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Hyflux Ltd (CE)

Hyflux Ltd (CE) (HYFXF)

0.000001
0.00
( 0.00% )
Updated: 20:00:00

HYFXF Discussion

View Posts
boston127 boston127 3 years ago
Wish I held my shares.

Cannot get any info to explain why this is so explosive.
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jchords jchords 3 years ago
Silent but explosive
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boston127 boston127 3 years ago
I do not. I bought under .004

and have been holding it but not even following it. Decided to sell just now, as I'm staying away from OTC Pink stocks. Nice surprise.
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buxmaker buxmaker 3 years ago
HYFXF is on fire today. Any idea what is up?
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boston127 boston127 4 years ago
TDA took my Order online today.

I'm just looking to find one of those 1 out of 10,000 Pink .0001 stocks that actually have value. Do not invest because of me.
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barnyarddog barnyarddog 4 years ago
Orders for this security cannot be accepted online at this time. For assistance with placing this order, please call Customer Service at 1-800-ETRADE-1 (1-800-387-2331).
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makinezmoney makinezmoney 5 years ago
$HYFXF: Massive Singapore Contract... $72Million Quarterly Revenue





investors.hyflux.com/newsroom/20180509_171615_600_R21RKV06YNI609EW.3.pdf


https://www.hyflux.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/Corporate-Brochure.pdf


Its only $0.026.... CRAZY CHEAP !



GO $HYFXF






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Pro-Life Pro-Life 7 years ago
Mistake/data error... but this may be buy time:

Click below and then click for maximum view

http://www.otcmarkets.com/stock/HYFXF/chart
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kerooney kerooney 10 years ago
Is there a reason this is showing up on my scan as a 5977% change?
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iamjah iamjah 12 years ago
Anybody monitoring this play?
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 12 years ago
Scoreboard for the week: +5.88%
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 12 years ago
This is THE time to step in from my view...
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 12 years ago
For the month: -1.06%...

......
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 12 years ago
For the week: +17.72%...

......
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 12 years ago
A big rebound off the bottom:

......
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
A quality company still paying dividends...
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
Same score this week as well: even!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
0.00% (even) is the scorecard for the week...
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
Notice Of A Substantial Shareholder's Interest
Mar 11, 2011

http://hyflux.listedcompany.com/news.html/id/244842
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swampboots swampboots 13 years ago
Hey I like this Co. Can't remember the symbols, .
But look here is my play during dividend:

12/20/2010 13:46:33 Bought 2000 HYFXF @ 1.75 -3,505.00 ---
12/30/2010 09:52:44 Sold 2000 HYFXF @ 1.8 3,594.93


Did I miss the window for the extra shares? If extra shares then they diluted and share price reasonable?

i cannot find didly qbout this distribution or dilution?
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
No recovery after the late December drop...
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swampboots swampboots 13 years ago
1.72 low of day,OK what gives with this 3 for 2 stock split?
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 13 years ago
Ballast Water Treatment Market Remains Buoyant

http://www.waterworld.com/index/display/article-display/2962768158/articles/water-wastewater-international/volume-25/issue-1/regulars/creative-finance/Ballast-Water-Treatment-Market-Remains-Buoyant.html

Driven by international regulations, the market for ballast water treatment systems is predicted to grow to over $34 billion. Tomasz Zagdan looks at the costs involved in purchasing a system, how companies such as Veolia Water Solutions & Technologies are getting involved and the separation and disinfection process.

Cumulative investments of over $30 billion are expected to be made into ballast water treatment systems (BWTS) over this decade, according to a study recently conducted by Frost & Sullivan. Investments will concern more than 57,000 maritime vessels that will require a ballast water treatment system to be installed during the period 2009-2020, driving massive requirement for system orders.

Demand for BWTS has emerged following the adoption of the International Convention for the Control and Management of Shipโ€™s Ballast Water and Sediments in 2004. This convention aims to address the issue of the so called โ€˜invasive marine speciesโ€™- aquatic organisms carried around the world in the ballast water tanks of ships.

Invasive marine species discharged into a new environment may become invasive and endanger the native ecology, threaten the local economic activities such as fisheries or even bring about diseases or human fatalities. According to the International Maritime Organization (IMO), maritime ships transporting over 80% of worldโ€™s commodities could carry between three and 12 billion tonnes of ballast water around the world each year. Losses incurred by economy as a result of the invasive species are equally staggering and in the USA alone it is estimated by the IMO to be as high as $138 billion annually.

In order to address this enormous environmental challenge, the IMO Convention adopted in 2004 set an obligation for the ship owners to meet strict water quality standards referred to as D2 standard in the legislation and determined the maximum volume level of invasive organisms allowed in the discharged water. Since ships have not been designed and equipped to treat ballast water, installation of an additional ballast water management system onboard is necessary to ensure conformity with the standards.

