tobyboy
- 05 Jun 2007 16:10
anything under 7 cheap cheap cheap. good div. just paid. chart looks sick
dreamcatcher
- 06 Dec 2012 12:56
- 774 of 974
Sir Philip Green rumoured to be shopping for M&S
Thu 06 Dec 2012
LONDON (SHARECAST) - Speculation has surfaced that Sir Philip Green, who has sold a 25 per cent stake in his Topshop and Topman chain for 500m pounds to a US private equity outfit, is lining up a bid for Marks & Spencer, whose shares were up in midday trade.
Rik Thakrar, risk manager and senior dealer at Spread Co said: “It is no secret that Sir Philip has long coveted Marks & Spencer, and has wanted to bring his expertise to restore the blue-blooded retailer to former glories.
"Investors are clearly speculating that the Arcadia Chairman will use his newly acquired funds to launch a takeover of M&S. Despite shares being close to a one-month high, the Spread Co dealing desk has recorded a surge in long positions in M&S this morning.”
The buyer of Green’s stake in Topshop and Topman was US private equity group Leonard Green and Partners. It is also likely that any future bid for M&S will involve some form of private equity backing, given the current £6.3bn market cap of M&S.
Green’s last attempt to take over Marks & Spencer failed eight years ago. He offered £9.1bn in a hostile bid, which equated to 400p a share.
At 12.15 Marks & Spencer shares were up 3.3p at 397.6p.
halifax
- 04 Jan 2013 11:55
- 775 of 974
sp falling away again?
skinny
- 10 Jan 2013 07:51
- 776 of 974
Interim Management Statement
MARKS AND SPENCER GROUP PLC
QUARTER 3 2012/13 INTERIM MANAGEMENT STATEMENT
13 weeks to 29 DECEMBER 2012
· Group sales +0.6% *
· Total UK sales +0.3%:Food +2.7%; GM -2.2%
· Like for like UK sales -1.8%:Food +0.3%; GM -3.8%
· Multi-channel sales +10.8%
· International sales +4.1% *
skinny
- 10 Jan 2013 08:02
- 777 of 974
Just been filled @360 - hmmm.
On edit :- actually filled @356.91!
Haystack
- 10 Jan 2013 11:20
- 778 of 974
Does this have further to fall?
Chris Carson
- 10 Jan 2013 11:25
- 779 of 974
Is the Pope a Catholic? :O) Food is unbeatable IMO just a pity about the rest.
dreamcatcher
- 10 Jan 2013 13:51
- 781 of 974
May help if you are thinking of buying M&S
Should I buy shares in Marks & Spencer?
By Darshini Shah | Thu, 10/01/2013 - 11:43
After leaked results on Wednesday night, Marks and Spencer (MKS) on Thursday confirmed a bigger-than-expected drop in Christmas sales.
Total UK like-for-like sales declined 1.8%, driven by a 3.8% fall in general merchandise like-for-like sales, compared to a 0.3% rise in food like-for-like sales.
Bolland in trouble?
The results leave chief executive Marc Bolland facing difficult questions about the future of M&S, as well as his position.
Bolland joined M&S with much fanfare three years ago, after turning Morrison Supermarkets' (MRW) fortunes around. But has his reputation as a steady decision-maker, rather than a slasher and burner, got the better of him?
General merchandise: "Frumpy, boring and expensive"
The results indicate that M&S has lost sight of its current customers and doesn't know how to attract future customers.
The retailer's first half-profits, published in November, fell for the second year in a row after womenswear sales disappointed. At the time, Bolland promised the clothing ranges would become "much more stylish and more trend-driven".
Louise Cooper of CooperCity summed it up quite nicely when she called M&S's clothing range "frumpy, boring and expensive". She stated: "As a 42-year-old mother, I imagine I am their target customer, but they haven't dressed me in years. Their head of clothes merchandising should be sacked - racks and racks of clothes in warehouse like spaces.
"Go to the Kings Road Marks (as I did pre-Christmas) and it will show you why the company is suffering. This is prime piece of retail real estate surrounded by seriously wealthy consumers, in Chelsea. And yet the racks of clothes are squeezed into a tiny blank space that reminded me of shopping when I was a child in the 70s. Hideous."
