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I believe .60 will be surpassed in the next 1-2 months and the 200 day will become support.
We need to see more revenues from water, but imo this stock will be in the several dollar range, moving to different exchange long term.
THe company stated in the CC and has re stated to me that they are not selling any shares to raise capital. The public float is small . The CEO owns about 3 million shares, I am sure he has a much higher target than either of us.
GLTU and great to the action.
Something is up, not normal activity.
Volume nay be near 1/4 million by eod.
Way undervalued, imo.
We shall see
A big thanks for going back through the CC and making a list of projects.
The future is bright.
IMO it must have been a prearranged purchase/sale.
Nice to see the activity.
GLTU
Facts are in the CC. That has been 8k;d. It dies matter and fundamentals will win out.
Company steaming forward, revs growing rapidly, great tech that is getting outside attention.
THe stock is under the radar, for now.
But it is not a fact that you are going to get .25's.
People buying in the low .30s. are getting very few shares.
You will get even fewer in .20s.
GLTA Longs
" I do think that they are in the right place at the right time."
I agree, I had little understanding of the huge potential in this industry. The industry updates really opened me up to a new market and new opportunity. I have since done research on my own and gotten questions answered along the way by the mindspring IR, I have built a very nice size position.
Water plays will become very hot imo, and stws is heading in the multiple dollars range as a leader in the desalination field.
GLTA Longs
Yes we are, way more long term revs,
http://www.fortstocktonpioneer.com/community/article_d73e0b5a-2bd1-11e5-aee7-57a3b393c2cf.html
My guess is we hear something real soon on the Fort Stockton projects, but there are so many potential pr's that should make this thing pop and never look back.
I hate to see it here, but I think we will be over a dollar shortly.
.35 is even a better deal.
But come on already.
I would disagree on what will make the stock move.
IMO there are many potential pr's that could bring in much more interest.
After the 3rd party press the last few weeks, I would think that there are more eyes on stws.
The market value is laughable at .37.
Sometimes these things start moving for no apparent reason.
Hard to say, but I am very ready.
IMO .37 is a screaming deal.
Time will tell.
GLTA Longs
I agree.
Its just a matter of time. Pretty painful to watch right now.
Very solid company, with a cutting edge tech.
I am going to buy a few more If I can get them in the .30's.
GLTA Longs
Did you listen to the CC??????????????????????
They 8k'd all the projects mentioned in it.
Huge potential upside revenue growth with some big name companies and institutions.
Oil and gas business profitable, very low float.
Most who post on this board know what they hold.
GLTA Longs
Nice to see most of the trades going through at the ask, .49's up.
The below is a quote from yesterdays pr. It is very evident stws desal tech fills a huge hole.
"This project has the potential to save the downstream communities and users millions of dollars annually by not requiring them to process the river water before using it.
Stanley Weiner, CEO of STW Resources, said, “We are very excited by the long term potential for this Brazos River project. In the event that the potential client proceeds with the full project, revenue will start out around $2-$2.5 million. We currently have eight solid projects in our pipeline with several more currently being qualified.”
"STWS up 12 % today on nice volume "
Its been a sleeping giant for a while now.
Volume seems to be building. THe futures mag write up is very nice and will bring more folks into this solid and quickly growing company.
Really like stws, very small public float, less than 6 million.
Several %revenue split/non dilutive funding arrangements available.
An oil gas division that is profitable and a desalination tech that appears to be best in class and quickly growing and expanding into the water market.
STWS
Really like stws, very small public float, less than 6 million.
Several %revenue split/non dilutive funding arrangements available.
An oil gas division that is profitable and a desalination tech that appears to be best in class and quickly growing and expanding into the water market.
STWS
You picked it on stws, its turning up and fast.
The fundamentals have always been strong, now the chart is starting to look good.
GLTU
What email address sent you the futures article?
Very nice should bring in more investors and traders,
With the right new we explode, many more eyes watching stws over the coming weeks.
