Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
not yet!
will check!
Did you check out the email i sent you?
good evening!
Wow. A down day on light volume. Good buying opp. here. Good luck all.
I don't chase stocks. CPPT looks good but I still don't chase any stock. No stock is a sure thing. Especially on the pinks. If I miss the run then I miss it ... if CPPT comes down to where I feel comfortable then I'll buy.
Good luck.
apologize,
a little pumping!
I believe this will go to one buck, if not two
bucks per share:
Level II,
CHART,
Revenue projections,
and estimates of PPS.
long term hold for some savy investors on IHUB
again, the point being, one or two or three cents,
will not matter in the end.
well,
one, you mentioned it is a LONG TERM HOLD.
likewise!
secondly, Stock Lobster gives a value of
OVER $8.00/share.
thirdly, Level II had some high marks on it?
pumping?
Keith
Now thats pumping.
lol
one penny.
when this hits $8.00 per share, you would've
missed a huge HOME RUN!
adding everyday: btw, got in today at 0.235!
through Fidelity brokerage.
Keith
HHHHHMMMMM..... I remember that happening to me also some time ago in another stock. I think the MM know this is going to run . Try to get in @.25 tomorrow and you should fill at the best ask. At this point I would just get in. The chartguru is absolutely right. so what if you pay a few pennies more. If will come back to you with interest. Get in above the ask. JUST GET IN.
You should be able to buy at .24
I am trying to buy at the ask, they keep upping it on me. Then I up my bid to the new ask...then it sits ... then they up the ask on me again...fockers. We'll see what happens tomorrow.
Buy it at the ask before it gets away from you.
Don't miss out on a huge move.....so what if you buy at .225 or .24 when this thing hits $1? I'm deadly serious
If someone buys at .24 I burn my wife's Beanie Babies.....Boy was she lucky.....or i was. Good close slowing moving up even w/o Ameritrade.
I keep upping my bid and they up the ask. I've been chasing this stock for the last 3 hours...
Good point. Let's keep our sanity here. Remember that once they let the dogs loose at Ameritrade there will be no more buying on dips for a long time. hey Lobster.....how about another snapshot of L2. Bid up to .225
Bargain basement prices. Hysterical...why quibble over a half a penny I always say! See......you.......waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay..........over...............a $1.00
This is how MCNS started!
Argh!*
it wasn't for the hour I had my .23 order in for
If we hit .24 today I will celebrate by throwing away all my wife's Beanie Babies.....maybe after I burn them all first!
cheers for that SL!
i won't describe it as a direct hit but very suggestive. makes sense that russian co's would be in the know about cppt.
me in at .20.22.225
Im in at .20, .22 and .23. Wait until Ameritrade opens up for them. Wow. to da MOON.
I think I a;so added at .225 last week.
After a buck.....don't matter
YOU DOG. I paid .23 for my last block.Soon we will laugh about these stupid prices and getting in a penny cheaper. Good times are coming my friend.
CPPT 10/18: Fee/Participation in Congo Project
October 18, 2006 06:29 PM Eastern Time
CompuPrint Receives Payment from Multi-Billion Dollar Exploration Company for STeP® Technology Diamond Report on 1,000 Square Kilometer Prospect
Company Also Receives Free Participation Interest for STeP Report
NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CompuPrint, Inc. (OTCBB:CPPT), an energy and natural resource exploration technology company, announced today that it has received an initial payment from an exploration affiliate of a multi-billion dollar company to provide its proprietary satellite-based STeP® technology report to locate diamonds in a more than 1,000 square kilometer area in the Republic of Congo. The September 2006 service contract also provides for the Company to receive, in addition to its undiscounted service rates out of project revenues, a 1% free participation interest and a 5% working interest in the project.
The Company has begun its preliminary analysis of the contracted prospect to determine the location of the kimberlite pipe(s) which is the potential source of the alluvial diamonds already found in the license area. Our co-venturer has already built a campsite to support the exploration activities.
In preparing its analysis, the Company utilizes proprietary STeP technology, which is based on interpretation of satellite data, to effectively identify kimberlite pipes containing diamonds, and for finding other natural resources subsurface, including oil and gas, gold and even water.