Bethany Hocking, analyst at Investec, stressed M&S needs to continue to grow general merchandise online if it is to stem ongoing market-share losses, but also warned that this was a less profitable channel.
However, there is one positive: Bolland insisted that while sales were down, he had decided to protect the group's profit margins rather than embarking on major promotions during the key shopping period, when 7% less had been put on promotion. As a result, guidance for gross margins remained unchanged, at towards the top end of the zero to 25 basis-points range.
Customers want to look younger, so maybe Bolland should take the stores' offering younger. Or if the clothes have to be expensive, then they should be stylish. Whatever Bolland decides, what's clear is that the clothing line needs to be revamped.
Food: Split opinions
The positive growth like-for-like in food showed M&S's products on offer worked over Christmas.
But again, opinion seems divided. M&S is now being challenged by Waitrose at the quality end of the market. At the same time, an Interactive Investor colleague commented: "I wouldn't do my weekly shop [at M&S]. If I wanted a posh meal once a week, I'd eat out."
Cyclical issues
And the general retailer is not just facing structural issues. Cyclical factors are negatively impacting the retail sector given pessimistic consumers, declining real incomes and rising real prices.
M&S itself acknowledged that there would be difficult times ahead: "We expect the pressure on consumers' disposable incomes to continue in 2013," it said in its statement. "As a result we remain cautious about the outlook for the year ahead."
So, without a change in strategy, M&S risks being left in the lost middle ground, with the likes of John Lewis, Waitrose and Sainsbury's (SBRY) stealing market share from above in pricier products, and Associated British Foods' (ABF) Primark and lower-priced rivals such as Aldi and Tesco (TSCO) pinching share from value-conscious customers.
Internal problems?
To add to the challenges, Philip Dorgan, analyst at Panmure Gordon, said the early release of the results fuelled speculation about internal battles at the retailer.
In fact, former chairman Paul Myners openly criticised Bolland in 2012, hinting at a divided board at M&S. However, at the time, Bolland played down the prospect of a fresh bout of the internal strife that has plagued M&S in the past.
'Sell' - Investec
"We had been (slightly) warming to the stock, but the statement demonstrates the size of the challenge ahead to stem the declines at M&S," commented Hocking.
"There remains an awful lot to do to stop further profit deterioration," she added, reiterating her 'sell' recommendation.
"Attractive at 340p"
But for the punters, Philip Dorgan, analyst at Panmure Gordon, sees 340p as a buying level for the stock. While he continued to rate the share a 'hold', he commented that private equity interest could be piqued again.
The stock is trading on a 2013 price/earnings ratio of between 11 and 12 times.
Haystack
- 10 Jan 2013 16:00
- 782 of 974
They seem to have lost their clothes market without much chance of getting it back. Maybe Green could buy up the non food business and let M & S become another supermarket like Waitrose. Surely this has to continue its downtrend.
skinny
- 10 Jan 2013 16:08
- 783 of 974
Just closed @367.2 +10.31.
Chris Carson
- 10 Jan 2013 16:12
- 784 of 974
Good one skinny :O)
dreamcatcher
- 10 Jan 2013 16:17
- 785 of 974
Well done skinny. I did like their sale in our local marks at christmas. Looked at a shirt I liked, looked at the sizes XXL and small, lol. I find if they have the size you want there will only be one, never two or more. Very frustrating.
skinny
- 10 Jan 2013 16:20
- 786 of 974
Cheers chaps - I bought a jumper in M&S bluewater on Sunday - I call it 'coral' others call it pink :-)
Dil
- 11 Jan 2013 14:15
- 787 of 974
Wot's your boyfriend call it ?
:-)
skinny
- 11 Jan 2013 14:24
- 788 of 974
Oi - it takes a real man to wear pink! :-)
dreamcatcher
- 13 Jan 2013 08:49
- 789 of 974
Bolland spurned by M&S women
By Graham Ruddick | Telegraph – 1 hour 43 minutes ago.. .
The retailer’s CEO is under pressure after falling clothing sales and difficult Christmas trading
By Wednesday afternoon in Marks & Spencer ’s smart Paddington headquarters, Marc Bolland, chief executive, Alan Stewart, its chief financial officer, and a collection of media and investor relations advisors had put the finishing touches to the 129-year-old retailer’s Christmas trading update.
