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DPEU Dp Eurasia N.v.

190.00
0.00 (0.00%)
30 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Dp Eurasia N.v Investors - DPEU

Dp Eurasia N.v Investors - DPEU

Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Dp Eurasia N.v. DPEU London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 190.00 01:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
190.00 190.00
more quote information »
Industry Sector
TRAVEL & LEISURE

Top Investor Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 15/11/2021 14:36 by hybrasil
The book build was only directed at institutional investors - indeed this was one of independent directors gripes at the time.

By the way have a read of Jubilants accounts. My comment is that Indian accounts are presented much more clearly than UK ones!
Posted at 12/9/2021 22:40 by m_kerr
what you should look for with domino's franchises is the like for like sales growth, and franchisee openings. both are excellent here. it's clearly a well run business with experienced local management, albeit results are soured by a failing russian business. main issue i've had with DPEU is that it's stuck in turkey, the lira being down 70% in the last 5 years. as an investor are you fairly compensated for that heightened currency risk? jubilant foodworks, the domino's franchisor of india, has an enterprise value of £5.3bn, or £3.8m per outlet, compared to around £0.2m per outlet for DPEU (5% of the value).
Posted at 22/3/2021 09:01 by nakedmolerat
SYDNEY (March 22): Asian markets faced a fresh stress test on Monday as a plunge in the Turkish lira lifted the safe-haven yen and blunted risk appetite, although the fallout so far looked to be relatively contained.

The dollar was trading almost 15% higher on the lira at 8.3000 after President Tayyip Erdogan shocked markets by replacing Turkey's hawkish central bank governor with a like-minded critic of high interest rates.

"Erdogan’s decision to fire Governor Agbal, who had sought to instil some price stability and perception of Bank independence, now raises question as to whether the new Governor will look to lower rates while still aim to fight higher inflation," said Rodrigo Catril, a senior FX strategist at NAB.

The uncertainty was enough to see Nikkei futures ease to 29,280, pointing to an opening drop from the cash close on Friday of 29,792.

Nasdaq futures dipped 0.3% and S&P 500 futures 0.2%. June futures for Treasury 10-year notes edged up just 1 tick, suggesting there was no broad rush to safety.

Investors are still struggling to deal with the recent surge in U.S. bond yields, which has left equity valuations for some sectors, particularly tech, looking stretched.

Bonds had another wobble on Friday when the Federal Reserve decided not to extend a capital concession for banks, which could lessen their demand for Treasuries.

The damage was limited, however, by the Fed's promise to work on the rules to prevent strains in the financial system.

Monday's tumble in the lira saw the yen firm modestly, with notable gains on the euro and Australian dollar . That in turn dragged the euro down slightly on the dollar to $1.1880.

After an initial slip, the dollar soon steadied at 108.86 yen, while the dollar index was a shade higher at 92.080 .

Also lifting the yen were concerns Japanese retail investors that have built long lira positions, a popular trade for the yield-hungry sector, might be squeezed out, so triggering another round of lira selling.

Still, analysts at Citi doubted that episode would lead to widespread pressure on emerging markets, noting the last time the lira slid in 2020, there was little spillover.

"In terms of impact on other parts of the high-yielding EM, we believe that will be quite limited," Citi said in a note.

OUCH!
Posted at 06/2/2021 11:09 by hybrasil
As I said I was in on the recent investors call and the subject of Russia came up. Its not quite answering your question but I believe they said they were in a position to pay off all of the Russian debt if needs be (there is a covenant issue)without affecting the overall business.

This mornings FT has an article about student rioters in Turkish universities. Apparently Mr Erdogan is a bit homophobic and is getting a little excited about LBGT issues. Student riots always have the possibility of bringing change to a country.
Posted at 13/1/2020 08:23 by gfrae
Essntial Investor, perhaps you should look at Raven ?
Posted at 24/8/2018 10:09 by cantrememberthis2
Investors chronicle added fuel to fire.
I've bought shed loads and will continue.
I've had emails from CEO and happy to add

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