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BARC Barclays Plc

183.20
1.68 (0.93%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Barclays Plc LSE:BARC London Ordinary Share GB0031348658 ORD 25P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  1.68 0.93% 183.20 183.48 183.52 185.68 182.82 183.32 54,857,915 16:35:20
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Commercial Banks, Nec 25.38B 5.26B 0.3470 5.29 27.81B
Barclays Plc is listed in the Commercial Banks sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker BARC. The last closing price for Barclays was 181.52p. Over the last year, Barclays shares have traded in a share price range of 128.34p to 185.68p.

Barclays currently has 15,154,554,000 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Barclays is £27.81 billion. Barclays has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 5.29.

Barclays Share Discussion Threads

Showing 117551 to 117569 of 175400 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
10/6/2016
14:41
Regardless of Brexit, the market has been running on borrowed time for a while. Market valuations make no sense whatsoever - be prepared for a correction !
pennstreet
10/6/2016
14:35
Well done with 184p Clond. I hesitated over 183p at the start of the week considering the Brexit worry wouldn't fully rear its ugly head until next week and so missed a few grand. He who hesitates and all that, a hard lesson.

Anyway, the mood is not likely to change to the upside for more than a brief respite until the vote IMHO. Yellen and the FOMC aside next week, with perhaps some nice forward guidance for July rate hike, otherwise, hold on to your hats on the roller coaster ride south would seem logical for the financial sector.

Where is the entry point? Probably around 160p which was the lower end of the previous 160-180p range I suggested we'd break out from at the end of May. The churn is pretty certain and if other bad data comes out then lower is possible, but realistically who would buy long here - or anywhere - until the 24th?

It is a known event with plenty of downside forecast so most with sense will park their money as they are doing now and await the day. If we leave, I'd stay on the sidelines longer, if we remain it won't matter what the price I'd be buying. Of course the opening rise will be missed by us PIs but perhaps a canny order a couple of pence above the closing price on the 23rd could mitigate some of that lost opportunity? Unless you have a very good broker that is... ;)

Anyhow, that's how I see it this weekend. Oh, and if Engerland do well that allied to a remain vote is always good for shares and the economy I believe. Equally they might be knocked out by then as I've heard we rarely get out of the group stage at the Euros. Ironic the tournament coincided with us wanting nowt to do with them, eh?!

Topicel

topicel
10/6/2016
14:17
I am not sure that so much cash as reported has exited the UK recently as the forex markets look too stable. Next week may be interesting though?
alphorn
10/6/2016
14:07
OUT in caps by the way!
technohead
10/6/2016
13:14
Sold at 184p so what is the entry point Top ?
clond
10/6/2016
13:07
Just on the phone to Barclays customer service. Great service.
alphorn
10/6/2016
13:05
Clond, I hate to say it but 166p with the blood already on the market floor ten days ahead of the referendum is looking a bullish scenario!

Just look at Portside's remarks above and how the City is reacting to such views is all we need to know. A major sell-off to be in cash is clearly sensible and can only escalate. And if it is just a taster of what the market thinks without the reality of leave, then no-one wants to be invested in shares - other than gold related perhaps - if it comes to pass on June 24...

Topicel

topicel
10/6/2016
12:44
Big buying op at the end of the day ?

Can we see 166p ???

clond
10/6/2016
11:51
trade . so the liars in the stay camp say the uk will have to pay tariffs . and the eu will not trade with the uk on exports .

so if that is the case then we stop trading with the eu they will be the losers not the uk . facts are facts

portside1
10/6/2016
11:48
job loses then migrants will have to leave if they have no jobs
but we know Cameron as lied on the migrants out of work made to leave not one migrant who as no job as been sent home fact .

if we leave the eu is finished great news bring it on

portside1
10/6/2016
11:40
christh.

Keith Pilbeam is professor of international economics and finance at City Univer [..] Show

this man gets is pay from the eu via our taxes
the man is a nutter and a liar .
he is not that bright got is job by family ties not by skills

portside1
10/6/2016
11:36
the in campaign says workers rights would be protected
well just watch the eu news france on strike the French gov want to make it easier to sack employees for big companies .

portside1
10/6/2016
11:32
to any poster on here read and notice the facts
the EU IS DESTROYING THE UK
if we stay in the eu the UK will be a third rate country within 5 years .
and the uk will be a very poor country .

portside1
10/6/2016
11:30
"One thing this debate has highlighted more than ever is what a load of absolute
toss pots we have as MPs"

When fear works so well with the sheep-like general public, why would we expect them to use anything else?