"We are proud that a substantial company in minerals exploration recognizes the value of STeP. Our technology will enable our client to more effectively and efficiently exploit its diamond exploration efforts and achieve substantial time and dollar savings,” said Roman Rozenberg, CompuPrint's Chief Executive Officer. “It has already been demonstrated that the technology we employ can help substantially in locating kimberlite pipes for diamond exploration. In addition, this project in Congo complements our now more than 1,000,000 acre off-shore Namibia diamond prospect for which we have obtained licenses from the Government of Namibia for diamond exploration. So, we are optimistic that our STeP technology will open more opportunities to work with this client and other major exploration companies. We are currently in negotiations to render other services to several potential clients of similar size."
About CompuPrint, Inc.
CompuPrint, Inc., through its wholly owned subsidiary, Terra Insight Corporation, provides subsurface surveying, and analytical services for exploration, drilling, and mining companies. The Company primarily uses satellite-based STeP technology, which facilitates the prediction and location of commercially viable deposits of hydrocarbons, gold, diamonds, and other natural resources. The Company interprets and quantifies geologic and satellite data to develop the assessment of natural resources for any given geographic area - on or off shore. The Company, through its subsidiaries and affiliates holds (1) six licenses to more than one million acres off-shore Namibia for diamond exploration, (2) a participation interest in a diamond prospect in the Congo, (3) a working interest in a one million acre Kurdistan oil prospect, (4) leases for oil and gas parcels totaling more than 16,000 acres of land in the Rail Road Valley and White River Valley areas of Nevada and (5) oil and gas leases in East and South Texas. For more information visit http://www.terrainsight.com.
This press release may contain forward-looking information within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and is subject to the safe harbor created by those sections. There are many factors that could cause the Company's expectations and beliefs about its plans to acquire additional exploration properties, plans to drill or drilling results to fail to materialize, inclusive but not limited to competition for new acquisitions; availability of capital; unfavorable geologic conditions; prevailing prices for oil, natural gas and other natural resources; and general regional economic conditions.
CPPT DD: Russia's ALROSA eyes Congo deals
Wed Sep 20, 2006 8:24 AM GMT
By Dmitry Solovyov
UDACHNY, Russia (Reuters) - Russian diamond giant ALROSA said on Wednesday that it was in talks to develop local diamond deposits in Guinea and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
ALROSA President Alexander Nichiporuk told a news briefing the company also planned to team up with Russian state-run oil firm Zarubezhneft to develop oil fields in Angola as part of a strategy to diversify its business away from diamond extraction.
"We have now launched work in Guinea and we have plans for other countries as well. As for Guinea, we have made real progress and we are now in talks with the government to obtain licences," Nichiporuk told Reuters after the briefing.
Nichiporuk, speaking in the northern town of Udachny in eastern Siberia, did not give further details on these planned deals or say how much they would be worth.
"The main thing is to have political stability in those countries. We're now considering possibilities of doing business in the Democratic Republic of Congo. They are gearing up for an election right now and we hope for stabilisation there," he said.
Nichiporuk said the continuing rouble appreciation were hurting ALROSA's exports.
"As a whole, the situation in the world is stable but we are worried by the weakening of the dollar rate because we are an export-oriented company and therefore we suffer certain losses," he said.
"We hope that hedging our risks will help us stabilise the situation despite the further appreciation of the rouble rate."
LOOKING FOR PARTNERS
Nichiporuk said the company expected its share of world diamond output to stabilise at the current level of 25 percent, up from 18 percent a few years ago.
Taking into account its assets in Angola, ALROSA last year sold diamonds worth between $3 billion and $3.4 billion. ALROSA directly controls 97 percent of Russian diamond output.
Last year ALROSA made a net profit of 15 billion roubles.
Nichiporuk said ALROSA was actively looking for reliable partners "to offset potential losses" from smaller sales of rough diamonds to its main partner, South African giant De Beers.
In a sign of just how fickle market conditions can be, De Beers -- the supplier of half the world's diamonds -- will buy $600 million worth of Russian gems this year, $500 million next and just $400 million in 2008.
The reason for the falling sales to De Beers is a European Union market monopoly probe. Under a five-year deal signed in 2002, ALROSA had planned to sell $800 million worth of diamonds a year to De Beers.
