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IAG International Consolidated Airlines Group S.a.

176.15
-0.80 (-0.45%)
25 Apr 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
International Consolidated Airlines Group S.a. LSE:IAG London Ordinary Share ES0177542018 ORD EUR0.10 (CDI)
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -0.80 -0.45% 176.15 176.10 176.20 178.20 173.80 175.45 16,952,869 16:29:56
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Air Transport, Scheduled 29.45B 2.66B 0.5401 3.98 10.57B
International Consolidated Airlines Group S.a. is listed in the Air Transport, Scheduled sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker IAG. The last closing price for International Consolidat... was 176.95p. Over the last year, International Consolidat... shares have traded in a share price range of 137.50p to 180.15p.

International Consolidat... currently has 4,915,631,255 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of International Consolidat... is £10.57 billion. International Consolidat... has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 3.98.

International Consolidat... Share Discussion Threads

Showing 13601 to 13625 of 30825 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
02/3/2020
00:27
It’s over for those that think a share or bond has any value.

Companies go bust and bond holders default. ( inc government bonds )

Very simple to understand.

1 nhs
02/3/2020
00:21
Pharmas and supermarkets might be the only ones to go up in the near term if there is a lockdown
spacedust
02/3/2020
00:12
Contamination of planes is now the problem re above

Decontamination is also a problem and takes time to do .

How many passengers will sue airlines or cruise ship operators where they can prove the Covid-19 was transmitted to them by an infected fellow passenger ?

IMO such cases are already in the pipeline especially those that died.



How long will people avoid wanting to travel again on the Diamond Princess ?

As fellow passengers are tracked down from others who had Covid-19 on a plane they shared together

How long will it be before folks curtail any air travel other than that of absolute necessity ?


Folks will avoid large gatherings like pubs, cafes and other eateries just as they will getting on cruise ships and aircraft or going in hotels.


Banks and financials to take hits

Plus OIL stocks and base metal mining stocks

Not much rising except special situations in a few stocks in very limited sectors IMO


It isn't Covid-19 that kills

It is the symptoms that follow and develop in circa 2% of cases

viral pneumonia , which then can lead to septic shock and sepsis

Sepsis is now the biggest killer in the world being responsible for 20% of ALL deaths and rising.

Pneumonia is the biggest killer in the world of children under 5 years of age

dyor

buywell3
02/3/2020
00:10
Here we go: ( as predicted )


Hong Kong / Transport
Cathay Pacific parks half its fleet and slashes nearly three-quarters of March flights as coronavirus epidemic hammers global aviation industry
Hong Kong’s flagship airline keeping 120 planes out of the sky at any one time
Bosses say move is in response to market demand as fear of travelling increases
Topic | Cathay Pacific
Danny Lee
Danny Lee
Published: 8:00am, 2 Mar, 2020

1 nhs
01/3/2020
23:55
Those saying flu kills more people so why cov19 getting more airtime....thats the answer there. It's because cov19 is so serious that governments around the globe are sitting themselves so are lying and keeping a tight lid on things so it doesn't cause panic.

How long can they keep this under wraps. Jeez even animals are now dropping dead from the virus.

This is scary.

Bottom is anywhere now 100p 200p 50p none of us know not even the.ceo of th company. I'll keep my short open

spacedust
01/3/2020
23:51
Now IAG cancelling.flights. heard it from the horses mouth

hxxps://news.sky.com/story/coronavirus-ba-owner-and-easyjet-cut-european-flights-11945266

spacedust
01/3/2020
22:41
United Airlines likely to cut flights due to Covid-19
npp62
01/3/2020
19:43
"As the teams and riders of the Moto2™ and Moto3™ classes were already in Qatar for the three-day official test at Losail International Circuit earlier this week, the races of both categories will be possible. The lightweight and intermediate classes will therefore compete in their season opener from the 6th to 8th March. The same will apply to the Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup, which will have two races during the Qatar Grand Prix as originally planned. Stay tuned for a revised schedule."
m1k3y1
01/3/2020
19:38
Moto gp just cancelled, more impact on iag and airlines
milliecusto
01/3/2020
19:18
I give up. Buy the shares and win, win, win.
hamhamham1
01/3/2020
19:10
Yep, it's an IAG board, not a virus board. If you are not in here why keep spouting largely irrelevant stats that have nothing to do with this airline directly, merely clogging it up with negative speculation - curious, particularly on a Sunday...
daveboy1
01/3/2020
19:04
Ham.....if you don't own any IAG shares and you are neither long or short IAG, why bother posting here ?
m1k3y1
01/3/2020
18:58
But if you look at China stats yesterday about 500 new cases but 40 deaths, so it's hard to compare the stats. Actually figures are:

