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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 7 October 2024
AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE
Prize draw operator Good Life Plus (GDLF) has increased the number of paying subscribers by 90% to more than 40,000 in less than a year. Management says that it might exceed expectations for the current financial year. Good Life Plus is raising £2m at 2.5p/share. Earlier this year, £2m was raised at 2.25p/share. The cash will finance customer acquisition and signing up new partners.
Brewer Shepherd Neame (SHEP) grew full year revenues by 4% to £172.3m and underlying pre-tax profit improved from £7.6m to £7.9m. NAV is 1217p/share, while net debt is £80m. Like-for-like retail sales were 4.9% ahead with the growth dominated by drinks offsetting a fall in accommodation income. Beer volumes declined 12% with own-brewed volume 17% lower. Brand refreshes are planned. Beer volumes continue to decline, while like-for-like retail sales for the initial 13 weeks of the new year are 3.8% higher.
Consumer brands company Silverwood Brands (SLWD) increased interim revenues from £5.85m to £7.08m and it moved into profit, but that was mainly due to exceptional gains.
CRUSHMETRIC Group (CUSH) increased interim revenues from HK$1.04m to HK$2.94m, although the loss was similar at HK$3.7m.
Talks with potential investors in Quantum Exponential Group (QBIT) have been terminated. The documentation has not been signed and the potential investor did not pay the £200,000 towards costs that it promised. Trading in the shares will end on 30 October.
Voyager Life (VOY), which has an option to acquire M3 Helium, has changed its name to Mendell Helium. The admission document is being prepared and the option should be exercised by the end of January. The company had £163,000 in the bank at the end of March.
Aquaculture technology developer OTAQ (OTAQ) reported a 16% decline in interim revenues to £1.5m because of a delay to a £350,000 order. The company continues to lose money. A forecast full year loss of £1.3m is similar to 2023, including a £150,000 benefit from cost reductions, and it could be halved in 2025 as the full benefit of cost savings show through.
KR1 (KR1) had net assets of 57.27p/share at the end of August 2024. The income in the month was £590,000.
Investment Evolution Credit (IEC), which provides loans under the Mr Amazing Loans brand, is holding a general meeting to gain approval to raise up to £2.5m from share issues. Paul Mathieson is being replaced as chief executive by Marc Howells. Former director Sam Prasad is loaning £200,000 to the company, which replaces a previous £100,000 loan.
Recycling services provider Majestic Corporation (MCJ) narly doubled interim revenues from $13m to $25m and pre-tax profit was one-third higher at $900,000. The company has received Enterprise Investment Scheme status.
RentGuarantor (RGG) has increased third quarter revenues by 62% and average revenues per tenant by 8% to £606.
Gains on investments enabled Hot Rock Investments (HRIP) to move into profit in the year to March 2024. Net assets increased to £512,000.
An undertaking of EPE Special Opportunities (EO.P) has provided additional funding of £2m to the Rayware Group. There is also a £1m contingent guarantee provided to third party lenders. EPE Special Opportunities still has £16m in cash.
ProBiotix Health (PBX) has a commercial partnership with Deutsch-Pharm. It will use two of the company’s products (for cholesterol lowering and vascular health) under its own brand in the Ukraine. Commercialisation is anticipated in the first quarter of 2025.
One Health Group (OHGR) has appointed Panmure Liberum as corporate adviser and broker.
Hydro Hotel Eastbourne (HYDP) has declared an interim dividend of 13p/share.
AIM
AO World (AO.) is acquiring musicMagpie (MMAG) for 9.07p/share, which values the pre-owned products supplier at just under £10m. There are irrevocable undertakings and letters of intent totalling 54% to accept the offer. AO World believes that the two companies have complementary online models, and a technology trade-in service will enhance its product offering. AO World says that the musicMagpie disc media and books business should not require significant investment.
EMV Capital (EMVC) director Jonathan Robinson bought 25,000 shares at 52p each following the interim results announcement of the company that was previously known as NetScientific. Total assets under management reached £106.7m following the addition of the Martlet Capital portfolio. Net assets edged up from £17.1m to £18.5m. Nasdaq-listed investee company PDS Biotech announced a 36-month survival rate of 84.4% in locally advanced cervical cancer patients treated with the company’s lead target drug Versamune HPV and Chemoradiation.
Tavistock Investments (TAVI) is raising up to £37.75m from disposals, which is more than treble the market capitalisation before the sale, with nearly £11m payable on completion and a further £11m from discharge of intragroup debt. The rest is payable based on performance. The two businesses made a pre-tax profit of £1.5m in the year to March 2023. The cash will be used for working capital and acquisitions. There could also be share buy backs. Chief executive Brian Raven bought 830,000 shares at 3.55p each.
Good Energy (GOOD) has acquired Lincolnshire-based solar installer Amelio Solar for an initial £5.5m. The focus of the business is the education and public sector. In 2023, revenues were £7m and pre-tax profit is £1.4m. However, there have been lower levels of activity in Good Energy’s existing installation business.
Packaging equipment and automation provider Mpac Group (MPAC) is making its second acquisition in recent weeks and this is by far the larger. Mpac is acquiring CSi Palletising for £47m, including £4.16m in shares, and the deal should be completed by the end of the year. CSi Palletising designs, manufactures and installs end-of-line packaging automation and robotics equipment and will enhance the geographic coverage. In 2023, CSi Palletising generated revenues of €71.5m and EBITDA of €7.3m. The latest interims show revenues of €44.4m and EBITDA of €6.8m. There is an order book worth €64.3m. A placing raised £29m at 400p/share and a retail offer to existing shareholders could add up to £1m to the figure.
Digital media publisher Digitalbox (DBOX) has commenced a strategic review, which could involve a sale of the company. This follows representations from a major shareholder disappointed about the level of the share price. Progress should be reported in November. Interim revenues were better than expected, but July and August were weak. Net cash is £2.2m, which is more than 50% of market capitalisation. A capital restructuring is underway to create positive distributable reserves.
Agricultural products supplier Wynnstay Group (WYN) says the second half has been hit by wet weather and weaker farmgate prices in part due to government policy uncertainty. Shore has reduced its 2023-24 pre-tax profit forecast by 35% to £7.5m and this will have a knock-on effect in the year to October 2025 where the profit forecast has been cut by 29% to £8.5m. Wynnstay should still have net cash, and the NAV is estimated at around 600p/share.
Payments technology company Bango (BGO) is making some progress towards regaining investor confidence and it is on course to make a full year profit. Interim revenues grew 19% to $24.1m. Annualised recurring revenues are 130% ahead at $12.9m. Net revenue retention is 159%.
Ceramic disc brake technology developer Surface Transforms (SCE) increased interim revenues by 58%, but growth is still not meeting expectations even though there is further growth in third quarter revenues. There are delays to installing additional capacity. Full year revenues are expected to be £11m, compared with previous expectations of £17.5m. There was £5m in cash at the end of June 2024. Odd Asset Management reduced its stake from 5.13% to 2.58%.
Graphene technology developer Versarien (VRS) has signed an agreement with Balfour Beatty to develop 3D-printable mortars for civil construction. It will formulate three types of mortar. This follows the disposal of AAC Cryoma for £550,000 payable in 15 instalments.
Oil and gas company Prospex Energy (PXEN) is applying for exploration licences in Poland. The licence awards should happen in the first quarter of 2025. Initial results from the Vlura-1B development well in Northern Spain are positive. Drilling intercepted significant gas shows and that confirmed the high quality reservoir. This well will be connected up and first production should be by November.
Battery and electronic components supplier Solid State (SOLI) is acquiring Gateway Electronic Components, which manufactures ferrite and magnetic components for £1.4m. These are used by electromechanical and Industrial Internet of Things businesses. The run rate pre-tax profit is £200,000, so the multiple is less than ten.
Surplus consumer products retailer Huddled (HUD) generated interim revenues of £5.3m and they continue to grow organically and via acquisition. Third quarter revenues will be around £3.5m. Management is investing in inventory and marketing. Warehouse functions are being centralised.
MAIN MARKET
Motor dealer software provider Pinewood Technologies (PINE) published its first results following the sale of the motor dealer business. In the six months to July 2024, revenues were 11% ahead at £16.1m. Major shareholder Lithia is taking up new licences in the UK. The US roll out is being planned.
The two board representatives of Kelso Group (KLSO) on AIM-quoted The Works.co.uk (WRKS) have stepped down. This will make it easier to sell its 6.3% stake if it wishes to. The average cost was 32p/share and the current price is 25.2p.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 12 August 2024
AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE
Quantum Exponential Group (QBIT) says potential investors have proposed a minimum investment of £1m at 1p/share. The investors have also agreed to pay the investment company £100,000 to cover costs since incurred since the proposed cancelation was announced. This will be repayable out of the proceeds of the investment when it is completed.
Marula Mining (MARU) is acquiring 80% of Kenyan mineral processing company Agarwal Metals and Ores, which owns the Kilifi manganese processing plant.
Flex Labs Inc (FLEX) is proposing to cancel its Aquis quotation and is holding a general meeting on 30 August. The plan is to seek a listing in Canada. The AI company joined Aquis last December at 6p/share. The share price halved to 0.75p last week.
