitioned general meeting of ProBiotix Health (PBX). Broker Peterhouse said that major shareholder OptiBiotix Health (OPTI) was not allowed to vote its shares at the meeting because of the relationship agreement from the flotation of the probiotics developer. OptiBiotix Health owns 53.5 million shares, and the votes were lost by less than 36 million shares.

Surgical treatments provider One Health Group (OHGR) interim revenues were more than one-fifth higher at £13.4m. New patients increased by 29%. The second half is likely to better than expected. That means that full year EBITDA should be higher than £1.9bn. There was cash of £4.9m at the end of September 2024. A move to AIM is being considered.

Aquis Exchange (AQX) and Cboe Europe are assessing a joint bid to provide an EU consolidated tape of stock trades. The European Commission has decided to create a single entity to operate a real-time, trade consolidated tape. The European Securities and Market Authority will select the business to take on the role. The plan is for the two companies to set up a joint venture called SimpliCT, which will be based in the Netherlands, to bid for the role of equity consolidated tape provider.

Luxury prize draw organiser Good Life Plus (GDLF) has achieved £330,000 in monthly recurring revenues. There are more than 40,000 subscribers and churn has been reduced. In the six months to July 2024, revenues were £1.69m. There was a £2.21m cash outflow from operating activities. There was a fundraising after the balance sheet date. Richard Johnston has been appointed as finance director.

Macaulay Capital (MCAP) investee company Vale Foods has repaid a £125,000 loan and this has been reinvested in shares in the latest fundraising of £430,000. A £100,000 loan has been made to another investee company.

Health IT provider DXS International (DXSP) has won its first NHS commercial contract for its AI ExpertCare Clinical Decision Support product. In the year to April 2024, revenues were 2% ahead at £3.31m, There was an impairment charge of £4.38m. Even without that write-down the company fell into loss. Chairman Bob Sutcliffe bought 50,000 shares at 1p each and 133,333 shares at 1.5p each. He owns 1.74% of the company.

KR1 (KR1) had net assets of 62.15p/share at the end of September 2024. The income from digital assets was £592,000 during September.

Social commerce platform investor WeCap (WCAP) says WeShop is considering a listing. If its convertible loans are converted into shares WeCap would own 16% of WeShop. The investment in Bio2pure of £100,000 has been written down to nil. At the end of April cash was £49,000 and net assets were £7.39m.

Rogue Baron (SHNJ) says Sinju Japanese Whisky will be available in the US in the third week of November. The latest shipment of 800 cases has been presold.

Marula Mining (MARU) is stockpiling ore at the Kinusi copper mine. Samples have been sent to South Africa for test work and the results will help to design the first phase of the processing facilities. Three trial shipments are about to be sold.

Fenikso (FNK) is launching a share buyback of up to 49.3 million shares. A further $404,000 has been received in loan repayments. The remaining loan is worth nearly $39m.

Chris Akers’ stake in Oscillate (MUSH) has been reduced from 5.94% to less than 3%. Peterhouse Capital has also reduced its stake below 3%. Jonathan Neame has bought 7,000 Shepherd Neame (SHEP) shares at 569.5p each.

Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) raised £475,000 at 1p each and there is a broker option to issue up to three million more shares.

Unigel Group (UNX) is paying an interim dividend of 1.5p/share on 22 November.

First Sentinel has resigned as corporate adviser of Vulcan Industries (VULC).

AIM

Energy supplier and energy efficiency services provider Good Energy (GOOD) received an unsolicited bid from Dubai-based Esyasoft Holding Ltd. Esyasoft offers a range of products. They include the Smart Grid Suite, which is a cloud-based integration platform that manages workflow and communications between utilities and meters and an energy mobility business.

Payments technology developer Eckoh (ECK) is recommending a 54p/share bid from funds managed by Bridgepoint Advisers II. The bid values Eckoh at £169.3m. The share price has not been at that level since the end of 2022, but it is the price indicated back in August. The bid values Eckoh at 20 times prospective 2025-26 earnings.

Nexus Infrastructure (NEXS) is spending some of its cash pile on Coleman Construction & Utilities, which is involved in civil engineering for water and marine sectors. This diversifies the business away from housebuilding infrastructure. The purchase will cost up to £4.4m and be immediately earnings enhancing – EBITDA was £700,000 last year. Trading is in line with expectations and the loss should be halved to £2.4m in the year to September 2024. A small loss is still expected this year.

