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Redhawk Res Inc RHWKF



GREY:RHWKF - Post by User

Post by NoRulesInCDAon Aug 30, 2013 9:59pm
508 Views
Post# 21711095

Frank little secret..its been Stifel Nicolaus' Going Out of Business Sale

Frank little secret..its been Stifel Nicolaus' Going Out of Business Sale
Don't be such a "non current event dweeb there Frank.

I believe my fond basher that the article was posted connecting the dots but there ya go below the trading stats. Oooh scary Canaccord sells 149,000. Rest of us have the eye on the prize my little bashing amoeba!. Great weekend everyone...even you Frank the Crank! Even better ask who is buying Frank? Nah just focus on the seller.

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T:RDK - REDHAWK RESOURCES, INC. J - https://www.redhawkresources.com 21:54:57 EDT - Update in 50 secondsPause
Sym-X Bid - Ask Last Chg %Ch Vol $Vol #Tr Open-Hi-Lo Year Hi-Lo Last Tr News Delay
RDK - T 125.0 0.235 · 0.245 22.5 0.235 -0.015 -6.0 1,136.0 267 78 0.260.260.23 0.64 0.23 14:42:07 Aug 13 realtime
TSX - T 125.0 0.235 · 0.245 22.5 0.235 -0.015 -6.0 966.5 227 47 0.260.260.23 0.64 0.23 14:42:07 realtime
Alpha - A 0.24 -0.01 -4.0 158.0 38 27 0.250.250.23 15:59:30 15 min
Chi-X - X 0.23 -0.02 -8.0 11.5 3 4 0.240.240.23 14:34:42 15 min
Close Prices Last 3 Months Price/volumes not adjusted for restructures
Date Ex Sym Open High Low Close Chg Total Vol #Tr Bid Ask T-TSX A-Alpha X-Chi-X H-CX2 P-Pure O-Omega E-TMX Select M-TriAct L-LiquidNet I-Instinet
2013-08-30 T RDK 0.26 0.26 0.23 0.24 -0.015 1,136,000 78 0.235 0.245 966,500 158,000 11,500
2013-08-29 T RDK 0.24 0.255 0.235 0.25 0.01 537,782 32 0.24 0.26 532,282 4,500 1,000
2013-08-28 T RDK 0.255 0.26 0.24 0.24 -0.005 568,500 21 0.24 0.255 568,500
2013-08-27 T RDK 0.27 0.27 0.245 0.245 -0.015 581,100 39 0.245 0.255 581,100
House Positions for C:RDK from 20130827 to 20130830
House Bought $Val Ave Sold $Val Ave Net $Net
1 Anonymous 113,000 27,935 0.247 2,326,500 557,598 0.24 -2,213,500 529,663
33 Canaccord 0 149,400 38,433 0.257 -149,400 38,433
9 BMO Nesbitt 0 15,500 3,720 0.24 -15,500 3,720
79 CIBC 40,500 10,256 0.253 56,000 14,984 0.268 -15,500 4,728
14 ITG 0 5,282 1,296 0.245 -5,282 1,296
13 Instinet 0 5,000 1,175 0.235 -5,000 1,175
82 Stifel Nicholas 682 163 0.239 700 171 0.244 -18 8
19 Desjardins 10,000 2,350 0.235 0 10,000 -2,350
124 Questrade 17,500 4,304 0.246 0 17,500 -4,304
59 PI 27,900 7,156 0.256 0 27,900 -7,156
68 Leede 35,000 8,549 0.244 0 35,000 -8,549
62 Haywood 168,000 42,379 0.252 0 168,000 -42,379
2 RBC 191,000 45,950 0.241 0 191,000 -45,950
85 Scotia 463,800 109,114 0.235 6,500 1,657 0.255 457,300 -107,457
7 TD Sec 1,581,000 382,417 0.242 83,500 21,539 0.258 1,497,500 -360,878
TOTAL 2,648,382 640,573 0.242 2,648,382 640,573 0.242 0 0



Mining slowdown begins to hurt as Bay Street sheds jobs, firms

BOYD ERMAN, JACQUELINE NELSON
The Globe and Mail
Published Thursday, Aug. 22 2013, 7:10 PM EDT
Last updated Friday, Aug. 23 2013, 7:16 AM EDT


A sustained downturn in Canadian capital markets claims its first big foreign victim Friday, as Stifel Financial Corp. shuts down its Toronto and Calgary operations and lets go of 60 people. Businesses such as stock underwriting and trading have plunged, eating away at profits for investment dealers in Canada – particularly smaller ones – and forcing some firms to close or merge.

The problem is that deep weakness in the commodity and resource sectors and volatile markets have sharply curtailed deal volumes and new public offerings for investment dealers. The S&P/TSX materials index has fallen 22 per cent in the past year and the energy index was flat, even as U.S. markets have soared to record highs. That poor showing has curtailed investors’ interest in junior mining and oil and gas stocks, meaning that fewer resource companies are able to raise money.
Eleven investment dealers merged, closed their doors, or announced plans to do so in the first half of 2013, the Investment Industry Association of Canada said. Ten firms closed in 2012.

Stifel Nicolaus Canada’s departure is an ignominious end for what began as boutique dealer Westwind Partners, before a series of takeovers left it under the umbrella of St. Louis-based Stifel Financial. In 2007, Westwind sold to Thomas Weisel Partners Group for $150-million; a few years later, Stifel bought Weisel, including its Canadian operations, for about $300-million (U.S.). There was talk of ambitious expansion in Canada from Stifel, but it never came to pass and the operation was barely registering on the Canadian capital markets scene of late.

Stifel has been hurt by the mining downturn given its underwriting specialty in the sector, but the company gave up on Canada just after being announced as the co-lead on a $21-million tech financing for Halogen Software Inc. Even by the standards of a struggling industry facing a deal drought, Stifel’s Canadian investment banking operations were not bringing in anything close to what its peers were.

According to the IIAC, firms in Stifel Canada’s line of business were bringing in about $600,000 per employee in revenue in 2012. And at that level, many were not profitable.

Stifel looks to have done about half that revenue per employee. In a filingThursday that confirmed the closure Stifel said its Canadian operations generated net revenue of $18.8-million (U.S.) in 2012.

On a headcount of more than 60 people, that’s only about $300,000 (Canadian) of revenue per employee, or half the average. (IIAC uses revenue in its calculations and Stifel uses net revenue, so the numbers are not perfectly comparable. But there’s not much difference at Stifel between net and total revenue, which in recent quarters have been very close in absolute terms.)
Stifel was far behind in most measures of success. Its trading desk handled less than one half of one per cent of total stock trading volume in Canada, by one estimate. In the first six months of this year, the firm had a 0.2-per-cent share of all new stock underwriting in Canada, ranking a distant 25th, according to Thomson Reuters figures.

While the impact on the market of Stifel’s disappearance will be negligible, the psychological effect will likely be bigger. Stifel’s closure represents the first sizable U.S. firm to give up on Canada in this market cycle. There has always been a trend among U.S. firms to show up in booms, and vanish in busts.

An optimist might suggest this is a sign of the bottom in the securities industry, but there may well be more pain to come.

“If small dealers…continue to fall away, Canadian capital markets will suffer serious consequences, both in terms of reduced competitive stimulus in retail and institutional markets, and less financing opportunities for small Canadian businesses,” said IIAC head Ian Russell in a letter to the brokerage industry.
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