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Deutsche Bank Reaffirms Their Buy Rating on Elementis (ELM)
Deutsche Bank Reaffirms Their Buy Rating on Elementis (ELM)

Business Insider

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Deutsche Bank Reaffirms Their Buy Rating on Elementis (ELM)

In a report released today, Kevin Fogarty from Deutsche Bank maintained a Buy rating on Elementis (ELM – Research Report), with a price target of £2.00. The company's shares closed yesterday at p142.80. Confident Investing Starts Here: Easily unpack a company's performance with TipRanks' new KPI Data for smart investment decisions Receive undervalued, market resilient stocks right to your inbox with TipRanks' Smart Value Newsletter Fogarty covers the Basic Materials sector, focusing on stocks such as Victrex, Elementis, and Synthomer. According to TipRanks, Fogarty has an average return of -3.4% and a 23.08% success rate on recommended stocks. Currently, the analyst consensus on Elementis is a Strong Buy with an average price target of p184.67, a 29.32% upside from current levels. In a report released on May 28, Barclays also maintained a Buy rating on the stock with a £1.89 price target.

Fraudster jailed for four years over €120k ‘spree' selling machinery he didn't own
Fraudster jailed for four years over €120k ‘spree' selling machinery he didn't own

Sunday World

time6 days ago

  • Sunday World

Fraudster jailed for four years over €120k ‘spree' selling machinery he didn't own

Judge says level of manipulation used by David Fogarty was 'simply outstanding' A businessman has been jailed for four years over a 'spree of deception' in which he conned machinery buyers out of over €120,000. A judge said David Fogarty (28) showed a 'simply outstanding' level of deceit and manipulation right up to the day he was imprisoned when he claimed to have €30,000 for his victims, which was not actually available. Clonmel Circuit Court heard how Fogarty, of Killea, Templemore, Co Tipperary, would dupe unsuspecting buyers up and down the country into paying thousands of euro for JCBs and mini-diggers that were not his to sell. He had pleaded guilty to charges of theft, deception and using a false instrument between 2021 and 2023. Fogarty also admitted to attempting to pervert the course of justice by using fake letters for addiction treatment to delay his court case. His victims lived in Donegal, Cork and Tipperary, with one man having to close his business and falling into depression after losing over €42,000 because of Fogarty's scam. Fogarty continued to offend while out on bail and defrauded another victim out of €33,000. In yesterday's sentencing hearing, the court was also informed that Fogarty had sums of €22,000 and €30,000 available to reimburse his victims, which the judge wanted verified. Following inquiries, Det Gda Mark Cullinane told the court that the sum of €30,000 was not available. David Fogarty News in 90 Seconds - May 29th Judge Catherine Staines later said that the 'level of deception, deceit and manipulation' shown by Fogarty 'is simply outstanding, even up to today'. Prosecution counsel Ed O'Mahoney had previously taken gardaí through the details of Fogarty's crimes. Det Gda Cullinane, of Thurles garda station, said one victim was at a loss of €42,000 in relation to the sale of two vehicles. Fogarty had sent pictures of a JCB telehandler to the buyer and used an invalid Vat number as evidence of ownership to sell it, even though it was not his. The buyer transferred €33,210 to Fogarty, but the vehicle was never delivered. In another deal about the same time, Fogarty came into possession of a mini-digger on finance using false identification and sold it to the same buyer for €8,850. The machine was later repossessed by the finance company and the buyer was at a loss. In another case, Fogarty was tasked with collecting a mini-digger for a man living in Schull, Co Cork, but instead sold it to a buyer in Roscrea for €8,000. Det Gda Donna Ferguson, of Letterkenny garda station, gave evidence of a buyer in Donegal inquiring about a mechanical lift vehicle being advertised online. A total of £36,900 (€42,649) was sent to Fogarty after the purchaser was shown a false bank document saying the finance on the vehicle had been cleared. As a result of fraud, the buyer had to close his business, was at a serious financial loss and now suffers from depression. Judge Staines said aggravating factors in the case were the sums of money involved, the impact on the victims and the 'spree of deception' Liam Carroll BL, defending, said his client wanted to apologise to his victims, and that he did not understand the 'stress' he had caused them. He said Fogarty was not offering any 'salacious excuse involving gambling or drugs', but that he was fearful prospective customers for his new business would not return. Counsel said the defendant became involved in a 'cycle of indebtedness' by taking money from two individuals for the same thing and trying to find alternative machinery in the meantime. Judge Staines said aggravating factors in the case were the sums of money involved, the impact on the victims and the 'spree of deception'. She also said Fogarty's 'lies, deception and manipulation know no balance' and that he went on to deceive the district and circuit courts by handing in false letters through third parties. Mitigating factors in the case were Fogarty's young age at the time of the offences, his guilty pleas and his apologies to those he deceived. She sentenced him to two years concurrently on most of the deception and theft counts, but ordered that he serve a concurrent two-year jail term over the Nenagh investigation because it was committed while he was on bail. After jailing Fogarty for a total of four years, the judge also praised the gardaí involved and acknowledged that the case took a huge amount of investigation and dedication.