Ormonde Mining (ORM) investee company TRU Precious Metals has appointed Ormonde Mining technical adviser Steve Nicol as chief executive. The 36.2%-owned TRU Precious Metals is exploring for gold and copper in Canada. Another investee company, Peak Nickel, has commenced a drill programme in Aberdeenshire. There will be a minimum of 1,000 metres drilled.
Gunsynd (GUN) remains on Aquis for a few more days and it has entered a farm-in agreement with Pinwheel Resources over acreage in Canada. It can earn 100% of Falcon Lake U-Co-Cu project and Bear Twit VMS project for a total outlay of £200,000 in cash and shares.
IntelliAM AI (INT) has secured a contract extension with a global alcohol company. The company’s consulting services will be broadened to 35 maltings sites in the UK. The contract value is a minimum of £100,000.
Walls and Futures REIT (WAFR) has been trying to attract institutional investors involved in infrastructure and property, but the General Election led to delays. The process will be restarted at the end of the summer holidays. The scale of any potential fundraising will be larger than previously expected.
Oberon Investments (OBE) raised £2.5m at 3.5p/share and that will help to accelerate growth. First quarter revenues increased by 90% to £2.54m and this came from all the divisions. Like-for-like growth of more than 30% is being targeted for the full year.
Tectonic Gold (TTAU) has sold its 10% stakes in diamond miner Deep Blue Minerals and heavy mineral sands miner Whale Head Minerals to AIM-quoted Kazera Global (KZG). A potential Western Australia gold acquisition opportunity is being assessed.
Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) has raised £100,000 at 20p/share.
Ananda Developments (ANA) has moved to the Apex segment of the Aquis Stock Exchange.
AIM
Hargreaves Services (HSP) reported a fall in full year pre-tax profit, but it was slightly higher than expected at £16.9m. Pre-tax profit was lower because of the reduced contribution from the German HRMS business, although it did have a much better second half. This recovery should continue into the current year. EU sanctions on Russian pig iron has helped prices improve, which is good for the HRMS recycling operations. The enhanced dividend will continue and should at least be maintained at 36p/share. NAV is 583p/share.
Customer engagement and intelligent automation systems supplier Netcall (NET) is spending an initial £9.6m for Govtech, which has a focus on the public sector, and this will be earnings enhancing this year. Govtech helps local authorities to automate council transactions so they can be done more quickly and efficiently. Netcall has local authority clients, and its coverage of UK councils will increase from 26% to 34%. Netcall had £33.7m of net cash at the end of June 2024. Even after the acquisition Netcall could still have £31m in cash at the end of June 2025.
Insurance premium finance and professional funding provider Orchard Funding (ORCH) says its largest customer has gone into administration. Orchard Funding has lent £16.7m to Insure That clients out of a total lending book of £66.8m at the end of June 2024. Management is assessing the recoverability of the Insure That loans. This comes six weeks after a positive trading statement.
Cash shell Earnz (EARN) is making its first acquisitions and raising up to £4m at 7.5p/share. It is buying energy services companies Cosgrove & Drew, which provides public sector project work and compliance services for heating and plumbing, and heating installation and maintenance services provider South West Heating Services. Earnz chair Bob Holt has a stake in Cosgrove & Drew, which will cost up to £196m. In 2023, it generated revenues of £9.1m and lost £832,000. South West Heating Services will cost up to £1.15m and it made revenues of £1.1m and a pre-tax profit of £275,000 in the nine months to March 2024. The focus is cross-selling of services and organic growth.
Ocean Harvest Technology (OHT) has published positive data from trials of OceanFeed Swine. Adding this feed ingredient to the diet of pregnant sows results in more piglets being born and improved milk quality in the sows. Revenues per sow increased by $24/year. More than $100bn/year is spent on swine feed.
Natural resources data analyser and provider Getech (GTC) has raised £1.5m at 2p/share and could generate up to £200,000 more from a retail offer. This will improve the balance sheet ahead of the planned sale of Nicholson House. The cost base is being reduced. There will be investment in the sales and business development teams, as well as in machine learning technology development.
Revolution Bars (RBG) has received court approval for its restructuring plan. This means that some bars can be closed, and others will have rent reductions. There will be 65 bars and pubs left in operation. This should improve annualised EBITDA by £3.8m.
Oil and gas company Prospex Energy (PXEN) raised £3.34m via a placing and subscription at 6p/share. There was also an oversubscribed retail offer that raised £859,000. Prospex Energy wants the cash to acquire an interest of 7.5% in the Vlura producing gas field that generates more than four-fifths of the Spain’s gas production.
Hermes Pacific Investment (HPAC) plans to leave AIM. The share price slumped to 40p. The investment company found it difficult to secure suitable investments in the financial services sector in south east Asia and changed into a property investor in 2022, but only one property has been acquired. There is a low free float, and the shares are trading at a large discount to the September 2023 NAV of 147p/share.
Oil and gas company Bowleven (BLVN) plans to leave AIM and 58.3% shareholder Crown Ocean Capital is offering shareholders the chance to sell shares at 0.225p each up until 11 September. This offer is dependent on the departure from AIM being agreed at a general meeting on 28 August. Management believes that being private will give the company more flexibility and reduce costs.
Floorcoverings manufacturer Airea (AIEA) was hit be a slowdown in second quarter sales. The decline of 5.6% was slightly better than for the market as a whole. Interim sales are lower with international revenues 22% lower. July has been stronger and new product launches are planned. There has been an increase in inventory because of the slow sales. The interims will be announced on 26 September. The full year expectations have been reduced.
Extended reality technology developer Engage XR (EXR) says interim revenues reached a record of €2.2m with the main growth coming from licence income. Net cash is €5.5m at the end of June 2024. Management still believes that Engage XR can move into profitability during 2025 without raising additional cash. Full year revenues of €5.3m and net cash of €3.7m are forecast.
EnergyPathways (EPP) says the retention of the decarbonisation investment allowance in the energy profits levy is a positive signal. This should be helpful for the company’s MESH Marram Energy Storage Hub) project. This part of the development of the Marram gas field in the UK Irish Sea.
Tan Delta Systems (TAND) has entered into a product agreement with an engine manufacturer to develop a sensor to monitor coolants and water-based hydraulic solutions. The initial value of the agreement is £200,000, but it could increase to £2m.
Seed Innovations (SEED) has used some of its cash to buy £250,000 of shares in the recent fundraising by AIM-quoted Pantheon Resources (PANR), which is exploring for oil and gas in Alaska. The placing was at 17p/share and the current share price is 18.18p. There is still £3.5m in cash left.
MAIN MARKET
Restaurants operator Hostmore (MORE) says interim like-for-like sales have declined 10% and this accelerated to a 23% decline in July. The first half loss has been reduced. Borrowings are likely to exceed the current debt facilities. Management continues to work on the acquisition of master franchise owner TGI Fridays Inc. The plan is to sell corporate stores to new franchisees and there are agreements to sell stores for more than $40m. A review of options if the acquisition does not happen is being undertaken.
Alkemy Capital Investments (ALK) has updated the market on progress with the Tees Valley Lithium refinery project. A collaboration with Geothermal Engineering intends to develop integrated supply chains in the UK. Project funding partners have been shortlisted, while overheads are being reduced.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 29 April 2024
Marula Mining (MARU) says its partner NyoriGreen Mining was granted eight new graphite mining licences in the Nyorinyori and NyoriGreen projects in Tanzania. The licences last for seven years. One licence application is outstanding. Trading in the shares has commenced on the A2X stock exchange in South Africa.
Watchstone Group (WTG) had cash of £6.5m at the end of March 2024, which is an £800,000 reduction over three months. Net assets were 14p/share at the end of 2023, so this will be slightly lower now. Management is seeking to conclude its remaining litigation and return cash to shareholders. It can appeal the case it lost against PwC.
Ormonde Mining (ORM) investee company TRU Precious Metals, which is a gold and copper explorer in Newfoundland, will carry out an exploration programme at the Golden Rose project. TRU still has C$2.3m in cash and this will fund the programme. The timing of drilling is being decided.
Kasei Digital Assets (KASH) has increased its NAV to £3.68m at the end of March 2024 having closed its position in GBTC after the announcement of spot bitcoin ETFs and reinvested some of the cash in spot bitcoin.
Ora Technology (ORA) reported a £699,000 cash outflow from operations in the six months to January 2024. The company is developing a digital carbon trading platform. There was £314,000 of cash left at the end of January 2024.
EDX Medical Group (EDX) is eligible for the Apex segment of the Aquis Stock Exchange and trading will start on the segment on 29 April.
Hydrogen Future Industries (HFI) withdrew resolution four from its AGM. This was designed to gain shareholder approval for the 2024 incentive plan. Some shareholders were against the plan. Timothy Blake, who owns one-quarter of the company, has become chief executive but he will not be on the board. Fungai Ndoro has left the board.
Vinanz Ltd (BTC) has installed the first ten S21 Bitmain Antminer 200 Terahash/second miners. These are some of the fastest miners in the world. More of these machines will be acquired.
Equipmake Holdings (EQIP) has appointed Tony Ratcliffe as finance director, replacing Steven McGillivray.