Thanks for posting
With their desal tech, third party news will come on a more consistent: basis in the near future .imo
I believe with the leadership and desal tech, stws is way under valued in the 40s,
I have to keep reminding myself, that according to the CEO in the CC, there are 4.8 million in the public float. This thing could really explode, short term.
Long term, with the gas and oil sector of stws profitable, and the real big money coming on some of the contracts in the water sector, I feel very comfortable.
GLTA Longs
Nearly 100k shares traded Friday, on a slow sumer day, most at the ask.
Follow through today???
Pretty quite so far.
GLTA Longs
Yup that should work.
Some volume today.
Nice to see.
I also tried to get on the list but to avail.
Get my info from investorrelations@mindspring.com, very reliable.
gltu
"We know what we own and longs will profit handsomely in time here with STWS."
I agree,
I am waiting for the trend to change. At this point it is hard to get interest in stws, even with the story. Many peoples first look is at the chart, then if things look good the fundamentals come into play.
I like this kind of play, boring right now, and very hard to watch, but very small float, great tech, lots of contracts at different locations,
Waiting for the spark.
GLTU
Great find!!
Many many irons in the fire, nice to get 3rd party confirmation on a project.
To STW Resources and interested investors,
A recently released report from Bluefield Research on the "Toilet to Tap" water (dubbed "New Water" by STW Resources) remediation trend highlights the business opportunity for the company. As noted in the article below, "wastewater reuse for municipal utilities will increase 61% by 2025, requiring $11.0 billion of capital expenditures."
In a comprehensive shareholder update Conference Call last week, company management discussed the company's many initiatives in wastewater resuse. The Conference Call is accessible in audio format by dialing in and entering the ID number below when prompted.
Dial In Number: (855) 859-2056 or (800) 585-8367
ID Number: 75872537
For your information.
US Wastewater Market to Total US$11.0 Billion Through 2025
BOSTON, Mass– 2 July 2015– Paralyzing drought and environmental impacts on water supplies across the US sunbelt– from Florida to California– has thrust wastewater reuse into the spotlight as a critical solution to minimize long-term risks to state water supplies.
According to a new report from Bluefield Research, wastewater reuse for municipal utilities will increase 61% by 2025, requiring $11.0 billion of capital expenditures. The lion’s share of the activity, or 94%, is expected to take place in nine states, headlined by Florida and California.
On the heels of this forecasted growth, Bluefield’s analysis also indicates a change in the market’s overall profile. Potable reuse – treating wastewater to drinking water quality – currently makes up 15% of the total capacity, but is expected to increase to 19% of total water reuse by 2025. Irrigation and industrial off-takers currently account for 69% and 16% of reuse, respectively. The expected jump in potable reuse stems largely from heightening pressure on policymakers and utilities to stay ahead of scaling urban populations, anticipated future droughts, and limited water supply alternatives.
These and other findings can be found in the just released Bluefield Research report,US Municipal Wastewater & Reuse: Market Trends, Opportunities, & Forecasts, 2015-2025, which highlights key drivers and trends impacting greater deployment of reuse systems in the US.
Reused Wastewater Flows in the US by State, 2014
Source: Bluefield Research
Today only 6.4% of wastewater flows in the US are reused for industrial, irrigation, or municipal purposes, highlighting the expansion potential. According to Bluefield, more than 247 reuse projects are in the pipeline, providing a solid foundation for growth going forward. A central focus of Bluefield’s report is an in-depth analysis of the state policies and their impacts on project development, including technology options.
“Within an extremely mature municipal water sector, wastewater reuse is proving to be key driver of change,” stated Erin Bonney Casey, water reuse analyst at Bluefield Research. “More than $1.9 billion of reuse applications have been submitted to state agencies for approval in California alone.”
