Ryan Mee, CEO of Fulcrum Metals, reviews FY23 and progress on the Gold Tailings Hub in Canada. Watch the video here.
Fleccy,
I wish you the best of luck.
What do you consider to be a fair price.
All I can see is that BT continues to go down and although the market has gone up BT has lost another 1p since my comment just 4 hours ago.
Fleccy,
If i was to have reinvested my dividends in the beginning of 2019 I would have paid 240 pence a share. So for example if I had bought then 1000 shares I would have paid £2400. I would have received a total of £154 as dividends. However my shares would only be worth £1895 leaving me with a loss of £300.
Fleccy,
I do not consider myself to be an expert in retail investing. However anyone who invested in BT either for the short, medium or long term in the last 5 years is losing a lot money. And if they had been foolish enough to reinvest the dividend it would have been throwing good after bad. If I had a proper understanding for retail investing I would probably never invested in BT. The reason why BT has a high dividend return is only because its price has fallen so drastically.
You are quite right. Communication has never been a strong point of BT. They treat their shareholders with contempt.
BT has never bothered to explain why the share price has plunged over the last 4 years. I was rather referring to all the pearls of wisdom and genius that we find on this board.
All BT's lame excuses like Corbyn and OFCOM are disappearing but the share price is still falling. Can anyone explain why the whole telecom sector is rising and BT is tanking. Even Vodafone with its massive debt mountain rose over 3% today.
Fleccy,
The big players!!! Can we please stop these conspiracy theories. Lets blame everyone else for our very poor judgment. This has been now going on for over 4 years. Lets just be honest and admit that we all made a massive mistake in ever investing in BT. Even if BT turns around for those who have been invested in BT for a long time it will be very unlikely that they will ever recover their losses.
Marcus,
I hope you are right. Exactly one year ago for those exact reasons many analysts chose BT as their share of the year. Well the market rose 12% and BT were down over 20%. I guess there must come a time when BT will turn around lets hope that it will happen in the coming decade.
Corbyn was a factor people were blaming BT's poor performance on his plans to nationalise openreach. My point was that all shares went sharply up the days following the elections including BT which went up to 207. Most of them have held on to their gains but of course not BT who have lost over 7%. Most shares are near there all time highs but not BT which has been on a continuous downward spiral for over 4 years (from £5 to £1.92 and has lost more then 20% over the last 12 months. The only comfort we have is that BT can not go down by a further £3.10 .
Heavy,
I am a long time Labour supporter and not looking forward to four more years of Boris. However I am very much relying that Corbyn does not get his message across. To put it frankly Labour has no chance if Corbyn successfully gets his message across.
Velo,
I have seen valuations of 15 billion for openreach. This works out at around £1.50 per share. The rest of BT must be worth well over £1.50. BT acquired EE for 12.5 billion. Lets give it worst scenario that Corbyn only pays £10 billion for openreach. We would still own the rest of the company .