Sharesmagazine
 Home   Log In   Register   Our Services   My Account   Contact   Help 
 Stockwatch   Level 2   Portfolio   Charts   Share Price   Awards   Market Scan   Videos   Broker Notes   Director Deals   Traders' Room 
 Funds   Trades   Terminal   Alerts   Heatmaps   News   Indices   Forward Diary   Forex Prices   Shares Magazine   Investors' Room 
 CFDs   Shares   SIPPs   ISAs   Forex   ETFs   Comparison Tables   Spread Betting 
You are NOT currently logged in
Register now or login to post to this thread.

Taylor Wimpey (TW.)     

skinny - 26 Jun 2014 12:12

logo-taylor-wimpey.png?mh=77&mw=165

Link to old thread

Chart.aspx?Provider=EODIntra&Code=TW.&Size=1000&Skin=BlackBlue&Type=3&Scale=0&Cycle=DAY1&Span=YEAR1&OVER=MA(13);MA(50);MA(200)&IND=MACD(26,12,9);RSI(14)&Layout=2Line;Default;Price;HisDate&XCycle=&XFormat=




About us
We are one of the UK's largest residential developers. As a responsible developer we are committed to working with local people and communities.



Company Website

Financial calendar

Recent Broker notes

BarChart Indicators

Recent Market news

Taylor Wimpey Fundamentals (TW.)

cynic - 29 Jun 2016 21:22 - 218 of 372

unless you have time constraints, why do you need a limit level?

hangon - 30 Jun 2016 13:47 - 219 of 372

The country is still short of housing - and Builders haven't left these shores - so what's really changed? Wasn't this the MM having a laugh and shaking-the-tree? In panic the Remainers Sold - and the Leavers stood-still.

I have TW. from lower ( ~2008 ), and am not about to cash-in at these blip-depressed levels. It will come back . . . . . yield says so.... even if any Bonus is cut short-term ( because they can, etc. )

However, for some Europe-focussed businesses there might be some hostility to Orders in the next few Months . . . . but only id we let our product quality slip as any £/$ woes assist our Exports.

Where we will be depressed is in Food/Oil/Energy costs, which wholesalers will mark-up quickly so they don't get caught . . . and having a near-need we cannot argue. Expect Tesco-Shopping and their Petrol to rise maybe 10-15% ( er, but not their Profits ! ).

Fred1new - 30 Jun 2016 18:23 - 220 of 372

Have a look at "said" buys against said "sells" over last week. But consider balanced books.

If you are not short term trader, previous two posts appear sensible.

But, if timed it was a nice trade over last month.

CC - 30 Jun 2016 19:21 - 221 of 372

Ok - so more large buy trades in many of the closing auctions tonight.

mentor - 01 Jul 2016 15:25 - 222 of 372

137.10p +4.80 (+3.63%)

Taylor Wimpey plc 95.8% Potential Upside Indicated by Deutsche Bank

Taylor Wimpey plc using EPIC/TICKER code LON:TW had its stock rating noted as ‘Reiterates’ with the recommendation being set at ‘BUY’ today by analysts at Deutsche Bank. Taylor Wimpey plc are listed in the Consumer Goods sector within UK Main Market. Deutsche Bank have set their target price at 261 GBX on its stock. This is indicating the analyst believes there is a potential upside of 95.8% from today’s opening price of 133.3 GBX. Over the last 30 and 90 trading days the company share price has decreased 64.4 points and decreased 57.7 points respectively.

Taylor Wimpey plc LON:TW has a 50 day moving average of 185.07 GBX and the 200 Day Moving Average price is recorded at 189.06 GBX. The 52 week high for the stock is 211.9 GBX while the 52 week low for the stock is 109.44 GBX. There are currently 3,264,960,695 shares in issue with the average daily volume traded being 24,164,201. Market capitalisation for LON:TW is £4,272,540,538 GBP.

