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the business i hope will break even in the next few months overall and equity will then be sort from a firm base with which to expand. there is talk of manchester already, no new contracts announced which is disappointing but i am sure several being worked upon. we also know that if done incorrectly for for the wrong cost this can come back to haunt the business massively as per secuirty businesses. still a buy, great rise of the period, top sliced a small amount but majority still in.
another good day, some trace back and now steady climb, good to see the next update, unless management run this wrong the business should progress well. hitchinbrooke break even by march, once this is done everything is profitable and growth can continue.
Still under value, worth more and nhs is chaos
money going into health care, defensive stock against finance and oil
I wonder why? Another blue day and the rise keeps going, hope to hit the one pound sometime soon but at the same time retrace?
Good movement today and I can't quite believe no retrace. Think this has another 70 pence to go over the next few months. Nice.....
off the radar, not invested in heavily, not sure but the SP is marching on, i question whether it will stabilise and go backwards slightly. i learnt badly not to sell into a rising SP so i am hanging on. first investment now over 120% and the rest well in profit. the business needs to announce positive moves, saying that i believe the SP was too low anyway and did not reflect the current status. profitable business, another placing for expansion?? maybe, we shall see.
And the climb back to previous levels continues. No updates to the bad, deals must be hopefully progressing and a few months until hitchinbrooke breaks even. Suggest by Xmas rather than march, nhs continues to go all over the place. Suggest this business has a very long and potentially fruitful life, more work, more contracts and integration with the nhs. Limited shares also available, no new funding in near future unless for significant expansion and £1 easy target.
Starting to make a little head way now. Averaged down and bought at 29 so going well and good to double money in the next few weeks. No idea in the charts but seems to have good, steady upward momentum. Nothing reported but expect contract close out, new hospital arrangements and I believe better than expected results. Good share, future bright, busy and lots if cash involved, the nhs needs businesses like circle, that's a fact.
You still in?
An innovative patient safety initiative at Hinchingbrooke Hospital has won a top national award. The Stop the Line scheme - which enables members of staff to stop an operation or treatment if they believe the patient is at risk - won a Philip Baxendale excellence in employee ownership award. Liz Pointing, Circle director of nursing and allied health professionals, received the employee innovation award at a ceremony in Birmingham. Stop the Line, introduced a year ago, is credited with a near 50 per cent decrease in serious incidents and is now being rolled out to other hospitals run by Circle. Circle, which started running Hinchingbrooke nearly two years ago, is the first NHS partner organisation to win one of the awards which recognise the achievements of employee-owned organisations. Liz Pointing said: “Circle is unique in being co-owned and run by the doctors, nurses, porters and cleaners who work in our hospitals. That is why it is such a huge honour to be recognised for engaging our employees and harnessing their innovation to improve care.” Read more: http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/Huntingdon-St-Ives-St-Neots/Safety-initiative-wins-Hinchingbrooke-top-award-20131113153635.htm#ixzz2l2Xk5w00
Another week of good rising!! Does anyone else see mileage in this share? Seems like a quite silent riser, closer to the 1.20 predicted.
I suggest this share is now on a steady upward trend. I have always liked its working model and huge Amounts of potential business. I bought around 65 pence, leveraged another 5 k at 29 pence so break even is now close. I think this will meet the £120 expectation.
Starting to make some headway now on circle. Nhs in chaos equals circle business and success.
David Cameron will monitor a and e wards this winter. Total chaos and expenditure that will only get resolved with changes from private industry like circle. Only the beginning, price tag of £1.20 which is more than possible. Expect new contracts to be announced, new hospital in Manchester and break even across the while business. A very worth while, off the radar business.
has appointed the new CEO who comes from a US private background. When asked about whether more private business would be used within the NHS he stated that it is about paitent comfort and deliverables, we must challenge and learn from different ways. the new ceo accepts that things cannot stay the same and will change.
Only a question of months before break even of this whole business is achieved and further expansions are announced. What circle do works, governments are aware and this will really drive more projects and value. I still believe the price £1.2 is more than possible, a rights issue would count me in. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/heal-our-hospitals/10372902/Set-doctors-and-nurses-free-to-use-their-common-sense-as-Hinchingbrooke-Hospital-does.html
Well with the population living longer, western cultures changing so fast and obesity etc now going to become significant challenges, something obvious to see on a recent trip, I remain very positive that this stock will reach its 120 recommended mark soon. Health is more expensive and required in greater amounts, private businesses like circle will help support the biggest, required changes in the nhs since it started. This is a guaranteed increase in margins, growth etc.
Read the latest half year report. The amount if tendering will now increase massively. The nhs is going to franchise to private businesses, systems and methods need to change and circle will be in the middle of it. One by one it will gain new services. Take two years to balance books and then gain an income from the tender, a great chance and opp when third party finance for another hospital in Manchester is nearly also agreed. http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-24061844 The money will be massive, great gains by working different and integrating services which circle can do well.
