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Tesco (TSCO)     

dai oldenrich - 01 May 2007 16:26

Tesco is one of the worlds leading international retailers. Since the company first the trading name of Tesco, in the mid 1920s, the group has expanded into different formats, different markets and different sectors. The UKs leading retailer Tesco was floated on the stock exchange in 1947 and in 1995 took over rival Sainsburys position as the UK number one. The principal activity of the group is food retailing, with over 2,000 stores worldwide. Tesco has a long term strategy for growth, based on four key parts: growth in the Core UK business, to expand by growing internationally, to be as strong in non-food as in food and to follow customers into new retailing services. The company launched a home shopping service in 2000, allowing customers to order their shopping online. Tesco is now expanding its convenience stores and overseas into areas such as Taiwan, Malaysia, Poland, the US and Ireland.

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=tsco&S

Upper graph = 12 month share price with 6 month moving average
Lower graph = 12 month volume (red line = volume average).

2517GEORGE - 12 Jan 2017 11:10 - 1607 of 1721

PE of 20+ means the update had to be good, the market seems unimpressed, disappointed even.
2517

dreamcatcher - 12 Jan 2017 11:50 - 1608 of 1721

Sales may be up, BUT WHAT ABOUT PROFIT ? Aldi and the likes are marching on with store openings. As said before Tesco cannot match Aldi with prices, due to overheads.
Just not geared for these price wars. Only going one way and that is huge price wars.

skinny - 12 Jan 2017 16:26 - 1609 of 1721

Tesco shares worth 17% more

Chris Carson - 12 Jan 2017 17:58 - 1610 of 1721

Went long this morning, spread bet @ 204.20p stop 194.20 initial target 220p.

skinny - 13 Jan 2017 08:16 - 1611 of 1721

There's nothing like a consensus!!

Barclays Capital Overweight 207.25 235.00 235.00 Reiterates

Goldman Sachs Sell 207.25 150.00 150.00 Reiterates

dreamcatcher - 16 Jan 2017 10:09 - 1612 of 1721

16 Jan
Kepler...
205.00
Hold

skinny - 16 Jan 2017 10:11 - 1613 of 1721

Really putting their neck on the block there!

dreamcatcher - 16 Jan 2017 10:24 - 1614 of 1721

I suppose they are saying all the news at the present time is priced in. :-))

Chris Carson - 16 Jan 2017 11:40 - 1615 of 1721

No sense of humour obviously :0)

dreamcatcher - 16 Jan 2017 11:41 - 1616 of 1721

You need one in this world Chris. lol

Chris Carson - 16 Jan 2017 11:44 - 1617 of 1721

Not kidding there dc :0)

skinny - 16 Jan 2017 11:44 - 1618 of 1721

At least one! :-)

Chris Carson - 17 Jan 2017 09:16 - 1619 of 1721

Expect to get stopped out today, clinging to 200p so far.

Chris Carson - 17 Jan 2017 16:40 - 1620 of 1721

Still clinging.

dreamcatcher - 17 Jan 2017 16:44 - 1621 of 1721

dreamcatcher - 20 Jan 2017 18:28 - 1622 of 1721

Market buzz -Food & drug retailers were also sent packing after Exane BNP downgraded its recommendations on shares of Tesco and Sainsbury.

The bank cut Tesco to 'underperform' from 'neutral' and pushed the target price down to 175p from 200p pointing to a high risk of de-rating given a building risk that inflation isn't fully passed through to the shopper, a tougher industry volume outlook and nothing in its recent consumer survey to prove volume growth is a given.

It cut Sainsbury to 'neutral' from 'outperform', keeping the price target at 255p.

"With our target price now a little below the current share price and a building risk cost inflation isn't passed through to the shopper smoothly, we cut our rating," it said.

Chris Carson - 21 Jan 2017 20:16 - 1623 of 1721

Mystery hedge fund targets Tesco as other short-sellers fold

Marion Dakers, financial services editor
21 JANUARY 2017 • 7:29PM
Tesco has become the target of a new large bet against its shares, going against the grain of many hedge funds that are cashing out their downbeat positions in British supermarkets.

Delores Holdings appeared on the register of major short positions for the first time ever this week, after establishing a bet against Tesco worth 0.7pc of the company, or around £114m at the current share price.

Little known is known about Delores, which is one of just four hedge funds shorting Tesco stock, joining established names Lone Pine, Marshall Wace and Pelham.
Tesco was once beset by short-sellers, who piled in to borrow stock as the share price plunged nearly a third in the early months of chief executive Dave Lewis’ tenure.

Short-sellers currently have positions worth about 4.1pc of Tesco, down from 7pc early last year, according to data from IHS Markit.

The shares have risen 30pc over the past year, buoyed by a return to like-for-like sales growth and progress on Mr Lewis’ cost-cutting programme.

Last week, the firm described its Christmas quarter as a “sustained, strong performance”, although the turnaround still has further to go, with no return to a dividend in sight.

Short positions are established by borrowing stock from a big investor before selling it on, in the hope of buying shares more cheaply when unwinding the trade.
After the financial crisis, the Financial Conduct Authority has required all short-sellers to disclose any trades larger than 0.5pc of the target company.

A number of funds have cashed in their bets against the supermarkets in recent months as the sector showed signs of renewed health. AQR and Discovery are among those to have dismantled their Tesco bets, while the Canadian Pension Plan and GLG have cleared their Sainsbury’s positions.

Some have closed their positions against fellow retailer Morrisons, which at one point had around a fifth of its stock on loan to short-sellers. The Bradford-based grocer’s surprise return to profit over the last few quarters has confounded the sceptics and left many short-sellers losing money on their trades.

Little is known about Delores, which is not registered at the UK Companies House. The name has also appeared on the short-selling list for the Spanish supermarket chain DIA.

The similarly-named Delores Limited, a small investment company owned by the Cooper insurance family, is not thought to be related. Tesco declined to comment.

dreamcatcher - 21 Jan 2017 20:48 - 1624 of 1721

Cannot see they are large enough on their own ? Food inflation is Tesco's greatest fear, do they absorb it (which they certainly cannot afford to do) or pass it on to the customer ( which is fine as long as all supermarkets and mainly the discounters also pass on the rises). Cannot see the German stores doing this freely. Due to far less overheads).
Delores Holdings may just see problems down the road and if others join in, well the game can soon change. Would think their will be an early board meeting called on Monday by Tesco. Quite a worry for Dave Lewis, with the sp already dropping.

Chris Carson - 21 Jan 2017 22:04 - 1625 of 1721

Doomed I Tell Ye Doomed Capt Manwareing!! :0)

dreamcatcher - 21 Jan 2017 22:06 - 1626 of 1721

Tesco or the shorters. :-))
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