The sales figures were worse than expected much worse in clothing but Bolland was confident that the company’s message that it had avoided heavy sales promotions during the period would settle the nerves of the City.
However, then came one of those chaotic moments that can say as much about the business broadly as they do about the event itself.
At 6.30pm, M&S was informed by Sky News that it planned to run a story that the retailer’s Christmas performance had not been good. It had figures that were uncomfortably close to the truth. Bolland and his team knew they were facing a leak. After consulting lawyers and advisors, they decided to publish the update early.
At 7.51pm, M&S sent the full trading update out on email to the media, investors and analysts as well as publishing the figures on its website.
Thirty minutes later, Bolland and Stewart were hosting a conference call to talk through the results.
“First I want to apologise for the unusual timing of this call,” Bolland started. “I have in my script 'good morning’, but I will say 'good evening’.”
The source of the leak remains unknown. However, the impression that has been left from the events of Wednesday night is that all is not well at M&S. This sort of thing simply does not happen to a blue chip company, let alone M&S, the country’s biggest clothing retailer.
On top of the leak now being investigated by chairman Robert Swannell, were poor trading figures. The 0.3pc rise in like-for-like food sales was below expectations, but this can be accounted for by the fact M&S did not see inflation in food prices and did not include December 30 and 31 in its numbers, which attract strong New Year’s Eve sales.
However, the 3.8pc drop in clothing sales was worse than even the most pessimistic predictions from analysts.
Almost three years into the job, Bolland now looks under more pressure than ever.
When he took over, the former Wm Morrison’s chief executive launched a three-year plan to transform M&S into a modern, multi-national and multi-channel retailer.
He has taken M&S back into Paris, expanded in China, and is building a new website for the company.
However, as M&S enters the final stages of that plan, the company’s vital womenswear range has shown no sign of improvement.
Bolland has said that management changes he has made to the clothing division including the departure of Kate Bostock and the arrival of former Debenhams (Other OTC: DBHSY - news) boss Belinda Earl as style director will not have an impact on the company’s products until the autumn and winter ranges of 2013 and 2014.
The early signs from the City are that Bolland will be given next Christmas to prove himself, but there is no doubt that shareholders and staff are becoming concerned.
After the debacle of the leaked results, Christmas 2013 looks make or break for Bolland. “We recognise that M&S is under some pressure,” said one top ten shareholder. “We’re inclined to give Bolland some time, perhaps six to 12 months, to get it right.
“One of the key issues is womenswear. Clearly he has a relatively new team there, and we want to give him to time to bed-in changes. So we’re not pushing for any change, not yet in any case.”
The early signs as to whether Bolland and the new team can deliver that improvement in general merchandise are mixed.
He believes it would “dreaming in the daylight” to believe that Earl and John Dixon, moved from head of food to lead general merchandise, could already have turned around M&S’s womens clothing.
But he insists the company is on track to meet his goal of transforming it from a “traditional UK retailer” to an “international multi-channel retailer” and, crucially, that the management team is behind him.
“One thing that is good about the last three years is we have had a very aligned board and strongly aligned management team. You haven’t seen mud and dirt thrown around,” Bolland said, adding that there is “nothing wrong” with M&S.
The company’s share price would suggest that investors do believe Bolland’s plan will be successful. Despite the decline in Christmas sales described as “dreadful” by one analyst shares in M&S are up 1pc since the figures were released.
The City welcomed the fact that Bolland and Stewart had protected margins during the Christmas period as Bolland expected they would.
Clive Black, analyst at Shore Capital, has a “Buy” rating on M&S. “We thought long and hard about it and the glass is still half-full on M&S as an investment case. It is not time to empty the glass,” he said.
According to Black, once Bolland’s three-year investment plan is complete, capital expenditure should fall and “an already robust balance sheet can become stronger”. That could open the door to an increased dividend and share buybacks.
However, despite the prospect of improved returns, Black believes the future will still hinge on womenswear: “If I was Mark Bolland I would pray to the clothing gods that they get autumn/winter right.”