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Clinical Commissioning Group today announced the 10 bidders that have passed the first stage of a contest to provide integrated older people’s services worth up to £800m. Among the bidders that have passed the “pre-qualification” stage of the controversial tender are outsourcing giant Serco, private healthcare provider Virgin Care, and United Health UK, a subsidiary of the US-based health and well-being company. Other bids going through to the second stage of the tender came from consortia of NHS and private sector providers. These include a consortium made up of Capita, Circle, Cambridgeshire Community Services Trust, and Oxford Health Foundation Trust; and another from Care UK, United Health, Lincolnshire Community Health Services Trust, and Norfolk Community Health and Care Trust. The full list, published on the website of the East of England strategic projects team this afternoon, was as follows: Albion Care Alliance Community Interest Company Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust with Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Capita with Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS Trust, Circle Partnership and Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust Care UK with Lincolnshire Community Health Services NHS Trusts, Norfolk Community Health & Care NHS Trust, and United Health. Interserve with Central Essex Community Services North Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust Northamptonshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust Serco United Health UK Virgin Care Ltd
No question, why not invest as the upside after the government has now chosen to privatise is huge. With capita in place to support the sky is the limit. Thousands of older patients across Cambridgeshire face being left worse off if increasing privatisation of the NHS continues, unions have claimed. Protesters took their campaign to a meeting of Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) at Huntingdon which is considering a bid for the provision of its adult and older people’s services in a contract which could be worth up to £1 billion. Potential contractors are expected to be named by the CCG at the end of the week but private health firm Circle, which won the controversial management of Hinchingbrooke Hospital, has confirmed it is bidding as part of a team involving Capita and the current provider CCS. Members of the unions GMB, Unison and Unite took part in the lobby, along with Huw Jones and Daniel Zeichner, prospective Labour parliamentary candidates for South East Cambridgeshire and Cambridge. Steve Sweeney, from the GMB and secretary of Huntingdonshire TUC, said: “This is a watershed moment in the NHS in Cambridgeshire. “If there is a decision that awards this contract to the private sector there will be no going back.” He said the change could leave elderly people needing care worse off. Mr Jones said: “My concern is that the people in this room are going to be salami slicing the NHS, privatising it slice by slice.” Mr Zeichner said: “The changes proposed by the CCG have drawn national attention, but there has been very limited information made available and very limited public debate. “There are many, very serious as yet unanswered questions which the CCG needs to answer.” But Dr Arnold Fertig, GP lead for the CCG’s older people’s programme, said improving care was a top priority: “The CCG’s over-riding objective is to improve outcomes and service quality for older people. “The current procurement will encourage existing and new providers to think about how they can better integrate services in order to keep people as well as possible.” He said: “Our pre-qualification stage of procurement closed at the end of July and those providers who have been successful in going forward to the next stage will be announced during the next week.”
A second NHS hospital could be taken over by a private company before the general election, it has emerged. Board papers published by the NHS Trust Development Authority reveal (pdf) that George Eliot hospital in Warwickshire, which serves 290,000 people, could be "franchised", with a private sector firm taking over its management. Last February Hinchingbrooke became the first NHS hospital to be privatised when it was handed over to Circle Health for 10 years. Health Service Journal reported that private firms such as Circle, Serco and Care UK were circling George Eliot, and other NHS trusts had expressed an interest in taking it over. The sell-off has been backed by the Treasury. According to its accounts, the 344-bed hospital had an income of £108m in 2011, which included an additional subsidy of £4m that is unlikely to be sustained in the future. The hospital has had the highest death rate in England and was one of the 11 trusts placed into special measures following the national review of mortality carried out by the health service's medical director, Sir Bruce Keogh. Labour's health spokesman, Andy Burnham, said: "Ministers have given the green light for the private sector to move into the NHS in the biggest way imaginable. NHS privatisation is now proceeding at a pace and scale never seen before. This prime minister has never been given the permission of the British public to put the NHS up for sale."
We’re currently recruiting – join us in making health care better We are currently looking for Registered Nurses, Health Care Assistants, Operating Theatre Practitioners, Clerical Staff and Medical Secretaries to fill a range of permanent, temporary and bank staff positions. Hinchingbrooke is no ordinary NHS hospital. We look different, feel different and act different. And, thanks to our unique partnership with Circle, we have all of the experience and expertise of our NHS heritage, backed up by the innovation and ambition of our Circle partners.
Hinchingbrooke Hospital. Hinchingbrooke Hospital is run privately by Circle Healthcare on behalf of the NHS. The hospital received 398 responses relating to care in the Accident and Emergency department in total. Of these responses, 320 patients said they were 'extremely likely' to recommend the hospital to family and friends. 66 others said they were 'likely to', while just one person said they were 'extremely unlikely to'. The hospital has therefore been ranked the fifth best in the country for Accident and Emergency services. Relating to inpatient care, 98% of the 462 patients surveyed at Hinchingbrooke said they would be either 'extremely likely' or 'likely' to recommend their treatment. Doctor Tom Hughes, Emergency Department Director at Hinchingbrooke, said: "It’s great news that patients have ranked Hinchingbrooke as one of the best A&Es in the country. Two years ago, our A&E was at serious risk of closure, and now we’re one of the highest performers in England. Our doctors and nurses work around the clock to make sure patients get the best possible experience when they come to hospital and it’s excellent news this has been recognised."
Good hopeful month in September for circle, next update not too far away so expect an improvement on current sp as business reaches towards break even and more business opps are announced. Great belief in this one, good 4 to 5 year value.