Following the sale, the remaining group will have very limited operations.
In addition, as a result of lack of distributable reserves, Goshawk said a
reconstruction of the group will need to take place before any proceeds may be
returned to shareholders.
A reconstruction is expected to take several months to complete and the
board may seek to, or be required to, de-list Goshawk's shares from the Stock
Exchange as part of this process.
Now this is what will happen to Alea. My fear is that they delist and the spreadbetting companies only pay on the last bid/offer, is this how it works? If it is it may be why the price remains artificially high, any comments?