Chinese mainland reports 573 new confirmed cases of novel coronavirus infections, 35 new deaths

So the ratio of deaths is heading up compared to the 1-2% official????

hamhamham1
01/3/2020
18:54
The WHO statistics say there are 84,000 cases worldwide, with 2900 fatalities, 3.5%.
But outside China, there have been 4351 cases, 67 deaths, 1.5%. That is low.
So, China have been by far the worst hit. Naturally so. The size of the population, environmental factors, air pollution, etc. A more unhealthy nation by far.

Obviously, those figures will change by the day. And Italy are not doing too well, but by and large I feel that the powers that be are on the case, and this will be contained. It's been good to see people who are informed, including the head of the WHO, coming out and declaring that the whole Coronavirus issue is getting out of perspective with all the fear mongering and dramatic news bulletins, and is causing mass panic unnecessarily.

There are far more deadly scenarios affecting the world these days than a newly discovered flu virus called Coronavirus. And we are soon to get Spring and summer weather which will see it off, and do the job. And then after that there will be a vaccine.

worraps
01/3/2020
18:50
I don't own any IAG shares, not long nor short here, honest.
hamhamham1
01/3/2020
18:33
ham.....do you own any IAG shares, or do you just trade options etc ?
m1k3y1
01/3/2020
18:32
worraps.....totally agree
m1k3y1
01/3/2020
18:22
There would be no hysteria if there was a vaccination, and it is pretty remarkable that with every research institute within the pharma industry working on one that they have taken this long. Off course we are talking of six weeks since the Chinese outbreak became apparent to the Western world, nonetheless they have a handle on most other outbreaks of flu, and with the technology to understand its molecular structure why is it taking so long, irrespective of clinical testing. In future maybe every man or woman leaving China should be quarantined for two weeks prior being allowed to roam in a guest country. They knew of its existence in mid-December but failed to act, now the news is everywhere except Wuhan, but this is a kind of flu so ought to be somewhat responsive to existing treatments, even if it did originate from an animal. Maybe try veterinary medicine!!!
bookbroker
01/3/2020
18:10
Because it kills approx 2% of all that get it. So do the maths if it spreads around the planet like common flu!
hamhamham1
01/3/2020
18:09
Flu kills 0.24%, this kills up to 3%, near 300% uplift in mortality risk
milliecusto
01/3/2020
18:05
This hysteria is becoming totally laughable. I'd like to know what the true purpose is. One person out of hundreds of millions dies from Coronavirus in the USA, and it's used to cause panic and alarm over the whole globe. Thousands die from winter flu every year, and we never hear a word about it. Norovirus takes hold on cruise ships and schools, and all we get is brief coverage in the media. Why on earth this Coronavirus is being used like this, to cause totally unnecessary panic and alarm I really do not understand. Total mass hysteria!
worraps
01/3/2020
17:27
Here we go ( as predicted)


Airport Workers Fear They're Unprotected From The Coronavirus04:01
Play
March 01, 2020
Martha Ann Overland
Humans — workers and flight crews as well as passengers — can be exposed to any number of pathogens at airports. EVA Air employees are seen wearing face masks at the Los Angeles airport in February amid the coronavirus outbreak. U.S. officials advise masks are not the best way to mitigate one's risk of contracting the virus. (Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images)
Humans — workers and flight crews as well as passengers — can be exposed to any number of pathogens at airports. EVA Air employees are seen wearing face masks at the Los Angeles airport in February amid the coronavirus outbreak. U.S. officials advise masks are not the best way to mitigate one's risk of contracting the virus. (Daniel Slim/AFP via Getty Images)
After passengers filed off a flight from China five weeks ago, cabin cleaners at the Los Angeles International Airport were sent in to clean the plane. One of the workers, fearing she might contract the coronavirus, refused.