To ensure effective implementation of the legislation, the IMO Convention has set a roadmap for the ship owners to achieve compliance. Specific timelines have been provided for the new build and existing ships, additionally differentiated depending on the capacity of the vesselโ€™s ballast water tank. Importantly, the agenda outlined in the IMO Convention will influence the timeline for investments of ship owners to install BWMS over the next ten years.

Although the IMO Convention was adopted in 2004, it needs ratification by 30 states representing 35% of the worldโ€™s merchant shipping tonnage to be effective. The current status of the Convention is that it has been ratified by 21 states representing about 23% of the merchant fleet tonnage.

Figure 1. Time lines for compliance with the IMO International Convention for the Control and Management of Shipsโ€™ Ballast Water and Sediments for newly built and existing vessels



Until the D2 standard becomes compulsory, ship owners are encouraged but not required to install a ballast water treatment system onboard their ships. As an interim means ship owners without installed equipment need to perform ballast water exchange, referred to as the D1 standard in the legislation. This does not ensure the same performance as treatment but serves as a temporary solution to minimise the impact of alien invasive species.

The Convention adopted by the IMO is not the only piece of legislation compelling ship owners to treat ballast water before discharge. Several European countries, Australia, the USA or even certain US states (e.g.: California) are also in the process of developing or enforcing similar legislation. Some regulatory bodies (e.g.: the US Coast Guard) are considering to impose stricter standards than the IMO. However, the IMO Convention is the only piece of legislation that has a truly global coverage and is used as a reference point for the remaining regulators.

Pricing challenge

One of the key questions both for the ship owners and system suppliers on the market is the pricing of ballast water treatment systems. System suppliers surveyed by Frost & Sullivan admitted that rather than a cost plus calculation model, they aim to adjust prices to systems that are already available. The analysis carried out by the company has also shown that the price level is still very unstable and reflects the early stage of the market development.

Figure 2. The Competitive Environment on the Ballast Water Treatment market and a few representative companies.



Compared to the data indicated in some of the commonly available publications (e.g. the Ballast Water Treatment Technology Guide by Lloydโ€™s Register from September 2008), prices have increased substantially. Capital costs associated to purchasing a system dedicated for a pump capacity of 200-250 m³/h range from $175,000 up to $490,000. Estimated price for larger systems with a pump capacity of around 2000 m³/h, range from $650,000 up to nearly $3 million.

Frost & Sullivan believes that the price levels will continue to fluctuate in the short-medium term and reach some level of stabilisation by 2015 when the market gains momentum and competition becomes more intense.

More than $7 billion in revenues a year at the peak of market

The total market potential for ballast water treatment systems of $34 billion is not evenly spread across the whole forecast period (2009-2020). As the legislation is yet to become effective, the overall market demand is on hold as the overall market awaits the legislative driver that will get the ship owners to purchase and install ballast water treatment systems.

Business opportunities

In response to the challenge of treating ballast water for a broad range of ship types and sizes, suppliers of treatment technologies have started to develop and commercialise treatment solutions. The scale of potential opportunities from sales of the ballast water treatment systems has already attracted close to 50 vendors with solutions at various stage of development or commercialisation with close about 100 component suppliers.

Figure 3. Overview of Ballast Water Treatment Technologies and related Solid-liquid separation and Disinfection solutions



The competitive environment of ballast water treatment suppliers comprises companies with varying industry backgrounds and includes: traditional suppliers of marine equipment (e.g.: Alfa Laval), system suppliers originating from the water and wastewater industry (e.g.: Veolia Water Solutions & Technologies), shipbuilders (e.g.: Hyundai Heavy Industries) and even the ship owners (China Ocean Shipping Company, COSCO).

Ballast water treatment systems are largely customised to the requirements of the shipboard conditions. Technology combinations applied in the system vary but typically include two stages: physical solid-liquid separation (e.g.: disc and screen filtration, hydro cyclones) and disinfection (using chemicals, UV, ozone, ultrasound and heat treatment and others).

Certification and potential entry barriers

Prior to commercialisation, systems need to undergo a testing and certification process which proves its effectiveness in line with requirements specified in the Convention and ensures that the adverse implications on the environment are minimal. The approval procedure includes a land based and a shipboard testing of the equipment, typically done by one of the classification societies. The process is both costly and time-consuming (up to two years) and constitutes a major market entry barrier for the potential suppliers.

As of December 2009, only seven of nearly 50 suppliers have finalised their type approval process. Given the early stage of the market development with only few type approved systems commercially available and the actual number of working installations being scarce, it is risky to evaluate the market prospects for specific solutions. However, taking into the account the diversity of the worldโ€™s maritime fleet, comprising vessels of varying construction, purpose and size, it is unlikely that a single best available solution will meet the universal requirements of all ships.

