This was also clearly evident from the income statements. The parent company’s sales in Q4 were only 2,000 SEK, so practically nothing. The parent company sells these dosimeters, in case that is unclear to anyone. According to the consolidated income statement, sales were 25,569 tSEK, which is considerably more. That includes Daro’s sales and perhaps Yuvio’s, if there are even any real sales there.
If I recall correctly, @Clark_kent kept arguing in the thread earlier about the uselessness of these dosimeters, at least in healthcare, unless I’m completely mistaken. Seems they hit the nail on the head. By the way, Henkel wasn’t mentioned with a single word in the report. LiKang is mentioned under significant events during the quarter, specifically regarding the press release Claes gave after the Q3 release, which stated that LiKang would continue purchasing dosimeters. Another mention of LiKang is in KPMG’s summary of audit findings for the financial years 2024–2025, according to which there were sales invoices to LiKang totaling 23.1 mSEK in the accounting. If I understood correctly, the audit did not question the validity of those invoices. But apparently, dosimeter sales to LiKang did not continue in Q4 after all, contrary to what Claes announced.
INTELLEGO: SUSPICIONS AGAINST FORMER BOARD MEMBER DROPPED – AFV
Today at 08:34 ∙ Nyhetsbyrån Direkt
Intellego Technologies
STOCKHOLM (Nyhetsbyrån Direkt) The criminal suspicions against Intellego’s major shareholder and former board member Johan Möllerström have been dropped.
This is confirmed by prosecutor Thomas Hertz to Affärsvärlden.
The prosecutor writes to the newspaper that it cannot be proven that the former board member acted with intent. Johan Möllerström is said to have received the notice on Friday.
Intellego’s founder and former CEO Claes Lindahl was detained in November on suspicion of aggravated market manipulation, aggravated fraud and aggravated accounting fraud. He has been released but the suspicions against him remain. In December, Johan Möllerström was also formally notified of suspicion of aggravated market manipulation and aggravated fraud.
Johan Möllerström served on the board until December and is listed as the company’s fifth-largest shareholder according to the ownership data service Holdings.
Möllerström is no longer on the list of suspects, so he either covered his tracks brilliantly or Claes really was messing around there on his own.
You can sell them to a friend by drawing up a bill of sale and submitting it to the bank. You can buy them back later if your friend doesn’t want to keep them hanging around in their portfolio. . Fees will be charged according to the bank’s price list. Or you can wait for the bankruptcy proceedings to reach a conclusion in a year or several years. It hasn’t started yet, but it’s sure to start soon.
The Swedish Tax Agency actually has a very good, regularly updated information site for all companies that have ever been listed on their stock exchanges (including all the junior lists!). It will be a good place to follow any major developments for this company in the future. Information is often scarce when things turn out the way they did here.
It has about 18,000 shareholders whose holdings are, at least for the moment, worthless. According to the newspaper Dagens industri Intellego is now looking for an alternative marketplace for the share.
I sold my Intellegos by calling a broker. Didn’t get much for them at all, but I couldn’t be bothered to wait and see if a better buyer would turn up someday. 800 units gone and 69 euros of dough has appeared in the account.
Most people are probably still holding, as there haven’t been any sales in the bought/sold section. Mind you, I didn’t post this message there either.
Did you sell those through NN via a broker-assisted order? @Mauno1, at least NN sent a message saying that those can now be traded on the OTC market, but it indeed requires a broker order, which is significantly more expensive than selling them yourself. It’s probably around €50 or so.
Edit: @Peesailija, so you got over a crown per share for them, if currency exchange and the broker commission have already been deducted from that final sum. Not much left over
I called the Nordnet broker, and it went through that way. It was supposed to be 40 euros for the commission + a possible additional fee, and the trade price was supposed to be 1 SEK/share. I haven’t received any info on what price it went through at, but the grey line disappeared and about 69 € has appeared in the account.
I just called the NN broker and, at the moment, you can indeed place a sell order at that 1kr price. Apparently, the marketplace then takes an additional 1% commission, and NN charges the standard Swedish commission instead of the 40€.
I called as well. I confirm the information: the fee for the Swedish exchange is now a minimum of 10 euros. Custody of unlisted shares costs 3 euros per month at NN.
Are these shares actually worthless now, so I should just sell them through a broker? Or is it better to sell them to my wife, for example, and buy them back later, so I can get the tax deductions while keeping the shares for myself, in case they might be worth more at some point in the distant future?
investment advice cannot be given. About 99% of the company’s revenue is forged, and there is debt. Lenders want their money back, whatever is possible to get, and no one wants to fund this in the current situation. Everyone can draw their own conclusions as to whether the company is ripe for bankruptcy.
How is that tax evasion? You can sell shares to realize losses for tax purposes. For listed stocks, one day is considered a sufficient period, after which the sold shares can be bought back. There are even court rulings on this.