While California moves towards its fifth-year of drought, spring rains have given needed relief to drought-stricken Texas. “Clearly, the best solution to water stress is rain, but Texas has developed a long-term view that includes reuse as a key component of its state water plan,” added Ms. Bonney Casey. “Even after these rains, several cities are moving forward with direct potable reuse projects as future insurance. Texas is so far the only state in the US with operating direct potable reuse projects.”
Forecasted Potable Reuse Capacity Additions
2Forecasted Potable Reuse Capacity Additions
Source: Bluefield Research
Oh I almost forgot, lol stws has already had a huge market correction!!!More than enough of one for me.
IMO stws will be safe in a market correction.
Folks will still need fuel and water,
GLTU
Yes I agree, info like that has helped me to better understand the water industry and see the incredible potential in stws. The future here looks very bright.
One thing I would really like is a transcript of the CC, it would be helpful in informing new investors of this sleeping giant.
GLTU
I don't know about ten this month, but what i will say if even half the contracts come through, shareholders will be do very very well. They 8k'd the CC, so imo it is just a matter of time.
What did Stan say in the CC, 4.8 million in the public float.
Market cap is laughable,
I could not resist, and picked up a few this pm.
GLTU
"Just wish there was something that could spark a fire under STWS pps. "
I would love for it to happen today. But we are in the low volume season and will need a few pr's on some of these contracts to get us going. I do encourage all investors to listen to the CC.
Because of the info shared in the CC, I do not think we drift back to the .30s, but will buy more if we do.
I was thinking about it over the weekend, I believe even in a market correction, stws will do very well.
STWS is very diverse, in both oil and gas (cash flow positive), and water. With multiple projects going in several cities,states and countries. According to the CEO, monty and staff to fund and execute these projects is not an issue.
I have been in stocks like this before, and bought in the low volume, slow times. In two of them the new lows in the coming years were still a 3 to 500 percent gain .These prices, although not fun to look at now, will be viewed very differently in the future.
GLTA Longs
In regards to your pm, that was my question..
I am pretty pumped about the future.
GLTU
Really nice price imo.
The CC also caused me to pick up a few more.
DId you get a chance to listen to the CC?
Be interested in your reaction.
GLTU
You got them on low of the day.
GLTU
After listening to the conference call, it seems that STWS is in the right place, with the right solutions, at the right time.
Saw this article on the Toilet to Tap solution for California. And state funding too.
Congressman seeks to end California water wars with waste-water recycling, desalination
By Steve Scauzillo, San Gabriel Valley Tribune
Posted: 06/29/15, 8:43 PM PDT
Emphasizing practical solutions in the battle over drought relief, a congressman urged local water leaders Monday to fight for funding for projects such as waste-water recycling and infrastructure repairs.
Northern California Rep. Jared Huffman came to Southern California to push his $1.4 billion drought bill and find some common ground in what he called the state’s water wars being waged in the halls of Sacramento and Washington.
The San Rafael Democrat, former assemblyman and environmental attorney, blasted his Republican colleagues for turning the state’s water shortage into a fruitless battle over environmental laws, instead of funding common-sense solutions such as recycled water plants, storm-water capture projects and desalination.
“The federal government has been absent on the funding side of things. Also, unfortunately, they’ve been absent on the policy side as well,” Huffman said.
Huffman, along with Rep. Grace Napolitano, D-El Monte, both members of the House Committee on Natural Resources, talked water with leaders from the Inland Empire Utilities Agency, the West Basin Water District, the Water Replenishment District of Southern California, the San Gabriel Basin Water Quality Authority and the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California during a round-table discussion and tour of sewage treatment facilities at the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts in North Whittier.
Huffman’s bill would expand water recycling projects, fund repairs of leaky pipes, manage watershed areas, invest in desalination research, provide efficient agricultural irrigation, ground-water cleanup and recharge.
“It would help to get (water) infrastructure projects going,” he said.
