The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.
Good on anyone who has made multiples on this stock by holding tight. Even harder knowing when to bow out than it is knowing when to take a punt, especially when the so called experts warn against it. Has been the 5 years of the tech leaders.
May take a while and always dependent on success but if this works then the sky is the limit.
To the two of you.
Anyone know what this equates to ol old price scale?
He will use the oil price as a means to play politics. His advisors are lways looking out for an angle that he can use to gain leverage. Suddenly he talks of not wanting to hurt consumers. Hmmmmmm..... Probably better to bail while the slick settles. Ultimately Global growth will determine the oil price.
The inherent problem with share dealing. Knowing when to bail out. I did say. Maybe furrher rises but more likely dip at first. Not my share but nearly the same principle applies nearly all the time on heavy intraday uplifts.
Great boost for long term shareholders. Shows what innovation and being the leader in your field can bring. My little knowledge of the ebbs and flow of share price movement is sell on the hype and buy back on the inevitable dip.
5 or 6 years ago thus share was north of £4.00. Complete disintegration of this and so many retail valuations by share price. If it stays afloat and in business it is probably worth a punt as it is hard to believe it can go any lower.
Like many retail stocks this has been battered. Is it a question of he/she who dares wins or a race to the bottom?
I think that playing stocks is so risky. A friend told me once that once and if you make 10% bow out. He was and is so right. This company will fold or at best survive with few outlets I believe. Share price will halve within a fortnight because there is nothing to save it. Play the markets only with spare cash.
Any company that has a big presence, is getting through the current high street malaise relatively comfortably (at least on the face of it) is worth sticking with. No reason for this to not get to £5.00.
It is becoming more and more apparent that since the financial crash there has been a stocks and shares illusion for high street retailers in particular. The values of so many retail companies have fallen so sharply so quickly that it is not feasible that these very same companies were doing as well as elevated share prices suggested. On Carpetright however, I think it is a poor company in that it looks drab, only offers what it offers which is not good enough or competitive enough and it simply cannot stop the rot. From the remnants however of this high street retail blitz will come some serious winners.
I am no analyst and nor do I or I will I state knowledge of what dictates the rise and often inexplicable fall of shares but on this it is clear. Political intervention, based not on really caring but votes will continue to peg this share and rightly so. Investors know it will yield a certain amount but I see no movement above 1.80 - 1.90 unless and until a key minister places a protective shield over their needs. The current cold snap is proof positive as is the fact that when buying shares you need to trust the governance of a company, look at possible political bumps in the road and more than trusting instinct, know what is trendy and what has enduring quality. Nearly impossible.
If in weather like this this share barely moves then it tells you everything and more about the state the energy market is in for the big 5/6 companies. The only surprise is that so far (it's surely coming though) no politician has sought to score points about the need to ensure energy companies don't overcharge and prevent people from staying warm. The companies should be able to say it is a natural consequence of what they provide but they daren't. This sector has been at the centre of political machinations for so long that investors are rightly wary and that must mean continued lack of investment and technology which as we have seen leads to reductions in the workforces. I say set limits on tariffs, tell your public that energy companies need to make some profit and resist every single call to interfere, further regulate or probe.
Worrying report in the Sunday Telegraph today. You look at stocks and other than the recovered commodity shares and a few housebuilders, it is only tech companies that are doing well. Got to wonder if this company has the market and investor confidence to recover.
I think only when and if a major energy goes bust and with all the employment and supply issues that would undoubtedly bring. It is right to have some control on the energy companies but it is either a free market or it isn't. I am sure if we went back to the days when these previously government owned companies were asked to bid to go private, many would now say no thanks. We need to be careful in this country about bowing to the masses just for the sake of some votes.
I think the energy sector more than any other will continue to struggle until a politician actually talks of the choices people make. This stock has been battered ever since Corbyn talked of an energy cap, irrespective of the rights and wrongs of his position. The reaction on the share price amd the noises in the media has since made this a political tool and seen a 70% fall and with no real sign of that chaning Amazing rreally. Amazing when you think how estate agents have slipped way under the radar whilst supportinh a housing market that does nothing but create the biggest bubble of all time.
Less than 6 months ago this share after many years of being in the doldrums hit the headlines for positive reasons and long term investors thought well held. Not in a great place once again so badly in need of rehydration.