Investment Evolution (IEC) has raised £160,000 at 20p/share. This will fund US consumer loans while the company makes progress with issuing its bonds.
Supernova Digital Assets (SOL) non-exec bought six million shares at 0.19p each. Saral Global VCC – Aftermarket Investments cut its stake from 11.5% to 10.4%.
Winforton Investments increased its stake in Good Life (GDLF) from 17.9% to 18.6%. Odd Asset Management raised its stake in skin treatments developer Incathera (INC) from 11.8% to 16.4%. Harry Hyman has raised his stake in Oberon Investments (OBE) from 4.98% to 5.29%. Peter Mills has taken a stake in Oscillate (MUSH) that is just above the 3% reporting level. Barry Hersh has reduced his shareholding in Global Connectivity (GCON) from 7.98% to 6.97%.
AIM
In the year to January 2024, geospatial data company 1Spatial (SPA) improved underlying pre-tax profit from £1.8m to £2.1m. The SaaS-based products are at an early stage of commercialisation, and it will take time for growth in business to show through in recognised revenues. The 1Streetworks product has already been taken up by UK Power Networks. The company generates cash from operations, but this did not cover capitalised development spending, which meant that 1Spatial’s net cash was reduced to £1.1m. Capital spending should have peaked. This year there should be enough cash generated to cover the development spending.
US-based uranium and critical minerals producer Energy Fuels is offering 0.026 of a share and an unfranked dividend of A$0.065 for each Base Resources (BSE) share. That is currently equivalent to A$0.302/share. This is a recommended bid and values Base Resources at A$375m. Two major shareholders owning 51.3% in total intend to support the bid. This will help to fund the development of Base Resources’ Toliara rare earth project in Madagascar.
Filtronic (FTC) has secured a £15.8m order for E-band amplifiers from SpaceX, which is part of a five-year strategic partnership. SpaceX is receiving warrants over up to 10% of the telecommunications technology developer. The first tranche is exercisable when £30m of orders have been made for E-band amplifiers and the second when there is a similar level of orders for other products. This sparked an upgrade by Cavendish, which raised its 2023-24 pre-tax profit forecast by one-third to £3.3m and the 2024-25 figure by 180% to £6.4m.
Donald McGarva is stepping down as chief executive of Aferian (AFRN) and leave the video streaming technology developer in October. This follows a trading statement revealing that 2023-24 revenues and EBITDA would be at the lower end of the previously suggested ranges of $47m-$48m and $1.6m-$2.6m respectively. There are delays in purchases of Amino video streaming devices. Costs have already been reduced and a further $3m will be cut. Management hopes to extend the borrowing facility of $16.5m that matures in November.
Vehicles provider for film and TV productions Facilities by ADF (ADF) was hit by the writers’ strike in 2023 and pre-tax profit fell from £4.8m to £900,000. Capital spending was delayed, although net debt increased to £12.9m. There has been a slow start to 2024 as schedules are rearranged. Pre-tax profit could still bounce back to £5m this year.
Audio products supplier Focusrite (TUNE) had already warned that the interims would be weak. In the six months to February 2024, revenues fell from £86.2m to £76.9m and pre-tax profit slipped from £10.9m to £3.4m. Working capital movements led to a large cash outflow so net debt increased to £27.3m, but that should partly unwind in the second half. The decline was in content creation equipment, whereas there was growth in revenues in audio reproduction equipment used for live events.
Sanderson Design Group (SDG) was boosted by growth in high margin brand licencing revenues and that helped to offset the decline in brand sales. Morris & Co was the only brand that did not contract during the year to January 2024. In 2023-24, revenues dipped from £112m to £108.6m and pre-tax profit edged down from £12.6m to £12.2m. North America was the bright spot. Costs have been reduced in the manufacturing operations. Net cash is £16.3m. Pre-tax profit is likely to be flat this year as most markets remain difficult.
Destiny Pharma (DEST) is exploring strategic options for post-surgical infection prevention treatment XF-73, including licensing and securing finance for the phase 3 trial. Potential partners have been put off by the cost of the phase 3 trial and management is reducing the planned cost. There was cash of £6.4m at the end of 2023 and that should last until early 2025.
i3 Energy (I3E) has published annual production guidance of 18,000-19,000 barrels of oil equivalent/day. Capital expenditure is expected to be $50.9m in 2024 and this means that production should be much higher at the end of year. Earnings are set to fall from £11.8m to £4m because of a decline in the gas price – although a recovery is expected. The annual dividend will be lower at 1.026p/share. WH Ireland increased its fair value estimate from 16.2p/share to 21.2p/share.
Chrysalis Investments has issued draft particulars of a claim against Revolution Beauty (REVB) that amounts to £39m plus additional consequential loss of £6.2m. This claim has not yet been filed with the court and relates to buying shares in the company when it joined AIM in July 2021. Chrysalis Investments was unsatisfied with the response it had got from the cosmetics supplier.
Musical instruments retailer Gear4Music (G4M) is benefiting from a focus on margins and reducing net debt. UK sales continue to grow, but they have declined in the rest of the world. Gear4Music returned to profit in the year to March 2024 and pre-tax profit is estimated at £1.4m and it could double next year. Net debt nearly halved to £7.3m. Chief executive Andrew Wass will become executive chairman and Gareth Bevan will take over his previous role.
Trellus Health (TRLS), which develops programmes for managing chronic conditions, still had net cash of $12.2m at the end of 2023 and this should last into the middle of 2025. Revenues were modest at £19,000, but a large-scale pilot was signed with United Healthcare earlier this year and patients are being enrolled. This and other contracts will initially generate modest revenues, but they are important in proving the effectiveness of the company’s technology.
MBU Capital is requisitioning a general meeting at metallurgical coal miner Bens Creek (BEN). It holds 22.1% of the company and wants the general meeting to discuss operational and strategic challenges. The Chapter 11 process continues to be progressed by the US subsidiaries of Bens Creek.
MAIN MARKET
First Tin (1SN) has updated the mineral resource estimate for the Tellerhauser tin project in Germany. Indicated and inferred tin mineral resource has risen by 35% to 138,600 tonnes. Total indicated tin is 37% higher at 45,000 tonnes. Test work at the Taronga in project in Australia indicates improving recovery levels.
Life sciences and aerospace components supplier Carclo (LON: CAR) had a particularly strong fourth quarter, which reflects the focus on improving margins and the financial status of the business. The benefits of the restructuring are starting to show through. Net debt fell from £34.3m to £30.4m at the end of March 2024. The current focus is the US restructuring, and this will benefit profitability this year.
Seraphim Space Investment Trust (SSIT) has sold its early-stage investments to new venture fund Seraphim Space Ventures II, which has the same manager, in return for an investment in the new vehicle. The portfolio cost £3.5m and is valued at £3.8m. That is 1.7% of the NAV at the end of 2023.
Chill Brands (CHLL) has suspended chief executive Callum Sommerton because of allegations about the misuse of inside information. Fieldfisher will carry out an investigation.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 11 March 2024
Luxury prize draw operator Good Life Plus (GDLF) raised £2.03m via a subscription at 2.25p/share, which is a premium to the market price of 1.875p. The subscriber is Winforton Investments, which is associated with Sportingbet founder Mark Blandford, which will have a 17.9% stake. The cash will be spent on marketing to accelerate growth and subscription numbers. Options have been granted to management at the subscription price. The reverse takeover of Semper Fortis Esports was done at 2p/share.
Cadence Minerals (KDNC) says the capital expenditure requirements for Amapa iron project have been reduced. Project financing talks continue with parties interested in taking a stake in the project. Cadence Minerals has invested $12.1m in Amapa and owns 32.6% of the project. The stake in Hastings Technology Metals has been sold. Cadence Minerals expects to leave the Aquis Stock Exchange on 5 April.
Food company Essentially Group (ESSN) is acquiring Best of Latin Foodstuff Trading for £1.95m. The company sources food from growers in Latin America and supplies hotels and restaurants in the UAE, where Essentially Group already supplies juices and other drinks. The deal will triple the revenues of Essentially Group. The former owner Catalina Onate will become an executive director of Essentially Group.
RentGuarantor Holdings (RGG) has raised £430,000 at 274p/share. The cash will finance the hiring of additional staff. Chief executive Paul Foy is converting £250,000 of convertible loan notes at 210p/share. He still has £250,000 of convertible loan notes.
Investment Evolution (IEC) is expanding into Spain, and it will grant subsidiary MRAL Spain non-exclusive recurring rights to the Mr Amazing Loans brand. Spanish company Investment Evolution Credit, not part of the group, will provide lending technology for a 49% stake in MRAL Spain.
Coinsilium Group Ltd (COIN) has raised £472,500 at 2.5p/share with executive directors subscribing £40,000. There have also been creditor payments of £83,900 in shares. Each new share comes with a warrant exercisable at 3.75p/share. The cash will be invested in Web3 and AI technology and provide working capital.
Marula Mining (MARU) has added to its team in Kenya. Gilbert Kibet is project geologist and Joy Chebet will be graduate geologist. Exploration work will commence on the Larisoro manganese mine in northern Kenya.
