Look at the positives - exceptional order backlog, no debts to be hammered on interest rate rises, component supply issue is only temporary, going from 3 to 8 product releases/year, most orders are for new products. This is a jam tomorrow scenario and I'm back in! This is a great little share for an IHT portfolio, and next time a broker points that out it'll pop right back up.
Not that great, and it would appear they've fired their CEO.
Second that.
Even if you shared out all the wealth, it would be back to that situation in a couple of years.
to see some good results and then a rise in the SP! Almost unheard of!
Must get myself a chainsaw to celibrate....
Gone. Hopefully for ever...
Yep. EMG is up and down like the Assyrian Empire, all for no good reason. I'm a LTH and very nicely in the black on this one, so don't fret too much its gyrations. The yield is good, and there aren't many opportunities to invest in hedge fund managers as most of them are private equity. I think Taveram might have missed his chance (for now)
Yep, I'm a LTH and regulary build as part of my IHT portfolio. Anything under 75p is a reasonably safe bet on CNC. Obviously SP flaps around on the vagaries of the market but the company is solid IMHO.
Yes, Speedy bought Geasons. It would be very 'off the wall' for rugged computer maker to buy a construction training company!
a little top up for my IHT portfolio. SP battrerring might continue inbetween now and brexit or no brexit day, but LT happy to build at this price.
In bargain territory now. If it wasn't for Brexit, I'd top up now. I'll just wait a few days until PM TM gets the boot.
The 3 month chart looks weird. Must be a name for that? Pyramids on the P*ss, maybe.
I agree there is no ryme or reason to this share. It behaves like the Assyrian Empire independent of the news, results, market backgound etc. But hey, making money on shares is easy - buy them when they're cheap and sell them when they're expensive. If they didn't go up and down, we wouldn't be able to do that! EMG has paid for many a good holiday over the years. Just hold your nerve, patience is a virtue.
They're on the company website under investors. Some of the fall on the 12th was the share going exdiv with an interim div of .95p. Any buy under 75p is good. This share is also probably IHT free if you own them for 2 years. Quite a few of the II's will be investing for IHT portfolios.
Personally, I see TSCO gradually re-earning its status as a solid defensive stock, and that will be a good thing when brexit gets messy or when the US bull run turns bearish. The article is right that percentage improvements in earnings are not particularly relevent when coming from a low base, and they will tail off to something more normal, but if it can get back to a decent proportion of its earlier profitability, churn out a steady divi, it will earn its place back. At exactly what SP, I'm not sure. The recent retrace is probably temporary IMHO.
Oh come on, you have to demonstrate real talent first, a few Boom!'s, 10 bagger here!, etc.
I seem to remember (back in the Brainspark days) that we had an applicant for the post of Resident Ramper who would provide a continuous flow of 'you don't want to be out of this for the weekend' etc. Perhaps we should re-advertise for the position.
I agree with Herbie, its good to see the back of Wallmart - the proposed merger is their exit. it's not at all a sure thing that any merger will go ahead, but if it does it will be paid for by merging operations and closing stores - not Tesco stores. Reduction in supermarket capacity is a good thing, especially when its someone elses capacity! In the supermarket world the competition is fought at a local level between individual stores and, if in a given place, the main two happen to be an Asda and a Sainsbury, they might be forced to sell one to Morrison or Tesco as part of the merger deal with the competition authorites. The only potential downside for Tesco is that future streamlined operations might give Assburies the opportunity to cut prices, but that's a long way off, and after a lot of upheaval and disruption.
Yes. Solid results too. Might top up for this years ISA if there is a dip at any point. I doubt will see sub 75 for a while. Still a possible aquisition target as well.
Not much of a boom when you look at the DGB 5 year chart, where THRU came from... Question is whether as a 'one product' company they will get to a point where someone serious wants to acquire them for serious money. DGB was a typical, cocked-up acquisition spending spree story. Maybe they have found one diamond in the mountain of sh*t they bouight and paid too much for. Maybe not.