We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
East Balkan | LSE:EBP | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B0QB4K42 | ORD EUR0.01 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 6.50 | - | 0.00 | 00:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
23/7/2008 20:21 | Bulgaria seeks measures after EU funding freeze | lbo | |
27/6/2008 13:44 | Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania Risk Ratings Downgrade (Update2) | lbo | |
27/6/2008 13:31 | Those in the emerging market universe are not immune to flirting with recession, as highlighted by the Baltic states. After a decade of fast growth, all three Baltics look headed for a sharp slowdown, with some analysts calling recessions. Both Latvia and Estonia contracted in Q1 (-1.9% and -0.5%, respectively), while Lithuanian growth was largely unchanged. Sagging domestic demand is the main driver of the slowdown, propelled by tighter credit and a property-market collapse. Adding to Baltic woes is double-digit inflation, which is eroding consumers' spending power and leading to talk of stagflation. | lbo | |
30/4/2008 13:11 | so what is the real NAV on this trust, is it worth a punt? | terrytibbz | |
15/4/2008 07:46 | With the drop in the pound you'd think a euro revenue stream would be good, unless they have hedged it all or have too much debt. | engineer66 | |
13/4/2008 18:39 | Lots of clued up investors spending cash on equity holdings in EBP...enough said DYOR. | jpmorgan | |
11/4/2008 14:34 | As the IMF warns, foreign borrowing in eastern Europe from the Baltics to the Balkans is out of control. The fuse has been set on each of these time-bombs. Some are now detonating. If the ECB continues to set monetary policy for the tastes of the Bundesbank for much longer, it will endanger the very project of European unity it was supposed to cement | lbo | |
21/2/2008 13:17 | The warning signals were coming months ago! Baltic property boom appears to be finished | lbo | |
31/1/2008 12:40 | Why do none of the directors hold any shares in this company? | m.t.glass | |
14/9/2007 11:04 | I think what happened here is that they needed a promotion line to float the company... so they said 7.5% yield.. institutions jumped at it... but a couple of years on they admit it is hard to find those returns and so this was just a promotion story.... now they are developing and not just buying properties... i.e. they buy land and then build they are also not doing what they set out to do... and it means lower yield in the short term and more risk.... also interet rates rise and property goes out of favour... long term we will see.. Slap | slapdash | |
31/8/2007 08:13 | I know but the problems is the debt markets is having an effect on Commercial activity too. It seems the world no longer likes property WORLD PROPERTY CRISIS HINDERS MARKET BOOM IN BULGARIA After years of growth, the prices of real estate in some European markets went down. Spain and Ireland registered a firm decrease in the prices, property became less expensive in the Baltic countries as well, Pari said | lbo | |
29/8/2007 16:35 | But EBP is involved in commercial, not in housing | labatie | |
27/8/2007 11:32 | Overheating sees house price downturn in Europe | lbo | |
04/8/2007 12:44 | Eastern Europe The Question Is How Fast You Go | lbo | |
03/8/2007 08:27 | Carmignac Gestion ("Carmignac") purchased, on 2 August 2007, 1,337,525 Ordinary Shares of Euro0.01 each at a price of 93 pence per share for Carmignac Grande Europe. Carmignac's resulting holding of 8,677,165 shares represents 6.20% of the issued share capital of the Company. | orchestralis | |
30/7/2007 10:00 | The extreme drought and heat wave that hit Europe in the summer of 2003 had enormous adverse social, economic and environmental effects but some on here would not see the "point" in knowing that. | lbo | |
26/7/2007 12:27 | hmm.. this is increasingly difficult to call.. when sentiment turns it can be vicious and take ages to come back... these guys are in the risky balkans.. they have changed strategy since float... (on divis).... will be affected by rising interest rates.... and have huge management charges have a look at TRC which floated only a bit after and went to a 15% discount to float price.... that would put us at 85p... Slapper | slapdash | |
26/7/2007 12:01 | Thats a very narrow minded perspective IMHO. Its not just about ethics. Its about knowing and researching all aspects, both social and financial, of any market. This is the real key to any monetary success when investing in foreign markets. | lbo | |
26/7/2007 11:51 | agreed - I think the best way of hleping people if you chose to is to give say 10% of your profits to charity... but to become ethical on things is just to complex as where does it end? Can you buy defence shares? Choclate makers? Gaming companies? Oil and GAs companies? Pharma companies as they test on animals? Banks which lend to questionable companies.. in fact you could cross off pretty much all the amrket for being unethical!!! Slapper | slapdash | |
26/7/2007 11:44 | Can't agree LBO. Interest in areas is for charity. Sharedealing is for taking a view on the market. | iomhere | |
26/7/2007 10:03 | And I suppose if any of your relations died in the floods in the UK that would not matter either. No need to be callous. I never said it would affect the value of properties but its a little more important to those affected then property values...Don't you think! All investors should have more then just a monetary interest in the areas that they invest in IMHO. | lbo | |
26/7/2007 09:56 | amazing how a stock goes from being tipped in IC and everyone's favourite company with great prospects in an area everyone loves.. property and emerging markets.. then suddenly.. it is not property that is overgought and that run has ended.... and they change strategy and eveyone is annoyed at no dividend growth.. shows how sentiment/psycology drives stuff.... where will she bottom?? Well I'm guessing the next interims might provide some kind of boost.... I think below 90p is a little cheap.... given yield.... so I would say we are almsot there unless there is a market set back.. Slapper | slapdash | |
26/7/2007 09:52 | Provided they haven't bought rubbish these could become a good buy if they get down to 80p. | iomhere |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions