2025 Q3 -tulosraportti
126 päivää sittenTarjoustasot
TSX Venture Exchange
Määrä
Osto
-
Myynti
Määrä
-
Viimeisimmät kaupat
| Aika | Hinta | Määrä | Ostaja | Myyjä |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | - | - | - |
Välittäjätilasto
Dataa ei löytynyt
Yhtiötapahtumat
Datan lähde: FactSet| Seuraava tapahtuma | |
|---|---|
2025 Q4 -tulosraportti 6.4. |
| Menneet tapahtumat | ||
|---|---|---|
2025 Q3 -tulosraportti 19.11.2025 | ||
2025 Q2 -tulosraportti 22.8.2025 | ||
2025 Q1 -tulosraportti 15.5.2025 | ||
2024 Q4 -tulosraportti 27.3.2025 | ||
2024 Q3 -tulosraportti 14.11.2024 |
Asiakkaat katsoivat myös
Shareville
Liity keskusteluun SharevillessäShareville on aktiivisten yksityissijoittajien yhteisö, jossa voit seurata muiden asiakkaiden kaupankäyntiä ja omistuksia.
Kirjaudu
- ·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration (and that of others here, this was actually a reply to a comment but I'm sharing it here too) – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black-white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The number of shares has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so the dilution is real. But the main part came from debt conversion and share issues to avoid bankruptcy, not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries, not “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a piece of future revenues (royalty + ownership stake) has been given up to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver-equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years. In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and stay above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged towards it – even if previous assets are gone and the number of shares is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management actually gets Mallay into stable production without another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold becomes high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean today's case is uninteresting, it's just much more risky and much more leveraged than before.·17.2. · MuokattuExcellon also has the Silver City project in Saxony, Germany, a large high-grade silver project in a historic district that has produced silver for over 700 years. Here they have drilled over 10–13.000 meters and had several very high-grade hits (over 1.000 g/t silver equivalent over narrow intervals), it is admittedly still pure exploration without production, but if it is realized, it is much better and more stable than politically unstable South America where local authorities often demand more money etc. if the silver price becomes very high. Here I also believe, incidentally, that Peru is a bit more stable than Mexico. I think that if one can buy the stock below 0.4-0.5 then it is a good bet for the portfolio in the long term :)
- ·31.12.2025RE: New press release - Excellon grants stock options In my opinion, this is just another way Excellon has diluted, debased, reallocated its shares and transferred assets/wealth from its retail shareholders to others. In July 2022, the month the current CEO took office, Excellon had a share price of C58 cent, today it is even lower. During this time, silver, gold and its equivalent mining companies, represented by SILJ and GDXJ, have risen by 160 %, 290 %, 280 % and 220 % respectively! Excellon's outstanding shares went from 34 million (million) to 347 million*, a 10-fold increase. Based on today's market capitalization of C$180 million*, the share price today would be over C$5 with the outstanding shares in 2022. Under this CEO, Excellon/retail shareholders also lost valuable assets, including the Platosa mine, Evolucion property (total "170 million once silver-equivalent") along with parts of Kilgore's future revenues and Silver City. Excellon was a C$10 stock in 2018 with these properties, when gold and silver were just a fraction of today's prices. All this is great if you were on the receiving end of hundreds of millions of what I call free shares distributed outside the stock market and the assets Excellon lost, but a disaster for Excellon's retail shareholders.·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black and white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The share count has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so dilution is real. But the main part came from debt-for-equity swaps and equity issues to avoid bankruptcy – not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries – not just “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a portion of future revenues (royalty + equity stake) has been relinquished to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years.In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and hold above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged to that – even if previous assets are gone and the share count is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management will actually get Mallay into stable production without yet another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold prices will be high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean that today's case is uninteresting; it's just much riskier and much more leveraged than before.
- ·17.12.2025Could be nice upside here. Bought 40,000 shares at 35 cents
Yllä olevat kommentit ovat peräisin Nordnetin sosiaalisen verkoston Sharevillen käyttäjiltä, eikä niitä ole muokattu eikä Nordnet ole tarkastanut niitä etukäteen. Ne eivät tarkoita, että Nordnet tarjoaisi sijoitusneuvoja tai sijoitussuosituksia. Nordnet ei ota vastuuta kommenteista.
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2025 Q3 -tulosraportti
126 päivää sittenUutiset
Ei uutisia tällä hetkellä
Tämän sivun uutiset ja/tai sijoitussuositukset tai otteet niistä sekä niihin liittyvät linkit ovat mainitun tahon tuottamia ja toimittamia. Nordnet ei ole osallistunut materiaalin laatimiseen, eikä ole tarkistanut sen sisältöä tai tehnyt sisältöön muutoksia. Lue lisää sijoitussuosituksista.
