stockbunny
- 02 Aug 2005 14:51
Ok is there a mutter from the gutter going about today or what?
Shares are now consolidated, payout deadline gone, no official
news......??????
(scratches head......)
Any clues among us beautiful BB'ers this afternoon?
skinny
- 13 Jul 2012 11:56
- 156 of 224
And again 692.50p.
Lord Gnome
- 13 Jul 2012 21:07
- 157 of 224
Closing in on £7.00. Could be a good level for a trading sell? August divi already in the bag and the next ex-div is still almost five months away.
skinny
- 14 Jul 2012 10:38
- 158 of 224
I'm of a similar mind and will be putting limit sell orders in on NG,VOD,CNA and BT.
Off topic - I see NWS is going well again.
skinny
- 16 Jul 2012 07:13
- 159 of 224
Press Release
OFGEM CONSULTS ON £22 BILLION INVESTMENT PLANS TO UPGRADE BRITAIN'S GAS AND HIGH VOLTAGE ELECTRICITY NETWORKS
· Around £22 billion allocated to upgrade and renew Britain's gas and high voltage electricity networks. This will ensure that Britain's networks remain among the most reliable in the world
· Investment is integral to secure Britain's future energy supplies and is part of the £200 billion identified as part of Ofgem's Project Discovery regarding security of supply
· Ofgem's close scrutiny of companies' plans secures project investment and ensures value for consumers
Lord Gnome
- 16 Jul 2012 19:58
- 160 of 224
What's your view skinney? Are we going to get our £7 or do we sell now expecting to buy back a bit lower down?
dreamcatcher
- 16 Jul 2012 20:04
- 161 of 224
..National Grid must 'sing for its supper' says Ofgem, as it cuts spending plans by £5bn
By Emily Gosden | Telegraph – 18 minutes ag
NG.L 682.50 -10.50
......
A row has broken out between National Grid (LSE: NG.L - news) and Ofgem over plans to transform the UK’s electricity and gas networks, after the energy regulator disallowed £5bn of proposed spending.
National Grid accused Ofgem of failing to “appropriately incentivise the essential investments necessary to provide safe, reliable networks for the UK consumer”.
But a defiant Ofgem chief executive, Alistair Buchanan, said National Grid must “sing for its supper”, criticising it for not “doing its homework properly” on the plans.
National Grid had argued for total expenditure of £33.5bn — in 2009-10 prices — over the eight years from 2013.
But Ofgem said the company could only spend up to £28.9bn, insisting parts of the proposals were unnecessary and others must be delivered more efficiently. It set the cost of equity below the level National Grid had requested.
Even to pay for Ofgem’s cut-down expenditure proposals for National Grid, and other regional gas distribution companies, average annual household bills will still rise by £7 next year and £15 by 2021.
The cuts Ofgem imposed included slashing National Grid’s proposed spending on moving electricity cables underground, from £1.1bn to £100m, as its analysis of what consumers were willing to pay was “not good enough”.
A £813m request for 20 new compressors to direct the flow of gas in its network was cut to £120m after the Environment Agency told Ofgem the supposed level of need was “nonsense”, Mr Buchanan said.
Ofgem will dock National Grid Gas £900,000 a year as penalty for shortcomings in its plans.
Some £5bn worth of proposals would only be approved if National Grid proved they were necessary in due course.
If National Grid has been “honest” in its plans, then Ofgem was unlikely to change its proposals before they are finalised in December, Mr Buchanan said.
“If they don’t like what we give them [then], they should go to the Competition Commission,” he said. But if National Grid now provided new information that justified changes, it might be penalised for failing to disclose that sooner, he warned.
National Grid shares fell 10½ to 682½p as City analysts said the proposals from Ofgem were harsher than had been expected.
Analyst Angelos Anastasiou at Investec (Frankfurt: A0J32R - news) said: "While there is still much debate to be had ahead of the Final Proposals, we reiterate our view that National Grid will probably require a capital raise by about 2015, and that a dividend cut next year is also likely."
But analysts at Liberum Capital said they believed the reduction in capital expenditure meant National Grid "should be able to sustain [its] dividend", but that the reduction "knocks off value as every £1 invested is worth £1.15 and therefore... knocks off 20p/share from our [price target
skinny
- 16 Jul 2012 20:54
- 162 of 224
Obviously I wish I'd sold on Friday :-)
I will probably hold for now and see how the news is digested.
BTW - I prefer this take
Nomura remains a buyer of National Grid
skinny
- 17 Jul 2012 07:24
- 163 of 224
Morgan Stanley reiterates its Overweight stance TP reduced from 740p to 730p.
HARRYCAT
- 17 Jul 2012 08:30
- 164 of 224
Stan
- 17 Jul 2012 08:47
- 165 of 224
Looked at these but think that SVT are a better risk in this type of sector i.e. defensive at the moment.
skinny
- 19 Jul 2012 08:18
- 166 of 224
HSBC Upgrades to Overweight TP raised from 740.00 to 770.00
skinny
- 26 Jul 2012 09:57
- 167 of 224
Nicely off the 200 ma.
skinny
- 30 Jul 2012 07:49
- 168 of 224
skinny
- 08 Aug 2012 12:43
- 169 of 224
Liberum Capital Upgrades Buy Old Tp 685.00 new Tp 730.00
BAYLIS
- 08 Aug 2012 20:15
- 170 of 224
Thankyou "skinny" for all your help.
skinny
- 09 Aug 2012 08:10
- 171 of 224
You're welcome Baylis - I just post news/charts on shares that I follow/hold.
skinny
- 14 Aug 2012 08:04
- 172 of 224
New 2year+ highs this morning.
skinny
- 14 Aug 2012 11:25
- 173 of 224
£7.
skinny
- 10 Sep 2012 09:35
- 174 of 224
HSBC upgrades to Overweight Tp increased from 770p to 790p.
skinny
- 27 Sep 2012 08:26
- 175 of 224
Sparks fly again on National Grid amid takeover rumours
The powers that be in the City are adamant that there is a multi-billion-pound takeover bid being hatched in the utilities sector. Corporate financiers have apparently been busy burning the midnight oil for weeks in order to bring the deal to light before the end of the month.
All fingers yesterday were again pointed at National Grid. Shares of the operator of most of England’s energy pylons and pipelines touched 693p amid growing speculation that GE Capital, the financial services unit of US giant General Electric, and its advisors are working on a cash offer well north of £9 a share. The close was 2p easier at 691.5p.
The word is GE Capital wants to get its hands on National Grid’s American activities and would be a seller of its UK operations.