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Lakcaj
From memory it did at one point exceed £4 as it was the go to defensive company when the market was in a period of correction. You also have to remember that up until the accounting scandal they were paying a healthy dividend in over 20 of those years.
If I had bought at 103p in 1995 and held throughout then as an investor I would be happy. By the way in 1995 I held Electronic Boutique which I originally bought at £0.002p and sold at £1.36p when they had evolved into GAME. I used the profits to pay off my mortgage and buy some HMV shares that went into administration not long after.
Taking the rough with the smooth. HMV at the time was paying a healthy dividend to attract investors to a struggling business. TSCO is one of the few ftse 100 companies that more than covers it's yield and seem to be in the process of selling off part of their retail businesses overseas that are struggling to either make a profit or indeed making a loss.
New CFO appointed which should see further cost cutting exercises and growth in the online business.
Last year analysts thought that the 4 large supermarkets will have to big start up costs in leasing or building super
hubs for online distribution but now concede supplying the demand is much more efficient supply customers straight from stock in the larger stores. This pandemic has convinced them this is the most efficient way of meeting the demand.
I’m just trying to put across in 1995 it was £1.03, in 2021 £2.27, a rise of £1.24 in 26 years.
Lakcaj
Agreed, Tesco is a boring share. It is meant to be. It is meant to hold its value, to grow as the business grows, to provide dividend income. It is not there to entertain you. That is what an Xbox or Playstation is for.
Yes I agree, Tesco is my long term share with good divis. My others are a quick buck and then move on. Will be interesting to see who’s shares rise or fall after 6-12 months. Could be quite a difficult time to invest. Still hoping Tesco hit £3.
Lakcaj
goinglarge has pretty much summed up TSCO but making the comparison to a company such as CINE is pointless. Every investor make a decision whether to buy or sell based on their financial position and personal circumstance.
My best return on investments over the years has been on the AIM but the excitement comes with the level of risk you take.
I agree. I only hold for the 5% potential dividend. Does not matter what they do the share price goes from £2.20 to £2.50. Not sure what it would take to move the shares on? Basically you are buying a fixed income for 10 yrs with no increase in profits likely
Sorry spelling error.. hyve.
Every time I look at this share I fall asleep, this is like one of those poor donkeys laden with bricks. Opening 25 fulfilment centres risky, extra staff, more .com vans, maintenance etc. Everyone will want to return to shops. I’ve got a hand in cineworld and have, at least a bit of excitement either way. Come on Tesco liven up !
Thanks Baysil. Great post. Funds will also be looking at covering their annuity costs to their investors and any increase due to the reduction in shares or indeed any increase overall in the yield will make TSCO very attractive to them.
Your not far wrong their my friend, mind you store manager doesn’t know who I am if I passed him in the shop “ mind you he’d have to raise his head out of his phone in his hands first’ alas two months have passed and my 30 years well done certificate still languishes in the in tray in the office,
Still after the call I made this week he will not be happy as a certain force will be paying them a visit if I’m right on what I’ve seen . ;-)
I’m just wondering if dead ratty is still where he collapsed 2weeks ago! I did complain to two senior team but still he has not moved poor thing ..
Summarised Dividend Research - 2020 Quote' FTSE 100 dividends are forecast to fall 24% (£18bn) in 2020, according to AJ Bell.
The investment platform’s Q3 Dividend Dashboard shows that 35 firms have cut dividends for 2020 with Shell, HSBC and BP topping the list. Nearly 500 companies listed on the London Stock Exchange have cancelled, cut, or suspended dividend payments since the start of the year.
The research, by GraniteShares, an ETF provider, highlights the dividend black hole that has emerged in 2020. The firm found that 493 companies between 1 January 2020 and 23 November 2020 have taken action on the dividend front to shore up balance sheets in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. No segment of the market has been immune, 51 FTSE 100 companies, 115 FTSE 250 companies, and 149 AIM-listed companies have cut, suspended or cancelled dividends in 2020.
UK equity income fund managers also caution that, while they expect 2021 to be a better year for income investors, dividends for the UK market as a whole are not going to return to 2019 levels.