Shareville
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Kirjaudu
- ·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration (and that of others here, this was actually a reply to a comment but I'm sharing it here too) – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black-white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The number of shares has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so the dilution is real. But the main part came from debt conversion and share issues to avoid bankruptcy, not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries, not “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a piece of future revenues (royalty + ownership stake) has been given up to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver-equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years. In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and stay above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged towards it – even if previous assets are gone and the number of shares is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management actually gets Mallay into stable production without another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold becomes high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean today's case is uninteresting, it's just much more risky and much more leveraged than before.·17.2. · MuokattuExcellon also has the Silver City project in Saxony, Germany, a large high-grade silver project in a historic district that has produced silver for over 700 years. Here they have drilled over 10–13.000 meters and had several very high-grade hits (over 1.000 g/t silver equivalent over narrow intervals), it is admittedly still pure exploration without production, but if it is realized, it is much better and more stable than politically unstable South America where local authorities often demand more money etc. if the silver price becomes very high. Here I also believe, incidentally, that Peru is a bit more stable than Mexico. I think that if one can buy the stock below 0.4-0.5 then it is a good bet for the portfolio in the long term :)
- ·31.12.2025RE: New press release - Excellon grants stock options In my opinion, this is just another way Excellon has diluted, debased, reallocated its shares and transferred assets/wealth from its retail shareholders to others. In July 2022, the month the current CEO took office, Excellon had a share price of C58 cent, today it is even lower. During this time, silver, gold and its equivalent mining companies, represented by SILJ and GDXJ, have risen by 160 %, 290 %, 280 % and 220 % respectively! Excellon's outstanding shares went from 34 million (million) to 347 million*, a 10-fold increase. Based on today's market capitalization of C$180 million*, the share price today would be over C$5 with the outstanding shares in 2022. Under this CEO, Excellon/retail shareholders also lost valuable assets, including the Platosa mine, Evolucion property (total "170 million once silver-equivalent") along with parts of Kilgore's future revenues and Silver City. Excellon was a C$10 stock in 2018 with these properties, when gold and silver were just a fraction of today's prices. All this is great if you were on the receiving end of hundreds of millions of what I call free shares distributed outside the stock market and the assets Excellon lost, but a disaster for Excellon's retail shareholders.·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black and white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The share count has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so dilution is real. But the main part came from debt-for-equity swaps and equity issues to avoid bankruptcy – not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries – not just “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a portion of future revenues (royalty + equity stake) has been relinquished to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years.In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and hold above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged to that – even if previous assets are gone and the share count is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management will actually get Mallay into stable production without yet another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold prices will be high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean that today's case is uninteresting; it's just much riskier and much more leveraged than before.
- ·17.12.2025Could be nice upside here. Bought 40,000 shares at 35 cents
Yllä olevat kommentit ovat peräisin Nordnetin sosiaalisen verkoston Sharevillen käyttäjiltä, eikä niitä ole muokattu eikä Nordnet ole tarkastanut niitä etukäteen. Ne eivät tarkoita, että Nordnet tarjoaisi sijoitusneuvoja tai sijoitussuosituksia. Nordnet ei ota vastuuta kommenteista.
Tarjoustasot
TSX Venture Exchange
Määrä
Osto
-
Myynti
Määrä
-
Viimeisimmät kaupat
| Aika | Hinta | Määrä | Ostaja | Myyjä |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | - | - | - |
Välittäjätilasto
Dataa ei löytynyt
Asiakkaat katsoivat myös
Yhtiötapahtumat
Datan lähde: FactSet| Seuraava tapahtuma | |
|---|---|
2025 Q4 -tulosraportti 6.4. |
| Menneet tapahtumat | ||
|---|---|---|
2025 Q3 -tulosraportti 19.11.2025 | ||
2025 Q2 -tulosraportti 22.8.2025 | ||
2025 Q1 -tulosraportti 15.5.2025 | ||
2024 Q4 -tulosraportti 27.3.2025 | ||
2024 Q3 -tulosraportti 14.11.2024 |
2025 Q3 -tulosraportti
126 päivää sittenUutiset
Ei uutisia tällä hetkellä
Tämän sivun uutiset ja/tai sijoitussuositukset tai otteet niistä sekä niihin liittyvät linkit ovat mainitun tahon tuottamia ja toimittamia. Nordnet ei ole osallistunut materiaalin laatimiseen, eikä ole tarkistanut sen sisältöä tai tehnyt sisältöön muutoksia. Lue lisää sijoitussuosituksista.
Yhtiötapahtumat
Datan lähde: FactSet| Seuraava tapahtuma | |
|---|---|
2025 Q4 -tulosraportti 6.4. |
| Menneet tapahtumat | ||
|---|---|---|
2025 Q3 -tulosraportti 19.11.2025 | ||
2025 Q2 -tulosraportti 22.8.2025 | ||
2025 Q1 -tulosraportti 15.5.2025 | ||
2024 Q4 -tulosraportti 27.3.2025 | ||
2024 Q3 -tulosraportti 14.11.2024 |
Shareville
Liity keskusteluun SharevillessäShareville on aktiivisten yksityissijoittajien yhteisö, jossa voit seurata muiden asiakkaiden kaupankäyntiä ja omistuksia.
