
The heavy resistant levels are @ 0.305cts and 0.31cts. Once broken, it will cheong through the rooftop.

I believe whoever BBs behind these few days buying spree from 0.285 -0.30 cts, knew something that we don't.

Today buying quote:
Bid Vol Bid Ask Ask Vol
2,380,000 0.300 0.305 7,959,000
2,209,000 0.295 0.310 7,798,000
2,376,000 0.290 0.315 2,000,000
1,180,000 0.285 0.320 2,120,000
909,000 0.280 0.325 1,109,000
325,000 0.275 0.330 1,538,000
156,000 0.270 0.340 160,000
100,000 0.265 0.345 40,000
50,000 0.260 0.350 86,000
200,000 0.200 0.360 100,000
Still holding on. Will not let go until half year result is out then decide. What is there to download when the margin is only $0.015 minus the brokerage fees & GST? Confident this counter will fly, question is WHEN? Well supported at $0.29 to $0.30 price range. At least it is now hovering at this range rather than previously $0.26. Need to break thru the $0.30 psychological barrier.
is stil early to say to sell...
Money inside ones pocket is always good thing to do.

But I'm holding on for a little longer to see the ending part.......

Guru said to take profit first
; I think it's cooked and well..why not. Make another on its low.

Why so quite here ?
Look like most bros here already sold off their UFS holdings!

BB come out to play again !

0.295cts will be history..................

Still trading at 0.295-0.30cents--WHY sooo happy 888max?
Will today stay above 0.30cts ?

Will UFS be potential for future biofuel play?
In Georgia, fuel from the forest
With promises of a more economical and eco-friendly alternative to corn-based ethanol, the Peach State looks to become a player in the biofuel market.
By Jeff Cox, CNNMoney.com contributing writer
May 15 2007: 1:40 PM EDT
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- While it may not stop gas prices in their climb to $4 a gallon, long-term help could be on the way from Georgia's 24 million acres of majestic pine-filled forest lands.
A consortium of government leaders, university researchers and entrepreneurs has the Peach State on the forefront of developing enzyme-based cellulosic ethanol using Georgia's abundance of longleaf pines and other varieties.
Advocates say this type of ethanol burns in a more environmentally friendly manner than corn-based ethanol and costs much less to produce. Experts say the amount of biomass needed to produce wood-based ethanol will come at up to an 80 percent discount to corn-based ethanol.
How that will translate at the pump, where national prices hit a record $3.09 a gallon Tuesday, is unknown until commercial-level ethanol plants start coming on line in the next several years. Georgia officials, though, are excited at the state's potential through its vast natural reserves to become a major producer in the region.
"To us here in Georgia and throughout the country, energy is something we have to be concerned about," said Ken Stewart, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Economic Development. "Utilizing the vast resources we have is very, very important to us."
Leading the charge is privately owned Range Fuels Inc., which is at the vanguard of developing ways to use the ubiquitous Georgia pines as fuel in the alternative energy revolution.
Backed by billionaire dot-com venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, Range Fuels is building a $225 million plant in Soperton, in southeastern Georgia. The plant will turn waste generated during tree harvesting into ethanol. Khosla has said he intends to build additional plants across South Georgia's pine-tree belt, with the goal of eventually producing more than a billion gallons of ethanol annually.
Range Fuels CEO Mitch Mandich said in an interview that the company has no set timetable as to when the initial plant will open, but groundbreaking is likely before the end of the summer.
"We're not going to talk about how long it takes us to put up a plant," Mandich said. "We have asserted we believe we will be the first commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol plant in the United States."
Mandich said Range Fuels will be deriving the waste it uses in the ethanol-making process from local timber companies. The residual wood waste will be transported to the Range Fuels plant, where it will undergo a patented thermoconversion process to convert it to a synthetic gas, then to alcohol and ultimately to ethanol.
The plant also can use paper pulp, peanut shells and even some municipal waste in the process.
Surging corn prices are making conventional ethanol-making more and more expensive. Cellulosic ethanol production has taken on a higher profile recently, with researchers in Brazil saying Monday that they have come up with a revolutionary way to produce ethanol on an industrial scale from plant waste.
Mandich, too, believes his company has a way that will provide a cleaner and cheaper alternative.
"Even with our first implementation we'll be competitive with corn ethanol, and quickly over time we'll be far under corn ethanol," he said.
Such news can't come too soon for the nation's $230 billion forest industry, which has struggled over the past several years to deal with foreign competition. The paper products industry has lost about 140,000 jobs over the past 10 years and nearly 100 mills have closed, according to the American Forest and Paper Association.
But as Georgia becomes more of an ethanol player, local timber companies will have more markets in which to sell their products, at prices cheaper than foreign competitors because of savings passed on through lower transportation costs.
Environmental advocates also love the idea. Wood-based ethanol is so eco-friendly that when the vital fuel ingredients are removed from a piece of virgin wood, that same timber can then be used for paper or pulp. The operation of wood ethanol plants, which can operate practically side by side with wood processing facilities, also requires far less fossil fuel use than corn ethanol operations.
"That's what makes it incredible, when you consider that out of the same amount of wood you're getting probably the same quantity of pulp and paper, but in addition to that you're also generating a couple hundred gallons of ethanol," said Lori Perine, a forest association official. "From the big energy picture, you've got more bargain for your buck."
Sam Shelton, a researcher at Georgia Tech's Strategic Energy Institute, said that to produce a gallon of ethanol it costs about $1.50 worth of corn but only about 30 cents of wood products. In addition, he said it takes about 10 times as much energy to produce one unit of corn ethanol as it does wood ethanol.
"The economics look very good," Shelton said. "The energy balance also looks much better for wood than it does for corn."
Shelton said the primary obstacle to getting wood ethanol plants on line now is engineering of the facilities, with the danger being in getting too ambitious with a process that is in a relative stage of infancy compared to other technologies.
NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- While it may not stop gas prices in their climb to $4 a gallon, long-term help could be on the way from Georgia's 24 million acres of majestic pine-filled forest lands.
A consortium of government leaders, university researchers and entrepreneurs has the Peach State on the forefront of developing enzyme-based cellulosic ethanol using Georgia's abundance of longleaf pines and other varieties.

