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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
---|---|---|---|
Fuller Smith & Turner Plc | FSTA | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
---|---|---|---|---|
606.00 | 600.00 | 610.00 | 596.00 | 606.00 |
Industry Sector |
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TRAVEL & LEISURE |
Announcement Date | Type | Currency | Dividend Amount | Ex Date | Record Date | Payment Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
15/11/2023 | Interim | GBP | 0.0663 | 14/12/2023 | 15/12/2023 | 02/01/2024 |
15/06/2023 | Final | GBP | 0.1 | 22/06/2023 | 23/06/2023 | 27/07/2023 |
17/11/2022 | Interim | GBP | 0.0468 | 15/12/2022 | 16/12/2022 | 03/01/2023 |
09/06/2022 | Final | GBP | 0.0741 | 07/07/2022 | 08/07/2022 | 27/07/2022 |
18/11/2021 | Interim | GBP | 0.039 | 16/12/2021 | 17/12/2021 | 04/01/2022 |
12/12/2019 | Interim | GBP | 0.078 | 19/12/2019 | 20/12/2019 | 10/01/2020 |
25/01/2019 | Final | GBP | 0.0435 | 01/08/2019 | 02/08/2019 | 06/09/2019 |
07/06/2019 | Interim | GBP | 0.08 | 13/06/2019 | 14/06/2019 | 12/07/2019 |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 21/11/2023 20:24 by darrin1471 The Telegraph is being a bit disingenuous. The £200m includes the special dividend from the brewery sale.Revenues are up because prices are up. City Pub group has just been sold at £10m below NAV. On the positive side: "Directors’ valuation of the total property portfolio in May 2022 at £995.6 million, approximately £400 million above our current book value – giving implied adjusted net asset value per share of £14.07" |
Posted at 21/11/2023 18:12 by lindowcross From the Telegraph today:A rally of more than 40pc from the year’s low in April helps to justify this column’s patience with pubs-to-hotels group Fuller, Smith & Turner and any further improvement in trading could (finally) take us into the black on this position, first taken two years ago. Working from home, train strikes and input cost inflation may have crimped the pace of the post-lockdown recovery but Fuller’s well-tended estate in London and the south of England is showing strong footfall despite some very variable weather. First-half results published last week for the six months to September showed double-digit percentage increases in revenues from food, drink and accommodation. Profits rose sharply, cash flow was good and the company increased its interim dividend by 42pc, adding a new share buyback programme as it did so. And the buyback is one of those that genuinely make financial sense, because the shares continue to trade a long way below net asset value. The company’s £386m market value compares with equity or net assets of £442m, and that latter figure is based on property valuations that date back more than two decades in many cases. An indication of the value that lies within Fuller, Smith & Turner comes from the £17m profit that the company will book on the sale of a property in Southwark, London, for £20m when the deal closes next year. Risks remain, especially from further train strikes, sticky inflation or “higher for longer” interest rates, which drain away consumers’ confidence and cash. But even then the valuation and strong balance sheet offer protection. In the meantime, the dividends and buybacks mean investors are gaining some reward for their patience. It is worth bearing in mind that by the time Fuller Smith & Turner completes the new buyback and pays its final dividend for fiscal 2024 next summer it will have returned some £200m in cash to shareholders over a decade, no mean sum relative to the current market value. Fuller Smith & Turner still looks very cheap. Hold. |
Posted at 15/11/2023 13:59 by 1tx Yes;better than expected.Worthwile divi increase.Still good value..... |
Posted at 15/11/2023 10:57 by giltedge1 Great Result, caught market off guard all up profit, Cashflow, Dividend, debt down. Mad hatter sale to come I believe. Great to see price rises sticking, charge £129 for a hotel room might have a pint on way home to celebrate!. |
Posted at 30/1/2023 12:18 by m_kerr they should have bulked up the brewing business as marstons did, and sold / spunoff the pubs by now. they're far too valuable in relation to the cash they generate.yes they've generated good returns over time, but that's only been because they've ridden a wave of london asset price inflation. since that stopped in 2015-16, they'v pretty much stood still as a business. fine if they're paying out a 6-7% dividend, but they're not. |
Posted at 26/1/2023 10:00 by 1tx LOL m kerr! Actually at least the investor from 2003 would n't have done too bad even today...The price then was circa 150p & would have got back 125p special divi in 2019 when the brewery was sold plus usual dividends.We live in hope. |
Posted at 19/12/2022 18:31 by essentialinvestor It's no longer the UK's best pub company imv.Yes there was a time when you could make a case of that. Look at the FSTA performance v Young's over the last few years. |
Posted at 17/11/2022 12:24 by essentialinvestor FSTA 2019 H1 for comparison |
Posted at 17/11/2022 10:00 by 1tx Is it done on a rolling 12 Months basis?Results reasonable in difficult times.Hospitality faces a "double whammy" in that we have the usual inflation increases plus we no longer have the reduced VAT & rates relief etc.I am probably in a minority of one in that I consider FSTA shares are cheap based on its assets & past record.Obviously I am making the reckless assumption that the world is not going to end......and that we may see a gradual improvement over the next year or so.NB I have been avoiding watching BBC News too often! |
Posted at 20/9/2022 21:17 by darrin1471 Not sure what government can do. Every company has a different hedge or contract. Do you give the same to FSTA and JDW or only give to FSTA as they have not hedged as well as JDW. |
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