Emmerson (LON: EML) says it filed an appeal against the unfavourable recommendation for its ESIA application for the Moroccan potash project, but the regional authorities say that they cannot examine the ESIA submission again. Emmerson subsequently notified the Moroccan government of an investment dispute and argues that the government is violating an agreement between the UK and Morocco. The dispute can be submitted to the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes. Prior to this, the company is seeking cash compensation from the government. Emmerson is trying to reduce its cash burn, but that will mean that there will be no progress with the development of the project. Two non-executive directors are stepping down and the two remaining non-executives will take fees in shares, while the chief executives pay will be reduced by two-fifths.

Construction dispute and expert witness services provider Diales (DIAL) says that there will be a small improvement in revenues and profit in the year to September 2024. Pre-tax profit will be at least £1.1m, up from £1m. The cost base has been reduced. Net cash is £4.3m. Diales is pulling out of the US. It will still have a Canadian operation, and South America is handled from Spain.

MicroSalt (SALT) has received an initial purchase order for 50,000lbs of low-sodium salt from a major food and drink manufacturer for one of its product lines. Annualised volumes should be 200,000lbs and there could be orders for two other products. There is also a follow-on order from a B2B customer and the 63,860lbs will be delivered in January. Two other B2B orders have been won.

Tlou Energy (TLOU) is seeking shareholder approval at its AGM to leave AIM. The shares will still be traded on the ASX and the Botswana Stock Exchange. Interest in the company has dwindled and the departure will save money. UK shareholders are offered the chance to transfer their holding to the ASX depositary in exchange for ASX-listed shares at no cost. Tlou Energy released a first quarter update indicating progress with the Lesedi CBM gas-to-power project in Botswana. First electricity sales are expected in the middle of next year. There was an operating cash outflow of A$800,000, plus A$1.7m of capital investment in the period.

Cleaning services provider React (REAT) has made the earnings enhancing acquisition of 24hr Aquaflow Services for £5m plus contingent payments of up to £2.4m. It will still be enhancing after a £1.1m placing at 81p/share. 24hr Aquaflow Services is a drainage and plumbing services provider.  This adds to group services.

Shield Therapeutics (STX) generated $7.2m from 43,500 ACCRUFeR prescriptions in the third quarter, which was slightly lower than forecast. The average net selling price is $167, and this could rise to $192 in the fourth quarter. Total nine-month revenues are $20m and the 2024 figure should hit $31.5m. Management admits that more cash will be required, and costs are being reduced. Sallyport is providing a $15m facility, up from $10m previously, and AOP Health has agreed to subscribe $10m for shares at 4p each.

Prospex Energy (PXEN) says third quarter gas production of its Italian interests, where it has a 37% stake, was 76,910scm/day. Prospex Energy’s net revenues for the quarter were €1m, which is a record. There should be a further increase in gas production in the fourth quarter.

Deltic Energy (DELT) says wireline logging and fluid sampling confirm the gas discovery at Selene in the North Sea, where it has a 25% working interest. The reservoir quality is better than expected, but it is deeper than anticipated which means that recoverable gas volumes of 131bcf are lower than previous estimates of 320bcf. This should still be economically viable. Further work is required, though.

Transport technology services provider Microlise Group (SAAS) has been hit by a cyber security incident. This has disrupted services, and they are currently inactive. Cyber security specialists have been appointed.

MAIN MARKET

Tin projects developer First Tin (1SN) has raised £8m at 6p/share. The cash will go towards the Taronga project in Australia and funding the enhancements highlighted in the definitive feasibility study. This could increase the project NPV to A$400m. The environmental impact statement will be completed so that initial project work can commence. There will also be cash to progress permitting at the Tellerhauser project in Germany.

Mears (MER) says trading is strong and margins are improving. The 2024 figures will be better than expected with revenues of £1.13bn and pre-tax profit of at least £60m.

A general meeting has been requisitioned at nanomaterials developer Nanoco (NANO) by Milwood Fund, which wants two of its employees to be given board seats. It appears Milkwood may want to sell assets and turn Nanoco into a shell.

Motor dealer Caffyns (CFYN) is selling its freehold premises in Lewis to Lidl for £4.65m, which is equal to book value. The pension fund will receive £2.4m and the rest will reduce debt. The Lotus dealership will be relocated.

Critical Minerals (CRTM) is making progress with the Molulu copper cobalt project in the DRC and is on course to start delivering ore. Two additional mineralised zones have been identified. Terms of a new offtake agreement have been secured with OM Metals following good copper grades from ore testing. Since the balance sheet there has been a £455,000 investment by NIU Invest.

