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IAG International Consolidated Airlines Group S.a.

162.25
1.35 (0.84%)
28 Jun 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
  1.35 0.84% 162.25 162.40 162.55 163.55 159.90 160.85 9,405,817 16:35:17
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Air Transport, Scheduled 29.45B 2.66B - N/A 0
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 160.90p. Over the last year, International Consolidat... shares have traded in a share price range of 137.50p to 187.45p.

International Consolidat... currently has 4,915,631,255 shares in issue.

International Consolidat... Share Discussion Threads

Showing 17251 to 17270 of 31050 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
03/5/2020
12:02
Probably created the Dow rise.. to exit positions Crafty old man :-)
amaretto1
03/5/2020
12:01
He sold the majority last week !
amaretto1
03/5/2020
11:25
Astor, not if you live in Devon or Cornwall, they may be worrying about lack of business in tourist hotspots, but then they complain of clogged up roads in summer, and Gordon Ramsey and his Uber wealthy pals pricing the locals out the market. Would they all not be better if they incorporated a local council goods and services tax on visitors, and non-indigenous Kernows!
bookbroker
03/5/2020
11:15
Yes, motor homes and holiday parks in devon, this the way to go
astorcourt
03/5/2020
11:05
Loganair try and get it correct.

He was selling weeks ago but now has sold out hope you inderstand the difference.

Warren Buffett, the legendary American investor, has sold his firm’s entire holdings in the four major US airlines, warning that the “world has changed” for the aviation industry because of the coronavirus crisis.

Please do your own research as always.

qantas
03/5/2020
10:49
Buffet selling his airline stocks is old news, I posted Buffet was selling some 3 weeks ago.
loganair
03/5/2020
10:44
Correction one as ment to say 80p may appear a little expensive in the not too distant future Price now 215p
spacedust
03/5/2020
10:34
Holidays at home is boring. Going Broad is awesome and will resume Albeit no time soon. Could be yrs.

The news of Buffett selling all the us airline stocks he held will send shockwaves. He held 10% in 4 huge airlines. He knows more about it.....

80p may appear a bargain in the not too distant future. Price now 215p

spacedust
03/5/2020
10:12
I think buffet is spot on. I can see the world realising it no longer needs air travel. Why pollute the planet and put yourself at risk when you can teleconference and support your own by taking holidays at home?
scubadiverr
03/5/2020
09:08
I can't see how BA will be forced to change anything. Demand has fallen through the floor and it won't recover for 3 years. They don't need the same amount of man power that they did. Simple. They have to react for the longer term.Buffet bailing out of all US airlines is very bearish I'm afraid and once 2 nd quarter results are out there will be a real realising of the scale of the problems.
tfergi
03/5/2020
08:38
Synergen SNG
amaretto1
03/5/2020
08:08
He knows airlines are the worst investment ever, Coronavirus, unions, currency, oil price all these factors.No one in their right mind will get on a plane until vaccine found.
montyhedge
03/5/2020
08:08
maybe now some will realise that the game is over at least for the foreseeable future.
sr2day
03/5/2020
07:33
The news of Buffett selling all the us airline stocks he held does not bode well.
bluearmy1
03/5/2020
06:53
Warren Buffet .. has sold out of all air line stocks...He was holding huge stakes...i suggest selling ....
amaretto1
03/5/2020
05:39
m1k,i think you would better off getting a job as a negociator for BA.instead of trying to ramp the share.the only way is down.
sr2day
02/5/2020
23:40
Jailbird....I agree GOV can't force BA to deploy alternatives BUT they can intervene and say that the course of action IAG are employing is unacceptable .

UK GOV have sufficient power to 'persuade' IAG to reconsider and offer a loan on commercial terms , which IAG would find difficult to refuse, given that they have already accepted the same from the Spanish GOV.

It would be positive to see the public get behind the BA employees who are about to lose their jobs and offer public support.

After all, these BA employees have been offering their services to the NHS and others to help combat the virus.

m1k3y1
02/5/2020
23:19
Furlough is just bought time for the Cos to get their house in order and prepare for redundancies
jailbird
02/5/2020
23:17
M1,

"If IAG are allowed to get away with this, it will open the floodgates for other companies to do the same and you will see hundreds of thousands of employees being given notice and fewer people being re-employed under much more inferior pay and conditions."

I am afraid this is process will happen regardless..many will do it anyway

"No one benefits except the company CEO's.
Less tax for UK GOV and more people on benefits and universal credit, more mortgage defaults, lower property prices, lower rents etc etc etc ."

The legal challenge to stop this by the union..the government must think seriously about the consequences of your point...it will be downward spiral and has a frightening chain reaction

Problem is Gov cannot force BA to do deploy alternatives like getting a Gov backed loan

jailbird
02/5/2020
22:13
buywell.......this isn't about survival.......this is about opportunistic exploitation of employees by BA.

If IAG are allowed to get away with this, it will open the floodgates for other companies to do the same and you will see hundreds of thousands of employees being given notice and fewer people being re-employed under much more inferior pay and conditions.

No one benefits except the company CEO's.
Less tax for UK GOV and more people on benefits and universal credit, more mortgage defaults, lower property prices, lower rents etc etc etc .

IAG has other options , they just don't want to explore them as far as BA is concerned.

Oh and as far as pensions go.....pensions companies will default because employees can no longer contribute. . Employees who are sacked and made redundant will be forced to pay lower contributions and / or withdraw their pensions ( if they can ) .

If all these people get sacked and only some of them re-employed on inferior pay.......you and I via our taxes will be paying for it. So far better to keep the companies going with commercial loans and keeping people employed than the alternative .

No one benefits from lower pay and conditions except the company bosses on big bonuses and share awards.

m1k3y1
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