We get the MPs we deserve.

Why would any of them present a balanced, thoughtful, rational argument when they're up against people who buy The Mail/Express/Times/Sun etc?

reimomo
10/6/2016
11:29
We are told that Britain’s net contribution to the EU budget, about 0.5pc of our GDP after the rebate (our gross contribution is much bigger; what we “get back” is EU payments to universities and interest groups as part of the EU’s subversion strategy) is the entry fee we must pay for “access” to the EU single market.

Why do numerous other countries, with equal access to the single market, receive substantial net payments from the EU – that is, from us and a few other countries?

Jean-Claude Juncker has said that France gets away with breaking the budgetary rules “because it’s France”. Britain is gleefully given the rough end of the stick by our partners “because it’s Britain”.

What access brings to Britain is the enormous cost of single market regulations imposed on all firms, not just the very small minority of exporters to the EU. It also brings higher prices in the shops because we are forced to apply the EU’s common external tariff to imports from third countries. Importantly, it brings a massive deficit with the EU on trade in goods and services – reducing the amount we can spend without borrowing from abroad by close to a massive 4pc of our GDP. But we do borrow.

The trade deficit with the EU is the biggest single contributor to Britain’s unsustainable current-account position.

We do not yet have much net debt to the rest of the world. But if the current account deficit continues at anything like its present rate it will not be long before we build up foreign debt that leaves us with four choices: default; an economic depression like that in Greece; substantial sterling depreciation; and total political submission to Germany in the hope of getting permanent transfers from that country. The last option is far-fetched beyond science fiction. The first and second are obviously unthinkable for a country such as Britain, at least if we restore control over our own affairs by leaving

portside1
10/6/2016
09:44
One fact is clear markets thrive on volatility.
alphorn
10/6/2016
09:40
So if we come out we sink basically is what you remainers are saying !!!!!!!!!

Problem is both sides are coming out with ridiculous arguments that are pure conjecture on their side. Nobody knows what will happen because it has never happened before.

What will be will be but we will survive if we come out , house prices may drop , mortgages may go up , unemployment may go up , the £ may drop and the stock market may slump.
All this has happened before in the recent past and we have survived.
They will all recover and markets will determine what levels they will be.

Both sides are just banking on the fear factor and the remain campaign is in the stronger position on that argument, people will fear what they may lose and then the unknown of what will happen if they lose it.

One thing this debate has highlighted more than ever is what a load of absolute
toss pots we have as MPs.

oohrogerpalmer
10/6/2016
09:31
THE GOV RULES STATE YOU CAN NOT COMMENT ARE PUSH YOUR VIEWS IF YOU HAVE SELF INTERESTS WHICH YOU BENEFIT .

SO WHY ARE 27 OF THE STAY CAMPAIGN NOT BEING INVESTIGATED CFOR CRIMINAL ACTIVITES

portside1
10/6/2016
09:29
you posters above must be non british the uk will be very good house prices would rise and we need rates to rise by at least 3% its killing pension funds
its now pointless to save ,
have noticed all those on tv backing stay all benefit from the eu .
the EU has been rotten to the low paid it is making them poorer big time

has for the two clowns major and blair they are a damn disgrace war mongers

Cameron or Osborne WILL NOT ADMIT THE COST OF THE EU TO UK TAX PAYERS HE WILL NOT GIVE OUT THE UK CONTRIBUTION FIGURES , WHY BECAUSE THEY ARE MORE THAN 350M A WEEK .

CAMERON AND IS CRONIES ARE JUST DAMN LIARS , BUT SO WOULD I IF I WAS GETTING THOUSANDS IN BENEFITS FROM THE EU
JUST LOOK AT THE LIST OF THE STAY CAMPAIGN

ALL MAKING FORTUNES OUT OF THE EU VIA THE UK TAX PAYERS THEY ARE NOT INTERESTED IN THE UK JUST THEIR OWN ENDS

JUST GIVE ONE THING THAT HELPS THE LOW PAID . NOTHING

VOTE OUT

CAMEROM AND IS CRONIES ARE JUST LIARS

portside1
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