Flex Labs (FLEX) says Supernova Digital Assets (SOL), which is associated with its executive chairman, has sold 1.24 million shares and raised £81,425. These sales were between December and February. Supernova Digital Assets plans to return cash to shareholders via a tender offer after Phoenix Digital Assets (PNIX), in which it owns 30 million shares, completes its tender offer. There will have to be a capital reorganisation to enable the tender offer to happen and £242,000 has been raised at 0.1p/share for working capital while the capital changes are arranged.
Kasei Holdings has changed its name to Kasei Digital Assets (KASH). Non-executive director Bryan Coyne bought 75,000 shares at 9.75p each. Gunsynd (GUN) executive director Donald Strang bought three million shares at 0.148p/share.
AIM
Wealth management company Mattioli Woods (MTW) is recommending an 804p/share bid from a company owned by Pollen Street Capital. That values Mattioli Woods at £432m and shareholders will still receive the interim dividend of 9p/share. The 2203-24 prospective multiple at the bid price is less than 17, falling below 15 the following year. When it joined AIM in November 2015 at 132p/share Mattioli Woods was valued at £22.5m.
Challenger Energy (CEG) has secured a farm out deal for the OFF-1 exploration asset, offshore Uruguay with Chevron. Challenger Energy will retain a 40% interest. The oil and gas explorer will receive a cash payment of $12.5m on completion, plus a carry of up to $15m on 3D seismic and 50% of the cost of an exploration well up to a $20m share. However, a well could cost between $50m and $100m according to Zeus, so Challenger Energy could still have to make a cash contribution. Regulatory approvals will take months.
A large diagnostics company has made a bid approach to kidney disease diagnostics developer, Renalytix (RENX). This has sparked a formal sale process, so that the company can assess whether there are other potential bidders. It is also possible that there could be a decision to stay independent. Funding options are being reviewed. Costs have been reduced, but there is currently cash and securities of $3.7m and the cash outflows remain significant so this will only last until the end of April. A share issue and/or debt financing will be required.
Empire Metals (EEE) says study results for the Pitfield project in Western Australia show favourable mineralogy and metallurgy in the high-grade titanium samples. This should simplify processing. Around two-thirds of the contained titanium is titanite, which can be processed at low temperatures. The overall end product would be ideal for a titanium dioxide pigment producer.
Kinovo (KINO) estimates that the costs of the guarantees to complete work on projects taken on by ex-subsidiary DCB will be £2.9m higher than previously expected. Cash flow from the continuing operations will help to fund this but Kinovo will move into net debt by the end of March. This will not affect the pre-exceptional pre-tax profit forecast of £5.8m, up from £4.9m.
LungLife AI (LLAI) raised £1.8m at 35p/share. The lung cancer diagnostics developer is starting the commercialisation process for its diagnostic technology. The cash will fund the evidence generating activities, including an early access programme and clinical utility studies. There should be enough cash until April 2025.
Controlled environment agriculture technology developer Light Science Technologies (LST) has appointed former ITM Power (ITM) boss Dr Graham Cooley as non-executive chairman. He bought a 7.5% stake last year and has been awarded 6.66 million options exercisable at 5p each. Richard Mills, who is boss of the growing systems division of Haygrove and has helped to develop global partnerships, has also joined the board. Myles Halley and Robert Naylor have stepped down. The company has been broadening its activities into fire protection.
Performance nutrition products provider Science in Sport (SIS) is focusing on improving margins rather than growing revenues. This strategy change was in the fourth quarter of 2023, so there was not much time to affect trading. In 2023, revenue dipped from £63.8m to £62.8m due to lower online sales. The Science in Sport brand grew sales by 17%. Liberum trimmed its 2023 revenues estimate, but it also reduced the forecast loss to £4.8m. The 2024 forecast revenues have been cut, but the loss is still forecast to be £3.1m with a move to breakeven in 2025.
Duke Capital (DUKE) has exited another investment with a total return on invested capital of 2.1 times. Street lighting columns manufacturer Fabrikat has been acquired by Metalogalva. Duke Capital has already received £2.7m from Fabrikat and will receive a further £10m after the takeover. There is potential performance-related deferred consideration.
Netcall (NET) continues to build its annual contract values and they have reached £30m. Recurring revenues were three-quarters of the interim revenues. There is rapid growth in cloud business and the cash in the balance sheet enables consistent investment in research and development. Full year pre-tax profit will edge up to £6.7m.
Nexus Infrastructure (NEXS) has focused on its Tamdown civil engineering business and the remaining cash from disposals has come in handy in a tough time for the housebuilding sector. Revenues fell from £98.4m to £88.7m. There is still £14.6m in cash. The final dividend is 2p/share. The order book is recovering and was £57.2m at the end of January 2024. There should be a recovery in the housebuilding sector over the next year, but the timing is uncertain.
Strategic Minerals (SML) sold 4,898 tons from the Cobre magnetite stockpile during February. That is the highest monthly figure since March 2021. Quarterly sales should be around 13,000 tons and annual revenues from Cobre should be around $3.5m.
Floor levelling equipment supplier Somero Enterprises (SOM) reported a 10% dip in revenues to $120.7m because of the weak North American market. Europe and Australia performed better. Pre-tax profit fell from $42.3m to $34.5m and the dividend was reduced from 35.5p/share to 30.6p/share. This year’s revenues are likely to be flat, but additional investment in a new facility in Belgium means that there will be a further decline in pre-tax profit.
Saietta Group (SED) has appointed administrators and following the resignation of Canaccord Genuity as nominated adviser the AIM quotation will be cancelled at the beginning of April. The electric drivetrain technology developer company has failed to secure additional cash and although there is interest in the business no firm buyer has been found.
MAIN MARKET
Ground engineering and piling business Keller (KLR) reported flat revenues of £2.97bn, but operating profit was two-thirds higher at £180.9m – £150m was expected before the recent trading statement. Pre-tax profit jumped from £93.5m to £153.4m. Net debt was one-third lower at £146.2m. The dividend is one-fifth ahead at 45.2p/share. Non-core businesses are being exited. The year-end order book was worth £1.5bn.
Standard list shell Spiritus Mundi (SPMU) has entered into heads of terms for the purchase of InReste, which has developed clinical diagnostic tests and operates a laboratory in Singapore. Spiritus Mundi chairman Zaccheus Peh is the controlling shareholder of InReste and will be the controlling shareholder of the holding company after the acquisition.
IT services provider Triad Group (TRD) is winning new business and it returned to profit in November. There will be initial costs of contracts in the fourth quarter. That means that there will be a greater benefit in the first quarter of the next financial year.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 26 February 2024
Music manager and promoter All Things Considered (ATC) has raised £2.3m at 105p/share. The company raised £4.15m at 153p/share when it joined Aquis in December 2021. The latest proceeds will be used to develop the artist representation and direct to consumer divisions, plus fund acquisitions. A potential artist management company acquisition has been identified. A new festival is being developed.
Trading was in line with expectations at Arbuthnot Banking Group (ARBB). Shore Capital believes the recovery in profitability due to higher interest charges has broadly already happened. Even so, the broker believes that the current valuation is undemanding.
Visum Technologies (VIS) is planning to acquire Socrates Imaging for Euro2m in cash and shares. Visum has exclusivity until the end of March 2024. Socrates Imaging has developed photo and video capture souvenirs. A final agreement needs to be made and shareholders have to agree to the purchase.
US focused lender Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) generated revenues of £441,000 and pre-tax profit of £268,000 in the six months to November 2023. Cash was £659,000. Consumer lending operations could start in the UK in 2025.
Hydro Hotel Eastbourne (HYDP) reported flat annual revenues of £4.4m, while pre-tax profit fell from £445,000 to £310,000 due to higher cost of sales. Cash is £1.63m. a lower dividend of 12p/share has been announced. Management is trying to secure more direct bookings.
Inteliqo (IQO) has launched the full Langaroo app on Google Play and the App store. Langaroo enables users to understand, speak, message and share information in 130 languages.
Coinsilium (COIN) will be providing global trade exchange platform LC Lite, which has been acquired by Incomlend. Coinsilium will advise on project token economics ahead of a launch later this year. Fees are paid in cryptocurrencies.
Valereum (VLRM) is getting near to completing a blockchain-based digital financial markets infrastructure and this should happen this year. After phase 1 is launched there will be further phases developing on-chain Centralised Securities Depositary. Investment company VLRM Capital will invest in principal trading of equities and cryptocurrencies, as well as staking digital assets. The first fund should be launched by the summer. Valereum chairman James Formoli will provide seed capital of £500,000 to the investment vehicle. Valereum itself wants to raise up to £4m and firm commitments have been received for £2.5m at 6p/share.
Phoenix Digital (PNIX) director Nicholas Lyth bought 1.26 million shares at 3.1p each.
TruSpine Technologies (TSP) has submitted additional documentation to the FDA for the 510(k) application for its Cervi-LOK medical device product. A shareholder requisition notice has been deemed to be invalid.
Hydrogen Future Industries (HFI) has raised £552,000 at 5p/share. The cash will further develop technology and fund a feasibility study for use in the mining sector. Rogue Baron (SHNJ) has issued 7.2 million shares to a service provider for services over a 12-month period.