Huffman last week began “crowd sourcing” his bill on his website, seeking public comment in an effort to break free from Washington-insider debates about lowering environmental protections including reducing water supplied for salmon and other fish in the San Joaquin-Sacramento River Delta where Southern California imports two-thirds of its water, he said.
“Some in Congress have treated the drought as a political opportunity instead of a moral imperative. They’ve dusted off the same political agenda they’ve pursued for years: weakening environmental laws, gutting fishery protections, and redirecting water needed by other regions — and tried to sell it as a drought response,” Huffman wrote on his website.
Huffman and Napolitano urged local water agencies to submit projects for funding to the Department of Interior. Huffman said federal money has been set aside but then gets diverted for other reasons, such as debt reduction.
“Let them know these are projects Southern California has ready to go,” Napolitano told the water managers.
Though hardly a quick fix, water recycling and re-use should be in California’s drought-busting tool box if current water shortages continue into next year or as many believe, the state enters a new normal in terms of scarce water supplies, Huffman said.
Eight water recycling projects in the state produce 200,000 acre-feet of water a year. There are 17 more in the planning stages, which would add another 300,000 acre feet, said Rich Nagel, general manager of West Basin in the South Bay, which along with the Water Replenishment District, is already using recycled water.
At a tour of the San Gabriel Coastal Spreading Grounds in Pico Rivera, Huffman learned this was one of the few places that accepts storm-water runoff, recycled water and imported water. Eric Batman of the county’s Department of Public Works spoke of the importance of green space in capturing water over the din of water rushing into the channel and then settling along the soft-bottomed San Gabriel River, where it percolates into the West Basin.
The WRD will break ground in September on a treatment plant that will add 21,000 acre-feet of recycled water from the Sanitation Districts’ plant at the 60/605 freeways and inject it into the ground water. By 2018, the district will use 71,000 acre-feet of recycled water to replenish the aquifer, where wells deliver potable water to customers. (An acre foot equals 326,000 gallons, the amount used by a family in a year.)
The project will wean the WRD off imported water.
When politicians contact him about this new idea of using treated waste water to recharge aquifers, Robb Whitaker, general manager, smiles. “We have been using recycled water here for 55 years,” he said.
Their latest project comes at a time when levels of the underground aquifers are falling, reaching lows not seen in 50 years, according to a May engineering report.
The report found the basins fell four feet on average, but much more in particular spots. For example, in the 2013-14 water year, levels beneath Inglewood and Gardena fell 20 feet, while the basin under Whittier dropped seven feet.
Underground basins, from the Chino Basin in the Inland Empire to the San Gabriel Basin, are at record lows, said Ken Manning, executive director of the Water Quality Authority.
A new project that may be eligible for funding under Huffman’s bill would take treated waste water up from North Whittier to the spreading grounds at the 605 and 210 freeways. That project was conceived 15 years ago and shot down by politicians and Miller Brewing as “toilet-to-tap,” Manning said. The water districts in Orange County soon sped ahead with water recycling and surpassed Los Angeles County.
LA Daily News, June 29, 2015 article link: http://www.dailynews.com/general-news/20150629/congressman-seeks-to-end-california-water-wars-with-waste-water-recycling-desalination
I feel very comfortable with stws at this point, and a whole lot better about mentioning it as an idea to folks.
GLTU
You will get a chance to listen to the CC.
I was blown away by the number of different projects with big names. All at different stages.
I wondered about funding/staffing all theses as each one would take money. many in the millions i would think. They answered that Q in the cc.
Basically, they have private investors involved, they are not selling stock to fund projects, and are not selling it for anything else at this point. Also staffing/executing all these projects is not a problem.
GLTU and listen to CC when it comes out.it is well worth your time.
From my contact with stws, we will see an 8k on the info/contracts presented. The CC will be up on their web site ( got the feeling that part may be a few days)
GLTA Longs.
It seems as though it is not a matter of if this will be a big winner, but when.
I wonder how many people were on the CC?
GLTA Longs