ALROSA has appealed to the European Court of Justice, hoping to overturn a February settlement between the European Commission and De Beers, according to which the South African firm will stop buying Russian rough diamonds from 2009.
Nichiporuk said there was a glut in global diamond trade, and according to ALROSA's own estimate, the value of the total world supply of diamonds outsized demand by at least $500 million to $700 million.
He said that ALROSA's sales of Russian diamonds totalled $2.8 billion in 2005 including $160 million of cut diamonds. The company said in a statement that diamond sales in the first half of 2006 were worth $1.71 billion including $778 million of Russian domestic sales.
fyi: Alrosa S&P Rating Raised (4/06)
MOSCOW (Bloomberg) — Alrosa, Russia’s diamond monopoly, had its long-term credit rating raised one level by Standard & Poor’s, which cited the Siberian company’s improving financial results.
The rating was raised to B+ from B, four steps below investment grade, with a positive outlook, S&P said in a statement. Alrosa’s short-term rating remains B.
Alrosa, based in Mirny, eastern Siberia, is the world’s second-biggest diamond producer after De Beers. Alrosa said Dec. 28 that it expects sales to rise 12 percent to $2.9 billion this year, from an expected $2.5 billion last year.
The upgrade “reflects Alrosa’s strengthening profitability and cash flows,” Standard & Poor’s credit analyst Elena Anankina said in the statement. “The ratings on Alrosa could be raised by up to two notches if the full audited 2005 financials confirm positive operating and financial trends, and if the Russian government achieves direct majority control over the company.’’
http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=17214
yi: BW- Russia diamond monopoly to reorganize
SEP. 20 12:39 P.M. ET The head of Russia's state-owned diamond monopoly said Wednesday that the world's No. 2 producer of uncut gems will reorganize and become an open joint stock company within months, after it settles a property dispute with regional authorities.
"The most important goal today is the opening up of the company," Alrosa chairman Alexander Nichiporuk told reporters visiting the company's mines in the Siberian province of Yakutia. "We expect this to happen after solving the question of property and its listing as part of the company's capital."
Nichiporuk also said the company did not plan an initial public offering in the near future -- something that has long been rumored -- though he did not rule out the possibility.
"Today this question is not on the agenda," Nichiporuk said. "Which form of attracting investment the shareholders choose -- taking credit, issuing bonds or other forms -- lies in the future."
The federal government, the largest single owner of Alrosa, is seeking majority control of the company, the world's second biggest diamond miner. Yakutia's republican government owns 32 percent, 8 percent is owned by the republic's districts and 23 percent by other entities.
The federal government has now lodged an appeal with the Supreme Arbitration Court to redistribute the company's assets between it and the Yakutia government.
Alrosa is second in rough diamond production only to Anglo-South African concern De Beers.
Nichiporuk also told reporters the company plans to develop diamond deposits in Guinea, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Canada.
And in a move to diversify its operations away from the diamond business, he said Alrosa would be exploring oil fields in Yakutia as well as abroad -- in Angola -- in combination with state oil company Zarubezhneft.
Copyright 2006, by The Associated Press. All rights
http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D8K8MTCO0.htm
fyi: Kremlin Picks 'Strategic' Enterprises
August 10, 2006
The St. Petersburg Times
MOSCOW - President Vladimir Putin's official web site on Friday published a list of 1,063 enterprises - ranging from regional airports to the state oil pipeline monopoly Transneft - which the Kremlin considers strategically important.
The list was approved by presidential decree on Aug. 4.
The list included 514 enterprises that are wholly state owned, and 549 in which the state owns more than 25 percent.
In addition to Transneft,other enterprises on the list were the Alrosa diamond monopoly, the Gazprom natural gas monopoly, Rosgosstrakh insurance giant, Vneshtorgbank, the defense firm Sukhoi and a number of airports across the country, including in Murmansk, Sochi, Irkutsk, Yekaterinburg and Rostov-on-Don.
Also on the list was the government's 51.17 percent stake in national airline Aeroflot, its 52.68 percent state in United Energy Systems, the Mosfilm film studio, and Rosoboronexport weapons exporter.