Blake Hutchins, co-manager of the Trojan Income fund, notes dividends for the UK market in 2021 will be “lower in the future (compared to 2019 dividend levels), but at more sensible levels”. He expects the biggest dividend paying stocks to rebase their dividends (NOT TESCO - THE opposite 2bn less shares make up the divi base) , which in turn will result in dividends for the overall market being lower. NOT TESCO after a £5bn Spec Div + yield up.... Firstly, data from Winterflood to 9 November shows that 47 dividend announcements have been made by trusts since the end of March, in which trusts have either cut, suspended or cancelled income payments to shareholders.
Secondly, AIC data from last May showed that 249 investment companies were paying income. Therefore, the number of dividend cuts or suspensions by trusts equates to just under 20% of those that pay dividends. End Quote Tesco is a STANDOUT investment... So why not invest in Tesco, trusts, pension funds etc etc. DYOR IMO shares are held down, pre results - so II's can recover the 21% shares lost in the consolidation and reinvest cash they are not getting form Shell BP of HSBC, which will leave 2bn less for everyone else. GLA
So my boy, carry on. (Just got Zulu film in my mind sorry.)
Had a couple of days off.I was looking forward to logging on here to more drivel from Eccles04.Shame
leas - Spot On £ 2.50 (10 % upside) with the easter eggs and BBQ season rolling out on the Ailes sooner than you can wink an eyelid.
Thanks for the heads up on divi... I only recently bought in to tesco for the first time... See good growth at this price... So in for long term.
Freedom fighter
Finals is n a couple of weeks. No doubt some announcement then. Maybe a rise in the sp as we approach 14th April.
Outlook should be positive too, especially with staycations and house/garden parties increasing in popularity as we come out of lockdown.
ff
'' anyone know if there will be a final dividend ''
A final will be paid at the end of June or start of July.
I am hoping for a payment of at least 7p per share.
RW
''Alongside this are the Clubcard Prices offers, these aren't so visible but are very good''
Just had delivered 6 bottles of red wine £9 each but the clubcard offer at the moment is £6 a bottle. Got a further 25% discount because of their current offer if buying 6 bottles.
I went to one for the first time last week, as I'd read somewhere that their hot cross buns were the best. It was horrible. Dreary range of products poorly presented, little attempt by shoppers at social distancing, not entirely clean and massive slow queues at the check outs. Also a far less convenient location than the local Tesco or Sainsbury's. If saving a few p is so important that it trumps time, convenience, cleanliness and choice, then I can (just) see why people might go there, but I never will again - especially with 25% off most wines in Tesco this week, and a perfectly drinkable prosecco at under a fiver.
Do anyone know if there will be a final dividend and are there any dates provided... Can't see any info anywhere
Trb
I bet the management in your store are counting down the days until you leave.
Theredbarron
I think you are right in that the "in your face" offers have reduced. Partly this is because of the need to encourage people to buy more sensibly - don't buy two when you only need one, leave some for others, remember the pillaged shelves. The plus side is that this also results in higher margins. Alongside this are the Clubcard Prices offers, these aren't so visible but are very good.
Is this behemoth going to crack the 230 barrier?,
Q. Does anyone use Etouro ?
I’ve noticed the offers have become less over the pass months things that were always 50% every other month like fridge& Yazzoo milkshakes are now only 25%
Slices of meat have the same offer but less meat! Stealth inflation at its best .
it will be very interesting come results in a couple of weeks to see how they’ve done .
Great to see Leigh day win the latest step on equal pay as a result I’ve signed up another 5 employees on their behalf.
What drivel.
@eccles04, why does tesco need to compete with Aldi and Lidl, neither of which stock full range although Lidl is getting better these days. tesco could gain more customer from Sainsbury's. If it's not because of Argos I rarely would go into a Sainsbury's. Their share price is doing rather well though.
NP the old boys that ran T back in the 70's/80's were a bit more with it than the current lot. They had a good set of strategies which enabled them to make a lot of progress as we know. Occasionally one sees a minor change of pace but nothing significant. Online shopping is not an engine for growth because it just moves goods from the shop to the van without changing volume. I shop in Tesco, Lidl and Aldi all the time but Lidl gets the lion's share because their combination of quality/price ticks a lot of boxes.