Advocates say this type of ethanol burns in a more environmentally friendly manner than corn-based ethanol and costs much less to produce. Experts say the amount of biomass needed to produce wood-based ethanol will come at up to an 80 percent discount to corn-based ethanol.
How that will translate at the pump, where national prices hit a record $3.09 a gallon Tuesday, is unknown until commercial-level ethanol plants start coming on line in the next several years. Georgia officials, though, are excited at the state's potential through its vast natural reserves to become a major producer in the region.
"To us here in Georgia and throughout the country, energy is something we have to be concerned about," said Ken Stewart, commissioner of the Georgia Department of Economic Development. "Utilizing the vast resources we have is very, very important to us."
Leading the charge is privately owned Range Fuels Inc., which is at the vanguard of developing ways to use the ubiquitous Georgia pines as fuel in the alternative energy revolution.
Backed by billionaire dot-com venture capitalist Vinod Khosla, Range Fuels is building a $225 million plant in Soperton, in southeastern Georgia. The plant will turn waste generated during tree harvesting into ethanol. Khosla has said he intends to build additional plants across South Georgia's pine-tree belt, with the goal of eventually producing more than a billion gallons of ethanol annually.
Range Fuels CEO Mitch Mandich said in an interview that the company has no set timetable as to when the initial plant will open, but groundbreaking is likely before the end of the summer.
"We're not going to talk about how long it takes us to put up a plant," Mandich said. "We have asserted we believe we will be the first commercial-scale cellulosic ethanol plant in the United States."
Mandich said Range Fuels will be deriving the waste it uses in the ethanol-making process from local timber companies. The residual wood waste will be transported to the Range Fuels plant, where it will undergo a patented thermoconversion process to convert it to a synthetic gas, then to alcohol and ultimately to ethanol.
The plant also can use paper pulp, peanut shells and even some municipal waste in the process.
Surging corn prices are making conventional ethanol-making more and more expensive. Cellulosic ethanol production has taken on a higher profile recently, with researchers in Brazil saying Monday that they have come up with a revolutionary way to produce ethanol on an industrial scale from plant waste.
Mandich, too, believes his company has a way that will provide a cleaner and cheaper alternative.
"Even with our first implementation we'll be competitive with corn ethanol, and quickly over time we'll be far under corn ethanol," he said.
Such news can't come too soon for the nation's $230 billion forest industry, which has struggled over the past several years to deal with foreign competition. The paper products industry has lost about 140,000 jobs over the past 10 years and nearly 100 mills have closed, according to the American Forest and Paper Association.
But as Georgia becomes more of an ethanol player, local timber companies will have more markets in which to sell their products, at prices cheaper than foreign competitors because of savings passed on through lower transportation costs.
Environmental advocates also love the idea. Wood-based ethanol is so eco-friendly that when the vital fuel ingredients are removed from a piece of virgin wood, that same timber can then be used for paper or pulp. The operation of wood ethanol plants, which can operate practically side by side with wood processing facilities, also requires far less fossil fuel use than corn ethanol operations.
"That's what makes it incredible, when you consider that out of the same amount of wood you're getting probably the same quantity of pulp and paper, but in addition to that you're also generating a couple hundred gallons of ethanol," said Lori Perine, a forest association official. "From the big energy picture, you've got more bargain for your buck."
Sam Shelton, a researcher at Georgia Tech's Strategic Energy Institute, said that to produce a gallon of ethanol it costs about $1.50 worth of corn but only about 30 cents of wood products. In addition, he said it takes about 10 times as much energy to produce one unit of corn ethanol as it does wood ethanol.
"The economics look very good," Shelton said. "The energy balance also looks much better for wood than it does for corn."
Shelton said the primary obstacle to getting wood ethanol plants on line now is engineering of the facilities, with the danger being in getting too ambitious with a process that is in a relative stage of infancy compared to other technologies.

where can i get the mirror image of the STI vs equity risk premium. Thanks
Who is the biggest shareholders in Unifiber ?
Tektronic Industries own 51% of UFS shares. Tektronix's owners are directors or managers of cellmark, a swedish group which happen to be the world's largest marketing company specializing in pulp and paper.

http://www.cellmark.com/UK/index.html
Beside that, hedge funds Stark Investemnts and Polygon Global Opportunities master fund together own some 7.8% of Unifiber @0.27cts.
So don't play play with them!

Well done Unifiber.
Chinese saying: One mountain is higher than other mountian.
So don't play play.

More likely to be the short sellers being corned. They betted it would dip today coz' mkt is down . A classic case of betting on the wrong side of the fence.
Today closed @0.30cts despite STI was down , tomorrow even better.

I'm NOT encouraging newcomer investors to join us.

Informations provided here is for those already vested UFS investors.
If we stick togethers, encourage each other along the way, we'll reach our objective.
Don't fight a lonely mental war alone with BB ?

May the forces be with you all.

ohh i don't think so 888max might as well have patience and wait till august and see, most important is to make some good profit. you have been giving a lot of good information on unifiber, i see confidence and patience in you. i too realise patience is important .
One way is to go away and come back in aug to check price.

correct 88max the BB's are clever and cunning. got to be careful.