Raiders climb to second spot after stunning Warriors
Raiders climb to second spot after stunning Warriors

The Advertiser

time25-05-2025

  • Sport
  • The Advertiser

Raiders climb to second spot after stunning Warriors

Canberra have underlined their NRL premiership credentials by becoming the first team to defeat the Warriors in New Zealand this season with a gritty 16-10 win. In a spiteful game played at a rain-soaked GoMedia Stadium, the Raiders (9-3) leapfrogged the Warriors into second spot on the NRL ladder after surviving a late onslaught from the Kiwi side. The Raiders had two players - Corey Horsburgh and Tom Starling - sent to the sin bin on Sunday but stood tall in Auckland to add the Warriors to their list of 2025 scalps, which also includes Melbourne and Cronulla. Starling could face the wrath of the match review committee for his 77th-minute high shot on Chanel Harris-Tavita, while Raiders captain Joe Tapine was placed on report twice. The Warriors drew first blood in the 15th minute when Tapine was penalised for a crusher tackle on Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, with Luke Metcalf kicking a penalty goal. Tapine's ill-discipline was a theme of a first-half Raiders performance where Ricky Stuart's men gave away five penalties and five set restarts. After Warriors winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had powered over Xavier Savage for the game's first try in the 23rd minute, referee Adam Gee lost patience and sent Horsburgh to the sin bin. The Raiders were on the ropes as the Warriors looked to exploit a 12-man defence, but Canberra were given an avenue back into the game when Harris-Tavita fumbled the ball. On the next set the Raiders flung the ball to the left, where Seb Kris sent Starling over the whitewash after an inside pass. Then, with 45 seconds left before halftime, Warriors centre Adam Pompey was penalised for being offside at a goal-line drop-out, which allowed Jamal Fogarty an easy penalty that tied the game up at 8-8 at the break. Metcalf and Fogarty traded penalties in the early part of the second half, the latter's coming when Nicoll-Klokstad was sin-binned for repeated ruck infringements with 20 minutes left. Tuivasa-Sheck shifted to fullback, but he was unable to halt Fogarty as the halfback backed up an Ata Mariota break and put the Raiders a converted score ahead with a quarter of an hour left. Fogarty's try proved the match-winner, with the Green Machine surviving sustained Warriors pressure, compounded by having to play the final three minutes without Starling. English import Morgan Smithies ensured the Raiders went home with the two points when he held out Warriors forward Marata Niukore in the dying stages. Canberra have underlined their NRL premiership credentials by becoming the first team to defeat the Warriors in New Zealand this season with a gritty 16-10 win. In a spiteful game played at a rain-soaked GoMedia Stadium, the Raiders (9-3) leapfrogged the Warriors into second spot on the NRL ladder after surviving a late onslaught from the Kiwi side. The Raiders had two players - Corey Horsburgh and Tom Starling - sent to the sin bin on Sunday but stood tall in Auckland to add the Warriors to their list of 2025 scalps, which also includes Melbourne and Cronulla. Starling could face the wrath of the match review committee for his 77th-minute high shot on Chanel Harris-Tavita, while Raiders captain Joe Tapine was placed on report twice. The Warriors drew first blood in the 15th minute when Tapine was penalised for a crusher tackle on Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, with Luke Metcalf kicking a penalty goal. Tapine's ill-discipline was a theme of a first-half Raiders performance where Ricky Stuart's men gave away five penalties and five set restarts. After Warriors winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had