After years of sluggish progress, the ratification process has witnessed significant acceleration in 2009. This is anticipated to be finalised over the next one to one and a half years followed by enforcement 12 months after the completion of the ratification process. Frost & Sullivan expects the market to gain momentum from 2012, once the legislation is ratified and enforced.

Future growth

The global ballast water treatment equipment market presents a massive growth potential for system vendors. Opportunities on the market exist for existing equipment and component suppliers or companies in the process of the product development. Among the existing system, suppliers may include small companies established specifically for the purpose of developing and commercialising ballast water treatment equipment.

Figure 4. Global Ballast Water Treatment Equipment Market, Revenue Forecast and Revenue Share in Three Time periods (2009-2020)



A couple of companies have already acquired venture capital financing, which can be a good indicator of the market potential for ballast water treatment systems. In addition, the majority of system suppliers, including the medium and large players, are still in the process of establishing their sales and distribution networks and also looking for partners with established position and strategic geographic presence in the global marine industry.

Companies will need to extend best practices beyond their product design set-up and take the necessary strategic initiatives of selecting and establishing strategic partnerships and setting up effective distribution and servicing channels. This will be critical in order to be ready to scale up, especially during the peak of the market for a few years during 2015-2020.

Authorโ€™s note: Tomasz Zagdan is an analyst (environment markets) at Frost & Sullivan. For further information please contact Fredrick Royan, research manager (water markets) at Frost & Sullivan at: froyan@frost.com.

More Water & WasteWater International Current Issue Articles

More Water & WasteWater International Archives Issue Articles
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
And come it did... since spring '09, this is a triple for some!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
Volume is really settling in advance of a move I perceive is coming.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
PDF of Q1 2010 Financials...

http://hyflux.listedcompany.com/newsroom/Hyflux_Q12010_PresentationSlides.pdf
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
This is crying for a new i-Box!!!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
Hyflux is getting a following from high profile names...
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
All new website... I need to completely re construct the i-Box... in the meantime, the company continues to forge ahead.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
From June '08... interesting stuff.

http://www.stockgumshoe.com/2008/06/multiply-your-money-by-solving-chinas-water-problem.html
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
This water and infrastructure, dividend paying, pinksheet monsta is running -

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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
Little bit of news in October but nothing in November.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 14 years ago
June and August this year were big news months -

http://www.hyflux.com/news.php
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asus asus 15 years ago
Nice!!!

You may want to post that on my board, they'd love to see it: http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=8961
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Asus, this has been rockin' hard all summer...

https://charts.edgar-online.com/ext/charts.dll?2-6-11-0-0-53-03NA000000HYFXF-&SF:1|5-FL:1=0A246A-HO:SW-BT=11-HT=395-WD=777
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Nobody is really paying close attention to this sector as there is only 1 behemoth that gets its' revs 100% from water and related activities.

Hyflux mentioned near the middle...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/utilities/2791116/Water-crisis-to-be-biggest-world-risk.html

"... The revenue share of the world's top water companies that comes from the sector is Veolia (34pc), Suez (16pc), Ferrovial (20pc), Sabesp (100pc), Severn Trent (100pc), RWE (23pc), ITT Corp (32pc) and Pentair (75pc).

Goldman Sachs said the best option is to spread investments across a basket of small "potential takeout candidates" such as Badger Meter, Calgon Carbon, Clarcor, Pentair, Pall, Instituform, Hyflux, Tetra Tech, Acqua America and Watts Water.

Stanford professor Donald Kennedy said global climate change was now setting off a self-feeding spiral. "We've got droughts combined with a psychotic excess of rainfall," he said.

"There are 800m people in the world who are 'food insecure'. They can't grow enough food, or can't afford to buy it. This is a seismic shift in the global economy... "


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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Speaking of bottoms... this one is really climbing out of one... NICE!!!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Water Crisis to be Biggest World Risk

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 5:35AM GMT 27 Feb 2009

Hyflux mentioned near the bottom...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/utilities/2791116/Water-crisis-to-be-biggest-world-risk.html

A catastrophic water shortage could prove an even bigger threat to mankind this century than soaring food prices and the relentless exhaustion of energy reserves, according to a panel of global experts at the Goldman Sachs "Top Five Risks" conference.

Nicholas (Lord) Stern, author of the Government's Stern Review on the economics of climate change, warned that underground aquifers could run dry at the same time as melting glaciers play havoc with fresh supplies of usable water.

Nobody listens to the real climate change experts"The glaciers on the Himalayas are retreating, and they are the sponge that holds the water back in the rainy season. We're facing the risk of extreme run-off, with water running straight into the Bay of Bengal and taking a lot of topsoil with it," he said.

