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BKG Berkeley Group Holdings (the) Plc

4,758.00
-4.00 (-0.08%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Berkeley Group Holdings (the) Plc LSE:BKG London Ordinary Share GB00BLJNXL82 ORD 5.4141P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -4.00 -0.08% 4,758.00 4,763.00 4,766.00 4,787.00 4,743.00 4,774.00 202,558 16:35:24
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Operative Builders 2.55B 465.7M 4.3893 10.86 5.06B
Berkeley Group Holdings (the) Plc is listed in the Operative Builders sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker BKG. The last closing price for Berkeley was 4,762p. Over the last year, Berkeley shares have traded in a share price range of 3,634.00p to 4,972.00p.

Berkeley currently has 106,098,643 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Berkeley is £5.06 billion. Berkeley has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 10.86.

Berkeley Share Discussion Threads

Showing 2426 to 2447 of 3525 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  105  104  103  102  101  100  99  98  97  96  95  94  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
12/11/2016
09:39
rock star - interesting article . Sorry to be thick but I can not understand about
passporting rights as surely that only affects individuals - see text below .

International businesses could shift as many as 100,000 jobs away from London within two years of the U.K. officially starting a process to leave the EU because they risk losing their passporting rights, Jefferies Group LLC analyst Mike Prew said in June. That could cause demand for office space to fall, hurting rents and prices

arja
11/11/2016
08:19
Doesn't read well.
rock star
10/11/2016
19:00
@Anley. Short answer is no. Directors shares received a compensation are usually granted free or at a discount, BUT locked in for lengthy vesting periods on that discount. At least 3 years, often 5, sometimes 10. The more senior the staff the longer the wait usually is. Stops them selling up en-bloc the day they leave.

@Jock, according to my records [ie E+EO], 1/2yr results to 31/Oct-16 due to be released on 2/Dec-16

phoenixw2
10/11/2016
17:30
When is the trading update due here? Thanks.
jockthescot
10/11/2016
17:04
wish I had time to focus on building stocks such as this one with often a wide day trading range ! But only eyes for the miners at present as they rocket !
arja
10/11/2016
16:06
Main board director to retire so couuld his 1m shares be on sale?

Also......In August, National Grid's Property business completed the first sale of a site, at Battersea, to the St William joint venture.

anley
09/11/2016
17:58
Most interesting news for this sector, in case you didn't see it earlier:

Barratt Developments Plc is close to completing the sale of about 300 London apartments to U.S. investor Greystar Real Estate Partners LLC, according to a person with knowledge of the plan.

The apartments are spread across four developments being undertaken by the U.K.’s third-largest housebuilder and some have yet to be built, said the person, asking not to be identified because the plan is not public. The homes will be valued at about 250 million pounds ($310 million) when completed and will be offered for rent by Greystar, the person said.

Spokesmen for Barratt and Charleston, South Carolina-based Greystar declined to comment.
Developers in central London are turning to bulk sales as demand for luxury apartments wanes amid higher taxes and increased supply. The number of homes under construction in the center of the capital that remain unsold will reach a record high this year, according to a report by Molior London seen by Bloomberg News.

The Barratt portfolio sale includes homes in the Aldgate, Nine Elms, Fulham and Hendon districts, Estates Gazette reported in March. Nine Elms, where developers plan to construct 20,000 homes, accounts for more than one third of the total.

raffles the gentleman thug
07/11/2016
00:55
anley,Fair comment.
garycook
06/11/2016
10:43
and keep to the point which is BKG.........and what could and is happening.....
anley
06/11/2016
01:32
By buying up multiple places on tax relieved leveraged mortgages?
cancun tango
06/11/2016
01:30
I realise this is all a little off thread to bkg, but hopefully relevant. Why do boomers see only the sense of entitlement from millenials who only want the same reasonably priced security of tenure that they had. Why deny that generation a home if their own by buying
cancun tango
05/11/2016
10:23
I remember the times :) As I recall I had to save a 10% depo, I don't think there was availability higher than 90% LTV, and yes it took a few years of frugality. Perhaps some remember the times. If you wanted a mortgage from a building society it was expected that you would have been a saver with them already, for a few years, and with a stable/reliable record. After all such a mortgage wasn't simply a loan, you were becoming a member of their society akin to being a shareholder. But that was 'how it had always been'.

I think one of the larger changes since then is that 'higher-education for all' leads to accumulating debt, rather than working, saving, and gaining career experience. It's a double if not triple-whammy. And unless the degree earned gives career leverage far greater than that lost whilst studying... what was the benefit of it?

Anyway, perhaps I'm veering OT so I'll cease and desist now. Don't want to start 'Oh aye, well we used to live in a hole in t'road' ...:) But the suggestion previous gens had it 'easy' does tend to set me off.

phoenixw2
05/11/2016
09:30
pheonix, you make some good points there, but it is worth noting that in 1990 someone on average wages would take 3 years to save a 5% deposit on the average house. Now the figure is so far off the scale it is unbelievable it could change by so much in 25 years.

There is a generation of people (the cut off is about 35) who are completely shafted in relation to property.

rcturner2
05/11/2016
08:30
A boomer... lol; I retired early and am likely not much older than yourself.
It's always struck me as curious that the 'youth of today' seem to believe they're more entitled than ever [since all of them now been threw hiya educashion?] yet uniquely deprived generation.
In property terms the change is apparent. Not so long ago buying a fixer-upper out in zone 3/4/5 of a location, improving it and trading up was the way most people *had* to go to finally own the kind of place they aspired to. The sense of entitlement seems greater now. No longer just a home, an instant enviable lifestyle in a desirable location...

FY on BKG now 8.1%
[BBR when I had my first mortgage 'handed to me on a plate', over 10%]

phoenixw2
05/11/2016
00:52
Or, the perspective of a boomer who's had it all handed to him on a plate.You only see the world via your own narrow prism and yah boo sucks and bwahaha to everyone else.You see how easy it this is?
cancun tango
05/11/2016
00:03
The perspective of someone who boasts when he's up but is quiet when he's down. I don't want to see anyone lose money, just trying to point out the futility of gloating.
cancun tango
04/11/2016
16:54
The perspective of a youngster. You only see the world via your own narrow prism and 'yah-boo-sucks' to everyone else.

Imagine -if you can- being at retirement, having accumulated what you aimed for, and not wishing to buy any more, rather sit on what you have and enjoy the income, whilst hoping the underlying positions will be at least reasonably stable in the longer term.

No, perhaps you can't.

ps I ended the week +74k, not as solid as it looked last night, but it'll do. Good luck with your day-trading.

phoenixw2
04/11/2016
16:28
All the fourteen year old no hope worriers starting to panic just because of all the so called uncertainties in the US. Bring it all on say I, then I can go shopping for cheap long term stock.....I just love it !
redips2
04/11/2016
16:24
It doesn't quite work like that key ... building materials prices only ever go in one direction, as everyone could see when energy prices collapsed and cement, bricks and blocks with the biggest energy input prices carried on upward.

But price inflation is noise and will get worked through, just as it has done with the average 5% materials price increases which have been put through for the past 30 years

raffles the gentleman thug
04/11/2016
15:51
The £ strengthening. Good news for builders in that cost of materials gets cheaper. Surprised these are down so much today. Brexit? Spanner thrown in the works there , not the dead cert it was before yesterday.
kev0856153
04/11/2016
15:41
Troll lol, every bear is a troll to you.
montyhedge
04/11/2016
15:31
Monty you are a troll. Come back and comment when BKG are £25 !!!
garycook
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