Normally when you boycott a company because of some woke nonsense some folks say "but what about the poor workers." In the case of Starbucks it is not the company, although it has sinned on many on occasion, but on this occasion it is its workers who are revolting.
On Bulletin Boards the GroupThink among a bunch of congenital idiots is that “TW@” knows nothing, is very stupid, is short of all stocks he writes about, is Jewish or part of a Jewish conspiracy and that nobody cares what he says.” Meanwhile I seem to get free accommodation, living inside the head of all these posters!
Shameless David Lenigas tweets (as you can see below) that to cure poverty in African he wants to do another Lonrho. This is not the Tiny Rowlands “unacceptable face of capitalism” Lonrho but a latter version controlled by Lenigas from 2006 and sold to some Swiss chaps in 2013 for 2.9 billion Rand. What follows shows Lenigas has no shame.
Thanks to the sponsorship of Sure Valley, Riverfort Global & Pires Investments (PIRI) we are expanding the number and quality of speakers and are able to offer up more fun and games at Sharestock this year - as you can see HERE. In this second episode of Altcast looking at small caps and AIM I Liam Bulmer of Riverfort . The first seven months of the year were bad but August was worse!. Where next? Enjoy.
Big Dave has recorded a 90 minute video with some arse-licking interviewer whose name I do not know which, and I really hate to say it, is really rather compelling viewing. Apparently Big Dave has had to sell both of his hundred foot yachts and says that he is really feeling the pinch paying his mortgages. I am almost in tears as I write, considering his hardship, and will be setting up a crowd fund page sharpish. Actually, a lot of what he says makes really good sense.
I was not clever enough to be holding a bunch of ARM shares when the company was takeover by Softbank Group of Japan in 2016. You may have been reading over the last few months, the company’s (re)IPO is not going to take place here, or in Japan, but in the US of A. And what a surprise that this is where technology sector demand is the most rampant, and valuations are the most excitable. However…