We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lancashire Holdings Limited | LSE:LRE | London | Ordinary Share | BMG5361W1047 | COM SHS USD0.50 |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
6.00 | 0.89% | 677.00 | 675.00 | 676.00 | 682.00 | 671.00 | 671.00 | 672,981 | 16:35:13 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fire, Marine, Casualty Ins | 449.1M | 321.5M | 1.3176 | 5.12 | 1.64B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
23/7/2017 09:39 | 11%,Best thing I did was sell out of ALY at 20p.What a good move that was. | garycook | |
23/7/2017 07:42 | Gary, I see ALY are now opening tea rooms. | 11_percent | |
23/7/2017 04:14 | Jrp,Good Posts.11%,You may have been correct on ALY,but LRE,is a different proposition I believe you will be wrong,unless we get a correction in the current markets.To be honest I hope you are correct and the LRE share price goes back to 610p,because I can also add more.Looking on the LRE Website I see the all time high is 933p,and the Low 155p.I would put money on the LRE share price hitting £9,with a take over bid,but it will never return to 155p again ? | garycook | |
22/7/2017 17:45 | Well 'up here' because of that, plus also you might imagine the trailing yield of 9.76%. 610p would give a current yield of 11.83%. Perhaps I should be buying some more :) | jrphoenixw2 | |
22/7/2017 17:29 | At the moment, the share price is up here because of takeover possibility. The shorts are betting this will not happen......and it revert back tp 610. | 11_percent | |
22/7/2017 17:03 | ... stake-building perhaps, or short-covering. Results due on Thursday. Berkeley were +2.86% on the week; Odey is short both. | jrphoenixw2 | |
22/7/2017 12:04 | Yes interesting.Somethin | garycook | |
22/7/2017 10:37 | Friday pm was interesting, as with much of the rest of the week a lack of volume through the morning then bam around noon it took off ending up with 165% of the 30-day average daily volume*. The price week-to-date on Thursday close was -1.4%, Friday alone was +2.8% for a full week of +1.4%. A turn-around on a Friday pm ending such a dull week took me by surprise. * Vol/30-day vol Mon 140/312k Tue 324/309k Wed 207/309k Thu 181/309k Fri 511/309k Figures noted daily from the intra-day graphs at Google/Finance [Presumably the 30-day average vol is only reset weekly [?] or similar, to remain un-altered as the week progresses]. | jrphoenixw2 | |
21/7/2017 12:17 | He has similar at DEBenhams, bit riskier than this, but then again, check out what happened at Sports Direct SPD over last 2 trading sessions ... (and its Sports Direct that has increased stake in DEB)... | mister md | |
21/7/2017 12:02 | Martin,Because he is a prize prat that is losing a lot of money atm | garycook | |
21/7/2017 11:17 | Why does Odey have such a large short position here ? | mister md | |
18/7/2017 11:36 | Jrp,Look forward to that. | garycook | |
18/7/2017 07:17 | Credie Suisse.Are too hard on any stock.I would love some more LRE at 610p. | garycook | |
18/7/2017 07:04 | Lancashire -1% CS INITIATE with UNDERPERFORM (Valuation) | cwa1 | |
17/7/2017 16:50 | Yep no kidding, I'd forgotten it was quite this thin though. Still it perked up nicely into the close :) | jrphoenixw2 | |
17/7/2017 13:07 | Jrp,Summer time lull. | garycook | |
17/7/2017 11:20 | ZZzzzz.... At the half-way point, 12.15, the intra-day vol vs 30-day average is 15,576/312,335. That's under 10% of an average 1/2 day... | jrphoenixw2 | |
10/7/2017 14:51 | JRP makes some good points. I tend to see the company as good managers of risk. When returns are good (insurance premiums high) they take on more risk. When returns are lower, they reduce risk. Managing risk can mean writing more premiums (more risk) or offloading risk through buying reinsurance (reducing net risk) or dropping marginal clients. The latest quarterly investor presentation makes it clear that they have been purchasing more reinsurance at lower attachment points as part of their desire to lower net risk. They've been preparing for a large loss event for quite a while now and are likely to be relatively less affected. When a large loss event happens there will be less price competition as the ones left holding the bag will be retrenching. They're also holding a large surplus of capital in the event that the market turns this year in time for 1/1 renewals. The focus is on shareholder returns. Despite difficult market conditions for the last 5 years, Morningstar says that 10 year total return is mid-teens but I suspect a fair amount of that will have come from the assumed dividend reinvestment over multiple years, a 15-25% recent one-off impact of the decline in Sterling and the fact this used to trade on a low single digit multiple. | gsbmba99 | |
07/7/2017 03:54 | jrp,Good Post.I have great confident in LRE also.I hope there not taken over.Has I enjoy the yearly Special along with Woodford and others investors here.Recently sold BEZ at 470,which was a mistake.Nevermind LRE one of my core holdings. | garycook | |
06/7/2017 18:04 | My take on it, my overview from holding it for c5 years now, and I'd be interested to hear other's views, is: They underwrite insurance on major infrastructure, and that requires a material capital base, and good market knowledge. It's a niche market with few and fewer players [as take-overs happen]. They also seem adept at timing the underwriting cycle, writing more business when premiums are high then sitting back and pausing when competition for business rises and margins reduce. Ie. They don't chase higher risk underwriting for the sake of writing cover. So you have to expect the divs, esp. any Specials, to ebb and flow. It's not like Unilever or whatever, 50 years of ever-rising nominal divs, you kinda have to have faith in the LRE board to pay out what is in the company's/our long term best interests. Added to which they operate with [roughly put] some forecast for their required future working capital, ie that required to underwrite expected business. This is not that unusual with insurers; where Special Divs from excess retained earnings can be a feature. So, any excess beyond required capital on the balance sheet rather than being retained for no explicitly profitable purpose, is returned to the owners of it, the shareholders. - Oh and, a lot of business is written in US$, which with the battered Sterling exchange rate translates into more £. - And there are headlines tonight like: 'Open season on Lloyd's insurance companies as sterling weakness makes them look cheap - Mid-cap underwriting firm Lancashire Holdings Limited (LON:LRE) defied the trend and was the best performing FTSE 250 constituent, up 4.8%, as sector peer Novae Group PLC (LON:NVA) succumbed to a takeover offer from AXIS Capital Holdings Limited.' [ it won't let me copy/paste the link, but it's from Proactiveinvestors .co.uk, dated today] | jrphoenixw2 | |
06/7/2017 16:32 | Anyone know why these guys make so mmuch cash. All the money men want to buy them. | 11_percent |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions