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PIN Pantheon International Plc

326.00
-1.00 (-0.31%)
Last Updated: 10:34:07
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Pantheon International Plc PIN London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
-1.00 -0.31% 326.00 10:34:07
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
326.00 326.00 326.00 327.00
more quote information »
Industry Sector
EQUITY INVESTMENT INSTRUMENTS

Pantheon PIN Dividends History

No dividends issued between 25 Apr 2014 and 25 Apr 2024

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 22/3/2024 08:35 by ali47fish
well i wish pin stated this like you- too much detail and numbers are not always compared to last update- for me simply not clear enough- thank you for clarifying
Posted at 22/3/2024 07:41 by ali47fish
pin monthly updte always not very clear in terms of progress- noted nav up though
Posted at 27/2/2024 08:14 by spangle93
Come on, ali47fish, it's not hard to find an RNS ;-) There's even one link in the box below the graph above, but this will format better
Posted at 22/2/2024 23:50 by lynton3
Tremendously informative Half-year Report issued by PIN today. Well worth reading.
Posted at 02/1/2024 13:32 by lynton3
ali47 - To answer your question - yes, I have read the article, and posted the link because I thought others would find it interesting. It supports and adds to my previous research on PIN.

I hold PIN as part of the growth section of my portfolio. It is one of five PE shares I hold - PIN, OCI, HVPE, ICP, HGT - and PIN is my second largest holding of these. I am happy to hold all of these PE shares as a group, and I look upon them as long term, buy-and-hold investments. From my perspective, they offer a high degree of diversification and have long track records of outperforming leading indices. They have all performed fairly well over the last year - though HVPE is a bit of a laggard.

So, PIN fits nicely into my portfolio, but it may not suit other investors with different perspectives.
Posted at 30/12/2023 17:57 by lynton3
Here is a research article on PIN:
hxxps://www.trustintelligence.co.uk/investor/articles/fund-research-investor-pantheon-international-retail-dec-2023?utm_source=Profund&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=newsletter_sat
Posted at 21/12/2023 12:07 by cousinit
PE only seems to have caught a moderate part of the bid in the recent rally. You would think an IPO window is opening now for the first time in a while.

I've generally been concentrating on the funds that can buy back shares like PIN, ICGT and OCI.

Did sell some positions down when CORD got pummelled alongside DGI9. CORD seems to have decent assets at a chunky discount with a robust balance sheet (and a worthwhile yield).
Posted at 17/10/2023 14:23 by damanko
1968jon, interesting post. Agree on some of your opinions. For older holders, they may be aware that I invested in PIN in 1989, at 90 pence or so. And sold in 2016 at around £15.

Just dipped a little toe in again, into my ii SIPP, the NAV discount seems too much. Full stop. Plus the tax relief will bring my buying price way under the current share price Good luck all, as always...

d.
Posted at 12/10/2023 11:57 by 1968jon
I am not getting involved in the tender and am likely to own a large chunk and add to PIN over the next ten years. I wholeheartedly support what PIN are doing and saying about their capital allocation policy. If I were still a trader, I might be weighing up some opportunities around the tender. Sell them, even short them, at 310-315 to see if I could buy them back cheaper in the short term. Why an average punter would get involved if they like the stock is beyond me? If I was a fund who is a forced(ish) seller of alternative assets/trusts (we've all read the papers, there is a lot of it about) and I could get out of a block (£10m+?) in a hurry and without suppressing the price, makes perfect sense. It will be interesting to see how much of the £150m they get done and the reaction afterwards.
Posted at 04/8/2023 10:10 by riverman77
As I've said before they really should be paying a modest dividend at least. On average they generate a 10-15% annual capital return, so even if they distribute just a fifth of that it would translate to a 2-3% distribution. At current discount this would be a 3-5% dividend yield. Surely this keeps everyone happy - they still get to keep 80% of their return for further investment, while shareholders get a nice income stream. The cynic would say this would slightly hold back their AUM and thus their management fee.

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