Powerful BB 💪
Congratulations
tofudidi ( Date: 11-Mar-2026 14:54) Posted:
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Hoping to see 8 series again....
going  to breakout soon... labubu bb coming... 
Oh ya...lol...anyway good to see price moving up....
piscesmonkey ( Date: 11-Mar-2026 09:47) Posted:
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Old news? 2025?
kt3152 ( Date: 11-Mar-2026 09:29) Posted:
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Agree with you. 
This stock is a fast mover.
This stock is a fast mover.
kt3152 ( Date: 11-Mar-2026 09:29) Posted:
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Rare to have sgx research notes....very positive....
Delvyss ( Date: 11-Mar-2026 08:41) Posted:
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Cement play comes again.. strong buying.. 💪 🧐
10 in 10 with International Cement Group - Tapping growth opportunities in Central Asia
https://www.sgx.com/research-education/market-dialogues/20250128-10-10-international-cement-group-tapping-growth
Q 57 late. Still waiting to buy some...
seanpent ( Date: 10-Mar-2026 15:38) Posted:
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Congrats to you too.  Latest earnings results quite an improvement.  Can stay invested.
kt3152 ( Date: 10-Mar-2026 10:54) Posted:
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Another dip opportunity.
Guess you had collected. Congrats....
seanpent ( Date: 09-Mar-2026 15:38) Posted:
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8
Cement prices likely to rise sharply in early 2026 despite capacity additions: Report
https://infra.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/construction/cement-prices-set-for-sharp-increases-in-early-2026-driven-by-demand-and-capacity-adjustments/126545214
https://infra.economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/construction/cement-prices-set-for-sharp-increases-in-early-2026-driven-by-demand-and-capacity-adjustments/126545214
A bucket placed for collection
seanpent ( Date: 09-Mar-2026 15:14) Posted:
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From 86 to 55, gonna see an upward reversal soon.
Hopefully selling is over....let's see today closing price.....
More foreign investments into Kazakhstan means more demand for cement?
Shell Signs Oil and Gas Exploration Deal in Kazakhstan
Charles Kennedy
Fri, 6 March 2026 at 12:30 am SGT  2 min read
 
In this article:
Shell and Kazakhstan have signed an agreement for oil and gas exploration in the Zhanaturmys block in western Kazakhstan, the Kazakh Energy Ministry  said  on Thursday.
The agreement &ndash signed by Kazakhstan&rsquo s Deputy Energy Minister Yerlan Akbarov and Suzanne Coogan, Senior Vice President and Country Chair at Shell Kazakhstan &ndash entails seismic exploration, data collection, and technical assessment of potential oil and gas resources in the Zhanaturmys block.
The contract will run until 2032, considering the scale and technical complexity of the exploration project in the block that spans 1,377 square kilometers, or 532 square miles, the Kazakh Energy Ministry said.
The Zhanaturmys block is located in one of Kazakhstan&rsquo s most promising oil and gas basins and could hold significant potential for expansion of hydrocarbon exploration in the country, the ministry added.
Shell&rsquo s Coogan commented that the agreement reaffirms Shell&rsquo s commitment to long-term cooperation with Kazakhstan, the energy ministry said.
Related:  How China&rsquo s Rare Earth Ban Backfired into a U.S. Tech Breakthrough
Shell and other international majors are currently locked in lawsuits and international arbitration with Kazakhstan over two major producing projects in the country.
The international oil companies operating the giant Kashagan oilfield in Kazakhstan last month initiated an arbitration process  to challenge  a massive $5-billion fine for allegedly exceeding sulfur storage limits at a processing facility at the second biggest oilfield in the OPEC+ producer.
The Kashagan oilfield is being developed by the North Caspian Project  consortium  of international majors, including Shell, and Kazakhstan&rsquo s state oil firm KazMunayGas.
Kazakhstan has several arbitration cases with as much as  $166 billion  in claims against the majors for damages, mostly because of lost revenues from delays at the Kashagan oilfield.
&ldquo We think that there&rsquo s still a lot of potential investment opportunities in Kazakhstan, but we will hold until we have better line of sight to where things end up,&rdquo   Shell&rsquo s chief executive officer Wael Sawan told analysts during the Q4  earnings call  last month, referring to the lawsuits.
 
Shell and Kazakhstan have signed an agreement for oil and gas exploration in the Zhanaturmys block in western Kazakhstan, the Kazakh Energy Ministry  said  on Thursday.
The agreement &ndash signed by Kazakhstan&rsquo s Deputy Energy Minister Yerlan Akbarov and Suzanne Coogan, Senior Vice President and Country Chair at Shell Kazakhstan &ndash entails seismic exploration, data collection, and technical assessment of potential oil and gas resources in the Zhanaturmys block.
 
The contract will run until 2032, considering the scale and technical complexity of the exploration project in the block that spans 1,377 square kilometers, or 532 square miles, the Kazakh Energy Ministry said.
The Zhanaturmys block is located in one of Kazakhstan&rsquo s most promising oil and gas basins and could hold significant potential for expansion of hydrocarbon exploration in the country, the ministry added.
Shell&rsquo s Coogan commented that the agreement reaffirms Shell&rsquo s commitment to long-term cooperation with Kazakhstan, the energy ministry said.
Related:  How China&rsquo s Rare Earth Ban Backfired into a U.S. Tech Breakthrough
Shell and other international majors are currently locked in lawsuits and international arbitration with Kazakhstan over two major producing projects in the country.
 
The international oil companies operating the giant Kashagan oilfield in Kazakhstan last month initiated an arbitration process  to challenge  a massive $5-billion fine for allegedly exceeding sulfur storage limits at a processing facility at the second biggest oilfield in the OPEC+ producer.
The Kashagan oilfield is being developed by the North Caspian Project  consortium  of international majors, including Shell, and Kazakhstan&rsquo s state oil firm KazMunayGas.
Kazakhstan has several arbitration cases with as much as  $166 billion  in claims against the majors for damages, mostly because of lost revenues from delays at the Kashagan oilfield.
&ldquo We think that there&rsquo s still a lot of potential investment opportunities in Kazakhstan, but we will hold until we have better line of sight to where things end up,&rdquo   Shell&rsquo s chief executive officer Wael Sawan told analysts during the Q4  earnings call  last month, referring to the lawsuits.