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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).

Chris Carson - 27 Jan 2017 07:43 - 1632 of 1721

Tesco shareholders will be delighted, not sure Booker shareholders will be.

mitzy - 27 Jan 2017 07:52 - 1633 of 1721

Surprised by Tesco buying them.

dreamcatcher - 30 Jan 2017 15:40 - 1634 of 1721

30 Jan Shore Capital N/A Hold
30 Jan Beaufort... 220.00 Hold
30 Jan Goldman Sachs 150.00 Sell
30 Jan HSBC 260.00 Buy
30 Jan Exane BNP... 180.00 Underperform
30 Jan Bryan Garnier 170.00 Sell
30 Jan Deutsche Bank N/A Hold

skinny - 30 Jan 2017 15:42 - 1635 of 1721

A consensus then - not!

dreamcatcher - 30 Jan 2017 15:46 - 1636 of 1721

I think the merger/takeover of booker was plan B as plan A is stumbling. Time will tell.
It has still got to be given the ok yet.

Stan - 30 Jan 2017 16:01 - 1637 of 1721

Surely the monopolies committee won't allow this merger.

dreamcatcher - 30 Jan 2017 16:04 - 1638 of 1721

50/50 Tesco will not be buying the food shops in the Booker group. If they get the ok, they will just be supplying them. Certainly going to gain massive clout in the buying department.

dreamcatcher - 30 Jan 2017 18:39 - 1639 of 1721

Proactive investor - The FTSE 100 ended down by 0.9% at 7,118.

The losers were led by Tesco (LON:TSCO) down 4.2% at 197.8p, giving up some of Friday's gains when the stock surged in the wake of news of its planned tie-up with food wholesaler Booker (LON:BOK).

Booker, which owns cash n carry outlets Makro also fell, by 3.5% to 204.86p in the FTSE 250 midcaps index.

Over the weekend, press reports suggested the deal faced a lengthy investigation from competition regulators.

dreamcatcher - 31 Jan 2017 17:39 - 1640 of 1721

31 Jan S&P Global 200.00 Sell

dreamcatcher - 01 Feb 2017 08:37 - 1641 of 1721

Is portside1 Tanker on ADFN? If so sounds like his investment in Tesco is hurting. Portside1 writes with an as instead of a has exactly the same as Tanker. He should not say buy, with no facts to hand.

skinny - 01 Feb 2017 08:40 - 1642 of 1721

Yes!

HARRYCAT - 01 Feb 2017 08:41 - 1643 of 1721

Which proves that you should make your own decisions when investing or trading and not be swayed by bulletin boards! Fine for swapping ideas but often rotten for reliable advice.

dreamcatcher - 01 Feb 2017 08:43 - 1644 of 1721

Exactly. :-))

dreamcatcher - 01 Feb 2017 08:46 - 1645 of 1721

I thought it was no big deal to him if the sp dropped he would just throw in another hundred grand, win, win as he said. As said before Tesco are desperate and nothing surprises.

dreamcatcher - 27 Feb 2017 17:25 - 1646 of 1721





Proactive investor -


Tesco to cut 1,700 deputy manager roles at Express convenience stores
Share
14:49 27 Feb 2017
Tesco will replace deputy managers at Express convenience stories with "shift leaders" as part of a major shake-up of the business

Tesco to axe deputy managers at Express stores
Tesco plc (LON:TSCO) plans to axe 1,700 of deputy managers at its Express convenience stores and replace them with lower paid “shift leaders” as part of the supermarket’s restructuring.
The UK supermarket announced the plans in a statement today, saying it will create 3,300 shift leader roles, resulting in a net increase of around 1,500 jobs.
Tesco said the deputy managers will start a 60-day consultation process and will be offered shift leader positions, alternative roles in its other stores or a redundancy.
The decision to replace deputy managers at 1,800 Express stores will result in an increase in the number of staff serving customers on the shop floor.
The news comes after Tesco last month proposed an overhaul of its distribution network that would involve cutting 500 jobs.
Its restructuring is trying to address a fierce pricing war between the UK’s so-called ‘big four’ supermarkets –Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons and Asda – as smaller discounters, including Lidl and Aldi, take over market share. Adding pressure on the sector, a weaker pound following the Brexit vote has pushed import costs higher.  
In an effort to improve its position in a highly competitive market, Tesco last month agreed a £3.7bn merger with food wholesaler Booker Group for £3.7bn. Booker is the UK’s largest cash and carry operator, supplying items to 700,000 convenience stores, grocers, pubs and restaurants.
Tesco said the deal would create the “UK’s leading food business” and expand its offering beyond its traditional food retail business.
The company reported a £162mln profit before tax in 2016, after suffering a £6.4bn loss a year earlier following a decline in sales and the discovery of a £326m accounting scandal.
Shares in Tesco dipped 0.55% to 188.95p in afternoon trading. 

dreamcatcher - 27 Feb 2017 17:28 - 1647 of 1721

Cutting staff = poor customer service = loss of customers = gain of customers for Lidl and Aldi.

ExecLine - 28 Feb 2017 14:07 - 1648 of 1721

The percentage of 'British Produce' sold by Lidl is astounding and much higher than its competitors.

Out of of all the supermarkets, Lidl should be the one most worthy of customer support from its support to the British farmers.

HARRYCAT - 28 Feb 2017 14:44 - 1649 of 1721

That's as maybe, but I have recently been into my local Lidl and won't be repeating the experience. Many of the products are copies of main brands and of very inferior taste & quality, imo. Bread, meat and vegetables seem to be reasonable, but most of the other products I tried were poor imitations.

dreamcatcher - 05 Mar 2017 10:36 - 1650 of 1721

Aldi boss insists 77% OF UK PRODUCTS ARE UK PRODUCTS

Balerboy - 06 Mar 2017 08:09 - 1651 of 1721

All they're meat products are supposed to come from a certain farm.......... you try and find it. It's a sham farm in name only.
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