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JTC Jtc Plc

824.00
4.50 (0.55%)
Last Updated: 11:21:42
Delayed by 15 minutes
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
  4.50 0.55% 824.00 822.50 824.00 826.50 810.00 810.00 18,615 11:21:42
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Unit Inv Tr, Closed-end Mgmt 200.08M 34.71M 0.2097 39.29 1.36B
Jtc Plc is listed in the Unit Inv Tr, Closed-end Mgmt sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker JTC. The last closing price for Jtc was 819.50p. Over the last year, Jtc shares have traded in a share price range of 623.50p to 838.50p.

Jtc currently has 165,521,678 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Jtc is £1.36 billion. Jtc has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 39.29.

Jtc Share Discussion Threads

Showing 70451 to 70474 of 92875 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
14/12/2018
12:18
Body language? mro.
mroalan
14/12/2018
11:36
maxK, on a free vote I wouldn't have been surprised if Mays agreement would have been voted through.
fireplace22
14/12/2018
11:30
Pendragon, what sort of things do you want the UK to be able to from outside the EU that we can't do while in it? Besides trade agreements, which will clearly involve great initial loss caused by withdrawal of benefits from existing treaties before any hypothetical advantages can acrue from new bilateral ones at some uncertain time in the future?

Genuine question.

brucie5
14/12/2018
11:24
The UK does have a distinctive knack for producing failed politicians. Maybe there's a start up in it: airhead-bnb - self-marketing with Samantha C.

Successfuly placed: Osborne - pound note recycling limited - vintage wallpaper for the discerning snob.

Unsold goods, milli major, milli minor, cam, blair, wots 'is name,

Almost cooked: May, Davis, Moggy, usw

Coming to a supermarket near you: Farago (Lidl and often) ; JerryCo (Co-op); Vince just let me show you how to hang this cable round my neck before you pull, B&Q; Rachel and Bros - independent shelf fillers.


Anyone for HAMMOND!

pendragon2
14/12/2018
11:23
Nationa unity gov = remain.

They would never agree on anything, so in effect stasis.

maxk
14/12/2018
11:16
Wouldn't have to if it was a national unity govt, would be the answer to many anti Corbyn labour MP's prayers (probably more anti Corbyn Lab MP's than Mays 113 dissident 'extremists')
fireplace22
14/12/2018
10:12
More likely he'll propose David Milliband for the job.
fireplace22
14/12/2018
10:10
A wonderful example of British delusion was Tony Blair, who genuinely assumed he could be European President, after he was rejected in the UK. The man is still hanging around hankering... Don't be suprised if he tries to propose himself as the leader of a government of national unity, laughable though it may seem.
pendragon2
14/12/2018
10:10
The opposition do have a credible plan it involves staying in the Customs Union and the single market. In other words remaining, only Corbyn hasn't quite come round to actually muttering those words yet.
fireplace22
14/12/2018
10:06
The problem is that the EU isn't just about trade, it is about a system of government in which the citizen and the people they elect have little or no say and that is a lethal process of disempowerment that will continue to end up badly as it did in with the IMF running Latvia's decade of austerity, the economic turmoil in Greece, now the Italians have a taste of being threatened with the flow of EC funding being halted if they try to run things in their own interests.

If the UK remains you can be pretty sure that for the foreseeable future the answer to anything a UK government might want to propose or do will be no. Sooner or later the case for quitting will re-emerge.

Were trade the primary case, in a global economy where free trade is the norm, the EU would wither away, role relinquished - business would simply do business within a framework of multilateral international agreements and standards, but that clearly isn't the case.

Right now, the opposition need to force the May government out, but there is no reason to suppose that any potential new administration would have a credible policy position.

Tragic actually.

pendragon2
14/12/2018
08:31
So the EU sign the biggest FTA in the world with Japan and the UK politicians are arguing like kids in a playground. Thanks Brexiteers.
spittingbarrel
14/12/2018
08:30
..or a parliament that insists 'no deal' is not an option. What a stance to take giving the EU confirmation that their worst fears won't be realised.
fireplace22
14/12/2018
08:27
"What are the EU leadership up to"

They are carrying out the EU ideology, and their aims of a federal europe...

It's being well known for years...David Cameron found out that the gangsters don't do 'concessions' or renegotiation with weak opposition...They only respect strong determined opposition...And it dosn't help having a weak sycophantic remainer and cohorts fighting your corner...

grannyboy
14/12/2018
08:11
It’s more than a coincidence that Brexiteers are also climate-change deniers.

Many want to smoke in pubs (never hurt anyone..) and think DDT and Asbestos are harmless..

It’s a control thing. Rejecting what they see as the nanny-state lecturing them about inconvenient truths.

I think the lecturing tone is the problem as much as the inconvenient truths. Authorities have made a mistake there.

Easy for manipulative liars to tell the suggestible to reject the experts and do as the lobby-dollars tell them.

Bannon, for example, had been at it for years at Breitbart and elsewhere before helping poisoning politics both sides of the Atlantic

blusteradjuster
14/12/2018
08:10
Isn't it time we had another Scottish Independence Referendum? After all, it's been a whole 5 minutes since the last one, and the dynamics must now surely have changed, especially considering the Rottweiler now running the SNP. :0)
taurusthebear
14/12/2018
08:03
I remember watching TV on referendum night.

A smug (isn’t he always) IDS was telling the anchor that there were reports of heavy turnout on the council estates.

The plan had worked, the desperate and disadvantaged had believed the lies and turned out for a fantasy.

blusteradjuster
14/12/2018
07:30
brucie - agreed.
pendragon2
14/12/2018
07:22
For complex and profound problems, people seek simple solutions. And into that gap move the right, either the ideologues, like JRM, or the shysters, like Boris. It's a tried and tested formula for success, if your criteria for success include the installation of populist figures, with little or no concern in the actual interests of those they have persuaded to vote for them.

I was listening last night to the John pienaar podcast which included an interview with Ian Duncan Smith, who was virtually threatening blood on the streets if a second referendum was to go ahead. This from the man who 'master minded' the misery that is Universal Credit, and now he has the curious notion that he represents the angry voice of the marginalised. We need to call their bluff. The gap between remain and brexit supporters is opening up, with 1.5 million new young voters since 2016, and the oldest brexiteers steadily diminishing in numbers. No wonder IDS is threatening violence on their behalf.

brucie5
14/12/2018
06:49
Got it in one Brucie.
blusteradjuster
14/12/2018
06:45
So Aleman has managed to convince himself that the seasonal variations in the greater trend is the trend itself. This is like waking up on warm morning in October and concluding that it's early summer.

I'm assuming he's also a brexiteer. No coincidence, I'm sure.
;)

brucie5
14/12/2018
06:38
Still hiding Skyship?


Kiwi’s ideological fervour and blatant cherry-picking of statistics is well known where he posts regularly.

blusteradjuster
14/12/2018
06:22
Christ jazza, you're an embarrassment to yourself
yieldhunter
13/12/2018
23:47
I’ve mentioned this to loony ideologue 7kiwi before (not that he wants to be reasoned with):

Give me billions of data-points, I’ll find thousands that confirm whatever I want to believe..

blusteradjuster
13/12/2018
23:45
Aleman,

Shall we add the Economist magazine to the conspiracy?

Screw the basic science (as you are), they’re only in it for the money*

*says the fossil-fuel-funded deniers..

blusteradjuster
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