The government said the list concerns enterprises that have "strategic significance for ensuring the defense and security of the state, (and) the protection of the morals, the health, rights and legal interests of Russian citizens."
Some of the companies on the list, such as Alrosa and Aeroflot, had previously been cited as possible targets for privatization.
But their inclusion on the list does not mean that their privatization is now "forbidden," said Arkady Dvorkovich, head of the presidential administration's Department of Experts.
"What this means is that any transactions involving these companies' shares would need to be approved by the president," he was quoted by RIA-Novosti as saying.
Every year, Russia privatizes a number of state-owned or state-controlled enterprises. Next year, about 1,324 enterprises are expected to be sold, Itar-Tass reported. Additionally, the state plans to sell about 566 share packets that it owns in various firms. In late July Economic Development and Trade Minister German Gref said the government was likely to sell its shares in several companies including Aeroflot and Svyazinvest, as well as in several ports, but added that the final decision would be made by October.
http://www.sptimesrussia.com/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=1255
fyi: Kremlin aims to control Alrosa 8/30/06
http://www.finmarket.ru/z/anl/anlpgv.asp?id=520811&lr=0
Alrosa The federal government is seriously aiming to take a diamond monopoly under its control.
The federal government intensified its efforts to take Alrosa, the second-biggest diamond company in the world, under its control. At the beginning of the year, the company was not public with 37% of its shares in federal government property, 32% belonging to regional authorities and 8% to municipal authorities. The other 23% is dispersed among minor shareholders.
The idea to increase the federal share in the company to a controlling stake is not new - the issue has been discussed since the mid-1990. In 2001, President Putin targeted returning the monopoly to federal control while regional Yakut authorities have successfully used all opportunities to protect their 40% stake. However, the federal government had already managed to increase its share to 47% by 2H06 and is now aiming to expand it to 50% + 1 share. The federal government is looking to be very serious.
Yesterday, it submitted the amendments to the budget code to the Duma, which will be approved in September-October 2006. The proposed amendments are re-distributing Mineral Resource Tax on diamonds from federal to regional budget.
As a result, the regional Yakut budget will get an additional RBL2.6bn. The federal and regional sides have also agreed on a further compensation package as the Yakut budget may lose some more RBL9-11bn. This makes the project to take the company under federal control already in 2006 realistic. The deal itself could be positive for Russia in general:
* It is unlikely result in a further increase of government control over economic activity as in this case we should see asset redistribution from regional to federal government. This is not bad for transparency of the monopoly and thus for management efficiency.
* It should accelerate the IPO process.
* If/when the company becomes public, it should be positive for the market, and federal government investments.
* Previously, President Putin has discounted reports of a potential deal between Norilsk Nickel and Alrosa. However, we cannot rule out that the issue will be raised later, in our view. Investment implications: We believe the federal government may complete the deal on Alrosa in 2006.
As has been expected, the deal represents a compromise between regional and federal authorities. The deal should be positive for the market (it would bring a new stock there) and for Russia in general. The event should help to further curb the political power of regional authorities. Julia Tsepliaeva, Moscow (7 495) 755 5489 <<06.08.30.pdf>>
fyi: JP Morgan forecast gives thumbs up to Alrosa
By: John Helmer
Posted: '04-SEP-06 07:00' GMT © Mineweb 1997-2006
MOSCOW (Mineweb.com) --Weaker market demand for diamonds, suppressed by growing inventories, is hurting De Beers, but Alrosa, the Russian rival to the world leader, should continue strong growth, according to a new forecast by JP Morgan Securities in London.
De Beers has reported revenue growth in the six months to June 30 of 1%, with Ebitda rising by just 2%. Rio Tinto reported better growth performance from its Australian diamond mining operations, although on a smaller revenue base.
Alrosa has not issued a first-half summary yet; but according to the JP Morgan report, the 2005 performance should be sustainable this year. Last year, according to Alrosa company reports issued in June, total revenues, including sales of Alrosa's share of production from the Catoca mine in Angola, grew 26% to $3.4 billion. Cost of sales grew at 42%, compared with 2004, to $1.8 billion, fuelled mainly by rising energy charges, a stronger rouble, and elevated costs of operation in Angola. Ebitda was up 19% to $1.2 billion.
