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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Halfords Group Plc | LSE:HFD | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B012TP20 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-0.40 | -0.25% | 160.50 | 160.30 | 161.10 | 162.50 | 159.80 | 161.60 | 1,060,007 | 16:35:06 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Misc Retail Stores, Nec | 1.59B | 34M | 0.1553 | 10.35 | 351.82M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
16/6/2022 08:54 | They should buy their own shares, at this rate they could acquire themselves in under 3 years ! | amt | |
16/6/2022 08:54 | I agree itisonlymoney. Looks like a fat-finger trade early doors. Halfords made £97m profit before tax, up hugely on both of the lastt two years. Market cap for the whole company is only £350m!!! There's no way this is the right valuation. Should be nearer to the 300p share price that it was in February. | jmountain | |
16/6/2022 08:32 | this was fat-fingered first thing triggering an auto sell-off. hfd has no debt. the business has £46m in net cash even after all the recent expansion. all the debt shown is lease obligations. 9p annual dividend on 156p share price that's 5.8% yield on the divi alone. amazed this has happened. even low side earnings give this a p/e of 5, which is ridiculous for a profitable business paying a divi with no debt. managment always underselling themselves here too. just managed to squeeze in a little more. | itisonlymoney | |
16/6/2022 08:26 | Wish they hadn't mentioned future acquisitions surely enough to manage at the moment I expected a share buybacks with the results Had high hopes staying put for now | 1pvh | |
16/6/2022 08:12 | Yes and markets react more on bad news than they do on good news. Roughly speaking they have guided 2023 earnings as somewhere between 2021 and 2022. If we look at adjusted (i.e. without non-underlying items) basic earnings per share that means about 30p. So at 200p was 6.7x without stripping out the cash. Ridiculous over-reaction in the wrong direction. | aringadingding | |
16/6/2022 07:56 | Market has been over-reacting for years now, upside and downside. Thats the result of instant information supply online imo. Plus you can see on here how when prices fly everyone gets excited at once and when they drop everyone thinks the worst. Probably creating a whole new tranche of mental health problems. | yump | |
16/6/2022 07:50 | amazing reaction to great results. probably caused by a misreading of a few shareholders and then a mechanized dump triggering stops down to the 150s. have loaded up at 156. i expect this to be blue by the end of day and about 240p by Friday. hfd is paying a 4% divi on this mornings price. forecast p/e of about 5. dominant market position. managmnt have a history of being very downbeat on propsects and then overdelivering. gla dyor. share price is stupidly low and doesn't make any sense against earnings. | itisonlymoney | |
16/6/2022 07:42 | It's store leases not bank debt. NBI have no position as I hate the market atm and am sitting 95% cash. But this is starting to look very cheap and therefore interesting. | elsa7878 | |
16/6/2022 07:39 | I think the net gearing looks ideal 100% at current valuation, is that concerning the market? | muchodinero | |
16/6/2022 07:28 | Hardly expensive. Forecast to make £50 million post-tax. Now valued at £340 million with net cash of £40 million. Strip out the cash and it's on 6 times...if they hit their forecasts. | elsa7878 | |
16/6/2022 07:18 | There's bound to be some Skelingtons in the cupboard too. I suspect longer term they overpaid for those such as axle group. Painful day for some. | my retirement fund | |
16/6/2022 07:08 | Would be interested sub 100, still to expensive | milliecusto | |
16/6/2022 06:10 | I don’t hold at the moment but that FY23 outlook statement of PBT at £65m-£75m is a significant reduction on FY22 and FY21. This is going to be a theme for most companies i think. Question is, is it priced in given the significant de-rating that has already taken place? | rimau1 | |
13/6/2022 10:50 | Thursday I think | gswredland | |
13/6/2022 08:13 | Results should be this week,will be interesting to see outlook statement. | balcony | |
31/5/2022 05:14 | The share price is following the market and auto related shares have taken a hit in particular. | amt | |
30/5/2022 07:24 | it wasnt a lrg raise vs mkt cap. imagaine if they were to do it now. would cost twice as much to current holders and i v much doubt they would pay half the price for the asset. share price is down in line more or less with uk retailers index. mkt has sold them all in anticipation of a big consumer slowdown. but some will do better than others. i think pure etailers in clothing sector will be hit hardest. those with less discretionary in them and specailists will do the best. | roguetraderuk | |
30/5/2022 07:20 | true but look at the effect its had on the share price. | my retirement fund | |
30/5/2022 07:11 | mrf, taking the companys perspective, thats when you raise, at highs not lows. always the way to do it. | roguetraderuk | |
30/5/2022 07:04 | It was under 10% dilution to be factual to make an acquisition, plus post covid it looks like it will be an income share again. | amt | |
19/5/2022 11:44 | Its a shame they diluted the billo out of the equity with crazy fund raising right at the top of the market to, this used to be a reasonable income share. | my retirement fund | |
19/5/2022 08:27 | bel, good points and this should do better than the avg retailer but the mkt needs to do its thing first, it looks like these might get to 185 and while they might go even lower i think they would rebound pretty quickly to 2xx once things calm down. | roguetraderuk | |
19/5/2022 08:10 | mrf I ADDED today as i think its undervalued on a 12 month bases tiger | castleford tiger | |
18/5/2022 14:52 | The downward trend seems well established and I'm guessing this is due to high inflation and high fuel costs dissuading drivers from driving. But a few things argue in HFD's favour - massive sales of used cars and higher age of cars on the road. Also, people still need to travel and public transport is 25% down, so people are either getting around using cars, or bikes, or electric scooters or whatever, but it's all HFD business. Even electric cars need tyres and HFD is one of the biggest tyre suppliers in the UK with its recent acquisitions - over 600 garages and catching up fast to Kwik Fit (700+ locations). | belroe |
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