powered over Xavier Savage for the game's first try in the 23rd minute, referee Adam Gee lost patience and sent Horsburgh to the sin bin. The Raiders were on the ropes as the Warriors looked to exploit a 12-man defence, but Canberra were given an avenue back into the game when Harris-Tavita fumbled the ball. On the next set the Raiders flung the ball to the left, where Seb Kris sent Starling over the whitewash after an inside pass. Then, with 45 seconds left before halftime, Warriors centre Adam Pompey was penalised for being offside at a goal-line drop-out, which allowed Jamal Fogarty an easy penalty that tied the game up at 8-8 at the break. Metcalf and Fogarty traded penalties in the early part of the second half, the latter's coming when Nicoll-Klokstad was sin-binned for repeated ruck infringements with 20 minutes left. Tuivasa-Sheck shifted to fullback, but he was unable to halt Fogarty as the halfback backed up an Ata Mariota break and put the Raiders a converted score ahead with a quarter of an hour left. Fogarty's try proved the match-winner, with the Green Machine surviving sustained Warriors pressure, compounded by having to play the final three minutes without Starling. English import Morgan Smithies ensured the Raiders went home with the two points when he held out Warriors forward Marata Niukore in the dying stages. Canberra have underlined their NRL premiership credentials by becoming the first team to defeat the Warriors in New Zealand this season with a gritty 16-10 win. In a spiteful game played at a rain-soaked GoMedia Stadium, the Raiders (9-3) leapfrogged the Warriors into second spot on the NRL ladder after surviving a late onslaught from the Kiwi side. The Raiders had two players - Corey Horsburgh and Tom Starling - sent to the sin bin on Sunday but stood tall in Auckland to add the Warriors to their list of 2025 scalps, which also includes Melbourne and Cronulla. Starling could face the wrath of the match review committee for his 77th-minute high shot on Chanel Harris-Tavita, while Raiders captain Joe Tapine was placed on report twice. The Warriors drew first blood in the 15th minute when Tapine was penalised for a crusher tackle on Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, with Luke Metcalf kicking a penalty goal. Tapine's ill-discipline was a theme of a first-half Raiders performance where Ricky Stuart's men gave away five penalties and five set restarts. After Warriors winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had powered over Xavier Savage for the game's first try in the 23rd minute, referee Adam Gee lost patience and sent Horsburgh to the sin bin. The Raiders were on the ropes as the Warriors looked to exploit a 12-man defence, but Canberra were given an avenue back into the game when Harris-Tavita fumbled the ball. On the next set the Raiders flung the ball to the left, where Seb Kris sent Starling over the whitewash after an inside pass. Then, with 45 seconds left before halftime, Warriors centre Adam Pompey was penalised for being offside at a goal-line drop-out, which allowed Jamal Fogarty an easy penalty that tied the game up at 8-8 at the break. Metcalf and Fogarty traded penalties in the early part of the second half, the latter's coming when Nicoll-Klokstad was sin-binned for repeated ruck infringements with 20 minutes left. Tuivasa-Sheck shifted to fullback, but he was unable to halt Fogarty as the halfback backed up an Ata Mariota break and put the Raiders a converted score ahead with a quarter of an hour left. Fogarty's try proved the match-winner, with the Green Machine surviving sustained Warriors pressure, compounded by having to play the final three minutes without Starling. English import Morgan Smithies ensured the Raiders went home with the two points when he held out Warriors forward Marata Niukore in the dying stages.

