roma
- 30 Mar 2004 15:49
- 43 of 57
Bush, do you think it will get that low? If it drops that low i'll buy some more. Last few weeks, 3.16/3.21/3.17/3.09/3.25/3.12/andlast week 3.05p
bush
- 30 Mar 2004 15:50
- 44 of 57
from memory it was about a month ago, sorry i'm being vague, but it was a 15 share so I was saving up for it! Then it suddenly went to about 320, now I'm just getting greedy. Hope this helps with whatever calculations you are doing!
roma
- 30 Mar 2004 16:08
- 45 of 57
Little woman, now you have me thinking,on the 24/01/2004 it was 16.15p and on the 13/02/2004 it was 3.16p so must have been some time in-between. Sorry not giving it any attention at that stage. so can't be certain of the date.
thestatusquo
- 30 Mar 2004 19:38
- 46 of 57
Hi Little woman,
Taking the divi on Legal & General tomorrow, and hoping price holds reasonably well. I like the defensive qualities of UK financials, as risk balancers to more adventurous growth stocks. Market looks like going sideways for a while, so yields plays are my current favourites. Growth stocks may take a breather.
I'm also using Investment Trusts to bank profits in, and use them as portfolio stabilisers to protect/preserve capital & overall return. I got my fingers burnt in 98-99 and vowed never again to ignore capital protection as part of my portfolio management!
I like FCIT (F&C IT), (BNKR) Bankers Investment trust, Perpetual Income Growth,
F & C Income growth (FIG). All very stable price wise & offering growing dividend yields in the 2-4% range. A better home than current money market/cash returns, for money not invested in equities.
On a 12 month view, I still really like LGEN & LLOY in financials, Galen(GAL) (Pharma), St. Modwen Properties(SMP) & Marks & Spencer (MKS) retail. A UK based bias for the year ahead might offer lower volatility in overall returns.
All IMHO.
TSQ.
thestatusquo
- 30 Mar 2004 19:43
- 47 of 57
I noted from an earlier post, comment about stocks on verge of FTSE 100 membership.
It would be interesting to look at say, the first 50 of the FTSE 250 to see which may be the most likely new entrants given their growth records.
I'm not an expert on the ins & outs of the index and the trigger points for entry ie. market caps etc., but a list might be good.
Anybody know best source of info?
TSQ
38
- 30 Mar 2004 20:15
- 48 of 57
LSE provides a download of all UK listed companies including market cap.
Don't know how frequently they update the values.
from the LSE home page click 'Companies' then scroll down to the excel spreadsheets.
'Have some info on index changes somewhere and if it falls to hand will let you know.
http://www.londonstockexchange.com/invrel/default.asp
38
- 30 Mar 2004 20:39
- 49 of 57
Entry to 100 = 90th or above in market cap.
Exit 100 = 111th or below
Entry to 250 = 325 or above
Exit 250 = 376 or below
Be fun to pull a forecast together (depending on your idea of fun).
When is the next shuffle ?
38
http://www.ftse.com/indices_marketdata/ground_rules/uk-series-ground-rules.pdf
thestatusquo
- 31 Mar 2004 16:22
- 50 of 57
Many thanks 38!
going to take a look.
TSQ.
38
- 02 Apr 2004 05:55
- 51 of 57
Hi TSQ,
I did the numbers of the FTSE 100 changes and the process is fairly straight forward. Sort the LSE list by cap and select the largest 150. Find the highest listed 250 and lowest 100 stock. Check the cap of the company, say, 10 higher than the highest 250 and ten lower than the lowest 100. Check the list by searching for all companies within these parameters on Company refs. (LSE list is two months old, Refs is weekly). Call that the opportunity set.
Sort by cap. All the 250 stocks at 90th or higher are promotion candidates and 100 stocks at 111 or below are demotion candidates.
At the last review Enterprise Inns went into the FTSE100 at 91, F&Col left at 114. (Why did Enterprise go in at 91 ? - no idea). New inclusions to the 250 went in at 155,166,264,283,322 and 324.
So predicting the 250 is more difficult just because of the number of different lines of stock that need to be entered into the system to make it work with any degree of certainty.
The next committe meeting takes place on Wednesday 9th of June.
I'm sure these forecasts are in a mag / paper some where.
Yours,
With insomnia,
38
webmeister
- 02 Apr 2004 06:48
- 52 of 57
LW...Although Shell had probs estimating future reserves, 330 was an important low last year, climbing to 420 with very bullish divergence..Though the price has been edging lower RSI has made higher lows so descent could be slowing!!
Full year net profit was up on the back of higher prices @ $11.7 billion against $9.28 billion previously...
Current investment however, will not pay off until 2006/07.. Perhaps the worst is now over!?!
thestatusquo
- 13 Apr 2004 19:24
- 56 of 57
Not a high yield play, but in valuation terms Galen Holdings (GAL), has lost a bit of ground recently making it a STRONG BUY in my book. Whilst scares persist over HRT drugs, Galen's pipeline encompasses a much wider field, including oral contraceptives, acne treatments, analgesics, antibiotics and novel drug delivery systems. The HRT scares continue to be the reason Galen trades at a discount to the sector.
Excellent management, increased US sales force and earnings forecast to rise significantly over next 2 years to 66pence and 89pence. Pricing Galen on a p/e of 18( a slight discount to the sector average), gives me price targets of 1200pence for 04, and 1600pence for 05.
Present price ~820pence, IMHO STRONG BUY.
TSQ.
38
- 13 Apr 2004 22:50
- 57 of 57
Hi LW:
7 prospects filtered out of the 350 based on a good covered divi, positive EPS growth rates and postive trend ROCE - but with no regard to current news, sentiment or technicals: BATS / GLH / DXNS / JLT / MTN / DCG / BWNG
Not in a position to discuss them at the mo'...
Regards