"A few hundred square miles of the Himalayas are the source for all the major rivers of Asia - the Ganges, the Yellow River, the Yangtze - where 3bn people live. That's almost half the world's population," he said.

Lord Stern, the World Bank's former chief economist, said governments had been slow to accept the awful truth that usable water is running out. Fresh rainfall is not enough to refill the underground water tables.

"Water is not a renewable resource. People have been mining it without restraint because it has not been priced properly," he said.

Farming makes up 70pc of global water demand. Fresh water for irrigation is never returned to underground basins. Most is lost through leaks and evaporation.

A Goldman Sachs report said water was the "petroleum for the next century", offering huge rewards for investors who know how to play the infrastructure boom. The US alone needs up to $1,000bn (£500bn) in new piping and waste water plants by 2020.

"Demand for water continues to escalate at unsustainable rates. At the risk of being alarmist, we see parallels with Malthusian economics. Globally, water consumption is doubling every 20 years. By 2025, it is estimated that about one third of the global population will not have access to adequate drinking water," it said.

China faces an acute challenge. It makes up 21pc of humanity but controls just 7pc of the water supply. The water basin in parts of northern China is falling by one meter a year due to overpumping. In Heibei province the aquifer fell three meters last year. An increasing number of rivers are running dry.

Disputes over cross-border water basins have already prompted Egypt to threaten military action against any country that draws water off the Nile without agreement.

The shift to an animal protein diet across Asia has added to the strain. It takes 15 cubic metres of water on average to produce 1kg of beef, compared to six for poultry, and 1.5 for corn.

Goldman Sachs advises investors to focus on the high-tech end of the world's $425bn water industry. But beware the consumer "backlash" against bottled water, now viewed as an eco-hostile waste of fuel.

It is eyeing companies that produce or service filtration equipment (which can now extract anything from caffeine to animal growth hormones by using nanotechnologies), ultraviolet disinfection, desalination technology using membranes, automated water meters and specialist niches in water reuse.

It is difficult to find a "pure play" on water equities. GE is a market leader in the field, but the sector makes up just 2pc of its colossal turnover.

The revenue share of the world's top water companies that comes from the sector is Veolia (34pc), Suez (16pc), Ferrovial (20pc), Sabesp (100pc), Severn Trent (100pc), RWE (23pc), ITT Corp (32pc) and Pentair (75pc).

Goldman Sachs said the best option is to spread investments across a basket of small "potential takeout candidates" such as Badger Meter, Calgon Carbon, Clarcor, Pentair, Pall, Instituform, Hyflux, Tetra Tech, Acqua America and Watts Water.

Stanford professor Donald Kennedy said global climate change was now setting off a self-feeding spiral. "We've got droughts combined with a psychotic excess of rainfall," he said.

"There are 800m people in the world who are 'food insecure'. They can't grow enough food, or can't afford to buy it. This is a seismic shift in the global economy."
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Well, how different things can be in 30 days -

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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
The obvious trend is down but not because the company is in poor condition... rather, the markets stink and do not rationalize good company from bad. Pathetic.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
A clear uptrend has formed since October -

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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
Hyflux = Dividends R Us -

http://www.hyflux.com/faqs.htm

Again, from the investor section-

1. What is Hyflux's dividend policy?
Hyflux's dividend policy is targetted at a payout ratio of 15%. It aims to maintain or increase its dividend per share.

SWEET!!!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
From the FAQ's in the investor section -

http://www.hyflux.com/faqs.htm

7. What is the size of Hyflux's total ordinary shares issued?
518,642,000

Yep... that's it folks... just 500M shares for a worldwide company... !!!
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 15 years ago
This stock hit bottom and is rebounding hard -

http://ir.asiaone.com/hyflux/spnc.html
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Soapy Bubbles Soapy Bubbles 16 years ago
Oh wow... very cool. BM'd and I am watching. I was wondering if there was more to the Hyflux name.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 16 years ago
This is a golden opportunity down here AND get paid dividends too!!!
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asus asus 16 years ago
Nice board... Good going on the ibox!
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mthead mthead 16 years ago
WOW!

Very impressive, FJ! Excellent IBox. Should be enough info there for anyone to see the potential for an investment in Hyflux. Thank you.
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Pro-Life Pro-Life 16 years ago
mt... I finally got the i-Box done with the new editor and I am pleased with the results but I am open to your suggestions and helpful observations... let me know. I hope eveyone finds this useful!!! Make sure you visit here as well -

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=12941


* The novelist George Eliot once said that "it is never too late to become what you might have been." That quote inspires me to seek those investments in the future that I didn't in the past.

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Pro-Life Pro-Life 16 years ago
A new seperate board has been created for Hyflux Water Trust -

HXWTF.pk

http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=12941


* The novelist George Eliot once said that "it is never too late to become what you might have been." That quote inspires me to seek those investments in the future that I didn't in the past.

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