News & Comment
Leading debt advisor Debt Free Direct has topped a superb set of interim figures by declaring a maiden payout of 1.5p a share.
Read
|
Recommendations
Debt solutions group Debt Free Direct, first backed by GCI at 44.5p, has suffered serious recent share price reversals and the share price has come under pressure again despite significantly improved results for the year to the end of April.
Read
Financials from Lancashire-based debt advice and solutions counter Debt Free Direct (DFD) – originally backed by GCI at 44.5p – dazzled on every metric at the half year to the end of October.
Read
Updates on Growth Company Investor's recommendations on ASOS, Begbies Traynor, Debt Free Direct, Latchways, Umeco and William Ransom
Read
Debt Free Direct delighted followers with another record set of figures for the year to April.
Read
Read
Read
Read
Despite an unspectacular month on the markets, our Company Watch and Company Profile recommendations continue to prosper. At current levels, our favoured stocks of 2003 are still ahead by an impressive 40 per cent, outperforming all indicies.
Read
Debt Free Direct seems to exhibit all the attributes investors should look for in a small company. It has moved into cashflow-positive territory, it is cash-rich following a recent £3.8 million fundraising (that brought many heavyweight institutions onto the share register) and it is ideally placed in a market that is both fast-changing and fast-growing.
Read
Read
|
Sector Articles
The Bank of England has revealed that a total of 128,000 mortgages were approved in October.
Read
Providers of debt advice to individuals are not bothered by the prospect that the Bank of England looks likely to cut interest rates at the next meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee on Thursday.
Read
Aim celebrated reaching 700 constituents just before Christmas, as it welcomed Debt Free Direct and Dickinson Legg to the fold. There was also a £50 million fundraising for EPIC Brand Investments, and a slew of Christmas trading updates from retail leisure companies. These were mostly good, although plenty more Aim companies picked the very quiet trading period over the break to slip out somewhat less appetising news.
Read
|
|
|