Charles Jillings, CEO of Utilico, energized by strong economic momentum across Latin America. Watch the video here.
"What Dillution ???? I rest my case that no one has a clue what they are talking about on these forums,, Please please ignore any gobble de gook that spout from the Idiots that post things like oohh the sp will go down to 6.30 and such crap..."
So said nicknaim on 15th July. Want to apologise for your abusive post? Funnily enough you now accept that this could go sub £6
nicknaim, Somewhere there is a village that's lost it's idiot. I suggest you get back there immediately, they miss you. What an obnoxious piece of cack you are. This is supposed to be a message board for Easyjet, not somewhere for you to vent your spleen. Grow up sonny.
Seems number of shares in issue on 26th June was 397,208,133
39,681,092 more shares were issued on that date
Now with this mornings announcement of another 19,860,046 shares, there are 456,749,631 in circulation.
Where next for the share price ??
Thanks Crocqman,
It's a lot clearer now, appreciate your help.
Cheers.
Don't know if anybody has read today's RNS?. If so, can anybody put this into laymans terms so that it could be more easily understood.
Would appreciate an explanation. Cheers.
This link appears to work.
https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-health-coronavirus-britain-gdp/wild-guesses-as-uk-economists-grapple-with-looming-gdp-plunge-idUKKBN23I0OL
Richard, Like you I hold a fair quantity of Lloyds shares via HL. I wrote 10 days ago requesting they vote my shares according to my wishes. I had to remind them again before they replied. Why can a large stockbroker like HL not bring in a system like Interactive Investor who send all the relevant information and voting forms through. I feel that all users of HL should make their feeling known on this issue. Am I correct in my belief that HL will simply block vote the huge number of shares held in Lloyds?, no doubt they won't vote as the smaller shareholders would wish. Seems the big boys stick together imho..
The genuine threat posed by this virus should not be underestimated.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-health/science-and-disease/coronavirus-news-uk-italy-china-south-korea-pandemic/
Posted today at 4.29pm
Coronavirus threatens the global economy with a 'sudden stop'
As well as spreading to Europe, the outbreak could spark a contractionary chain reaction that ends in a worldwide deflationary bust, writes Ambrose Evans-Pritchard:
Covid-19 is self-evidently beyond the point of meaningful containment. Virologists and infectious disease experts have known for three weeks that this was highly probable, and certainly not a mere tail-risk as suggested by equity market pricing. We are now there.
The global economy may be heading for some sort of "sudden stop" in supply chains, trade flows and tourism more akin to the outbreak of the First World War than the Lehman or dotcom crises.
The question is whether this will be a short-sharp episode followed by a V-shaped recovery in the second quarter (priced by stocks), or a slower elongated "U-shaped" recovery (priced by the dollar, Swiss franc, and safe haven bonds), or a Spanish cedilla (priced by almost nobody) as real fear of central bank impotence starts to take hold in the markets for the first time.
Read his analysis in full here.
mjga786. Seldom on these boards have I ever seen such absolutely childish garbage posted. If you cannot post anything sensible or even comprehensible, please don't bother. You've unfortunately left yourself open to total ridicule, so sad.
When can we look forward to any kind of uplift in this share price?, I'm fast becoming disillusioned.
You said "I know it says "chat", but is there any danger we can stick to the point of the board, which is Lloyds?
I know, I don't have to read it.
But god, I'd love some thoughts about the actual company and where it's going, as opposed to idle chit-chat."
Since then all you've done is post "chit-chat". Also, we are leaving the EU tonight, so your comment that we probably won't is totally misguided.
Not really much to be said about Lloyds that's not been posted by the experts and those more financial savvy than the rest of us, so just chill !!
Steptoe, I happen to know a lot about this company. I've held shares here for well over 3 years and made a tidy profit in 2017. Got out at the right time and then started to buy again after the big drops. Still hold a fair amount of shares at quite a low average.
So why would anybody care what you think with your unpleasant comments?.You probably have a massive loss on here Take off the rose tinted specs.
If the sp gets back to 1p I'll be more than happy.
I held shares in Magnolia Petroleum and Matra, both stuffed their shareholders and I can see the same happening here. Every day it drops more, the share graph says it all. None of the Directors prepared to put their own money into shares, says a hell of a lot about the confidence they have here. No faith in their own promises, simply trying to suck in those who will blindly follow. If somebody can come up with a definitive reason for the eternal optimism I read here, then I'll hold my hands up, but in the meantime I'll just continue to watch the share price collapse. If there is so much oil and magnificent prospects of getting it to market then the share price would be at least stable if not growing, but no... down down down it goes. This stinks.
Bad management and lack of "truthful" news will kill this company.
Cue the abuse.
TFE, that's true. Too many snitches dobbing comments back to admin, it's very sad. Whatever happened to freedom of speech and thought?. Those who are reporting are quite unpleasant individuals.
This message will self destruct in ........
I can understand Frankieabbots comment. The directors don't seem to offer a lot of encouragement to the long suffering share holders. The fact that none of them have bought any shares in the last 4 or 5 years says a lot to me. I've been a holder here for over 3 years and have witnessed the ups and down down downs.... The hopes of good news tomorrow never seems to materialise, but we all hold "just in case" of another huge rise like the one in July 2017.
Crystalball "Sold up - can see these tanking to the 40s again for no other reason than interest rates, brexit and the massive shorting of them."
I can't find any evidence of shorting on Lloyds, certainly nothing above 0.05%, where do you get your information from?