JP Morgan analyst and Russian specialist, Tatiana Tchembarova said she expects Alrosa to continue performing strongly, despite the current difficulties in the international diamond market and weakening prices.
"Revenue growth from continued liberalization of diamond prices in Russia," Tchembarova reports, "should outstrip the impact of weaker global markets, driving revenues and margins higher." She also noted that "once Federal [Government] control is formalized, we envision that the company will take a greater strategic role in the Russian mining sector overall."
The June shareholder vote indicated that the federal takeover target of 50% plus one share had not been reached. But court action to enforce it had been settled between the federal and Sakha governments. Formal control is expected to occur before the year's end.
Even if Alrosa may be holding larger inventories of rough out of the market, while cutting prices for smaller goods to encourage demand, the JP Morgan report suggests "prices for polished higher-range diamonds -- which represents most of Alrosa's production -- have remained robust. Contrasting what Tchembarova terms "disappointing" results from De Beers for H1 2006, the outlook for Alrosa is more positive, she said.
At the start of this year, Alrosa's long-term debt stood at $1.2 billion, up just $36 million on the 2004 level. Short-term debt was $596 million, up $243 million from the year before. About half of the latter figure was accounted for by debt financing related to the trading of Angolan diamonds. Fresh debt may be required, the report noted, since "we understand that any further share buybacks associated with the move to achieve Federal government control may be financed by Alrosa itself."
DeBeers is reporting that its current debt is at $2.5 billion, and this is projected to rise toward $3 billion in order to finance high-cost exploration for new diamond sources in Canada and South Africa. This year De Beers is projecting exploration spending of about $800 million.
Alrosa's cost of exploration -- mostly in Russia and Angola -- is significantly less, and is projected at about $110 million this year.
Alrosa's share of the global diamond mining market is now 25%, making it the largest diamond-miner in the world after De Beers.
http://www.mineweb.net/gems/991787.htm
fyi: AP ~ Russian Diamond Co. Looking Abroad
By MARIA DANILOVA , 10.03.2006, 01:46 PM
Just below the Arctic circle, amid sprawling tundra forests that are the only sign of life for hundreds of miles, geologists from Russia's state diamond monopoly Alrosa drill deep into grayish mud in search of precious gems.
But the world's No. 2 producer of raw diamonds after South Africa's De Beers Group is no longer content with mining gems alone - it plans to expand into coal and gold mining, as well as exploring oil and gas fields at home and abroad.
The Kremlin, which is increasingly consolidating its control over the country's key industries, is rumored to be eyeing Alrosa as a nucleus for a state-controlled mining holding company.
Once a closed and secretive entity, some of whose mines and towns were hidden off the map in Soviet times, Alrosa today is seeking to change its legal structure to enable it to list its shares on Russian and international markets.
"Yes, we do have ambitions, I can confirm that," Alrosa's president Alexander Nichiporuk said in response to a journalist's question about future plans, on a recent tour of the company's diamond fields and plants in the Siberian province of Yakutia.
Such a makeover won't be easy.
Before opening up the company, which it views as strategically important, the federal government wants to increase its share to majority control from the current 37 percent.
The Kremlin plans to raise its stake by redistributing the company's capital assets between the federal and the local government, which was handed most of Alrosa's physical property when the company was born out of its Soviet-era predecessor in the early 1990s. The Yakut government currently owns 32 percent, its provinces have 8 percent and the remaining 23 percent are held by other entities, including a government-owned bank and investors.
Moscow is promising Yakutia to fully reimburse the transfer by plowing more tax revenue into the provincial budget, as well as increase funding for social and environmental projects. The Yakut government, however, has fiercely opposed the move, fearing it would lose its say in the company and its share in profits.
In Yakutia, an India-sized, scarcely populated region of forested tundra and permafrost, diamonds are a source of living and pride, accounting for 99 percent of Russia's and up to 25 percent of the world's gems. Diamonds from Russia are popular because many buyers are wary of "conflict diamonds" from African countries.
A court is adjudicating the case. Nichiporuk, who has served in the country's Finance Ministry and is said to be a trusted confidant of President Vladimir Putin, predicted it would be settled after New Year.