Taylor Wimpey plc is a national developer operating at a local level from over 24 regional businesses across the United Kingdom. The Company also has operations in Spain. Its segments include Housing United Kingdom and Housing Spain. The Housing United Kingdom segment includes North, Central and South West, and London and South East (including Central London) divisions.

hlyeo98 - 01 Jul 2016 16:06 - 223 of 372

This is nothing new as Deutsche has been calling TW. a BUY from the beginning of the year and they are holding a big chunk at a loss now after Brexit. They wouldn't call it a SELL, would they?

jimmy b - 01 Jul 2016 16:11 - 224 of 372

Bet you wish you had bought at the beginning of the week though hlyeo

hlyeo98 - 04 Jul 2016 13:18 - 225 of 372

Well, I'm not a short term dealer... I think we are still not out of the woods with the economy.

hlyeo98 - 04 Jul 2016 18:23 - 226 of 372

Builders are having a dead cat bounce last week.

mentor - 08 Jul 2016 12:22 - 227 of 372

132.20p +10p (+8.19%)

Another good day for the builders

CC - 08 Jul 2016 21:44 - 228 of 372

Should be an easy run back to 140p but I'm holding on for more. I'm happy to hold for a couple of years and see it go back in the 170-210 channel and collect the dividends along the road

colinspurr - 09 Jul 2016 10:21 - 229 of 372

I agree with CC's last comment. All house builders have been over sold in my opinion. For something in the same line but a little different have a look at INL. Down over 40% - stupid with their Fin Year end being 30 June, with Trading statement soon.

Fred1new - 09 Jul 2016 11:01 - 230 of 372

Are you holding too many builders?.

I am. 8-(

Claret Dragon - 09 Jul 2016 11:21 - 231 of 372

Never owned any of them.

Fred1new - 09 Jul 2016 11:36 - 232 of 372

Good and bad luck.

I bought back in 2009.

Also, expect to hold for next 6-12months plus.

Claret Dragon - 09 Jul 2016 12:11 - 233 of 372

Dump all of them. The fırst cut ıs the least painful.

There margıns wıll erode very quıckly.

Just my take.

mentor - 10 Jul 2016 23:49 - 234 of 372

Here we are again a nice trading range chart

TW%209%20JULYchart.png

mentor - 11 Jul 2016 23:00 - 235 of 372

Are dividend cuts inevitable for Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey? - By Motley Fool | Mon, 11th July 2016 - 15:29

Absolute dividend policies

Until recently, Taylor Wimpey (LSE:TW) and Persimmon (LSE:PSN) were two dividend growth darlings. Income investors flocked to them because of their rapidly growing dividend yields and low valuation multiples. Right now, everyone is worried that dividend cuts are inevitable.

But there's no real risk of dividend cuts in the short term. Both housebuilders have very strong cash balances and very little debt on their balance sheets. Both companies also have absolute dividend policies based on excess capital on their balance sheets rather than pegged to future earnings.

A dividend cut in the longer term may not be inevitable either. While investor demand in the commercial property sector has taken a very big hit, the residential market is quite different. Long-term fundamentals are better for the residential market because there remains a chronic housing shortage. The number of new houses being built remains well below their pre-recession highs, and that's unlikely to change any time soon.

Housebuilders can also do more to conserve cash and prioritise dividends by reducing investment in land banks, delaying new construction and cutting back on share repurchases. Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon already have very large strategic landbanks, with both companies having around six years of supply at current build rates. What's more, Taylor Wimpey and Persimmon's 20%-plus margins mean they can withstand a modest house price shock and remain very profitable.

For 2016, shares in Taylor Wimpey have a prospective dividend yield of 7.8%, while Persimmon's shares yield 7.3%.

mentor - 12 Jul 2016 08:47 - 236 of 372

148p +7.10p (+5.04%)

Well ahead once more after the overdone mark down

a very strong order book just now 150 v 100

mentor - 12 Jul 2016 09:23 - 237 of 372

Having gone well over 150p now the stock is now into the Limbo range 140 - 170p with support at 140p
Register now or login to post to this thread.