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BOO Boohoo Group Plc

35.96
-0.04 (-0.11%)
28 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Boohoo Group Plc LSE:BOO London Ordinary Share JE00BG6L7297 ORD 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -0.04 -0.11% 35.96 35.98 36.18 36.50 35.11 35.38 3,957,691 16:29:46
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Womens Hosiery, Except Socks 1.77B -75.6M -0.0596 -6.03 456.13M
Boohoo Group Plc is listed in the Womens Hosiery, Except Socks sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker BOO. The last closing price for Boohoo was 36p. Over the last year, Boohoo shares have traded in a share price range of 27.77p to 60.42p.

Boohoo currently has 1,268,438,263 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Boohoo is £456.13 million. Boohoo has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -6.03.

Boohoo Share Discussion Threads

Showing 9026 to 9046 of 99775 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
03/1/2018
14:58
Revenue last year 296 million.... so 100% growth on the cards. That why Broker targets all near 300.
kuss1
03/1/2018
14:54
What truly amazing with Boo is the rate of growth if you can crack the on-line market. I think Nasty Gal will generate around 30 million this year in revenue from zero in just 12 months. Who knows what PLT will do. As you say they might over-take Boo in just 12 months since their purchase. They are particularly popular in the US. Boo have guided some 540 million in total revenue. I think they will hit 600 million.
kuss1
03/1/2018
13:51
220 soon with the news were just hearing. Nice little share earner
uzzymaz
03/1/2018
11:17
Institutions desparate to buy these at 220 just a few months back.

PLT up 700% in the states the last quarter .. could see some eye-watering growth figures come next week.

Customer base up to 6-7 million. Once you've shopped you tend to return..

kuss1
03/1/2018
10:41
once through this resistance there is little to stop it till 220
adejuk
03/1/2018
10:23
Nice few days rise. Anyone know when the next update/ results are expected?
rickyvader
03/1/2018
09:52
Approaching the 3 month high mark for the technical analysts out there...
algorithmicx
03/1/2018
09:32
If Next can beat expectations by 600% then it looks goood for Boo to beat it by at least 50%.I feel a little less worried now we are back through the 2 quid mark as my last buy was 204.
cinoib
03/1/2018
09:32
Yep, margin is the key... that was wot sunk it the last time for those who feared the worst rather than saw the growth. Management's last guidance was 80% so there could well be a "beat" to those expectations not only for reasons that Algorithmic points out.

Hi bamboo; hope the New Year "turns" well for you ;-)!

sogoesit
03/1/2018
09:19
I think a beat is pretty much sewn on. Even brokers are guiding 86%. The question is how much? And what level of margin. I'm hoping for-mid range 9.5%. Be happy with that.
kuss1
03/1/2018
09:11
Next Statement:

..."with our Online business performing particularly well. We believe part of this improvement has been down to much colder weather leading up to Christmas."

Can we expect a beat to estimates bearing in mind this weather and the fact even more people would have shopped from the comfort of their home?

algorithmicx
03/1/2018
08:41
Boo just getting back to where it should be on those interims. A conservative 80% top-line growth is fantastic. Just that expectations got ahead of themselves. With margins of 9-10% that's still twice the profitability of ASC and growing at twice the rate..

In the trading update we'll have additional contributions from PLT, NG and Boohooman. Boohooman doing really well though only launched in California stateside, but the google trends looking great in the UK.

I'm hoping Nasty Gal will be showing revenue of near 20 million in the update next week. That will put them on track to deliver almost 30 million by the end of year. So from zero to 30 million in 12 months.

These internet co's are all about growth and cash generation.

kuss1
03/1/2018
08:29
Hi Sogo, I was just going to refer to the NEXT statement myself. Particularly the uplift in online sales compared to high st.

Guess the share price rise here could be partially fuelled by shorts closing.

bamboo2
03/1/2018
08:25
Next’s Trading update today viewed as good news for retailers.
BOO next resistance should be around 220p.

sogoesit
02/1/2018
21:51
FOMO I love that word!
algorithmicx
02/1/2018
21:04
ASOS had its inexorable climb as it opened up in new countries around the worldThe recent comment about opening countries is what excited me medium term
nfs
02/1/2018
17:46
Rathean. After my experience with ASOS I can wait.
cinoib
02/1/2018
14:35
#cinoib long term you're spot on, short term I see more £3+ volatility to trade on if you're not happy holding for 3-5 years...
rathean
02/1/2018
13:44
I seem to remember selling ASOS when it was still growing at 50% + thinking it was to expensive at £12. What a big mistake that was, so will hold tight this time and will see where we are this time next year before the panic sets in. My 5 year forcast is £25-£30. Tht will buy me a small farm, unless I add some more. I can see higher highs and higher lows which usually means the worst is over, only a 2008 style crash can change that.
cinoib
02/1/2018
11:52
I think there is, and has been for last couple years, a problem with fashion retail analysis (as we usually get "tough year to come" forecasts). I am sure this is fine for the likes of Next, M&S, TED, Debenhams etc. but not for ASOS or BOO.

