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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jtc Plc | LSE:JTC | London | Ordinary Share | JE00BF4X3P53 | ORD GBP0.01 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.50 | 0.18% | 821.00 | 823.50 | 825.00 | 827.00 | 810.00 | 810.00 | 84,580 | 16:35:08 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Unit Inv Tr, Closed-end Mgmt | 200.08M | 34.71M | 0.2097 | 39.34 | 1.37B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
11/12/2018 06:34 | And how are they to achieve that? Abstention is hardly life-affirming! Nor the fringe loony parties, and it's difficult to include Corbyn nowadays. | edmondj | |
11/12/2018 05:09 | The self serving centrist establishment still can’t grasp that those who voted Leave refuse to be cheated. The next General Election will be fun. 17.4 million voters out for revenge. | mount teide | |
10/12/2018 23:21 | Well welcome to the (hard)brexit fold LR2... | grannyboy | |
10/12/2018 22:37 | Not at all Granny. I want May's ridiculous bodged deal to fail. A hard Brexit is fine by me as I would then hope to see a realignment of the current moribund UK political parties and some new parties form that are more attuned to the wishes of the British people. Let's remove ourselves from the yoke of the EU Commission and then we can concentrate on the removal of the multitude of corrupt UK politicians. | lr2 | |
10/12/2018 21:54 | Ho dear...LR2 are you a decoy let out to roam the streets to take the heat off Mays and the establishments total incompetence following months of brexit negotiating failure, culminating in today's humiliating fiasco... 'I Know lets blame the Russians, it will help to take the public's eye of the fine detail of Mays cracker of a deal.....In fact, better still if we could start a war with them, that would be . . ..... | grannyboy | |
10/12/2018 21:39 | The greatest current terror threat surely comes from Russia. If the government can't see that then they're even more stupid than I had assumed. | lr2 | |
10/12/2018 21:00 | The left less inclined to violence? Are you having a laugh, or are you just naïve?? | maxk | |
10/12/2018 20:52 | Concerning what you say about German security services complicity in rightist murders that sounds very sinister. The extreme right is unfortunately on the march in Europe, and for all our British tradition of moderation, the death of Jo Cox should have been a wake up call that we have those of our own to deal with. The vast majority of both brexiteers and remainders would make common ground against all violent extremism, but divisions exacerbated by this toxic brexit debate have only created opportunities for nut cases of the right. Those of the left seem by and large less inclined to violence, at least towards people. I think Cameron will go down in history as the most arrogant and destructive naif in modern British history. The man who let the toothpaste out of the tube with no idea of what to do with it, or how to put it back. As for Boris, there must be special place in hell for lying opportunists, who are willing to barter their country and the prosperity of many for their own career interests. Yet like Trump, he still seems able to command a following. Sometimes I despair. I'm less sure than ever, tonight, where this leaves us. | brucie5 | |
10/12/2018 20:47 | Pendragon - my post was not purely centred on Europe (geographic sense) as the catchment area but globally as you have said. I think that we are saying the same thing. | alphorn | |
10/12/2018 20:00 | Pendragon - I would disagree with your conclusion about the youngsters. You are looking at the subject very parochially (if I may say). IMO the wave to come of highly qualified people from the Far East is about to happen. To me it is very important that European youngsters (geographic sense) have the worldly experience to match the wave when it comes. Living in a 'closed' environment will not help them at all. | alphorn | |
10/12/2018 19:54 | Brucie - the big problem is that that the younger generation in many EU countries face a crisis of disastrous proportions in their own personal circumstances, lack of career chances, low incomes, minimal long term chances of success. Why should the UK risk their own youngsters being in the same boat. The UK's politicians seem to be in a class of their own for ineptitude, however. Not nasty, just incompetent. | pendragon2 | |
10/12/2018 19:52 | Brucie - nicely put. There is no leadership at all from Westminster from any of the parties. A dreadful situation. | alphorn | |
10/12/2018 18:41 | Pendragon, for me, brexit represents a disastrous opposing of interests and values between the young, the dynamic, the racially diverse, the aspirational and educated versus the old, the embittered, the white and the less educated, together with the opportunistic, and those like RG with an ideological fixation about Britain's former glories. Not everyone on either side fit into those categories, of course and I daresay you are an honourable case in point. But when you have a situation where the old are such a significant part of the brexit vote that every year makes a potentially winning margin to the remain vote, it is untenable. You cannot ask the wealth creators and tax payers of the future to give up their aspirations for the sake of those whose pensions and benefits they will be paying. That is going to be far more of a problem than the likely violence that will derive from the nasty fascist fringe, who are also an active subculture within the brexit movement , witness the recent direction of Ukip. This is why I feel so passionately that at very least we should be given the chance to vote on the options before us, as opposed to the flagrant lies that were told. | brucie5 | |
10/12/2018 17:14 | Re the right in Germany supposedly being nut cases, this seems very sensible to me. I hope this is the correct link, there should be subtitles. I think the one I originally saw was longer. | freddie ferret | |
10/12/2018 14:17 | cat among pigeons | pendragon2 | |
10/12/2018 13:15 | Cue the latest May lie. Delay and cling on. Why would the EU offer anything else when they can be sure a 2nd ref. will almost certainly result in the UK staying in the EU? | taurusthebear | |
10/12/2018 11:42 | I suppose you can best protect your investment when you can influence policy. | blusteradjuster | |
10/12/2018 10:27 | So along with Rees-Mogg's Somerset Capital fund moving funds offshore while warning clients about 'uncertainties' on UK's leaving the EU, here we have the big Brexiteer hedge fund supporters of Leave taking a short positions on UK PLC. After all, it won't affect their jobs. To some this might seem a tiny bit cynical, but hardened Brexiteers probably won't bat any eye. Comic highpoint of the w/e seeing Boris Johnson trying to look responsible in a 'fresh lid' telling Andrew Marr he 'should not unerestimate' how responsible he feels about Brexit! You gotta laugh. | brucie5 | |
10/12/2018 09:45 | ....thanks for the link zho haven't read Mauldin for a while. | hazl | |
10/12/2018 09:31 | PENDRAGON2 10 Dec '18 - 07:51 - 70357 of 70357 0 0 0 fire/alp - I was thinking of May defeat this week followed by Tory Ministers saying go to Brussels on a salvage trip, or resign now. She is on first plane out. Then a negotiation,then a second vote in Parliament, no election, no referendum 2. -------------------- Then an attempt to move the envelope, which they have already said, cannot be moved any further (French just looking for an opportunity to push on fishing rights, Spain pushing on Gibraltar), so TM comes back saying 'I told you so.' Attempt at a second vote fails. Attempt to trigger a GE fails. Crisis of authority. (Cue: stock market plunges, as hard Brexit looms into view) People's vote. | brucie5 |
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