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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jlen Environmental Assets Group Limited | LSE:JLEN | London | Ordinary Share | GG00BJL5FH87 | ORD NPV |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-0.70 | -0.78% | 89.60 | 89.30 | 89.90 | 90.30 | 89.30 | 89.70 | 898,725 | 16:35:02 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Investment Advice | 108.45M | 98.3M | 0.1486 | 6.04 | 593.39M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
14/12/2022 13:57 | High volume today, but share price unchanged , hasthe Company closed down for Christmas already, or have I missed some recent news? | route1 | |
05/12/2022 10:40 | Macc1, thanks for that a nice little run through.....not much info but good to watch. I liked the greenhouse deal when it was announced and hope it works well.....I'd like to see a large greenhouse project beside more ADs as it seems to make a lot of sense....waste heat....waste vegetation....nice and circular. (good to use your own electricity rather than sell it on at a variable prices) The salmon farm in Norway did seem a bit strange but it certainly does diversify things???!!! | pavey ark | |
28/11/2022 08:18 | Here's a video for todays results: hxxps://youtu.be/ipz | macc1 | |
18/11/2022 17:54 | Winterflood also pointed out that if biogas was confirmed as exempt, it would benefit JLEN Environmental Assets (JLEN), a diversified fund that generates some of its revenue from the sale of heat and biogas and enjoys some subsidy in the form of the feed-in-tariff scheme. Funds such as Greencoat UK Wind (UKW) and Bluefield Solar Income (BSIF) with the highest exposure to subsidised CfD and ROC revenues should see a smaller reduction in NAVs, said Winterflood’s Ratnasingam. UK Wind rose 3% yesterday, one of the biggest risers in the sector, and rallied another 3.7% today. Foresight Solar (FSFL) and NextEnergy Solar (NESF) gained over 2% yesterday. The latter’s rise may have surprised Ratnasingam as he believed FSFL could be the most vulnerable to a knock to NAV as it had recently set its power price assumption at the higher end of the sector range of £80-£175/MWh for 2023 and £65-£150/MWh in 2024. By contrast, he said NESF was ‘relatively attractive’ because of its investments in battery storage through a 500MW joint venture with Eelpower. Investor’s Newell estimated it was in line for a reduction in NAV of just 0.3%. However, further clarification is needed as Chande included NESF, BSIF and UKW in a list of five that also included Renewables Infrastructure Group (TRIG) and JLEN he believed could see reductions of around 2.5% in NAV. ‘Arguably this is already reflected in discounts,’ he said. Until the smoke clears, however, those gaps between share prices and NAVs look set to remain. | carterit | |
16/11/2022 19:12 | Half year results due on 28th November | gateside | |
16/11/2022 11:31 | No positive news - just a 40% windfall tax on excess profits. Should see share price fall in the run up to autumn statement - then who knows? | bodgeman | |
04/11/2022 13:22 | JLEN seems to be treading water at the moment, does anyone have any recent andhopefully positive news as to current developments? | route1 | |
13/10/2022 22:29 | For transparency I hold both the bond and JLEN. route1 - the bond can be sold in the market prior to maturity and I am tracking the price at each month end that would allow me to make just under 5% annualised over the period held. the point is that the bond is virtally risk free whereas JLEN will likely return more over the long term - but as we have seen in the last month - has risk. in a rising market stock market, bonds would be uninteresting | melody9999 | |
12/10/2022 12:00 | You also need to consider that bonds don't have NAV appreciation. | markldn | |
11/10/2022 06:11 | Bonds in any currency always pay a FIXED interest over a Fixed period of time.So money is locked away.Whilst I appreciate that the certainty gives people peace of mind, I would much prefer to invest in JLEN, a company with a proven track record, which is continually acquiring new assets within the Renewable and Sustainable Energy Industries.Due to Global "circumstances " of which we are all fully aware Sustainability and Energy is front and centre , and a concern to Companies and individuals anywhere on the planet.So, on that basis I will continue to hold . | route1 | |
09/10/2022 05:03 | https://www.bbc.com/ | spoole5 | |
05/10/2022 13:39 | Another point is that , at a 4.83 discount to net asset value , this is the first time , according to the share price graph provided by Hargreaves Lansdown , that JLEN has traded at a significant discount . Those five years evidently include the spring of 2020 , when stock markets crashed , and I distinctly recall the morning then when the FTSE100 collapsed by just over 10% . According to a recent buy tip by the Daily Telegraph , JLEN is the most broadly based of all the renewables funds and , as long as NAV continues to increase , the share price should eventually follow suit . | mrnumpty | |
05/10/2022 12:14 | Melody9999 raises the point that the dividend here isn’t much higher than that on some bonds , and therefore suggests that investors are better advised to put money in to ostensibly safe bonds . Well , without purporting to know much about bonds , didn’t we see mayhem last week on the bonds market last week until the Bank of England threw £ 65 billion in to stabilise bonds ? Secondly , however , surely the capital value of your bonds is exactly the same at maturity as the amount which you paid for them , whereas the value of shares ( and being an investment trust , that’s what this fund is ) can increase and , it seems to me that with energy markets in mayhem , there is a screaming need for the alternative sources of electricity which JLEN is invested in , not because they are “ renewable “ but because we risk even greater electricity shortages this winter than usual . In recent years , even before the Ukraine war was part of the calculation , Britain has come increasingly close to power cuts , which have only been averted by the Government regularly paying large industrial users of electricity ( brick works , glass factories , steel works ) to cease operations . To a large extent because of the fanaticism of Westminster in pursuing Net Zero , thereby destroying coal-powered power stations and having almost no strategic gas reserves and leaving nuclear power to wither away , Britain now needs electricity from wherever it can get it . I’m very happy to be corrected about bonds by anyone who has greater knowledge than my minimal knowledge . | mrnumpty | |
29/9/2022 08:55 | A real no brainer,I'm about to fill my boots for the third time, especially at these prices. | route1 | |
28/9/2022 20:32 | JLEN currently yields 6.6% and at current price there is opportunity of a good capital gain. I'd buy JLEN over gilts any day! Just my opinion. | gateside |
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