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WHY White Young

6.55
0.00 (0.00%)
Last Updated: 01:00:00
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
White Young WHY London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 6.55 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
6.55
more quote information »

White Young WHY Dividends History

No dividends issued between 26 Apr 2014 and 26 Apr 2024

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 19/4/2019 21:21 by johncasey
Why did he have to come back?
Posted at 24/7/2012 09:22 by tpaulbeaumont
THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR July 21, 2012
Why We're Driven to Trade

With computerized traders that "hold" stocks for only a few seconds at a time and markets that can swing wildly in a matter of moments, long-term investing seems to be on the verge of extinction.

Perhaps this is inevitable. It turns out that short-term thinking is deeply embedded in the workings of the human brain. New research suggests that in order to avoid trading your accounts to death, you must counteract some of the very tendencies that make Homo sapiens the most intelligent of all species.
Posted at 10/4/2012 13:59 by scotsman2
WHY do traders keep making so many mistkaes, moving stops, running losses, over-leverage, averaging into losers ??? no matter how many books we read, trading videos we watch there always seems to come a time & situation when we BREAK THE RULES.

we may get away with this a few times but one of these days we don't and its back to square one.....start again, refreshed risk control.....then a few months / years later BANG same thing happens again !!!

round and round in a cycle of destruction
Posted at 16/2/2012 15:38 by tpaulbeaumont
to be sure hes talking sense CT, but thats more general trading advice, I was hoping the thread would be more about whether graphs work, why ppl who dont use them dont use them and what they do use, maybe some examples from them etc...
perhaps all advfn'ers use graphs, dont subscribe to EMT and understand all the moves in the markets they follow? ...or havent looked in cos they dont know latin and cant be bothered to google lol ;)
Posted at 30/12/2009 23:09 by gisjob2
No squire ! I realise you dissed my post 466 previously, but who turned out to be right?.

I work for a similar company and to be frank if worked for WHY would of been looking for another job a year before the downturn because of the inept management.

I didn't realise it was against the law to post, I thought that was the idea of the board. Just because I tell a few truths from a position of more knowledge than most on here does not mean I have an axe to grind. Fact is, I appreciate some of the really knowledgable posters on other boards who have made and saved me money in the past, not because I follow them blindly cause I don't, but because when someone has knowledge it makes me consider my options that little bit more closely and question myself.

Making statements like 'this should be 40p' etc helps nobody and whilst I accept everybody should do their own research this kind of uninformed post is pointless.

The Engineering sector is on it's ass, if you haven't be made redundant in the last year you are lucky. Contracts in the book are being pulled at a rate of knots and trying to take legal action doomed to failure and get you a bad rep. A poor balance sheet is a nightmare and makes you week in the market and restructuring may solve a short term problem but won't build your reputation up over night. Losing good staff also makes you unable to bid for some work or makes the quality suffer.

I don't hold shares in this bag of sh"te, have never worked for the comapny and never will. Is that plain enough for you to understand?
Posted at 30/12/2009 17:48 by squire007
why u still here at moment then ........ employee of wyg i take it or closely connected !!
Posted at 23/12/2009 15:49 by johnhemming
According to the company's documentation holders of WHY after 6th January who hold them in ISAs have 30 days in which to decide whether to sell them (and keep that cash in the ISA) or not to sell them. If they don't sell them then any dividends (not before 2013) or capital gains will be taxable in a normal manner - as if they were not in a tax wrapper.

The price for the additional share capital is I think 7.6p. The company, however, needs to pay off over 20M of preference shares from profit (to the lenders) before it can pay any dividend.

In terms of valuing the company, therefore, you need to consider what the underlying earnings are. The liguidity of the post recapitalisation shares will be quite small because the 85% held by the institutions will not be able to trade at a whim.

The new shares are consolidated on a 1 for 10 basis as well.

Hence possible rought valuations are:
PE 10 on underling 12m - 120m minus 30m pref shares - 90m 15% of this 13.5m ie approximately 4 times the current market cap.
Alternatively turnover at 200m minus 30m etc etc.

This depends, however, on how well they manage to cope with the global situation.
Posted at 09/12/2009 13:23 by deanroberthunt
WHY OH WHY
Posted at 23/11/2009 17:35 by daniel
Why does companies like WHY always feel the easiest way out of self inflicted problems is to shaft the shareholders? Are shareholders Stupid? Vote No!
Posted at 09/8/2009 18:31 by nutsyboy
Rennes - Having intimate knowledge of the City, the way it works and the way Bankers think, here is my best guess (generally and not necessarily on WHY)...

The balance sheet of pretty much every Bank in the World is shot to pieces and there is absolutely no room for any assets in any form to be taken on to their books.

Therefore, whereas a couple of years ago the spectre of Debt for equity was almost standard procedure, now this is not the case.

With very few exceptions, Banks have no choice but to agree to refinancing facilities and the only saving grace for them is that it allows them to renegotiate margins and fees very much in their favour.

Bankers are simple people with simple objectives - they borrow money at one rate and lend it out at a higher rate. They do not particularly care who they lend it to, or for how long and the only reason they do research on their clients is to obtain approval from their bosses to do the deal...

Each bank has its own method of calculating the likelihood of NOT being repaid, and providing this is low enough they lend. simple as that.

In this market, their strategy is equally as simple - (reluctantly) agree to refinance the debt to avoid the company going under, with a view to getting out of the deal as soon as they can.....

I fail to see why WHY is any different - the refinance is a done deal imho, all we have to do is wait for the RNS that tells us this unequivocably.

WHY should be around 40p by Mid September imho.






I fail to see why WHY is any different

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