Andrew Hore

Quoted Micro 28 October 2024

AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE

Electrification technology developer Equipmake (EQIP) has raised £3m at 3p/share. Chief executive Ian Foley has subscribed for 6.67 million shares, although his stake will be diluted to 34.1%. The cash should last for six months and move the business towards cash breakeven. There was £2.48m in the bank at the end of May 2024. In the year to May 2024, the cash outflow from operations was £6.3m. The company estimates a requirement of £5.5m for working capital over the next 12 months. A potential licensing agreement could bring in £4.6m over a two-year period. Equipmake could reach cash breakeven in 2025-26. The focus is on higher margin work and bus repowering range will be rationalised. Costs are also being reduced, but it is investing in its commercial team.

Igraine (KING) has secured right of first refusal on current and future battery storage projects developed by GEM Energia. AIM-quoted Vela Technologies (VELA) is providing a loan facility with a minimum commitment of £200,000. Igraine will issue 35.5 million shares, which is 29.1% of the company, to GEM in return for the rights. David Levis, the chief executive of GEM, is joining the Igraine board as an executive director. He founded GEM to develop battery energy storage projects in the UK. It develops the projects up to the point where it either sells them or proceeds with the development itself. Igraine will have the right to receive 8% of the sales proceeds of a disposal or be involved in their further development. Initial sites will be sold to generate cash for Igraine and strengthen the balance sheet. Each site requires £150,000-£250,000 to secure grid connections and get to the ready to build stage. Every MW of capacity is valued at £120,000. After costs, a 100MW site could generate cash of more than £7m. There are four sites which are already in progress.

Oscillate (MUSH) has started hydrogen operations in Minnesota. A hydrogen soil-gas sensor has been bought and pre-field work started, which will provide data to enable further progress. Igraine has been diluted from 10.2% to 5.05% following the recent share issue.

Lift Global Ventures (LFT) says investee company Trans-Africa Energy has not received the £12m it was waiting for from an African investor. It is talking to alternative sources of finance for the energy infrastructure project in Ghana. The redemption date on the loan notes held by Lift Global Ventures has been extended to the end of 2024 and in return the value will be increased from £1m to £1.25m.

Ananda Developments (ANA) says two of its potential medicines, MRX2 and MRX2T, will be used in National Institute for Health and Care Research and NHS co-funded phase IIIa epilepsy clinical trials involving up to 500 patients. This could support marketing authorisation applications if the trials are successful.

EDX Medical Group (EDX) has raised £300,000 from a Saudi Arabian investor at 11p/share, which was a 22% premium to the market price.

Corporate businesses developer Macaulay Capital (MCAP) managing director David Horner has doubled his shareholding to 500,000 shares by buying 250,000 shares at 20p each. His family has a 24.9% stake. Marula Mining (MARU) director Jason Brewer has increased his shareholding by 340,000 shares at 5.38p each. That takes his stake, held through Gathoni Muchai Investments to 9.13%. Mike Cass has increased his stake in BWA Group (BWAP) to 15.1%. James and Alexandra Pace have a 5% stake in Shepherd Neame (SHEP).

AIM

Footwear retailer Shoe Zone (SHOE) says that poor weather hit second half sales, but it has traded in line with expectations. Full year revenues were 3% lower at £161.3m with a second half decline wiping out the interim growth. Trading did improve in August and September. Zeus forecasts a fall in pre-tax profit from £16.5m to £9.5m. The full year dividend will slip from 17.4p/share to 6.2p/share.

Disinfection products supplier Tristel (TSTL) beat expectations in the year to June 2024. There were initial revenues from the US, but they will take time to build up. Sales grew in nearly every market, with small dips in Australasia and China. A price increase in the UK, combined with higher volumes, helped hospital medical device decontamination jump 38%. The main growth in sales is in the UK and Europe. In the year to June 2024, revenues improved from £36m to £41.9m, while pre-tax profit rose from £6.2m to £8.2m. There was a reallocation of costs from overheads to cost of sales, so this affected comparatives. The total dividend was raised 29% to 13.52p/share.

Telecoms enterprise software provider Cerillion (CER) continues to grow faster than its underlying market. Revenues were 14% higher in the second half, enabling profit to be better than expected. There are record new orders and this underpins further growth in the next couple of years. The €12.4m order from the previously unnamed Virgin Media Ireland is contributing to the growth. It probably generated £6m last year. This is the first contract with a tier-1 telecoms company and could help to win other contracts with this level of business. In the year to September 2024, revenues were 12% ahead at £43.8m.

Online marketing services provider XL Media (XLM) is selling its North American business for up to $30m in cash, with $20m payable on completion and up to $10m in April – based on revenues and gross profit in 2024. Some cash should be redistributed to shareholders by the end of the year. The company will effectively become a cash shell.

EnergyPathways (EPP) has been asked by the UK government to participate in the Hydrogen Storage Business Model. This will help to define the new investment support scheme. The first Hydrogen Storage Allocation Round should be in 2025.

