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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Flybe Grp | LSE:FLYB | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B4QMVR10 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.00 | 0.00% | 0.964 | 0.964 | 0.99 | - | 0.00 | 01:00:00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | N/A | 0 |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
15/6/2016 21:32 | What does it all mean? | mbmiah | |
15/6/2016 16:50 | Interesting link to Flybe airports/routes/bums on seats and story going forward. Saad certainly didn't pose for the photo and could do with standing a bit closer to his razor imo :). | sandoval | |
15/6/2016 11:21 | Come on Saad, get your wallet out and buy some shares for yourself! Getting very tempted to buy back in again myself - but only if the CEO/CFO are willing to put their own money in first. If it's so cheap on fundamentals, then what's holding them up - outlook for the industry as a whole? | closetinvestor | |
14/6/2016 17:03 | Hopefully a will settle after 23rd june and a normal (upward) service will follow.......K | kumala | |
14/6/2016 16:34 | Never had a spreadbet on flybe but I'm getting tempted to get a well covered Mar s/bet. | sandoval | |
14/6/2016 16:18 | Great numbers but down 20%.Ffs | anony mous | |
14/6/2016 15:45 | Support should be close, hopefully, or not as the case may or may not be! | bulltradept | |
13/6/2016 10:48 | By Alan Oscroft - Thursday, 9 June, 2016 | More on: EZJFLYBRYA I’ve never been much of a fan of investing in airlines, as they’re so dependent on uncontrollable costs (like fuel), offer no real differentiation, and are constantly fighting a pricing war. But it’s hard to argue against the success of some of our smaller ones in recent years. Game changer When we think of the budget aviation revolution in the UK, easyJet (LSE: EZJ) springs to mind as a pioneer under the helm of Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou. And it is Sir Stelios we have to thank for keeping the company focused on returns, as without the shareholder revolution that he headed, the airline would probably have overstretched itself and destroyed value. Over the past five years, easyJet shares have soared by 296%, to 1,493p today, though they’ve gone off the boil of late and have lost 21% since 2015’s high point in April. Forecasts for this year are modest, with just a 3% EPS rise on the cards, but a 16% earnings hike penciled in for 2017 would drop the P/E to 9.2. That would be the lowest valuation the shares have been on since 2012, and since then we’ve seen the dividend multiplying threefold to a predicted yield of 4.5% this year, rising to 5.3% next. That makes easyJet shares look good value to me, as long as a Brexit vote doesn’t kill our budget airlines’ cheap access to European skies. Not as cheap Short-haul competitor Ryanair (LSE: RYA) has been less popular with a lot of travelers due to its penny-pinching approach to customer service, but it’s served shareholders pretty well — Ryanair shares are up 279% over five years, just a shade short of easyJet’s gain, to 1,492p. Ryanair’s earnings growth has been similarly impressive too, but we’re not expecting to see any dividend cash before the year to March 2017, and then it’s only expected to yield 0.5%. Despite that, the shares are on a higher P/E than easyJet of 12 for 2017, and 10.5 based on 2017 forecasts. I still think Ryanair shares are reasonably priced and we could be looking forward to a few more years of growth, but of the two it’s the least attractive to me. Recovery prospect But the one that could well turn out to be the best bargain right now is Flybe Group (LSE: FLYB), whose share price has headed in the opposite direction to the other two, dropping 60% since June 2014 to 57p. After years of losses, the company has been firmly set on a turnaround plan — and the shares have actually picked up 13% since the end of May, in anticipation of positive full-year results. And on Thursday we got that, with EPS coming in slightly ahead of the City’s forecasts at 3.1p, compared to a loss of 16.5p last year. Revenue rose by 8.7%, and with per-seat costs down 4.2% we saw adjusted pre-tax profit of £5.5m. “This year was the second full year of our three-year transformation plan and our performance has been very encouraging“, said chief executive Saad Hammad, pointing out that this is Flybe’s first year of profit as a quoted company. Analysts are forecasting two more years of very strong EPS growth, suggesting a P/E for March 2017 of only 6.2, dropping to 4.5 the following year. That looks cheap. | amorruso | |
10/6/2016 08:26 | Yeah, why buy this when there's great value stocks like ASOS out there. | bruceylegs | |
09/6/2016 22:45 | I've been looking at actual profit, 8% more seats sold vs previous year, increased revenue 8.7% , increased seat capacity 9.7%, lower unit costs, £174 mill cash, reduced APD to come, possible LHR slots etc. Overpriced ? | sandoval | |
09/6/2016 10:02 | If this is the reaction to good news...I can't wait until Flybe really takes off! | palwing13 | |
09/6/2016 09:58 | Do the results make FLYB a possible takeover target? Now profitable and trading below cash. | bruceylegs |
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