NRL: Raiders snap Warriors winning streak with victory at Go Media Stadium
NRL: Raiders snap Warriors winning streak with victory at Go Media Stadium

RNZ News

time25-05-2025

  • Sport
  • RNZ News

NRL: Raiders snap Warriors winning streak with victory at Go Media Stadium

The Warriors' Marata Niukore, in action against the Canberra Raiders in Round 12 of the NRL Telstra Premiership Rugby League Competition, at Go Media Stadium, Auckland, on Sunday night. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/ The Warriors entered the contest sitting second on the ladder, but only two points ahead of their rivals. This result will see them slip to fourth, leapfrogged by the Raiders and Melbourne Storm (bye) on points differential. Fogarty scored the winning try in the 63rd minute and converted it for good measure, putting his stamp on a contest that was close throughout. Warriors counterpart Luke Metcalf put his side ahead with an early penalty and they seemed in control, when Roger Tuivasa-Sheck slithered over in the corner, forcing the ball over his head for a try. Hooker Tom Starling had a try for the Raiders, with Fogarty converting and then slotting a penalty on halftime to level 8-8 at the break. Metcalf again kicked a penalty to give the Warriors a slight edge, but it was never likely to be enough, as Fogarty accepted an offload from Ata Mariota to clinch the visitors' victory. Both teams had players sent to the sin bin, with Corey Horsburgh and Tom Starling guilty of high tackles for Canberra, and fullback Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad singled out on his own goal-line for taking too long to clear a tackle. The result ended the Warriors' five-game winning streak and they will now hope to start a new one, when they visit South Sydney Rabbitohs next Sunday. Read what happened, with RNZ's blog: NZ Warriors: 1. Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad 2. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak 3. Adam Pompey 4. Kurt Capewell 5. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck 6. Chanel Harris-Tavita 7. Luke Metcalf 8. Jackson Ford 9. Wayde Egan 10. Bunty Afoa 11. Leka Halasima 12. Marata Niukore 13. Erin Clark Interchange: 14. Te Maire Martin 15. Jacob Laban 16. Demitric Vaimauga 17. Tanner Stowers-Smith Reserves: 18. Tom Ale 20. Samuel Healey 21. Tanah Boyd 22. Ali Leiataua 23. Taine Tuaupiki Canberra Raiders: 1. Kaeo Weekes 2. Savelio Tamale 3. Matthew Timoko 4. Sebastian Kris 5. Xavier Savage 6. Ethan Strange 7. Jamal Fogarty 8. Corey Horsburgh 9. Tom Starling 10. Joseph Tapine 11. Simi Sasagi 12. Zac Hosking 13. Morgan Smithies Interchange: 14. Owen Pattie 15. Noah Martin 16. Josh Papali'i 17. Ata Mariota Reserves: 18. Jed Stuart 19. Trey Mooney 20. Danny Levi 21. Pasami Saulo 22. Chevy Stewart

Canberra Raiders underline premiership credentials with spiteful win over NZ Warriors
Canberra Raiders underline premiership credentials with spiteful win over NZ Warriors

7NEWS

time25-05-2025

  • Sport
  • 7NEWS

Canberra Raiders underline premiership credentials with spiteful win over NZ Warriors

Canberra have underlined their NRL premiership credentials by becoming the first team to defeat the Warriors in New Zealand this season with a gritty 16-10 win. In a spiteful game played at a rain-soaked GoMedia Stadium, the Raiders (9-3) leapfrogged the Warriors into second spot on the NRL ladder after surviving a late onslaught from the Kiwi side. The Raiders had two players - Corey Horsburgh and Tom Starling - sent to the sin bin on Sunday but stood tall in Auckland to add the Warriors to their list of 2025 scalps, which also includes Melbourne and Cronulla. Starling could face the wrath of the match review committee for his 77th-minute high shot on Chanel Harris-Tavita, while Raiders captain Joe Tapine was placed on report twice. The Warriors drew first blood in the 15th minute when Tapine was penalised for a crusher tackle on Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad, with Luke Metcalf kicking a penalty goal. Tapine's ill-discipline was a theme of a first-half Raiders performance where Ricky Stuart's men gave away five penalties and five set restarts. After Warriors winger Roger Tuivasa-Sheck had powered over Xavier Savage for the game's first try in the 23rd minute, referee Adam Gee lost patience and sent Horsburgh to the sin bin. The Raiders were on the ropes as the Warriors looked to exploit a 12-man defence, but Canberra were given an avenue back into the game when Harris-Tavita fumbled the ball. On the next set the Raiders flung the ball to the left, where Seb Kris sent Starling over the whitewash after an inside pass. Then, with 45 seconds left before halftime, Warriors centre Adam Pompey was penalised for being offside at a goal-line drop-out, which allowed Jamal Fogarty an easy penalty that tied the game up at 8-8 at the break. Metcalf and Fogarty traded penalties in the early part of the second half, the latter's coming when Nicoll-Klokstad was sin-binned for repeated ruck infringements with 20 minutes left. Tuivasa-Sheck shifted to fullback, but he was unable to halt Fogarty as the halfback backed up an Ata Mariota break and put the Raiders a converted score ahead with a quarter of an hour left. Fogarty's try proved the match-winner, with the Green Machine surviving sustained Warriors pressure, compounded by having to play the final three minutes without Starling. English import Morgan Smithies ensured the Raiders went home with the two points when he held out Warriors forward Marata Niukore in the dying stages.

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