PanGenomic Health (NARA) intends to withdraw from the Aquis Stock Exchange.
AIM
Safety and compliance services provider Marlowe (MRL) is selling part of its governance, risk and compliance software and service business to Inflexion for an enterprise value of £430m. That will pay off debt and enable £150m plus to be paid to shareholders. That could leave £60m of cash in the business. This could fund acquisitions in the remaining business areas of testing, inspection and certification, and occupational health. Marlowe chief executive Alex Dacre is leaving with the disposal.
Horizonte Minerals (HZM) estimates that it will cost $454m to complete construction and deliver first metal at the Araguaia nickel project. This means that the estimate of overall cost is currently 87% higher than before at $1bn. The company is in talks with shareholders and lenders to secure full funding in the second quarter of 2024. The increased investment requirement means that existing debt facilities will have to be restructured. Short-term funding will be required will the discussions continue. Heikon Investments slashed its shareholding from 7.99% to 0.33%.
Shield Therapeutics (STX) is making progress with Accrufer iron deficiency treatment sales, but a third party overstated the number of prescriptions in 2023. There would have been 90,500 on the previous methodology, which was lower than expected, but the revised figure is 77,000. Year-end cash was $13.9m. Costs are being controlled, but there is no guarantee that there is enough cash to reach breakeven. Shield Therapeutics expects to be cash flow positive in the second half of 2025 instead of later this year.
Electric drivetrain developer Saietta Group (SED) it needs more cash by the end of March, or it will have to find a bidder and that made it the top faller on AIM for the second week in a row. Cash payments have been delayed.
Retail and promotional business Spaceandpeople (SAL) did slightly better than expected in 2023 with revenue of £5.8m, up from £4.7m. The company has changed its revenue recognition policy in the UK and revenues will be recognised on a net rather than gross basis. Without the change the 2023 revenues would have been more than £6.5m. The German business is recovering, and its revenues will still be recognised on a gross basis. There is no change to pre-tax profit – £90,000 is forecast.
Fertiliser producer Harvest Minerals (LON: HMI) says 2023 orders totalled 34,880 tonnes and 28,707 tonnes were invoiced and cash received for 27,024 tonnes. The 2024 orders have reached 7,067 tonnes. Management believe that orders could reach 70,000 tonnes this year, even though the market remains difficult. There was $630,000 in the bank at the end of 2023.
Frasers Group has acquired a 8.9% stake in models and collectibles supplier Hornby (HRN).
Empire Metals (EEE) is focusing on the Pitfield titanium project and is not extending the Gindalbie tribute agreement.
Chamberlin (CMH) has sold its profitable Petrel business for £3m and an exceptional gain of £2m. The cash will be invested in its foundry and machining business. There is £250,00 deferred until repairs are undertaken for the facility that is being sub-let to the purchaser by Chamberlin.
RBG Holdings (RBGP) has raised £2.8m at 9p/share, compared with a market price of 9.25p. This will provide a more solid base from which to grow the remaining legal services and M&A business. New legal partners have been recruited to grow the core operations. There is a £24m HSBC facility, but there will be increased headroom after the cash call. There is enough cash for at least 12 months. It is possible that M&A adviser Convex Capital will be sold to its management.
MAIN MARKET
Aquila Services Group (AQSG) intends to leave the standard list. The housing consultancy business reversed into shell company General Industries in August 2015. The share price is well below the level it was at the time of that deal. Management says that it has missed out on chances to acquire businesses because of a lack of liquidity in the shares. Leaving will save £100,000/year.
Newtyn Management has reduced its stake in Pinewood Technologies (PINE) from 10% to 8.56%. Chief executive William Berman sold 1.46 million shares at 34.85p each.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 19 February 2024
Vehicle electrification technology developer Equipmake (EQIP) has raised £4m at 6p/share and a further £110,000 from a retail offer. This will fund research and development for the international market and finding opportunities in the US. There is also grant funding of up to £4.57m. The order book is valued at £13.1m and mainly relates to the bus market. The cash will last at least 12 months.
Coinsilium (COIN) says that the SalitaFinance AI-driven platform, where it has a 6.7% stake, has received investment from a top ten global infrastructure bank. Another investee company, crypto friendly payments company Greengage Global has secured an agreement with a new regulated partner and this will enable the earlier launch of Greengage’s US dollar currency accounts along with forex and SWIFT payments services for clients.
Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) has appointed Axis Capital Markets as corporate broker to help to raise up to £100m via the previously announced bond offering. The share price rose by 50% on the week to 60p. The December 2023 admission price was 4.5p.
RentGuarantor (RGG) has entered a three-year marketing deal with student letting company University Living. The rent guarantee service will be promoted to residential tenants. This will broaden access to the market.
Mortgage Chat (MCAI) has raised £105,000 at 0.05p each. The strategy is moving towards the development of an artificial intelligence platform called Mortgage Chat connecting borrowers and lenders.
Brewer Adnams (ADB) has asked advisers to explore options for funding growth plans.
Marula Mining (MARU) has published a shareholder circular to gain approval for a subscription by AUO Commercial Brokerage. The first subscription will raise £3.75m at 3.75p/share with further subscriptions potentially raising £4.78m at 10p/share. The general meeting is on 8 March.
BWA Group (BWAP) has come to a settlement with St-Georges Eco-Mining Corp, which will convert some loan notes into 146.2 million shares and cancel £1.42m of convertible notes. Connected parties will also be encouraged to rerun up to £1.8m of convertible notes.
TruSpine Technologies (TSP) has entered into a £50,000 loan note agreement with Martin Armstrong, a former chairman. This can be converted into shares at 2.5p each.
Lord Nicholas Monson has increased his stake in Lift Global Ventures (LFT) from 4.96% to 5.33%.
AIM
Katoro Gold (KAT) has raised £750,000 at 0.1p/share, along with warrants exercisable at 0.2p/share that could raise up to £1.5m, and it is planning board changes. Executive chairman Louis Coetzee is stepping down. Outstanding board fees of £91,000 have been reduced to £63,600. A new strategy will involve maximising value from existing interests and seeking new opportunities in critical metals, including uranium. Paul Johnson, who has previously run Power Metal Resources and Metal Tiger has been appointed strategic consultant. The company plans to change its name to Katoro Global Resources.
Good Energy (GOOD) is building on its energy efficiency services business through the acquisition of Maidstone-based JPS Renewable Energy, which is a solar and storage installation business. The initial consideration is £7m in cash and shares with deferred consideration of up to £6.75m over two years. The vendors placed 842,000 of the 1.32 million shares issued at 250p each. JPS generated revenues of £12.4m and pre-tax profit of £600,000 in the year to April 2023 and pre-tax profit could increase to £1.3m this year.
Neometals (NMT) says a review of the Spargos project in Western Australia indicates low potential for lithium-bearing pegmatites. Sampling did not produce any significant results. There will be field mapping to investigate two potassium anomalies and a strategic review of the project.
Gattaca (GATC) is still finding the permanent staffing market difficult, and first half net fee income is expected to decline 16% to £18.9m. This has led to downgrades for full year net fee income, but cost cutting has meant that the full year pre-tax profit forecast is maintained at £3m. The figures will be second half weighted.
Harvest Minerals (HMI) received fertiliser orders for 34,880 tonnes, of which 28,707 tonnes were invoiced in 2023. There have been 1,250 tonnes invoiced so far in 2024. Sales guidance is 70,000 tonnes for 2024. Cash was $630,000 at the end of 2023. Cost are being reduced.
Trading in Artemis Resources (ARV) shares has resumed on ASX. Trading was halted on 8 February although it continued on AIM. Artemis Resources published an update on the West Pilbara project exploration. This shows potential sub vertical orientation of pegmatites at Kobe and Osborne. The first drill hole potentially stopped short of the Osborne target. A drilling programme to test Osborne is planned for March to test near surface lithium rich zones.
M&A activity remains weak at professional services network operator DSW Capital (DSW) and that will hit this year’s profit. There appeared to be an improving trend, but January was poor and that hit network revenues. February is also set to be disappointing. The other activities are trading well. The 2023-24 pre-tax profit will be between £600,000 and £700,000. There was cash of £2.7m at the end of January 2024.
Baron Oil (BOIL) has raised £3m at 0.05p/share, while the retail offer generated £260,000. This will fund drilling preparations for the Chuditch-2 appraisal well south of Timor-Leste, which is planned for the fourth quarter. Shell discovered the Chuditch-1 gas field in the Chuditch production sharing contract in 1998. Timor-Leste authorities recently approved the farm-up agreement with TIMOR GAP Chuditch Unipessoal relating to the production sharing contract. Baron Oil’s subsidiary will retain 60% of the production sharing contract and the partner, which has increased its interest from 25% to 40%, will be responsible for 20% of all costs, including the Chuditch-2 appraisal well.
Beowulf Mining (BEM) is raising cash to invest in Kallak iron ore project in northern Sweden and the graphite anode materials plant in Finland. There will be a rights issue and a PrimaryBid retail offer in the UK raising up to £7.5m in total. A formal decision on the fundraising and pricing will be made on 7 March. A capital reorganisation will reduce the par value of the shares from 1p to 0.1p. The cash will be spent on the Kallak pre-feasibility study and environmental studies, which will enable the application for an environmental permit.
