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BEG Begbies Traynor Group Plc

109.00
-1.00 (-0.91%)
Last Updated: 10:08:30
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Begbies Traynor Group Plc LSE:BEG London Ordinary Share GB00B0305S97 ORD 5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -1.00 -0.91% 109.00 108.00 111.00 109.00 107.50 108.00 145,752 10:08:30
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Finance Services 121.83M 2.91M 0.0185 58.92 171.68M
Begbies Traynor Group Plc is listed in the Finance Services sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker BEG. The last closing price for Begbies Traynor was 110p. Over the last year, Begbies Traynor shares have traded in a share price range of 105.50p to 139.00p.

Begbies Traynor currently has 157,508,057 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Begbies Traynor is £171.68 million. Begbies Traynor has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 58.92.

Begbies Traynor Share Discussion Threads

Showing 3876 to 3900 of 3900 messages
Chat Pages: 156  155  154  153  152  151  150  149  148  147  146  145  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
18/3/2024
11:51
BEG just been on R4 programme today called "Dead Company Walking". Interesting listen. BEG should be in a good position the sound of it.
spawny100
15/3/2024
15:56
Thanks Aleman.
This looks like it maybe about to break out of the 108-115 trading range, fingers crossed!

gswredland
15/3/2024
14:16
The number of registered company insolvencies in February 2024 was 2,102, 17% higher than in the same month in the previous year (1,801 in February 2023).

For individuals, the total number of insolvencies in February 2024 was 10,136, 23% higher than in the same month in the previous year (8,239 in February 2023).

aleman
24/2/2024
05:41
Still sitting on the fence with this one, beginning to lose patience especially given the amount of insolvency work that is available to them, although others have noted that they have had a practice of working with many smaller companies rather than choosing the larger ones, which does involve them in recruiting more staff.At this point in time the Analysts consensus price target of £1.70 would seem a long way off.
route1
22/2/2024
09:42
Took the opportunity to buy some BEG !

Good luck

P.

peddlers
21/2/2024
09:55
I thought I read somewhere that BEG were very slowly moving up the value chain to do more middling sized companies? This case study has over 400 employees and a pension deficit of over £100m.
aleman
21/2/2024
09:30
adipsia - a good assessment for which many thanks.
Now do I sell ......
Suet

suetballs
21/2/2024
09:18
As I've mentioned previously, the reason that high insolvency levels and distress in the UK market isn't having such a dramatic effect upon the BEG bottom-line, is that they operate in the low/volume end of the corporate market. Their income is always going to be impacted by the asset-position of the business over which they are appointed. Loads of small company CVLs doesn't add up to great profits... what it does add up to is a requirement for more expensive employees and increased overhead.

Compare and contrast: BEG - £122m fee income, 1,072 employees, Operating profit £7.1m, Operating margin 5.9%. FRP - £104m fee income, 510 employees, Operating profit £16m, Operating margin 15.4%.

Now I realise that BEG have begun diversifying into other fringe areas, but their core remains insolvency and the fact is that they are not picking up the most lucrative restructuring income from larger Administrations. This has - and for the foreseeable future will remain with the likes of FRP, Interpath (ex-KPMG), Teneo (ex-Deloitte), PwC, Ernst & Young and other larger American-owned companies like Kroll.

This is the reason why BEGs bottom-line does not show them capitalising on the poor state of UK plc. They're not alchemists and they are handling a load of base metal.

adipsia1
08/2/2024
17:33
It should be doing a lot lot lot better, the analysts price targets are around £1.70 for this year, so we have a long way to go
route1
05/2/2024
13:27
Yes need the activity levels to feed through to the bottom line to get the share price moving.
whilstev
05/2/2024
11:05
A mystery BEG doesn't do better given the sweet spot it finds itself in.
fozzie
05/2/2024
10:47
Britain faces its highest level of corporate insolvencies on record this year as businesses crumble under the pressure of higher interest rates.

An unprecedented 33,000 companies will go under this year, according to the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), many of which will never have recovered from the impact of the pandemic.

The consultancy increased its estimate for insolvencies from 28,000 as it warned the retail and hospitality sectors “have nearly caught up with construction in terms of insolvency numbers in 2023”.

It said the figures would be a new record since 2013, where comparable statistics are available, although it added that its own analysis suggests insolvencies would have been higher in the 1990s.

aleman
15/1/2024
14:45
Well that is me out. New year and all that. Had high hopes for this one but sometimes you've just got to find somewhere else for your money. BEG will no doubt double in the next six months!! GLA
the pie
22/12/2023
13:37
I would agree that it's been a disappointing year for the share price but not for the company.
Here's to increased profits and dividends in 2024.
All the best everyone.

the bolton wanderer
22/12/2023
08:29
Half year results were reported on the 11th
whilstev
22/12/2023
01:38
What's with the thumbs down, perfectly reasonable question, as the earnings were not reported as scheduled.You seem to have a problem with your Thumbs, are you sick, maybe you need to see a doctor
route1
21/12/2023
15:27
A rather disappointing performer this year given the backdrop
daneswooddynamo
21/12/2023
15:09
Number of retailers in financial distress in Q4 increases significantly from Q3.
aleman
20/12/2023
09:19
At what time today will the earnings report be released?
route1
13/12/2023
12:09
Well put Aleman
glaws2
12/12/2023
17:06
BEG has been doing complementary non-insolvency work for years and it seems to have fit in fine. It's nothing new and they seem to know what they are doing. It's been evolution rather than revolution.

BEG's business is slightly more balanced/slightly less countercyclical than FRP as far as I can tell. You'd expect FRP to do slightly better in a downturn and BEG to do slightly better in an upturn, would you not?

aleman
12/12/2023
13:01
IMO wishful thinking in terms of more complex and remunerative work from BEG. BEG are efficient undertakers, not even into palliative care and so many miles away from profitable restructuring work... hence the move towards diversification.Question: How do recent acquisitions fit into any insolvency-based model ? Are they planning to become commercial estate agents ? That doesn't bode well in this economy.
adipsia1
12/12/2023
09:20
BEG's last FY results:

Well placed to further increase exposure to larger, more complex insolvency appointments with our 11% share of the administration market ranking us second largest nationally by volume (increase from fourth over the last five years)

aleman
12/12/2023
07:55
Stunning H1 results out from FRP this morning would show that the restructuring and insolvency market is getting into full-flow. Shame that BEG don't seem able to capture more of the lucrative Administrations market where FRP reign supreme.
adipsia1
11/12/2023
16:30
Strong operational performance that creates meaningful profits and cashflow.But then of course you've got to pay for your acquisitions and generous earnouts.Key question is - those acquired businesses, still going to be generating the same profitability, after all the earnouts and deferred considerations are done? So statutory PBT jumps?
boonkoh
Chat Pages: 156  155  154  153  152  151  150  149  148  147  146  145  Older

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