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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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-3.00 | -2.73% | 107.00 | 107.00 | 109.50 | 109.00 | 107.50 | 108.00 | 325,217 | 16:35:10 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Finance Services | 121.83M | 2.91M | 0.0185 | 58.38 | 170.11M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
22/6/2017 13:46 | Well that's a handy rule, transfer the assets two years before planned bankruptcy and you get to keep your cake while the shareholders get stuffed. | lefrene | |
22/6/2017 13:15 | Sears to file for Bankruptcy next month? | aleman | |
22/6/2017 10:08 | Australian mortgage arrears rise | aleman | |
22/6/2017 07:04 | Long yields continue to fall. Yield curve flattening. Rate cut indicated. | aleman | |
22/6/2017 06:51 | Go Ahead's full year passenger and revenue numbers guidances have been tweaked down very slighty. This means Q4 must have been a little worse than the rest of the year which was itself a marked slowdon on last year. So, is the UK continuing to slow after reporting only 0.2% growth in Q1? | aleman | |
20/6/2017 22:54 | Yep, looks like it could be getting worse and even into messy territory - more defaults so bang rates up again. But the defaults scare off supply as well as higher rates hitting demand. | aleman | |
20/6/2017 22:26 | Lending Club Data is getting very interesting. If you play with the data for Net Annualised Returns By Vintage, you can see that interest rates charged jumped in 2016 and 2017 due to strongly rising charge offs for the years before. The average interest rate charged for supersubprime, FG, and the net amount received after charge-offs, tc. goes like this: Year/Av Rate Charged/Net Annual Return 2007 16.27 -9.01 2008 17.11 -0.11 2009 18.86 2.84 2010 19.37 7.72 2011 20.83 8.49 2012 23.34 9.65 2013 24.26 9.24 est 2014 24.64 5.51 est 2015 24.21 -0.35 est 2016 26.51 1.32 est 2017 29.85 The higher rates and rising charge-offs follow a similar trend - but of lower magnitudes - for mid-risk borrowers, C+D. A and B grades remain fairly steady through all years for interest rate and charge offs. In the cumulative graphs, 2015 and 2016 vintages (most still not fully paid yet)are showing trends on a par with recessionary years for pretty much all grades, with 2016 looking like quite possibly being worse than 2008 or 2009. The charts show 2017 starts off with significant charge-offs starting unusually early, within the first 6 months, so 2017 could be bad and the 2018 average rates charged could be over 30% for EF grades. It is interesting how rates keep going up and up for mid and lower grade borrowers as defaults just keep on increasing. It makes it a bit clear how such high rates can be getting charged when the media keep telling us we have reached near-zero rates. Lending Club lent nearly $1.5bn in Q1 so must be some kind of indicator of what is going on. Clearly, there is a problem with rising defaults and the much higher rates they bring for all but those with the best credit scores (A+B ~ 45%) but even they will also get hit if the problems with the 55% of poorer quality borrowers spill over into the rest of the economy as higher insolvencies and lower spending. | aleman | |
20/6/2017 17:11 | Experian's US bank card default index looks to be accelerating upwards, although bank and auto defaults eased. | aleman | |
16/6/2017 21:58 | Restrictions on interest only mortgages and rate rises tipped to burst Australian housing bubble and push the economy into recession in 2017. | aleman | |
16/6/2017 21:53 | Chart caught up at close today. Looks much better. I should have picked up on this earlier. The 200-day average overtook its 2014 high and is accelerating up. | aleman | |
15/6/2017 13:09 | ADVFN charts are garbage. The header still shows 50.5p when the spread has been 51.0/52.75 for a while. It will probably catch up tomorrow. Lack of selling at 51p bid bodes well. It's taken 7 months to work though 50p sellers but it looks like it might be done now. | aleman | |
15/6/2017 11:13 | 3 MPC members voted for a rate rise. | aleman | |
15/6/2017 11:12 | Retail sales look like they might be starting to roll over in recessionary fashion. Note that they would probably have been a worse without the good fuel and clothing sales seen as warm weather saw more people making leisure trips. | aleman | |
15/6/2017 07:00 | DFS already said they expected a softer market this summer but it has deteriorated more than expected in recent weeks and they will now miss forecasts for the year. | aleman | |
13/6/2017 13:45 | Expect more profit warnings in the consumer sector? | aleman | |
13/6/2017 08:27 | Official bid back above 50p at 50.5p, after not spending much time below 50p this time. The actual bid seems to be a new high of 51.13p. Importantly, it does not seem to have drawn any selling so, hopefully, sets the base to push on from here. | aleman | |
12/6/2017 18:31 | 2015 subprime auto bonds look set to have highest loss rates ever, beating 2007 issues. Santander auto losses for 2016 are running significantly higher for 2016 than for 2015 so will 2016 vintages be even worse than 2015? S&P also suggest 2016 will be significantly worse than 2015. | aleman | |
12/6/2017 13:39 | Well, at least you did not miss it! | aleman | |
12/6/2017 13:36 | ah clearly a brainstorm there - well a month to wait ;-) thx | ironstorm | |
12/6/2017 13:34 | That's Tues 13th July. | aleman | |
12/6/2017 13:06 | final results according to the RNS | ironstorm | |
12/6/2017 10:39 | What news is there tomorrow? | aleman | |
12/6/2017 10:34 | Hopefully we will hear more on all of this tomorrow with finally an uptick in business. | ironstorm |
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