Analysts say a public listing would be a logical move for Alrosa, which would make the company attractive to investors and raise capital for the much-needed, costly exploration work.
"After restructuring its capital and shareholders the company is very likely to conduct a public offering of their shares," said Denis Mushtayev, a metals analyst with Metropol financial investment company.
Government-hired experts have valued the company at $6.1 billion, while independent observers estimate it to be worth $8 billion to 10 billion once it is reorganized, Alrosa says. Mushtayev valued the company at $12 billion to $15 billion.
But an IPO would require a major image change for the secretive company, bringing higher transparency and corporate governance requirements, observers note.
Alrosa is also busy contesting a recent antitrust ruling by the European Commission, which ordered the company to scale down and eventually stop all trade with De Beers, its biggest client for decades, by 2009. EU regulators argue the trade between De Beers, which controls about 60 percent of the world's rough diamond supplies and Alrosa, which produces up to 25 percent, restricts fair competition.
The move is a major setback for the company, which currently sells 24 percent of its diamonds to De Beers, and Alrosa has challenged the decision with the European Court of Justice, which is expected to rule within six months.
Simultaneously, the company has also begun expanding its own marketing network by setting up trading companies abroad. The company recently signed a cooperation agreement with De Beers for joint research and exploration work in Russia and other countries.
Over the past several years, Alrosa has been showing robust growth, last year selling diamonds worth $3.4 billion, compared to $2.7 billion in 2004 and $1.8 billion in 2003. The company also boasts an average salary of some $1,080 a month - nearly three times the country's average monthly pay of $410.
Alrosa also heavily invests in the social sector, maintaining hospitals and kindergartens and building sport stadiums and churches in its Yakut mining towns.
The company has moved outside Yakutia too - mining for diamonds in Russia's northern Arkhangelsk region and owning stock in two major diamond fields in Angola. It also plans to develop diamond deposits in Guinea, the Democratic Republic of Congo and possibly Canada.
And it plans to explore oil fields in Yakutia and outside Russia - in Angola - in partnership with state oil company Zarubezhneft.
"One cannot rule out that the state will use Alrosa to cement its influence in the metals mining sector - the state already has such sectors in the oil and gas fields," said Mikhail Galkin, an analyst with MDM bank.
Rumors swirled earlier this year that Alrosa could be used by the state to take over Norilsk Nickel, the world's No. 1 palladium and zinc miner. Nichiporuk said the idea is not being discussed at the moment.
Observers note Alrosa's progress, but say it still has a long way to go before becoming an open and effectively-run Western company.
They also take a dim view of the company's plans to enter a swathe of noncore sectors at once: gold, coal, oil and gas. Timothy McCutcheon, a partner at DBM Capital corporate finance boutique and a specialist in mining called the plan "a value destroying activity."
"If you are a huge company building cars that's OK, but if 80 percent of what you make are diamonds and 20 percent is everything else, that raises the question - why bother?" he said.
Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed
http://www.forbes.com/technology/feeds/ap/2006/10/03/ap3063591.html
who was the diamond company again - i missed that.
I'm introducing the AGGI guys to CPPT technology. Apparently they didn't know about this.
The ability to drastically cut down on those costly dry-holes, esp. in colder climates where the drilling season is short, is huge!
love CPPT!
need more monies/profits to buy more.
shortly!
Keith
I successfully guessed the Diamond company, but they are very secretive about their client list.
I threw a few options out there, but I haven't gotten the "bingo" signal yet.
I will, tho. Let me fish a bit more.
"* Just hired by a multi-billion dollar oil company, and is getting repeat business from them, and their competitors"
does anyone know who this company is?
People cannot even see the potential because this is so cheap.
It is really unbelievable to find a sub $1.00 stock that has this kind of nearly perfect setup for a run into dollars.
Unfortunately, most people don't know how to evaluate the facts, and will only realize this one after it starts to run hard.
I cannot make any promises, but I oersonally see CPPT a 10x bagger at the least...and that's using the most conservative of estimates, and imagining only a 10% profit margin.
Followers
|
16
|
Posters
|
|
Posts (Today)
|
0
|
Posts (Total)
|
714
|
Created
|
10/13/06
|
Type
|
Free
|
Moderators |
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |