McGavock
- 11 Jan 2008 12:49
With an 8% yield these shares MUST be cheap. Does anyone out there really expect RBS to sut their div? Have put my shirt on it at 401.
spitfire43
- 13 Feb 2008 09:02
- 30 of 40
Lloyds are down to 411 this morning, I have a 390 entrance price for them which in these volatile markets is fairly realistic. Results are due 25th Feb, so I still have time to buy, and take advantage of a very nice dividend.
spitfire43
- 14 Feb 2008 10:23
- 31 of 40
Banks very weak this morning, they seem to be effected by negative sentiment to BB. and poor figures from UBS with another $12bn writedown, I also saw on Bloomberg thet the German central bank are actively rescuing one of there banks, can't remember the name of bank.
So hopefully moving towards my buy price for lloy and rbs.
mitzy
- 14 Feb 2008 13:45
- 32 of 40
We are at the pivotal point today it could go either way back to 400p or down to 300p.
mitzy
- 14 Feb 2008 17:03
- 33 of 40
halifax
- 14 Feb 2008 17:43
- 34 of 40
Spitfire LLOY results out on 22nd Feb not 25th as stated in your thread 30. Presumably chose a friday so directors may have a good lunch on POETS day!
XD on 5th March does one wait for the results before buying is the question?
RBS results out on 28th February by then the market will have probably made up its mind about the recession scare and whether the banks can maintain these mouthwatering yields.
Barclays results on tuesday will set the tone next week.
spitfire43
- 14 Feb 2008 18:15
- 35 of 40
Halifax thanks for the dates, would like to buy some rbs and lloy before the results, and top up after if all tooks good. Looks like the markets may have finished there rally now, and hopeful of an entrance price tomorrow.
spitfire43
- 15 Feb 2008 18:40
- 36 of 40
pleased to buy some lloy today, rbs didn't quite make my price, maybe next week. lloy seemed weaker than other banks today, not sure why. See article released today.
UK bank Lloyds TSB is expected to report a 4.7 pct increase in annual profit next Friday, helped by steady growth in its core retail arm and a relative lack of direct exposure to the credit squeeze.
Lloyds, the UK's fifth-biggest bank, is expected to report an underlying pretax profit of 3.89 bln stg for the year to Dec 31 2007, up from 3.71 bln stg the previous year, according to a consensus analyst forecast collected by the company.
Although Lloyds is less exposed to the credit crunch than some rivals due to its lack of a strong presence in investment banking, investors will be watching for any further write-down in debt-related assets on top of the 200 mln stg it announced in December.
The market is likely to scrutinise any comments from the bank on its fast-growing commercial property division, amid signs of a gathering slowdown in the UK commercial property market.
Investors will also be looking for Lloyds to deliver on guidance issued in December that its retail bad debts would be no higher than in 2006.
spitfire43
- 18 Feb 2008 12:29
- 37 of 40
It's amazing how market sentiment changes so quickly, Friday all doom and gloom with Financials leading market down, today Financials are all positive leading market up. The reason is an article in The Times saying barc, lloy will raise the dividends this week, this had already been widely anticipated since November.
I believe Banks will have to come clean this time, and I think they will, tomorrow will be very interesting for barc, I believe another 1.5bn w/o is anticipated (correct me is I'm wrong)
Remember 9th Nov when barc was temporary suspended because of wild speculation of 10bn w/o, which in the event turned out to be only 1.3bn. For what it's worth I believe US banks have talked upped the size of UK banks sub prime exposure, and would hope to see this confirmed tomorrow.
spitfire43
- 22 Feb 2008 08:16
- 38 of 40
good results from lloy with profits just slightly ahead of consensus, and only 280m write offs for whole of 2007. Even a rise in the dividend payment of 5%.
As dull as ditch water, but this is exactly what we need in these markets.
queen1
- 22 Feb 2008 09:20
- 39 of 40
Within the sector I'd suggest that LLOY is the safest place for your money right now. They've barely been touched by the credit crisis (relatively speaking) and the dividend is superb.
spitfire43
- 22 Feb 2008 15:41
- 40 of 40
LLOY is certainly safest place in sector, I was going to invest 50/50 between lloy and rbs, but have changed mind to 70/30 in favour of lloy. shame a didn't buy more than I did on Friday, but will keep buying on dips.