However, there are signals that any improvement in sales may not come easily.
On Thursday, in news that barely registered amid the chaos of the night before, Carole Boyes-Weston, head of design for the womenswear labels Per Una and Limited Collection, left the company after only nine months.
There are also murmurs about Bolland’s management style and whether he has been decisive enough on changing the general merchandise division. For example, analysts have suggested that he should focus on making M&S’s individual brands, like Autograph, more distinctive.
A rival retail leader said: “He comes across as unsure and needy. It looks like he is moving the deckchairs around on the Titantic. There has been no bold decisions.”
A second top ten shareholder said it is “watching closely” Bolland’s international growth plans because of fears that M&S is diverting much needed capital expenditure from the UK to abroad.
“Should the business be expanding internationally when they’ve got problems at home?” the shareholder said. “The key thing is to stabilise the UK business.
“If you think about M&S, it’s taking more cost out. But if you take too many staff out the stores end up impacting your own trading performance. That’s what happened at Tesco (Other OTC: TSCDY - news) .
“You’ve got to worry if they’re taking out UK costs and losing share, should they be interested in rolling out internationally?”
The shareholder said they had told Bolland about their concerns: “We’ve questioned the lack of UK capex [capital expenditure] uplift, and whether he’s damaging the UK franchise at the cost of international expansion.”
The comparison to Tesco is a concerning one for Bolland because last Christmas the supermarket group was forced to issue a profits warning, its first in decades. But it will also remind Bolland of how quickly fortunes can change in the retail industry.
Philip Clarke, the Tesco (LSE: TSCO.L - news) chief executive, is now a favourite of the sector after delivering a 1.8pc uplift in like-for-like sales just a year on from the profits warning.
Like Clarke, Bolland recognises the main problem behind the company’s struggles. He will now be hoping that he can repeat the Tesco man’s recovery in sales too.
skinny
- 13 Jan 2013 13:53
- 790 of 974
Are you being served? Not by M&S
There was an eerie quiet on the upper floor of Marks & Spencer’s Covent Garden store at 9am on Friday. Between racks of purple pyjamas and discounted underwear, Sylvia Coxhill, a pensioner from Purley, Surrey, wandered like a heron searching for a fat fish in the reeds.
“It seems they are catering more for people my age nowadays,” the 68-year-old said. “The clothes are comfortable, I know what I’m getting. And I like the price cuts this time of year.”
Downstairs, the food section was busier. Nelle Andrew, 28, and Anna Jean, 28, work at a literary agency nearby. “The ready-meal range is great, and the dips are perfect for a dinner party,” said Andrew. And the clothes? “I’ve never been upstairs. I’ve never asked a friend where her top is from and heard ‘M&S’. And you wouldn’t want to admit it if it was".
dreamcatcher
- 14 Jan 2013 14:43
- 791 of 974
Investor fires warning shot at Marks and Spencer boss
By Michael Millar
Mon 14 Jan
LONDON (SHARECAST) - One of the biggest investors in Marks and Spencer has warned that boss Marc Boland has until the autumn to sort the company out before investors lose patience.
The company recently reported that sales of general merchandise, which includes clothing, fell 3.8% fall in its last quarter.
David Cumming, head of UK Equities at Standard Life Investments, the group's 10th largest shareholder with 1.6% of its stock, said Bolland had between six and nine months to sort out clothing if he wanted to keep his job.
He told the BBC's Today Programme M&S had made progress in areas like logistics but the key issue was general merchandise, in particular clothing.
'We're not comfortable with the progress here - they have made management changes but they are a bit late," Cumming said.
"[Boland] has to get his autumn range right, that's when the management changes that he's made will have an impact.
"I think the market will wait to see how that range, which doesn't really come through until six to nine months, is going to work. If that is poor then he'll be under a lot of pressure," he said.
Cummings said the market was willing to wait because the M&S' difficulties were already priced into its shares and the group could still be vulnerable to a bid from private equity.
"So us and the market will wait but he is under pressure," Cumming warned.
goldfinger
- 14 Mar 2013 16:23
- 792 of 974
Gone long here. Chart looks fantastic for a trade range med term trade. Both horizontal and vertical trading ranges, bouncing from support.