AQUIS STOCK EXCHANGE
Oscillate (SRVL), which is changing its name to Serval Resources, raised £34,000 in its retail offer at 22.5p/share, which is below the maximum level of £300,000. It is acquiring Kalahari Copper and moving to AIM on 27 April.
Digital assets investor Valereum (VLRM) has received confirmation that the $300,000 cash element of the coupon is being paid in instalments over four days. Further amounts due from strategic partner Quorum Global Photonics (QGP), which is a 49.7% shareholder, are expected to be paid under the $200m royalty and streaming financing agreement. Pieter Scholtz and Gerhard Kotzee are directors of both companies.
Wishbone Gold (WSBN) plans to acquire the Silver Lake project in Western Australia. Before that happens, historic data will be further analysed. If it goes ahead 3.57 million shares will be issued for the acquisition.
Hot Rocks Investments (HRIP) has made new investments in Central Gold, Futuro Resources and Cobra Resources (COBR). Investee company Mendell Helium (MDH) is moving from Aquis to AIM, and 49%-owned Sunshine Gold Capital has been granted a third tenement as part of the Dexter gold project, which is near to two existing gold mines in Western Australia.
Stack BTC (STAK) made a loss of £110,000 in the six months to January 2026. There was cash of £51,000 at the end of January 2026 and since then £4.28m has been raised. There have been 31 Bitcoin acquired. The focus is finding a business to acquire.
Ethtry (ETHY) has spent £100,000 to buy 66.6737 Ethereum. It owns 816.6737 Ethereum.
Cooks Coffee Company (COOK) was franchisor of the year (expanding food and non-food) in the 2026 Irish Franchise Association Awards, and a franchisee was named franchisee of the year.
Shepherd Neame (SHEP) non-exec director George Barnes bought 2,173 shares at 458p each. Falconedge (EDGE) chief executive Roy Kashi and family have bought 2.9 million shares for an average of just over 1p each. The total holding has risen to 6.45%. EPE Special Opportunities (LON: EO.P) directors Clive Spears and David Pirouet each bought 5,968 shares at 176p and 168p respectively.
TechFinancials has changed its name to Ubuntu Mining and Metals Inc (UNTU).
ASSET MATCH
Brewer Wadworth and Company (WAD) says 2025 accounts should be published later in April. Strong Christmas trading meant like-for-like sales were 7% ahead. Beer volumes were 16% higher in the first two months of the year as the company sold more of its beer via its own pubs. Like-for-like sales of the group are 4% higher, but margins are under pressure even though gas and electricity costs are set until 2029. One pub was sold in January.
AIM
RentGuarantor (RGG) growth is accelerating with first quarter revenues more than doubling to £880,000 and this has sparked an upgrade. New partners have been brought onboard. It is also offering a new product with mydeposits that combines insuring rent deposits with the rent guarantee service. Allenby has increased its 2026 pre-tax profit forecast by 26% to £300,000. This would be a maiden profit.
Van Elle (VANL) is recommending a 52.3p/share cash bid from STRABAG UK, which values the ground engineering company at £58.8m. The share price has not been that high for more than three years. The directors had talks with other suitors before receiving this bid approach. Vienna-based STRABAG provides construction services, and it was seeking to expand in the UK.
Alien Metals (UFO) says joint venture partner GreenTech Minerals has identified material upside potential for the Munni Munni Platinum-Palladium-Copper-Nickel project in Western Australia not included in the current mineral resource estimate of 24Mt @ 2.9 g/t PGE₄ for 2.2Moz. Alien Metals has a 30% interest and a free carry until completion of a bankable feasibility study. High grade zones have been identified and there is potential for open pit mining. The results of the maiden drilling programme should be announced later this month. Joint venture partner West Coast Silver has announced a 1,500 metre drilling programme for the Elizabeth Hill silver project in Western Australia.
Data analysis software and services provider Celebrus Technologies (CLBS) says full year revenues are broadly in line with expectations at $23.3m, down from $38.7m because of a change in business model, and the loss will be around $200,000. Annualised recurring revenues grew from $13.6m to $15m. Two bank customers sold off parts of their businesses, so their payments were reduced. Some expected deals at contracted stage were lost or delayed and Celebrus Technologies is improving its skills in winning new clients. Cash was $32m at the end of March 2026. Another loss is anticipated for 2026-27.
Mercantile Ports and Logistics (MPL) is pursuing legal remedies to regain control of port operating subsidiary, Karanja Terminal & Logistics. One bank did not sanction an agreement for a one-time settlement of company debt with the consortium of banks. The court has told the Committee of Creditors holding the company debt to consider an offer to redeem 100% of outstanding debt. There has been no progress and there are potential buyers interested in the assets. An international oil and gas company is a potential provider of funds to help redeem the debt. A meeting was held to consider Mercantile’s proposal on Friday 10 April.
The shares of Secure Property Development and Investment (SPDI) returned from suspension. The property company amended heads of agreement with energy storage technology developer Adven, which it is proposed will acquired SPDI, so it is not a reverse takeover anymore. Instead, Adven intends to join AIM and launch a share exchange for SPDI. Adven can then raise money via EIS.
Steppe Cement (STCM) has increased cement sales in Kazakhstan in the first quarter of 2026 to 344,058 tonnes, from 276,217 tonnes in the same period last year. The average price was one-fifth higher at around $57/tonne. Market share increased to 16%. Capacity is being increased and the final estimated cost is $35m.
Atome (ATOM) is in the final stages of negotiations for the funding of the Villeta fertiliser project in Paraguay. Definitive documentation with the equity consortium is expected by 17 April. The potential funders are likely to be at the IMF and World Bank spring meetings at that time.
Physiomics (PYC) has accepted a general meeting request from Michael Whitlow, who owns 13.7%, and the meeting is on29 April. Michael Whitlow wanted to appoint Nicholas Tulloch, Ian Bagnall, Martin Gouldstone (later removed) and himself as directors and remove Dr Jim Millen, Shalabh Kumar, Dr Tim Corn, and Dr Peter Sargent, as long as least two of the new directors are appointed. The board did offer to appoint two non-execs to replace two existing ones, but it felt that the remuneration requested was too high. The board believes that the disruption could hamper the ability to commercialise its IP. They are asking shareholders to vote against the resolutions.
Quantum Blockchain Technologies (QBT) says a court has stopped enforcement of a €6m plus damages award against Sipiem relating to the Mediapolis business. The company has not been able to enforce the seizing of property of a former Sipiem director because he has declared bankruptcy. The liquidation of Mediapolis is being completed and a further distribution of €132,000 is expected to be received by the end of June.
MAIN MARKET
Financial management software developer Aptitude Software (LSE: APTD) has decided to seek a potential purchaser as well as considering other options for the business. It is possible that other businesses would be sold to concentrate on Fynapse. The refocus on that product led to a 1% dip to £49.8m even though Fynapse sales were higher. Recurring revenues were £54.4m and operating profit was flat at £10m. Net cash is £21.2m. The dividend is 5.4p/share.
Solvonis Therapeutics (SVNS) has been granted a US patent for its PTSD programme. The patent covers a chemically distinct monoamine modulator series designed to modulate serotonin, dopamine and noradrenaline transporter systems (SERT, DAT and NET) and lasts February 2043.
Andrew Hore