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VFD Group Plc: Listing of 5,067,396,400 Ordinary Shares of 50 Kobo Each

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There is a brighter future for VFD if only they can maximize the capital raised . VFD is more of a long term stock, investors who were not eligible to participate in the right issue should make use of this period to average down their cost.
Well said. Long-term outlook depends heavily on capital deployment. If VFD can channel the funds into profitable ventures, then the temporary dilution becomes less relevant over time. For investors, this is really a “wait and see how they execute” phase.
 
Exactly. The opportunity is there, but it all comes down to how well VFD uses the capital.

If they deploy it into profitable ventures and grow earnings, long-term investors will benefit. For those who missed the rights issue, this phase can be a chance to gradually build or average their position—but with patience and a clear view of the company’s execution.
Exactly. Opportunity exists, but execution is the deciding factor. For long-term investors, this phase can be used to build positions gradually but with patience and a clear understanding of the company’s fundamentals.
 
This means if I buy November, 2025 or even Yesterday I'm qualified or only those who bought it on or before August 8, 2025 are qualified?
Only shareholders who held the stock on or before the qualification date (August 8, 2025) were eligible for the rights issue. Buying after that date (even recently) does not qualify you for the rights entitlement. However, you can still buy the stock on the open market at the current price, but without the rights benefits.
 
This means if I buy November, 2025 or even Yesterday I'm qualified or only those who bought it on or before August 8, 2025 are qualified?
Correct. The eligibility is strictly based on the qualification date. Anyone who bought after August 8, 2025 would not be included in the rights allocation. The rights were tied to holdings as at that record date, not subsequent purchases.


VFD is good company to invest in with sound fundamentals. The concluded Rights Issue as listed now dilutes the share which can temporarily bring down the price but it will bounce back eventually
 
VFD is good company to invest in with sound fundamentals. The concluded Rights Issue as listed now dilutes the share which can temporarily bring down the price but it will bounce back eventually
Well said. The temporary price pressure from dilution is normal after a rights issue. What really matters is whether the capital raised translates into improved earnings and business expansion.
If execution is strong, the market typically re-rates the stock over time.
 
Well said. Long-term outlook depends heavily on capital deployment. If VFD can channel the funds into profitable ventures, then the temporary dilution becomes less relevant over time. For investors, this is really a “wait and see how they execute” phase.
Yes, dilution is just a short-term effect. What really matters is how VFD uses the new capital. If they invest wisely and grow profits, the share price and returns will follow. For now, it’s about patience and watching execution closely.
 
Exactly. Opportunity exists, but execution is the deciding factor. For long-term investors, this phase can be used to build positions gradually but with patience and a clear understanding of the company’s fundamentals.
This is the time to watch closely. The opportunity is real, but how VFD executes will determine if it pays off. Long-term investors can use this period to build positions steadily, keeping fundamentals front and center and being patient for results.
 
Only shareholders who held the stock on or before the qualification date (August 8, 2025) were eligible for the rights issue. Buying after that date (even recently) does not qualify you for the rights entitlement. However, you can still buy the stock on the open market at the current price, but without the rights benefits.
Yes, only those holding VFD shares on or before August 8, 2025 were eligible for the rights issue. If you bought after that date, you miss out on the rights allocation. You can still buy VFD now on the market, but you won’t get the extra shares from that rights offer.
 
Correct. The eligibility is strictly based on the qualification date. Anyone who bought after August 8, 2025 would not be included in the rights allocation. The rights were tied to holdings as at that record date, not subsequent purchases.
Exactly, that’s how it works. Only shareholders recorded by August 8, 2025 qualified for the rights issue. Any shares bought after that date won’t carry the rights allocation. It’s all about who held the stock on the official record date.
 
Well said. The temporary price pressure from dilution is normal after a rights issue. What really matters is whether the capital raised translates into improved earnings and business expansion.
If execution is strong, the market typically re-rates the stock over time.
Exactly, that’s the key. Short-term price dips after a rights issue are normal, but what really counts is how effectively the company uses the new capital. Strong execution can turn that temporary pressure into long-term gains as earnings and growth pick up.