Kirjaudu
- ·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration (and that of others here, this was actually a reply to a comment but I'm sharing it here too) – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black-white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The number of shares has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so the dilution is real. But the main part came from debt conversion and share issues to avoid bankruptcy, not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries, not “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a piece of future revenues (royalty + ownership stake) has been given up to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver-equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years. In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and stay above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged towards it – even if previous assets are gone and the number of shares is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management actually gets Mallay into stable production without another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold becomes high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean today's case is uninteresting, it's just much more risky and much more leveraged than before.·17.2. · MuokattuExcellon also has the Silver City project in Saxony, Germany, a large high-grade silver project in a historic district that has produced silver for over 700 years. Here they have drilled over 10–13.000 meters and had several very high-grade hits (over 1.000 g/t silver equivalent over narrow intervals), it is admittedly still pure exploration without production, but if it is realized, it is much better and more stable than politically unstable South America where local authorities often demand more money etc. if the silver price becomes very high. Here I also believe, incidentally, that Peru is a bit more stable than Mexico. I think that if one can buy the stock below 0.4-0.5 then it is a good bet for the portfolio in the long term :)
- ·31.12.2025RE: New press release - Excellon grants stock options In my opinion, this is just another way Excellon has diluted, debased, reallocated its shares and transferred assets/wealth from its retail shareholders to others. In July 2022, the month the current CEO took office, Excellon had a share price of C58 cent, today it is even lower. During this time, silver, gold and its equivalent mining companies, represented by SILJ and GDXJ, have risen by 160 %, 290 %, 280 % and 220 % respectively! Excellon's outstanding shares went from 34 million (million) to 347 million*, a 10-fold increase. Based on today's market capitalization of C$180 million*, the share price today would be over C$5 with the outstanding shares in 2022. Under this CEO, Excellon/retail shareholders also lost valuable assets, including the Platosa mine, Evolucion property (total "170 million once silver-equivalent") along with parts of Kilgore's future revenues and Silver City. Excellon was a C$10 stock in 2018 with these properties, when gold and silver were just a fraction of today's prices. All this is great if you were on the receiving end of hundreds of millions of what I call free shares distributed outside the stock market and the assets Excellon lost, but a disaster for Excellon's retail shareholders.·17.2. · MuokattuI agree with much of your frustration – old shareholders have been severely diluted and the values in Mexico are practically lost. At the same time, I think the picture you paint is a bit too black and white and places almost everything on the current management. Some nuances: The share count has actually gone from around 34 million to over 300 million in recent years, so dilution is real. But the main part came from debt-for-equity swaps and equity issues to avoid bankruptcy – not just through options. Share-based compensation (options/RSU/DSU) is a small part of the total compared to what went to creditors and new investors. The problems in Mexico (Platosa/Evolución) and the large La-Antigua dispute were there long before Howarth became CEO in 2022. Platosa struggled with deep, wet mines and high costs for years, and the company took on expensive convertible loans already in 2020. Today's management inherited much of this mess. Platosa and Evolución are in reality gone for current shareholders, I agree with that. But it happened through insolvency in the Mexican subsidiaries – not just “free transfers” to friends, but as part of a rather brutal restructuring to prevent the top holding company from also going under. Kilgore and Silver City are not given away 100%, but a portion of future revenues (royalty + equity stake) has been relinquished to the bondholders. That weakens the upside, but the projects are still important assets in Excellon. If one looks forward instead of backward, the case is now much more concentrated. The company has gotten rid of a lot of old debt and the worst Mexico problems. The focus has shifted to the Mallay mine in Peru, which is a fully built underground mine with a 600 tpd plant. Historically, it produced around 1.3 M silver ounces per year under Buenaventura. Excellon's goal is to reach around 2–2.5 million silver equivalent ounces per year at Mallay, at low costs. That is actually more than Platosa delivered in its best years.In addition, they have Kilgore (gold) and Silver City (silver) as long-term projects that can create additional value if the gold and silver market remains strong. So yes, the history is ugly, and old management/financing has destroyed a lot of shareholder value. But as of today, you have a company without Mexico, with one restarting silver mine in Peru and a couple of exciting projects in reserve. Should the silver price really go to (and hold above) for example 100–120 USD/oz and Mallay function as planned, Excellon will be extremely leveraged to that – even if previous assets are gone and the share count is high. Whether one wants to own the stock today becomes more a question of whether one believes that management will actually get Mallay into stable production without yet another round of extreme dilution, and of course that silver/gold prices will be high enough, long enough, to provide a proper rerating. The destructions of the past are real, but that doesn't necessarily mean that today's case is uninteresting; it's just much riskier and much more leveraged than before.
- ·17.12.2025Could be nice upside here. Bought 40,000 shares at 35 cents
Yllä olevat kommentit ovat peräisin Nordnetin sosiaalisen verkoston Sharevillen käyttäjiltä, eikä niitä ole muokattu eikä Nordnet ole tarkastanut niitä etukäteen. Ne eivät tarkoita, että Nordnet tarjoaisi sijoitusneuvoja tai sijoitussuosituksia. Nordnet ei ota vastuuta kommenteista.
Tarjoustasot
TSX Venture Exchange
Määrä
Osto
-
Myynti
Määrä
-
Viimeisimmät kaupat
| Aika | Hinta | Määrä | Ostaja | Myyjä |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | - | - | - |
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Dataa ei löytynyt

