Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.
With credit to monevator.com...
"As well as being two major Eurovision powers, Ireland and Luxembourg are the domicile of choice for most London-listed ETFs.
Why? Well, for one thing they don’t menace UK investors for withholding tax.
So we’re laughing, right?
Definitely not.
Irish and Luxembourgian ETFs still pay withholding tax to the US on their underlying assets.
In other words, a London-listed S&P 500 ETF will pay 15% withholding tax to the US IRS before they pay the balance to you.
So your dividends are shorn of 15% as usual. But again the UK taxman cometh and this time you can’t claim 15% back. The ETF paid it, not you."
The above is from 2013 but I think still relevant.
Https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/investing/article-12959153/Scottish-Mortgage-chief-Tom-Slater-defends-giant-soared-like-rocket-plunged.html
https://archive.is/7wdGq
Sorry that I can't give a specific answer (as I avoided any issues by punting mine across to the ISA in advance)...
However, related pages still exist on the Aviva website.
If you enter the number of shares at https://www.aviva.com/investors/b-share-scheme-and-share-consolidation-calculator/
the page will expand to give calculations AND links to more specific pages.
HTH
Vodafone (VOD) is already one of the worst-performing telecoms stocks and Berenberg is concerned about the ‘achievability’ of 2023/24 guidance.
Analyst Carl Murdock-Smith retained his ‘hold’ recommendation and reduced the target price from 85p to 80p on the Citywire Elite Companies AAA-rated stock, which softened 0.9%, or 0.7p, to 78.2p yesterday.
Vodafone’s poor performance is ‘largely due to depressing full-year results in May, which included disappointing guidance, a poor performance in Germany and a frank assessment of Vodafone’s need to change, by new permanent chief executive Margherita Della Valle’.
Murdock-Smith said since May, the group has made ‘three major announcements, on M&A in the UK and Spain and a national roaming agreement with 1&1 in Germany, but to only muted reception’.
‘Looking ahead to the first half results on 14 November, we worry that the results may raise concerns about the achievability of 2023/24 guidance, while questions linger about longer-term German capex and dividend sustainability,’ he said.
(Source: Citywire)
"The Board has proposed a final dividend of 24.0 pence per share in respect of the year ended 31 March 2023, such dividend will be paid, subject to shareholder approval, on 26 July 2023 to shareholders on the register on 9 June 2023. The associated ex-dividend date is 8 June 2023. The dividend is to be paid from the Company's revenue account.
For shareholders who wish to receive their dividend in the form of shares, the Company's Dividend Reinvestment Plan (`DRIP'), administered by Link Group , will be available. The last day to elect for the DRIP is Wednesday, 5 July 2023.
Following this payment, the total dividends paid for the year will be 31.0 pence per share (2022: 26.5 pence per share)."
Seeing as the RNS feed still seems ropey here...
Dividend Declaration
The Board of Capital Gearing Trust P.l.c. today announced a proposed final ordinary dividend of 60p per share in respect of the year ended 31 March 2023.
Subject to shareholder approval at the Annual General Meeting to be held on 5 July 2023, the dividend will be paid on 10 July 2023 to shareholders on the register at the close of business on 2 June 2023. The ex-dividend date is 1 June 2023.
See also Trustnet - any portfolio/watchlist charting involving Shell is currently restricted to one day.
Yahoo Finance and Investing.com seem to have ported over "old RDSB" data/history so I assume there's no legal/ethical/regulatory block to doing so.