eute gegen Börsenschluss in Kanada kam eine sagenhafte News bei Poly Pacific raus (WKN A0LGDN) 400 Millionen Dollar Umsatzpotenzial durch das Recycling von Nylon. Und das zusätzlich zu den bereits gemeldeten anderen Deals. Die Margen in diesem Geschäft sind exorbitant hoch, sodass mit einem Gewinn von 250 bis 300 Millionen Dollar aus diesem Deal zu rechnen ist. Bei knapp 30 Mio. outstanding Shares und einem aktuellen Kurs von 36 Kanada Cent ist die Firma damit massiv unterbewertet. Selbst wenn sich der Abbau über 5 Jahre hinziehen würde bedeutet das einen Gewinn von 50 Millionen Dollar pro Jahr allein aus diesem Geschäft. Bei einem absolut bescheiden angelegtem KGV von nur 10 müsste der Kurs demnach zwischen 15 und 18 Dollar liegen. Die Kanadier konnten noch nicht auf die News reagierten weil die Börse bereits zugemacht hat. Ich rechne mit erheblichen Kursanstiegen am Montag und den darauffolgenden Tagen. Die News Poly-Pacific International Inc. - News Release Feb 23, 2007 3:38:00 PM BURNABY, BC, Feb. 23 /CNW/ - Poly-Pacific International Inc. (\"Poly-Pacific\" or the \"Company\" (TSX-V: \"PMB\"; OTCBB: \"PLYPF\"; Berlin: \"A0LGDN\"; Frankfurt: \"POZ\" wishes to announce that the Company has responded to an RFP (Request for Proposal) with an application for access for assessment to a landfill site containing waste nylon and polyesters. This was on the agenda for the Tuesday, February 20, 2007 Kingston city council meeting. A staff report that went to council on Tuesday night, but was never acted on after the meeting became bogged down in other issues, recommends allowing Poly-Pacific to conduct an assessment of the old Kingston Township dump in exchange for $1. City council will consider the matter at their next meeting. The City of Kingston wishes to investigate the potential for removal and recycling polymer fibres (nylons and polyesters) that are believed to be present in the former Kingston West Landfill Site (also know as the McAdoo\\\'s Lane Landfill). The McAdoo\\\'s Lane Landfill Site was operated as a licensed landfill from 1970 through to its closure in 1987. Although no formal records of landfilling were kept, it is estimated that approximately 180,000 tonnes (360 million pounds) of industrial waste were landfilled between 1970 and 1987 and that the overall volume of the present landfill is in the order of 1�million cubic metres. Upon meeting the conditions as outlined in the access and assessment agreement, the City of Kingston will grant Poly-Pacific a license to access the site for the sole purpose of assessing the feasibility of extracting fibre from the site. In a Kingston Whig-Standard Newspaper, an article by staff writer Ian Elliot, dated February 22, 2007, Mr. Elliot wrote \"Standard So-called \"garbage mining\" is common in some countries and is growing in the United States, either by companies who want to extract recyclable materials and valuable metals from dumpsites, or by public agencies who evacuate a dump, compact the material and rebury it to gain more space.\" The full article can be viewed using the following link. http://www.thewhig.com/webapp/sitepages/...amp;classif=News+%2D+Local This release may contain forward looking statements. These statements are based on management\\\'s current expectations and beliefs and are subject to a number of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those described in the forward looking statements. Poly-Pacific does not assume any obligation to update any forward looking information contained in this news release. We seek safe harbour. The TSX Venture Exchange does not accept responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of the release. |