Bushveld Minerals (BMN) has received a $4m payment from Southern Point Resources, which will be repaid when the $12.5m subscription is finally received. This takes the interest free loans to $6m, which have been paid to a South African subsidiary. Southern Point Resources says that the subscription will be paid by 28 February. The financial position of the company is being managed so that vanadium production, which has restarted, can continue until the rest of the cash is received.
Coal miner MC Mining (MCM) advises shareholders not to accept the A$0.16/ share bid from a company controlled by the majority shareholders. One condition is the acceptance by 50.1% of the shares not owned by the bidder.
Crossword Cybersecurity (CCS) has entered a partnership agreement with IT distributor TD SYNNEX, which will sell Crossword’s Trillion threat intelligence platform.
MAIN MARKET
Pendragon has completed the sale of its motor distributor business and will focus on its motor dealer software. The name has changed to Pinewood Technologies (PINE).
Better contract news from data integrity and banking integration software provider Gresham Technologies (GHT), which has secured a $1.5m contract for its Claretti software. The customer is described as a cash management and retail digital services provider. The deal covers the US and is for five years.
HeiQ (HEIQ) is acquiring a manufacturing facility in Portugal to commercialise the AeoniQ synthetic filament yarns technology. Commercial production could start by 2026. Capacity will be 3,000 tons.
HeiQ wants to raise £2.44m. A placing raised £685,000 at 8.7p/share and there is a retail offer of up to £75,000 closing on 22 February. The rest of the cash will come from an issue of non-interest bearing convertible loan notes with a conversion price of 8.7p/share. Revenues were $41m in 2023, but EBITDA will be lower than expected. Net debt is $2m. The year end is being changed from December to June 2024.
XP Power (XPP) says that weak demand meant that 2023 figures will be well below expectations. The 2024 results will be second half weighted. Net debt was £112.7m at the end of 2023.
Carclo (CAR) is closing its Tucson facility and manufacturing will be moved to Pennsylvania.
BSF Enterprise (BSFA) is setting up a separate subsidiary to develop a cultivated leather business.
Dispensa (DISP), originally known as Zamaz, is calling a general meeting on 14 March to gain shareholder approval for the delisting from the standard list.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 12 February 2024
RentGuarantor (RCG) 2023 revenues were 3% ahead of Zeus forecasts and expects to upgrade its 2024 forecast in April after the accounts are released. The 2023 revenues were 73% higher at £742,000. There was a 57% increase in tenant contracts to 1,124. A new insurance partner has increased insurance cover for rent arrears at a lower cost. Zeus has an estimated discounted cash flow valuation of 303p/share. The current 2024 forecast is revenues of £3.6m and breakeven.
All Things Considered (ATC) has acquired a 50% stake in Mckeown Asset, which has concert and festival management interests, as well as 40% of Something Records and 10% of Brighton venue Concorde 2 (it has an option to increase the stake to up to 70%). The initial payment is £475,000 in cash and James Mckeown intends to spend £25,000 in All Things Considered shares. There is potential deferred consideration of £200,000. Mckeown Assets NAV was £243,000 at the end of April 2023, including investments valued at £125,000.
EPE Special Opportunities (EO.P) had an NAV of 324p/share. Holdings in Atlantic Credit Opportunities Fund and Prelude Structured Alternatives Master Fund have been sold and EPIC Acquisition Corp is being wound up because it failed to find a suitable acquisition. There was cash of £15.3m at the end of January 2024. The £4m of unsecured loan notes has been extended to 23 July 2024. There are 12.5 million ZDP shares in issue that mature at the end of 2026.
VSA Capital (VSA) and Andrew Gerrie and Alison Hawksley have settled their legal dispute with Silverwood Brands (SLWD) that relates to 2.28 million shares that were transferred from the two individuals to VSA Capital. The agreement should enable the transaction to sell Lush shares to Silverwood Brands to be unwound.
Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) says that it should take between ten and twelve months to gain FCA authorisation to provide consumer loans. It previously thought that it would take up to 18 months. The loans will be offered at annual percentage rates of between 19.9% and 59.9%. This is expected to improve revenues and profit. Investment Evolution Credit has launched an offering of up to £100m of 15% fixed rate unsecured bonds that last five years. This will fund the US loan portfolio and then UK loans when approvals are granted.
The NAV of Gledhow Investments (GDH) fell from £1.7m to £1.41m at the end of September 2023, including £174,000 in cash. The cash figure has increased to £280,000. There is 51% of the investment portfolio invested in AIM, one-third in Aquis and the rest in pre-IPO investments.
Diagnostic products developer EDX Medical Group (EDX) is raising £4.01m via a subscription at 12p/share, which is a premium to the market price. Founder Professor Chris Evans subscribed for 6.25 million shares. The other investors were high net worth individuals.
Oscillate (MUSH) has a 12.75% stake in Psych Capital (PSY). The investment company is pleased about the news that Psych Capital has been awarded a grant for a phase 1 POC study in Israel of psilocybin-assisted therapy for anorexia nervosa patients.
Marula Mining (MARU) has amended the terms of the Q Global Commodities subscription of up to £3.75m at 3.75p/share so that the money can be subscribed by another affiliate. This cash will be invested in battery metals mining projects in Africa. There is an option to subscribe up to a further £4.78m at 10p/share.
Substrate Artificial Intelligence (SAI) has an investment agreement with Indico Investments and Management, which can provide up to Euro2m with shares issued at a discount of 10% to the relevant share price. There is 2% commission on the total amount, plus 15% commission for each capital increase.
Newbury Racecourse (NYR) non-executive director Dominic J Burke bought 3,000 shares at 700p each, taking his stake to 6.51%. Arbuthnot Banking Group (ARBB) chairman and chief executive Sir Henry Angest acquired 100,000 shares at 990p each, taking his stake to 57.3% of the voting shares.
Clean Invest Africa (CIA) has raised £200,000 at 0.35p each.
Alex Albertini has been appointed as a non-executive director of SulNOx Group (SNOX). He has experience in the shipping industry.
AIM
Adam Wilson is stepping down as chief executive of coal supplier Bens Creek (BEN) once a replacement has been found. Lower metallurgical coal prices led to a shortage of cash last year and $13 of convertible loan notes were issued to 29.9% shareholder Avani Resources. That cash should have lasted until the end of 2024. The company blames poor weather in West Virginia for interrupting production and delaying trains transporting coal. Avani Resources has offered another $5m as a working capital facility. While details are worked out Avani has advanced $1.25m. A 12-month offtake agreement for 40,000 short tons of coal is being negotiated with Avani Resources.
Futura Medical (FUM) says 2023 product revenues were around £3.1m following the launch of erectile dysfunction treatment Eroxon in the UK and Belgium. It has already built up a 20% market share. A $4m upfront payment from Haleon for US rights will be recognised in 2024. There was cash of £7.7m at the end of 2023.
Redx Pharma (REDX) is selling global rights to the preclinical-stage KRAS (Kirsten rat sarcoma virus) inhibitor programme to Jazz Pharmaceuticals for an upfront payment of $10m and potential milestone payments of up to $870m. Redx Pharmaceuticals should have enough cash to get into 2025.
In-game advertising technology provider Bidstack (BIDS) has issued additional convertible loan notes to Irdeto because it has not been able to provide information to Bidstack to publish a shareholder circular. Shareholder approval is required for the convertible issue. Bidstack had drawn down £600,000 from the convertible loan note facility but does not expect to make any more draw downs. The €3m payment from commercial partner Azerion is running out with cash of £1.4m at the end of January and this will run out by the end of March. A strategic review has been initiated.
Building products supplier Alumasc (ALU) has traded strongly, even though the underlying markets, particularly housebuilding, have been weak. Interim revenues increased 6% to £47.8m and pre-tax profit was 14% higher at £6.3m. Water Management increased its profit contribution with recent acquisition ARP only becoming part of the group late in the period. New products helped the housebuilding division. Additional costs on sales meant that the building envelope division profit was lower. A major export order has been delayed, but full year pre-tax profit could still improve from £11.2m to £12.1m.
Cleaning services provider React (REAT) increased its pre-tax profit from £700,000 to £1.8m in the year to September 2023. Revenues grew by 43% and there was a full contribution from the LaddersFree acquisition. Net cash is £1.3m. Current trading is at record levels. Pre-tax profit is expected to grow to £2.1m this year. This has been trimmed because of additional investment in systems to cope with further growth. Tax losses are running out, so the reported earnings will be lower despite the underlying progress.
Semiconductors developer Sondrel (SND) revealed that it had received £1.5m form the customer where payments had been delayed. This has enabled deferred payments to be made by Sondrel. New business opportunities are being negotiated. Even so, Sondrel needs to raise more cash before the end of March to put it on a sound financial footing.
Bushveld Minerals (BMN) has suspended full year guidance until it receives funds from Southern Point Resources relating to last year’s fundraising. Full year production fell 3% to 3,714mt, but sales rose 13% to 4,051mt. However, production has been affected by the lack of cash and it fell to 267mt in January. Southern Point Resources owes more than $10m and claims processing delays and the default of a funding partner have delayed the payment. The payment should be made by the end of February.