Seascape Energy Asia (SEA) has been awarded a 28% participating interest in a production sharing contract over the DEWA complex cluster, offshore Sarawak, Malaysia. Enquest owns 42% and Petroleum Sarawak holds 30%. The area has 12 gas discoveries in shallow water near to the coast. Six will be focused on and these have 500bcf of gas in place. Seascape Energy Asia will commit $600,000 for a detailed resource assessment and field development plan.

Specialist recruitment firm Gattaca (GATC) reported an underlying 2023-24 pre-tax profit decline from £3.7m to £2.9m on 5% lower net fee income of £40.1m. There was a 3% increase in net fee income for contract work, but permanent income dropped by one-third. Despite the decline, Gattaca is gaining market share. Costs have been reduced and the US business has been sold. There could be a modest improvement in profit this year.

Prospex Energy (PXEN) recently acquired a 7.2365% working interest in the onshore Spain Viura gas field, which recommenced production last week. The Viura 1B development well has encountered significant gas shows in the Utrillas-A reservoir and a new gas bearing reservoir interval below that. The well, which cost Prospex Energy €375,000, could contribute to production in November Flow testing results for the deeper reservoir will be available next year. There should be a significant upgrade to recoverable reserves. The European gas price is rising.

Musical instruments retailer Gear4Music (G4M) continues to recover with growth in the second quarter nearly offsetting the decline in the first quarter and further improvement in October. In the six months to September 2024, UK sales grew 4%, but European sales declined. Total sales were 1% lower at £61.7m. Gross margin has fallen back, but the interim loss will be reduced. Full year revenues are expected to be higher and pre-tax profit could jump from £1.1m to £2.8m.

Information and data publisher Merit Group (MRIT) has been hit by the ending of project work and the lack of replacement work. Sales resource is being added, but that will take time to boost revenues. Canaccord Genuity has changed its 2024-25 forecast from a £900,000 profit to a loss of £800,000 after a 11% reduction in expected revenues to £18.5m, which is lower than the 2022-23 figure. A return to profit is forecast for next year. There are management changes that are flagged for next year.

Ariana Resources (AAU) has reviewed the data for the Dokwe gold project in Zimbabwe. There are several zones of potential extensions to mineralisation. There are also gold-in-soil anomalies to follow up and drilling is planned. The in-pit resource is 1.2moz in two open pits at Dokwe Central and Dokwe North. Measured and indicated resources are 30Mt at 1.3g/t gold. Ariana Resources believes there could be annual production of up to 100,000 ounces of gold for up to 15 years. A revision of the pre-feasibility study is underway.

At the end of the week, property developer and investor Caledonian Trust (CNN), which has been on AIM for more than 29 years, announced its proposed departure. The direct annual cost of the quotation is £100,000 and liquidity is poor. A general meeting to gain shareholder approval will be held on 18 November. There is already support from holders of 85.3% of the shares. The quotation could end on 26 November. NAV is 195.1p/share.

Adams (ADA) is proposing the cancellation of the AIM quotation and sell off the company’s investments, many of which are also quoted on AIM, to return the cash to shareholders. Prior to this Adams will be buying back shares at 4p each. The estimated NAV is 3.72p/share. Liquidity is limited because Richard Griffiths owns 94% of Adams.  A general meeting will be held on 27 November and, if passed, the cancellation will be on 5 December.

MAIN MARKET

Advanced materials developer HeiQ (LON: HEIQ) has found growing its business difficult, particularly in textiles, flooring and antimicrobials and not recovery is expected until well into 2025. Another restructuring plan will cut costs and focus on certain facilities. Non-core operations will be scaled back. Some parts of the business may be sold, and outside finance is being sought for AeoniQ. Part of the cost cutting is giving up the listing. This should take effect on 19 November. Because the shares are on the transition category of the market since the restructuring of the Main Market, no shareholder vote is required. The shares will be traded by JP Jenkins. Daren Morecombe has increased his stake from 14.5% to 22%.

Bloomsbury Publishing (BMY) grew interim revenues by 32% to £179.8m, while pre-tax profit jumped from £17.7m to £26.6m. This is due to strong consumer division revenues due to strong sales of fantasy fiction and cookery books.

LED lighting and wiring accessories supplier Luceco (LUCE) increased third quarter revenues by 3% with residential EV charging the main growth area. However, excluding acquisitions, like-for-like revenues were 3.6% lower, partly due to phasing of orders so that there is a strong fourth quarter order book. Margins are improving. Net debt was £67m at the end of September 2024.

Andrew Hore

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