#Gold #Nasdaq We’ve received a few emails asking us to review this share. Generally, from the tone of things, we tend suspect the price is being “ramped” in a discussion forum or perhaps even the financial media. And as a result, it’s probably worth some investigation before taking any risks, despite the potentials being fairly impressive. Oddly, we had a good reason to be fascinated by this odd sounding share. It is named after a Scottish mountain we’d actually climbed!
In May one year, a Saturday evening in our village “pub” brought a commitment to meet up the next morning and climb a mountain. To be honest, alcohol was involved and four folk volunteered to meet up early on Sunday to drive into Perthshire and ruin a civilised Sunday morning. At 6am, we piled into a Mercedes estate and to be honest, the usual banter was completely absent as aside from the driver, three of us were mentally reviewing our sanity in agreeing to this adventure. But the blue skies made it look like an excellent day was ahead and Billy = the driver and the clown whose idea this was – had been fastidious in checking our choice of clothing in footwear before we tackled what is probably Scotlands easiest Munro (over 3,000 feet) mountain to climb.
We arrived at “base camp”, a big roadside lay-by – and could only eye the sky with some hesitation. The problem was, despite it being the start of May and our group being mostly sober, a few flakes of snow were falling and this is never a good thing in the Scottish mountains. Most rescue stories start with a similar scenario, the inexperienced tourist claiming the snow wasn’t even lying when they set out to climb in trainers, shorts, and usually a hoodie. Unfortunately, the four of us didn’t have such an excuse. We were all fairly serious skiers, we all had the right footwear and clothing, and if it were not for the inevitable group bravado, we should have abandoned the plan in the car park, the closest point to our target mountain.
But unfortunately, fortified by coffee and bacon rolls, a few flakes of white stuff were not going to dissuade our gang of hero’s, so we started the long, cold, tedious, uphill walk to allow everyone to tick this mountain off the list we’d not previously climbed. Inevitable, whiteout conditions prevailed but unfortunately, it was relatively easy to follow the well trodden path we’d chosen. Sometime around noon, arriving at the summit, any ideas of photographs to commemorate the occasion were forgotten, a round of handshakes through ski gloves, along with a quick toast of foul whisky, we turned tail and headed down. By 1pm, we were back in the Mercedes, admiring the now snow covered ground and planning were to get lunch. The village of Kenmore was an obvious choice, its incredibly scenic location hosting a fairly nice hotel/pub. And by 6pm, we were all home.
The only fly in the ointment, after completing the miserable climb, was TV news. Across the highlands of Scotland, quite a few folk had been caught out with blizzard conditions in the mountains, two folk dead in the Cairngorms. We all knew, from the conditions while we thankfully descended the slopes, our climb had only been possible with our choice of clothing and anyone tackling Schiehallion without following the well marked tourist trail would have found themselves in a lot of trouble, very quickly. While the rest of the UK was welcoming Spring, the Scottish mountains retained their voracious appetite for victims. All things considered, we never gathered to climb a mountain again, preferring to ski down the things.
Hopefully Schiehallion share price doesn’t share similar tastes to the mountain which the investment trust is named after. The name derives allegedly from Gaelic and an impossible term which translates at “Fairy Mountain”. Another story claims the mountain is named after the shape of a female breast. Who knows…
Currently, above 1.8p should allegedly trigger share price movement to an initial 2.14p with our longer term secondary, if bettered, calculating at an impressive 2.7p. It certainly has potentials but similar to the mountain from which it takes its name, also has dangers, needing below 1.2p to justify serious concern.

FUTURES
FUTURES
| Time Issued | Market | Price At Issue | Short Entry | Fast Exit | Slow Exit | Stop | Long Entry | Fast Exit | Slow Exit | Stop | Prior |
| 10:29:18PM | BRENT | 7106.8 | |||||||||
| 10:31:47PM | GOLD | 5237.65 | 5123 | 5079 | 5022 | 5167 | 5250 | 5279 | 5316 | 5145 | Success |
| 10:34:05PM | FTSE | 10693 | Shambles | ||||||||
| 10:37:37PM | STOX50 | 6124.7 | |||||||||
| 10:41:21PM | GERMANY | 25004.4 | ‘cess | ||||||||
| 10:44:13PM | US500 | 6850.3 | Shambles | ||||||||
| 10:47:23PM | DOW | 48860.5 | Success | ||||||||
| 10:50:31PM | NASDAQ | 24751.4 | 24614 | 24528 | 24345 | 24771 | 24983 | 25085 | 25242 | 24806 | |
| 10:53:45PM | JAPAN | 56719 |
23/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10684 points. Change of -0.02%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,967,110,577 a change of -9.04%
20/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10686 points. Change of 0.56%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 7,659,209,162 a change of -16.29%
19/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10627 points. Change of -0.55%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 9,149,830,600 a change of 23.38%
18/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10686 points. Change of 1.23%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 7,416,218,337 a change of 13.36%
17/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10556 points. Change of 0.79%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 6,541,923,736 a change of 30.7%
16/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10473 points. Change of 0.26%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 5,005,351,962 a change of -53.38%
13/02/2026 FTSE Closed at 10446 points. Change of 0.42%. Total value traded through LSE was: £ 10,736,069,118 a change of 25.25% 
SUCCESS above means both FAST & SLOW targets were met. ‘CESS means just the FAST target met and probably the next time it is exceeded, movement to the SLOW target shall commence.
Our commentary is in two sections. Immediately below are today’s updated comments. If our commentary remains valid, the share can be found in the bottom section which has a RED heading. Hopefully, this will mean you no longer need to flip back through previous reports. HYPERLINKS DISABLED IN THIS VERSION
Please remember, all prices are mid-price (halfway between the Buy and Sell). When we refer to a price CLOSING above a specific level, we are viewing the point where we can regard a trend as changing. Otherwise, we are simply speculating on near term trading targets. Our website is www.trendsandtargets.com.
UPDATE. We often give an initial and a secondary price. If the initial is exceeded, we still expect it to fall back but the next time the initial is bettered, the price should continue to the secondary. The converse it true with price drops.
We can be contacted at info@trendsandtargets.com. Spam filters set to maximum so only legit emails get through…
Section One – Outlook Updated Today. Click here for Section Two – Outlook Remains Valid shares
Click Epic to jump to share: LSE:ECO ECO (Atlantic) O & G** **LSE:IQE IQE** **LSE:TERN Tern Plc** **LSE:TLW Tullow** **
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Updated charts published on : ECO (Atlantic) O & G, IQE, Tern Plc, Tullow,
LSE:ECO ECO (Atlantic) O & G. Close Mid-Price: 42.2 Percentage Change: + 9.61% Day High: 42.4 Day Low: 38.5
Target met. In the event of ECO (Atlantic) O & G enjoying further trades ……..
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View Previous ECO (Atlantic) O & G & Big Picture ***
LSE:IQE IQE. Close Mid-Price: 12.78 Percentage Change: + 21.95% Day High: 12.76 Day Low: 10.6
Now above 12.9 should prove capable of a lift to 15 next with some probabl ……..
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View Previous IQE & Big Picture ***
LSE:TERN Tern Plc. Close Mid-Price: 0.45 Percentage Change: + 5.88% Day High: 0.45 Day Low: 0.42
There is a chance this is about to exhibit some recovery! Movement next ab ……..
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View Previous Tern Plc & Big Picture ***
LSE:TLW Tullow. Close Mid-Price: 10.2 Percentage Change: + 2.93% Day High: 11.14 Day Low: 9.79
Next above 11.4 should produce movement to 13p with our secondary, if beat ……..
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View Previous Tullow & Big Picture ***