Cloud computing services provider Beeks Financial Cloud (BKS) has secured a significant multi-year contract with one of the world’s largest global exchange groups. The contract requires regulatory approval so it may not make a contribution in the year to June 2024. The value of the deal was not disclosed but it could be worth £3m or more each year. Another contract has been increased in size. Canaccord Genuity is maintaining its 2023-24 pre-tax profit forecast at £4.1m and increasing the 2024-25 figure from £5.3m to £6m.
Verditek (VDTK) has agreed terms to sell its solar business and become a shell. The buyers are the holders of secured convertible loan notes in return for the surrender of £528,340 loan notes and £50,000 in cash. The company will transfer the shareholder loan to the new company for nominal consideration. The bondholders are providing Verditek with a loan facility of up to €100,000 to fund the operating costs of the solar business. If the deal does not go ahead by the end of February Verditek will be running out of cash. A new management team is interested in joining Verditek and there are plans to raise £300,000.
RF components and systems developer Filtronic (FTC) has won a £7.8m contract for ground station antenna amplifiers for a leading global supplier of LEO satellite communications equipment. It also released interims with revenues 1% ahead at £8.5m. The cost base has been increased to cope with future growth, so there was a swing from profit to loss. Cavendish has raised its full year revenues expectations from £20.5m to £23.5m and pre-tax profit estimate has more than trebled from £800,000 to £2.5m.
Helium One Global (HE1) says Itumbula West-1 has flowed a high concentration of helium to surface. A measured helium concentration of up to 4.7% equates to nearly 9,000 times normal background levels. The well results will be evaluated. The company raised £4.7m at 1.5p, which is still a 650% premium to the share price prior to positive drilling news.
Artemis Resources (ARV) has discovered spodumene bearing pegmatites with Li2O grades of up to 1.82% at the Mount Marie prospect in the Greater Carlow project. This is the first tangible proof of spodumene bearing pegmatites and it could be part of a lithium corridor according to WH Ireland. Assay information is being assessed and should be published on 13 February.
MAIN MARKET
S and U (SUS) says tough trading conditions are hampering trading. Advances by motor finance provider Advantage were 7% lower than last year. In the second half of 2023-24 90% of due payments were made, down from 94% in the previous period. This means that pre-tax profit will be 10%-15% below expectations of £38m. Net receivables for Aspen Bridging have increased from £114m to £130m. The second interim dividend will be raised from 35p/share to 38p/share.
A new African investor has invested $500,000 in Blencowe Resources (BRES) at 5p/share and a further $2.5m has been conditionally raised at the same price.
First Tin (1SN) says sampling at the Taronga tin project confirms extensions to known mineralisation to the northeast and southwest and identified other potential targets.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 22 January 2024
Standard listed Mustang Energy (MUST) has entered into non-binding heads of terms for the acquisition of Cykel AI (CYK). The offer is 1.844 Mustang Energy shares for each Cykel AI share. The Mustang Energy share price is 30.6p, having risen from 25.5p prior to the announcement of the deal. Cykel AI is developing artificial intelligence software, which will be marketed via a Software as a Service (SaaS) model, and it joined Aquis on 25 October 2023 at 3p/share. Trading in Cykel AI shares has been suspended at 9.25p, valuing the company at £19m. Mustang Energy previously tried to do a deal with Bushveld Minerals (BMN), involving one of its subsidiaries but that fell through. A prospectus for the acquisitions is expected in the second quarter of 2024.
Fuel additives developer SulNOx Group (SNOX) generated third quarter revenues of £98,400, up from £53,500 in the second quarter. Nine months revenues were doubled. There is £2.68m in the bank. Fourth quarter invoiced sales are already £64,500.
Global Connectivity (GCON) says 15%-owned investee company Rural Broadband Holdings has increased its stake in UK broadband provider Voneus from 32% to 36% as part of a £25m financing.
Cooks Coffee Company (COOK) has increased the number of coffee shops and revenues in the 12 months to December 2023 were 16% higher at £26.9m. Like-for-like UK sales were 6% ahead and in Ireland it was 6.8%. December was a record month and there was positive operating cash flow. The year-end is being changed to March.
Electric motors and drivetrains developer Equipmake Holdings (EQIP) has gained a contract for the next stage of its electric motor development with aerospace company H55 for electric aircraft. There will be £315,000 of work deliverable by the end of May 2024 with a further £400,000 after that. Aircraft production could commence in 2025. Dr Nicholas Moelders has been appointed as chief operating officer. Interim revenues rose from £1.05m to £2.07m, while the loss increased from £2.79m to £2.96m because of higher admin expenses.
Hydrogen production systems developer Hydrogen Future Industries (HFI) has commenced its first mining sector feasibility study in the US. The idea is to use wastewater from tailings as a way of generating hydrogen. Management is discussing a potential deal with a partner in Australia for the deployment of renewable energy microgrids.
Marula Mining (MARU) subsidiaries have been issued seven new graphite mining licences for Takela and NyoriGreen projects in Tanzania. The licences last seven years. Marula Mining owns 75% of the licence owners and it is paying $25,000/licence, as well as issuing 1.05 million shares at 13.5p each as additional consideration for the investments. Marula Mining has approved a $6.38m exploration budget for its projects in Tanzania.
Igraine (KING) investee company Fixit Medical, which has developed the Cingo drainage catheter fixation device, expects to produce the first production prototypes in the first quarter of 2024. Fixit Medical is preparing a technical dossier for the ISO 13485 application.
Looking Glass Laboratories (NFTX) has decided to withdraw from the Aquis Stock Exchange, having joined in November 2022.
WeCap (WCAP) has invested a further £900,000 in WeShop convertibles, taking the total investment to £3.75m. The conversion price is 200p/share. WeCap has also invested in £4m of convertibles with a conversion price of 300p/share. Including an investment in a company owning shares, WeCap owns 15.3% of the diluted share capital of WeShop. This is valued at £24.6m at the latest fundraising price.
A purchase of 4,250 shares in Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) at 50p each led to a 125% jump in the share price to 45p. There were four other trades during the week, and they were at 24p/share and 25p/share. The online consumer loans company joined Aquis on 14 December 2023 when it raised £508,000 at 4.5p/share. There is no reason for the share price to have risen so far other than the limited liquidity of the shares.
Valereum (VLRM) has restarted talks with Vinay Gupta of Mattereum and they are exploring potential opportunities.
Chief executive Dr Michael Hudson has acquired 50,000 EDX Medical Group (EDX) shares at an average price of 8.89p each, taking his stake to 6.77%.
Michael Edwards has bought one million shares in Aqru (AQRU) at 0.12p each.
AIM
Tissue converter Accrol (ACRL) has acquired wet wipes and tumble dryer sheet manufacturer Severn Delta for around three times EBITDA. There is a factory in Somerset with four production lines. Revenues are £5m and this will take Accrol into new markets.
Scientific instruments manufacturer Judges Scientific (JDG) generated organic sales growth of 15% in 2023. Profit should be in line with expectations. Liberum expects pre-tax profit to rise from £28.3m to £31.4m. Increased stocks have held back cash generation. Net debt is forecast to be £44.9m.
Paper and technical fibres maker James Cropper (CRPR) has been hit by weak trading in the paper business and slower growth in sales to hydrogen companies in advanced materials. As a highly operationally geared business this has led to a slashing of current year pre-tax profit forecast from £5.9m to £500,000. Employee numbers have been reduced in the paper division, completing the restructuring. Higher capacity utilisation will improve the profit contribution.
Trading in scientific instruments developer Microsaic Systems (MSYS) has recommenced after a 625-for-one share consolidation and a placing raising £2.1m at 1.25p. The consolidated share price was 4.0625p and it fell to 1.4p in initial dealings and stayed at that level, which is a 65.5% decline. Cash will be used to acquire assets from DeepVerge. Full year results for 2022 and interims for 2023 were published to enable the shares to recommence trading after suspension.
Growth at payments technology company Bango (BGO) was held back by contract delays. Moving into profit for the full year was always going to be a tough and Bango has fallen well short. Revenues grew 62%, which is 6% below forecasts. Bango did move into profit in the second half, but it was not enough to make the full year profitable, and the loss is likely to be around $3.7m. That is due to the high margin, lower sales, increased costs and negative foreign exchange movements. Bango should still move into profit in 2024 and start to generate cash.
Hercules Site Services (HERC) did well in the year to September 2023 with underlying pre-tax profit better than expected at £900,000. HS2 work is building up. The construction workers provider is opening its own training centre. That will help the business in the longer-term, but initial costs will hold back profit this year.
XP Factory (XPF) says Boom Bars generated like-for-like growth of 29% and Escape Hunt grew 17% in the past 12 months. This is much faster growth than the market. Group revenues were 95% ahead at £44.5m and this underpins the current forecast for the 15 months to March 2024. XP Factory is on course to move into profit in 2024-25.
Third quarter trading was in line with expectations at Naked Wines (WINE) with the decline in constant currency sales of 10% lower than in the previous quarter. This was the peak trading time. Quarterly operating profit is likely to be £3m-£5m. Annual costs have been reduced by £7m. Net cash is £3m and the business should become cash generative by 2025.