"I was scared to death," said Barbara Gomez of Inglewood, Calif. "I start crying."

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Gomez said her boss told her that if she didn't board the plane, her job would be on the line. Still, she refused.

"Then the other manager came out of the office," Gomez recalled. "And he says, 'Do you know, that over 200 people are going to be boarding this aircraft in the morning.' I say, 'I don't care. Barbara Gomez is not going on the aircraft! You know, this is about my health.' "

In the end, Barbara Gomez did not get on the plane. She was eventually reassigned to clean a domestic flight.

No gloves, no masks

In this modern age of jet travel, it was a matter of time that the coronavirus would appear in the United States. As of Sunday, one person has died and dozens have been infected in the U.S., but the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says the risk of contracting the virus remains low.

Appeals for calm by the Trump administration and the CDC haven't done much to ease the worries of airport workers, who say they're on the front lines.

Security personnel, gate agents and other employees come in contact with hundreds of travelers a day. Cleaning crews have to mop up bodily fluids such as vomit, mucus and blood. Many of these workers say they lack gloves and respiratory masks as well as the information they need to protect themselves.

"We did not get any training whatsoever," Gomez said. "It's just go clean the airplane. Right now, we hardly have solutions to clean the airplanes with."

She said she and her colleagues are not provided with gloves; they are lucky if flight crews can spare a few extra.

Marc Desnoyers, the president of JetStream Ground Services, which employs Gomez, insists that this is not the case.

"Provisions of cleaning solutions, gloves and all necessary safety equipment, including masks when requested, are closely monitored and replenished when needed," said Desnoyers in a written statement and in a phone interview with NPR. "When a concern is raised by a team member, we work to address it immediately, as we did with this employee."

When asked about the city-mandated, 16-hour training curriculum in emergency preparedness, which includes information on infectious diseases, Desnoyers said "every employee has been trained."

He added that Gomez completed her training in November.

But according to Gomez, the only training she has received from JetStream was a 30-minute class in CPR.

Andrew Hagelshaw, communications coordinator with the Service Employees International Union-United Service Workers West, said he is hearing similar reports from other airline workers at the Los Angeles airport.

They are particularly vulnerable, he said, because they don't work directly for the airlines. Instead, they are employed by subcontractors that frequently cut corners.

NPR obtained copies of half a dozen complaints that JetStream employees recently filed with the city. All stated that their training was brief, limited to CPR and active shooter drills.

On the front lines

To prevent the spread of the virus, several major U.S. carriers have stopped flying to mainland China. But now that the coronavirus is infecting people in the U.S., that's not much comfort to airport workers.

Yvette Stephens, a security guard for international flights at Newark Liberty International Airport, comes in contact with hundreds of passengers from all over the world.

And it's a messy business.

"We have people every single day that cough, sneeze, don't cover their mouths or their nose," Stephens said.

Workers complained, and the airlines received some unflattering media attention. It appears the airport is now stepping up protections for its ground staff.

Stephens' employer, OmniServ, has offered gloves and will soon be providing face masks, she said, "but we won't know more until they start the training process."

She wasn't willing to wait for company-provided masks.

Stephens has multiple sclerosis, so she bought a supply and handed them out to her co-workers.

As of Sunday, the CDC is not recommending that healthy people wear masks. Measures, such as frequent hand-washing and staying away from people who are sick, are more effective.

But these guidelines are not reassuring contract airport workers who are paid hourly.

Stephens said she has no choice but to work.

"You know, I have to pay my bills," she said. "I have to pay my rent."

Stephens lacks health insurance. For now, she continues to work at the airport and hopes she doesn't get sick.

But she has no doubt where the virus is headed.

"You can't say it's not going to come this way, because it will."

Copyright

1 nhs
01/3/2020
16:53
And another realistic viewpoint:
worraps
01/3/2020
16:49
See if this helps. Even the head of the WHO thinks the panic is senseless.
worraps
01/3/2020
16:31
Typically the Americans are now starting to panic, and are panic buying food in the shops especially in California as they now have 34 cases of Coronavirus in California with a total of 72 in the country as a whole and therefore would not be surprised to see the Dow Jones, S&P sell off heavily tomorrow and throughout next week.
loganair
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