ADVFN Logo

We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.

Trending Now

Toplists

It looks like you aren't logged in.
Click the button below to log in and view your recent history.

Hot Features

Registration Strip Icon for alerts Register for real-time alerts, custom portfolio, and market movers

HTI Hawtin

0.825
0.00 (0.00%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Hawtin LSE:HTI London Ordinary Share GB0004156930 ORD 5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 0.825 0.00 00:00:00
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
  -
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
- O 0 0.825 GBX

Hawtin (HTI) Latest News

Real-Time news about Hawtin (London Stock Exchange): 0 recent articles

Hawtin (HTI) Discussions and Chat

Hawtin Forums and Chat

Date Time Title Posts
31/3/201120:44HAWTIN - Something stirring322
08/1/201021:53What's Happening at Hawtin?1
03/9/200912:39HTI Chart and News52
30/4/200909:20OVERLOOKED I THINK4
18/2/200610:17Hawtin....Share BuyBack Started1

Add a New Thread

Hawtin (HTI) Most Recent Trades

No Trades
Trade Time Trade Price Trade Size Trade Value Trade Type

Hawtin (HTI) Top Chat Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 09/3/2011 10:36 by vauch
A hefty drop in the share price.
give it a few month and an RTO.
Posted at 11/1/2011 08:35 by haydock
Top of the leaderboard:

Hawtin Secures Abercynon Letting
Share this article
TIDMHTI

RNS Number : 2201Z

Hawtin PLC

11 January 2011

HAWTIN PLC

HAWTIN SECURES ABERCYNON LETTING

Hawtin PLC ("Hawtin" or "the Company"), the South Wales based property investment group is pleased to announce that it has let the whole of The Gateway, a 59,298 sq ft industrial/warehouse development in Abercynon, South Wales.

Furniture Origins (UK) Limited, one of the largest furniture and glassware manufacturers in the world - has taken a 10-year lease on the entire building at a rent rising to GBP200,000 pa by year five.

With this letting Hawtin has reduced the voids across its 1.3 million sq ft industrial portfolio to just 1.6%.

Richard Hayward, CEO of Hawtin commented: "We have worked extremely hard over the last couple of years to reduce our industrial void rates and are delighted with the progress we have made. Securing a letting for the entire building is fantastic and shows the quality of assets in our portfolio. We are now looking to secure further deals on the remaining space in our portfolio to further improve our position."

The letting agents were DTZ, Cooke & Arkwright and Richard Hayward Properties.

- Ends -

Enquiries:
Posted at 03/11/2010 14:28 by meict
Gentlemen,

If you want to invest in a share that is at the moment pennies but is likely to be somewhat higher in less than a fortnight, may I suggest Highams Systems Services (HSS)?

The spread is reasonable and, when you've done your research, the rewards will be obvious.

I'm of the opinion that the profits for the first half of 2010-11 will easily surpass what they made in the whole of last year. The first half ended on 30th of September, HSS did not issue a Trading Update last year but published an Interim Statement on 12 November.

I expect the share price to move by 1p when the interim results are published.

Meic
Posted at 02/11/2010 14:19 by meict
OVERVALUED!

There'll be no serious buying until the price drops to less than a penny.

Hawtin has major problems, which won't be solved overnight.

The Market Makers are having a laugh. Today they bought 8,324 shares for 1.27p or £106 less expenses. They also sold to somebody 13,510 shares at 1.79p – an ENORMOUS spread!

Whoever bought at 1.79p has to see his shares rise by almost 50% just to break even.
Posted at 01/11/2010 14:02 by meict
A quote, this morning, of 1.27p – 1.79p, these people want the penny and the bun! Having said that, I think the price will go lower.

I'll try and find time to write a post, which I think contains 'good' news – I'll e-mail sharw with what I know, for his input, before I finalise it.
Posted at 29/10/2010 11:20 by mryesyes
i tried to buy one of their properties but it was being sold to a member of the directors families, i was told this to make me think the properties were good buys but when i saw the price hawtin got................
Posted at 29/10/2010 11:12 by mryesyes
This is one of several other companies in the same boat, except this is the biggest plane crash; see also THG and SAF
Normally if it did not have all these assets it would have delisted, been made bankrupt, taken action to disenfranchise shareholders to resell the co, but in hti's particular case it can take none of these options but at least it can flog off its assets and funnel the cash to its directors until the forced/crash landing, they are in the ejector seats with the money in their names, you are just holding a worthless cert, its only a matter of when the bank pulls the plug, but it may take a year since they are selling properties
and using the cash to make the min bank repayment to keep the sales going.
It like you had bought 100 properties with 1 huge loan. After prices fall you are in negative equity, so you keep things going as you sell the properties 1 by 1 until you have the cash in your pocket, then abort.....HTI is not like you and your mortgage, their finance is unsecured against particular properties, got it???
Posted at 25/10/2010 17:17 by meict
Well Mr Hawtin and solarno lopez, what do you know? Nothing?

So it's a straight lunatic gamble! Didn't you read sharw's well-informed post (272)?

'Yes, another fine mess this company has got into - buying property at the top of the market and, just as bad, selling at the bottom. The balance sheet had £15.5m attributable to equity interests 3 years ago and now it is minus £21.4m.

'Properties are valued at £44m and net debt is about £55m. So who would want to buy this company? It only has two attractions. One is the stockmarket quote, but this is AIM, not the main market, and a reverse takeover would still require a prospectus so that is not particularly attractive. The second is the accumulated losses, both trading and capital. These would only be worthwhile to a company that could make use of them. If such a company were to be found how much would they value Hawtin? Not a lot - this is 2010, not the dot com boom.'

Expecting a miracle lads? As I write, they are trying to sell the Millennium Plaza at a knock down price.

Anyway, tell sharw and me all you know and perhaps I'll tell you something you don't.
Posted at 30/9/2010 18:04 by haydock
Sadly as a holder since the early 1970's, just another case of Hawtin always going down the wrong path at the time of a mkt disaster.

Early 70's they became a secondary bank, just in time for the 1974 bank crisis.

A phoenix share if ever there was one, i have learnt all i know from Hawtin !!!

Someday I will get my 100 quid back, worth it to learn.

I did meet a man who has an enormous holding of shares from the '60s.
Very good luck to all who sail in her.
Posted at 07/9/2010 09:17 by sharw
So, HTI has sold its share of the Wirral property for £275,000 against a net book value of £175,000. That sounds very good until you realise that they are talking about the book value as written down. HTI actually paid £1.625m for this in Spring 2007 so that is a loss of £1.35m, or 83% of the original investment.
Hawtin share price data is direct from the London Stock Exchange

Your Recent History

Delayed Upgrade Clock