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THE INVESTOR'S GUIDE TO WARRANTS:

Capitalize on the Fastest Growing Sector of the Stock Market, Second Edition (Hardcover)
   by Andrew McHattie   Rating: ISBN-10: 027303751X

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Warrant Symbol - PES.WT
Number  Trading - 500,000
Expiration Date -
Cusip -

Warrants called to trade news:




1991-06-19 16:25 MT - EOP Completed
 
Effective date:  June 10 1991
Offering date:  June 19 1991
Expiry date:  December 9 1991
Trade date:  June 20 1991
Offering:  500,000 units consisting of one share and one warrant
Price:  $1.10
Wt to buy one share:  Five
Wt exercise price:  $1.10
Wt expiry date:  June 22 1992
Agents:  Pacific International
Agents Wt:  For 200,000 shares
Wt exercise price:  $1.10
Wt expiry date:  One year from trade date
Directors:  G. Pesava, R. Echerer, R. Rothbauer
Trading symbol:  PES
Security No:  539629
Cusip No:  715906 10 3
Wt trading symbol:  PES.WT
Wt security No:  908127
Wt Cusip No:  715906 11 1
Unit security No:  864569
 
1991-06-18 16:01 MT - EOP Date Fixed
 
Effective date:  June 10 1991
Offering date:  June 19 1991
Expiry date:  December 9 1991
Trade date:  Tba
Offering:  500,000 units consisting of one share and one warrant
Price:  $1.10
Wt to buy one share:  Five
Wt exercise price:  $1.10
Wt expiry date:  One year from trade date

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Warrant Terms
  • Expiration Date: The last day the warrants can be exercised. If warrants aren't going to be exercised then they must be sold the day before the expiry date. The longer the time to expiry the more valuable the warrants.
  • Leverage: A measure of how much you can increase your exposure to a share if you bought warrants instead of making a direct investment. It is the current share price divided by the current price of the warrant.
  • Intrinsic Value: The difference between the exercise price and the actual trading price of the common stock. Once the common has gone over the exercise price, the warrants are "In the Money."
  • Volatility: The higher the volatility rating, the higher the price of the warrant. Historical volatility is calculated by using the standard deviation of an underlying stock price over a specific period.
  • Time Value: The difference between the current warrant price and its intrinsic value. Interpreted as the consideration paid for the advantage the warrant buyer has over the direct investor.
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