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AGA Aga Rangemaster

184.50
0.00 (0.00%)
03 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
AGA Rangemaster Investors - AGA

AGA Rangemaster Investors - AGA

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Aga Rangemaster AGA London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 184.50 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
184.50 184.50
more quote information »

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 25/6/2015 12:41 by zedman_1
As I'm sure you know Salty, we do get an investor perk:

"If you own 5,000 shares and spend £500 or more in AGA Shops, Fired Earth or Divertimenti stores you qualify for a 10% discount up to a maximum of £500 or currency equivalent."

Shares, new Aga and a discount. Everyone is happy.
Posted at 16/5/2014 11:56 by fugwit
Did the Chronic Investor go into detail regarding the woeful pension deficit at AGA?
Posted at 13/10/2013 21:15 by paul_butcher1999
Even if labour win they wouldn't actually do the 2 year fix policy it simply does not work. They know that too, it's a gimmick designed to get the Tories to splutter it doesn't work and then they can say 'Tories on side of fat cats'. The only result is Tories will now shift to opposing some of the green taxes that milliband brought in as Secretary of State for energy and climate change, so in that sense millibands "policy" will decrease bills a bit (albeit offset by investors/lenders now needing a higher political risk premium).
Posted at 30/8/2013 14:33 by smicker
Amazing how there are no posts for the past two months while the share price increases approx 40%. The half yearly report was fairly optomistic going forward and seems to have caught investors attention if not posters
Posted at 10/3/2012 08:07 by paul_butcher1999
smicker you are right. essentially the way these triennial pensions reviews works (for all companies with defined benefit schemes) is a negotiation based on i) the over/ underfunding of the fund and ii) the health and prospects of the company. The pension side are always well aware that the key asset in a deficit situation is the continued existence of the company. they will negotiate with the company with this shared understanding and if cannot agree on amounts etc it can go to the pensions regulator (but very very rare as people tend to reach reasonable agreement). So if/when company cannot afford payments the pension trustees etc will simply agree less to be paid. they will absolutely not risk the companies' future.

Biggest director buys for a while. Company continues to be absurdly undervalued. Investors find it hard to see further than their nose sometimes, but even in very bad economic situation this company continues to make a healthy profit ... wait till we get even a little recovery - and when the punitive levels of taxation begin abating a bit ...
Posted at 08/7/2011 07:50 by cockneyrebel
I meant for the year ahead opposed to the current year. Come the interims investors will be looking to the coming years earnings and PE imo.

CR
Posted at 28/3/2011 10:07 by smicker
RNS now out and it seems to be the same holdings.

Interesting to speculate that they may have seen an opportunity to take on the AGA pension fund but that has now passed as the scheme moves to surplus and so the benefits will now accrue to the shareholders.

Newspaper comment was that institutional investors were reluctant to buy AGA shares while they were aware 20% of the company was held by a seller.
Posted at 12/1/2010 17:02 by max12475
I do believe there is a good return to be had on AGA. It is such a fundamentally strong and well run company that I fail to see how it can fail. I think it is only a matter of time before the shares rise through £1.50 (which is where I bought at unfortunately!)

The trading statement this week will quell some investors fears I'm hoping and we should see a good performance this week.

What are everyone elses thoughts?

I'm in AGA for the long run, it's a relatively safe investment with some great upside potential.
Posted at 10/6/2008 10:29 by bigbertie
Baffled - I assume this is falling because of general concerns about recession impacting all consumer goods stocks. I held on to this one because of the positive management statement on 9 May, the fact that the company has net cash and the hope that up-market products (like more expensive houses) will prove less vulnerable to a downturn. The general economic situation could be affecting the shares, for example because investors need to release cash to cover other losses or meet higher spends. All this just my speculation - there could be bad news on the way, in which case I can only assume it is a fall in sales or rise in raw material costs.....who knows.

Edit - just noticed the RNS about the HSBC group holdings - if I read it right they have disposed of holdings of 6 million shares! Is this right? That could be either good or bad news - it could lead to a stock overhang, or they could have gone to a stakebuilder (do Duke Street still have 23%?). Or could it just be some slight of hand by HSBC? Anyone know?
Posted at 14/3/2008 12:05 by bigbertie
yes - not too bad, but really we need a bid to see much profit in the next year as the depressed forecasts for consumer spend are hardly going to set the shares alight in the near future. Wish I'd sold in September when the shares were over 400p (and when the Investors Chronic said they were "good value" at 427p!) I held on hoping for a bid, and I'm still holding and hoping.

this was a £1bn turnover group in 2000, 0.5bn in 2006, now 0.3bn. the directors comment on the "challenge" of reducing overheads to match. I agree - can we look forward to large cuts in director remuneration?

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