The problem being that analysts find it difficult to measure, and thus forecast, online trade where they cannot apply the kind of "footfall" data that is gathered in the high street to read across to online. This is also complicated imv by the new online business model that the likes of BOO have of their "sales and return-if-you-don't-like-it" concept.

The second issue, if you like, for the macro "top-down approach" is that retailers like BOO have a different demographic target market, and pricing points, to the likes of Next & M&S. Sure, if there's a squeeze on wages, and prospects for the economy, the older (>24 years old) demographic may pull-in their horns but I don't think those under 20, who probably get their stuff paid for by bank of Mum&Dad, or those in the 20-24 range, who have just started working and are happy to be "free with their new found money" will be dented. To the contrary, while employment is high, and still growing, this latter demographic is likely to be increasing its expenditure.
Looking forward to the January data to see if this view is borne out.... or not...!!
All imv.

sogoesit
02/1/2018
11:32
The top-down macro indicators imply that consumers have likely spent cautiously this Christmas. Nevertheless, we expect strong online and multichannel retailers and the discounters to emerge as winners over the 2017 festive period. We maintain our cautious stance into the early stages of 2018 and across our UK coverage we would own B&M, boohoo, M&S, Kingfisher and Ted Baker.

We believe consumers have likely spent cautiously when celebrating over the 2017 festive period. That's because consumer confidence has been weak in the second half of 2017 averaging -11pts (vs -5pts Jan-May) and December saw consumer confidence fall again to -13pts (6pts lower than December 2016). In addition, inflation of c.3% has eroded consumer spending power as household disposable income fell by £1 p/w yoy (or c.-1%) to £199 per week per household in November (ASDA). On the upside, the weather has been more seasonal in November/December (after a warm October) and the unemployment rate is very low. However, given the wider macro backdrop we take a cautious stance.

We forecast -3% to +4% LFL sales growth as most retailers are up against tough comps given a good turnout last Christmas.

As we have seen in recent quarters, we expect strong online and multi-channel retailers and the discounters to take share over the Christmas period.

The top-down macro indicators imply that consumers have likely spent cautiously this Christmas. Nevertheless, we expect strong online and multichannel retailers and the discounters to emerge as winners over the 2017 festive period. We maintain our cautious stance into the early stages of 2018 and across our UK coverage we would own B&M, boohoo, M&S, Kingfisher and Ted Baker.

We believe consumers have likely spent cautiously when celebrating over the 2017 festive period. That's because consumer confidence has been weak in the second half of 2017 averaging -11pts (vs -5pts Jan-May) and December saw consumer confidence fall again to -13pts (6pts lower than December 2016). In addition, inflation of c.3% has eroded consumer spending power as household disposable income fell by £1 p/w yoy (or c.-1%) to £199 per week per household in November (ASDA). On the upside, the weather has been more seasonal in November/December (after a warm October) and the unemployment rate is very low. However, given the wider macro backdrop we take a cautious stance.

We forecast -3% to +4% LFL sales growth as most retailers are up against tough comps given a good turnout last Christmas.

As we have seen in recent quarters, we expect strong online and multi-channel retailers and the discounters to take share over the Christmas period.

2018 could be another tough year, as we expect the trends of the macro indicators mentioned above to persist (at least in the near term). Inflation is expected to ease into the second half of 2018, which should provide some relief. However, with real GDP growth expected to slow, ongoing Brexit negotiations and rising interest rates we think consumers will spend prudently in 2018. In light of this, in the UK we have a preference for discounters like B&M who are well positioned for any weakness in the consumer environment (see "Growth In A Tough Market"), strong online retailers like boohoo (see "Feel the Buzz"), retailers with compelling self-help stories like M&S (see "M&S Food: Worth A Bite") and Kingfisher (see "From Disruption to Redemption. Upgrade to Buy") or retailers with strong brand equity like Ted Baker (see "Steady As She Grows"). We would avoid cyclically leveraged retailers like Dunelm (see "Ambition vs Competition") or operationally challenged retailers like Sports Direct (see "SPDexit. Downgrade to Underperform").

algorithmicx
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