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CRPR Cropper (james) Plc

305.00
0.00 (0.00%)
18 Mar 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Cropper (james) Plc CRPR London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 305.00 08:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
305.00 305.00 305.00 305.00 305.00
more quote information »
Industry Sector
FORESTRY & PAPER

Cropper (james) CRPR Dividends History

Announcement Date Type Currency Dividend Amount Ex Date Record Date Payment Date
09/11/2023InterimGBP0.0307/12/202308/12/202308/01/2024
24/08/2023FinalGBP0.0407/09/202308/09/202320/10/2023
15/11/2022InterimGBP0.0208/12/202209/12/202213/01/2023
21/06/2022FinalGBP0.07507/07/202208/07/202212/08/2022
09/11/2021InterimGBP0.02509/12/202110/12/202114/01/2022
19/11/2019InterimGBP0.02528/11/201929/11/201910/01/2020
25/06/2019FinalGBP0.1104/07/201905/07/201909/08/2019

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 08/3/2024 18:22 by gopher
Ever stock has its price, director buys may signal an improvement in paper division which would put a floor under current price particularly if dividend payout could be resumed. I await this upturn with scepticism..
Posted at 08/3/2024 15:18 by spooky
CRPR director piling in. 2437 shares. What a complete plonker.
Posted at 20/1/2024 21:49 by p1nkfish
Is the solar farm being developed and/or supplying energy under CRPR ownership?
Posted at 17/1/2024 21:00 by darrin1471
Highest trading volumes for a year. I was surprised the £100k sold in dips after 11am did not cause the share price to fall further.
I have been watching CRPR for most of 2023. I almost bought under 600p in April and again in December on the back of falling paper pulp prices.
I have kept one eye on hydrogen (ITM & PRES) so delays are not unusual. The current push back to "calendar years 2026 to 2028" is quite a delay.
Will continue to watch.
Posted at 19/4/2023 10:54 by darrin1471
Was planning to start a small position yesterday but could not get my price target.
Price is higher today but rise is not convincing.
"a multi-million pound investment in the next three years" changes this from a simple energy and input cost recovery play to more of a restructure story which may take several years and eat into this and next years profit forecasts.

"Overall, approximately 10% of employees will potentially be affected, predominantly within the Paper and Group functions at a cost of GBP2.1m, of which the majority will be cash."
From CRPR annual report 2022, CRPR employed 587 full time equivalents costing £30.5m
Posted at 17/12/2021 13:48 by km18
James Cropper Plc posted an impressive set of HY results a few weeks ago as the company rebounds from COVID. Revenues were up 46% to £49.8m, profit before tax was up to £1.9m from no profit, and EPS was up to 16.2p from loss of 0.2p. Obviously business has rebounded from shutdowns to pre-Pandemic levels. But so too has the share price which is back at early-2020 levels. Valuation isn’t particularly helpful, forward PE ratio at around 34 looks a little rich. Balance sheet is reasonably healthy, but share price lacks momentum. Not a bad company, but a share to monitor for the time being....from WealthOracleAM
Posted at 25/8/2021 15:53 by garth
CRPR slowly, quietly on the rise and looking like this time it might just break out up

:0)

G.
Posted at 18/1/2021 08:44 by garth
Interesting Hydrogen economy move this morning for CRPR.

I have been out for a while and moved some funds back in for the long term. Management spent two decades demonstrating that they could build a cutting edge business out of TFP via Fuel Cells and then aviation - that gives confidence re this new bolt on. And I prefer bread and butter plus jam to jam on its own.

I am concerned short term though about aviation impact on TFP and on papers with further lockdown. So there is some powder left to follow a possible poor trading statement or it all going wrong this week in the US.

It was a little too easy to pick some up first thing so I suspect we may have a seller.

Might get interesting if the Green Energy/Hydrogen Economy crowd ever catch on.

Any other views?

G.
Posted at 25/4/2020 14:44 by pireric
Liontrust from January

Hold: James Cropper (CRPR)
Stevens classes herself as a “buy and hold” investor, who doesn't like to trade in and out of stocks, even though the micro-cap space can be volatile, which can create trading opportunities. “We like to hold companies for the long term and let the businesses do the work for us by growing,” she says. “ It allows us to be more relaxed about timing, not to worry about when to enter or exit from a position.”
James Cropper has been in the fund since March 2017, and she has topped up the holding along the way. She says: “It’s an interesting business located in the Lake District. They have been producing paper for over 200 years.”
The company has three divisions; the main one makes the low-volume high-quality coloured paper that it’s used in Burberry carrier bags, while the most profitable one is Technical Fiber Products, which provides the aerospace industry with a material made up of carbon fibres called non-woven. “You can find it on the outside of aircrafts made by Boeing and Airbus, and Ferrari and Lamborghini use it in their cars," says Stevens.
The third division is 3D Print, which produces environmentally-friendly paper packaging that substitutes more polluting plastic packaging. Stevens, however, points out that it’s very difficult to make it and keep the colour: “You have some pulp and you crush it under high pressure into shape. But when you crush it, the colour gets lost.” It is the growth of this final division over the next decade that Stevens is particularly excited about and which will ensure she stays invested for the long-term.
Posted at 08/4/2020 14:05 by bamboo2
One of the biggest problems facing the co, a year or so before CV, was high input costs as the price of paper pulp soared. Prices of CRPR's main raw materials have dropped significantly over recent months, and this could help towards early reinstatement of the divi, once CV lockdown is over.

Input prices down nearly 40% since the peak.

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