Zeus has cut its 2024 and 2025 forecasts for Big Technologies (LON: BIG) after the monitoring technology company’s trading statement. The 2023 figures were in line with expectations, but Big Technologies expects its Colombia prison service contract to end in the first half of this year. This year’s revenues are expected to fall to £51m and the operating profit estimate is reduced from £31,7m to £23.9m, down from £28.9m in 2023. The 2025 operating profit is expected to be £27m.
A trading statement from utility infrastructure platform IQGeo (IQG) shows 2023 revenues 6% ahead of forecast and a much higher cash figure of £11m. Annualised recurring revenues are 50% higher at £21.1m. This has sparked an upgrade of 2024 estimates by Cavendish with revenues of £49.8m and pre-tax profit of £5.5m, up from £3.4m in 2023.
Strategic Minerals (SML) says that the Cobre magnetite operation has regained a major client that has ordered 30,000 tons. There could be a second contract of a similar size. This follows a halving of sales volumes in 2023.
There were positive drilling results from Thor Energy (THR). The drilling at the Wedding Bell and Radium Mountain uranium prospects in Colorado intersected high-grade uranium. Grades were up to 0.69%. This follows positive results from the Groundhog prospect. The assay results should be received in February. There are plans to drill other prospects in the region. The uranium price has moved above $100/lb.
Prospex Energy (PXEN) says that the Podere Malar-1 well in the Selva field is producing gas at the expected levels. Prospex Energy owns a 37% working interest in the Selva Malvezzi production concessions. Operator Po Valley Energy is determining the optimal flow rate for the longer-term. There are plans for further drilling on the concession.
MAIN MARKET
Foams manufacturer Zotefoams (ZTF) had a strong end to 2023 with revenues in line and pre-tax profit slightly better than forecast at £13.1m – a small increase on 2022. The foam business did particularly well and should continue to as new Nike shoe designs are launched. The ReZorce recyclable carton business remains loss-making and trials with customers will happen in the next few months. Net debt is £31.9m and capital investment will lead this to increase in 2024.
Gulf Marine Services (GMS) has updated guidance for 2023. The offshore energy vessels provider says underlying EBITDA will be around $86m, which is one-fifth higher than in 2022. The 2024 EBITDA range is $87m to $95m.
Andrew Hore
Quoted Micro 18 December 2023
Flex Labs Inc (FLEX) joined the Access segment on 15 December. The Canada-registered company is developing AI middleware for natural language processing text generators. There is no product yet. The introduction price was 3p, which valued Flex Labs at £3.42m. The share price ended the week at 6p.
Investment Evolution Credit (IEC) joined the Access segment on 14 December and raised £508,000 at 20p/share, valuing the online consumer loans company at £2.99m. The company currently focuses on the US but plans to move into the UK. In the US, Mr Amazing Loans offers loans of between $2,000 and $10,000 with interest rates of between 19.9% and 29.9%. Approvals are required to start offering loans in the UK. The core business is loss-making. The share price ended the week at 6p.
Shares in Semper Fortis Esport (SEMP) rose as shareholders agreed to the acquisition of Good Life + and the subsequent reverse takeover that occurs on 18 December.
Yooma Wellness Inc (YOOM) left Aquis on 15 December. The company has been put into voluntary liquidation.
China-focused eCommerce company Samarkand (SMK) reported a 1% dip in interim revenues of £8.1m, while the loss was reduced. There was growth in sales outside of China. Revenues from own brands rose 18%. VSA has downgraded its expectations for the full year because the recovery has not gained the anticipated momentum. Cost savings are helping to reduce the loss. The full year loss is still expected to fall from £4.7m to £3.8m. Samarkand could move near to breakeven next year.
Business assurance provider Adsure Services (ADS) generated revenues of £4.25m in the six months to September, which was prior to joining Aquis. There was an interim loss, but last year the second half was highly profitable. There are plans to diversify the customer base.
Retail carbon trading company Ora Technology (ORA) did not generate revenues in the period to July 2023. There was £1m in the bank at the end of July 2023.
In November, Guanajuato Silver (GSVR) increased month-on-month silver production by 23% to 295,284 ounces equivalent. The production improvement is set to continue into next year.
Marula Mining (MARU) is involved with local partners in applications for graphite mining licences at the Nyorinyori graphite project and the NyoriGreen graphite project in Tanzania. New processing equipment has been installed at the Blesberg lithium and tantalum mine.
Wishbone Gold (LON: WSBN) says visual inspection of core from recent drilling at the Cottesloe project in Western Australia show zones containing base metals while x-ray fluorescence scanning shows elevated base metals readings. Assay results will make things clearer.
Newbury Racecourse (NYR) has appointed Shaun Hinds to replace Julian Thick as chief executive.
IamFire is raising £1m at 1.5p/share and it has changed its name to WeCap (WCAP).
EPE Special Opportunities (EO.P) had net assets of 300.48p/share at the end of November 2023.
Marallo Holding Inc has acquired 1.75 million shares in NFT Investments (NFT) for a total cost of £47,375. Michael Heald has increased his stake in brewer Adnams (ADB) from 21.4% to 23.5%. Oscillate (MUSH) non-exec John Treacy has bought an initial 880,000 shares at 0.54p each.
AIM
Recruitment firm Impellam (IPEL) has finally agreed a takeover offer after months of being in a bid situation. HeadFirst is offering 557.2p/share in cash and 392.8p/shares in loan notes for each Impellam share. Shareholders will also receive the 55.9p/share dividend announced, plus a further cash dividend of 22.4p/share and a in specie dividend of 56.1p/share. This all adds up to 1,084.4p/share and values Impellam at £483.2m. The non-convertible loan notes offer annual interest of 17% and last an initial 3 years. The convertibles have annual interest of 12% and the total loan amount can be converted into 20% of the bid vehicle.
Venue management software supplier Skedda Inc has proposed an 82p/share offer to SmartSpace Software (SMRT) valuing it at £25m. The share price has not been that high since 2021 and it jumped 103% to 70p, still well short of the bid level. JO Hambro, which owns 8.3% of the software developer, is supportive of the offer. Skedda believes that it can provide the financial backing that SmartSpace Software requires. The SmartSpace Software board is considering the offer. The company is currently loss-making.
Dispute resolution services provider Driver Group (DRV) moved back into profit in the year to September 2023, mainly due to higher gross margins. The £1.1m pre-tax profit was still lower than the £2m reported for 2020-21. The cost base has been reduced and additional projects have been won. Net cash is £5.8m. The final dividend is 0.75p/share and management says that there is around £1m of surplus capital that can be used for share buy backs. The core businesses will be rebranded Diales and there are plans to move into other sectors, such as aerospace and IT.
Defence and forgings company MS International (MSI) more than doubled interim pre-tax profit from £3.46m to £7.72m. Revenues improved from £42m to £57m. The defence business returned to profit and generated all the revenue growth. That offset lower contributions from other divisions. Net cash is £50m. There are £57.5m of contract liabilities on long-term contracts and NAV is £43.4m. Deliveries for US navy contracts begin in the second half.
Shore Capital has reduced its 2024 and 2025 forecasts for pawnbroker H&T (HAT). The pledge book is growing faster than expected and an additional £10m of funding was recently secured. That additional profit is offset by increased wage costs following the raising of the National Minimum Wage. There will also be higher interest costs. The dividend is likely to grow by a lower percentage than previously anticipated. The 2024 revenues have been edged up to £261m, while pre-tax profit is reduced from £36.7m to £39.7m. A higher tax rate means that there will be a 10% drop in earnings estimates to 62.8p/share.
There is a continued decline in the share price of energy and water efficiency company Eneraqua Technologies (ETP) after the announcement that two local authorities are delaying spending. There is also a £900,000 exceptional charge relating to defective equipment. A loss of £6m is forecast for 2023-24.
Phase 3 trials of the grass allergy treatment developed by Allergy Therapeutics (AGY) show highly statistically significant reductions in symptoms compared with a placebo. There will be a meeting with the regulators in the first quarter of 2024.
Image Scan (IGE) returned to profit in the year to September 2023 as revenues were 50% ahead at £3m. A further improvement is expected this year. The order book is worth £650,000 with a pipeline of potential work that underpins further growth.
Former ITM Power (ITM) boss Dr Graham Cooley has acquired a 6.6% stake in Distil (DIS). This follows the drinks company’s £765,000 fundraising at 0.35p/share.
MAIN MARKET
RM (RM.) expects 2022-23 revenues from continuing operations to decline from £214.2m to £196m, which includes £19m (£33.6m) from Consortium, which is being closed. The educational technology provider expects to have a significant write-own relating to that business. Management is renegotiating lending facilities.
Kitchenware retailer ProCook Group (PROC) reported an underlying interim pre-tax loss was reduced from £2.8m to £2.2m. Revenues fell, but gross margins have improved, helped by lower freight charges. High street sales are growing, although online revenues have declined due to problems that have been sorted out. In the most recent eight weeks sales were 1.5% ahead
S and U (SUS) says net receivables have grown from £417m to £446m since the half-year end with the growth coming from the car finance and property bridging divisions. Management is cautious about prospects.
Andrew Hore