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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 |
---|---|---|---|
27/4/2018 14:15 | Still think somethings afoot! | harleymaxwell | |
26/4/2018 18:54 | I salute your optimism! :) But on 15cents/1.39=10.8p/5 Meanwhile let's see what next Thursday brings... '03 May 2018 First Quarter 2018 Results' | jrphoenixw2 | |
26/4/2018 11:50 | Flush out a few more sellers for the new buyer? | harleymaxwell | |
25/4/2018 12:16 | Yep, that's true, it's also the case that a bidder might try to coolly build a non-reportable position while sounding out other major holders to see where the latter's position might be available to buy, then if a deal is brewing, boom they might leap into compulsory bid territory. Perhaps also worth watching any shorts as they've usually got their ear to the ground; and LRE has been rumoured as a potential bid target perhaps every other year in the say 10 years I've owned it. Total short reportable right now = 4.91% Made up of: Numeric Inv -0.51% Worldquant -0.60 Odey -3.80% Overall short hasn't really materially changed this year, but changes in position seem to take a day or two to feed through. | jrphoenixw2 | |
25/4/2018 11:25 | Fair observation but a stake builder has to start somewhere!Let's see | harleymaxwell | |
25/4/2018 10:07 | Does anyone get to see decent figures for volume? I no longer do since Google/Finance completely shafted their own site a few months back. Just wondering if there were any notable trades/candles this morning, or if it was simply more of a bigger trade than usual amongst a general dearth of volume. We have seen similar before, someone puts in a chunky non-limit buy order and the share price spikes out of sight - for a while. FWIW the Stock Exchange showed vol of circa 150k at 9.45am/Lon, perhaps before the offer-side was out of reach? If it is a predator, it's going to take 'a while' to build a position accumulating through the market at that rate... | jrphoenixw2 | |
25/4/2018 07:56 | Still ticking upSmall volume but still a target for a take out imho | harleymaxwell | |
23/4/2018 11:51 | Nice move up today - must be a takeover candidate given consolidation in the Lloyds market at present | harleymaxwell | |
25/3/2018 08:50 | Note to self for future reference: Per 1324/13-Mar^ 'Just going on the FX chart of Google/Finance I'm estimating the rate was circa 1.397, so looking for circa US0.10/1.397=7.16p' My broker paid out at 7.15077p. I still don't know if that is correct, and they've got it wrong before. Meanwhile the LRE website STILL shows '$0.10 (or approximately £0.07151)' hxxps://www.lancashi So it seems you can estimate the converted div closely by taking the GBP/US$ rate from Google/Finance at noon on the record date, versus, the LRE site which even weeks later still doesn't publish what the actual rate was. | jrphoenixw2 | |
22/3/2018 17:36 | Setanta have crossed the 10% mark. | 11_percent | |
21/3/2018 10:22 | More deals expected as insurer M&As heat up - Merger and acquisition activity appears poised to accelerate in 2018 despite healthy valuations as insurers pursue various growth strategies, analysts say. Deals will also come as companies try to reinvent themselves for the digital age. “Deal activity in 2017 contained signs of the M&A trends that we expect to see accelerate as more insurers seek to transform, using business acquisitions or disposals as elements of that transformation,&rdqu Acquisition prices are robust but not so high as to deter buyers. “There is some level of anticipated consolidation in the valuations, but nothing prohibitive yet,” said Meyer Shields, Baltimore-based analyst with Keefe Bruyette & Woods Inc. In January, American International Group Inc. bought Bermuda-based Validus Holdings Ltd. for $5.56 billion in cash, and on March 5, France’s Axa S.A. said it would buy Bermuda-based XL Group Ltd. for $15.3 billion in a blockbuster deal. “The deals that have happened the past couple of years haven’t been sellers that are in trouble,” said James Auden, managing director at Fitch Ratings Inc. in Chicago. “These deals are more strategic in nature; you’re seeing premium in the purchase price.” Growth is a driver behind the deals. “The buyers want to grow strategically in a mature marker,” Mr. Auden said. “The sellers are getting favorable prices.” Valuations vary in the insurance sector, with some mid-sized insurers and reinsurers trading at a premium. Companies in the reinsurance and insurance sector are trading around book value on average, said Taoufik Gharib, senior director, North America insurance ratings, at U.S.-based S&P Global Ratings Inc., with the exception of a few Bermudian players including Hiscox Ltd., Arch Capital Group Ltd., RenaissanceRe Holdings Ltd. and Lancashire Holdings Ltd. “Those are the positive outliers in terms of trading at a premium relative to their year-end 2017 book value.” Broadly, book value is calculated by subtracting liabilities and intangible assets, such as goodwill, from a company’s assets. The early activity could signal further acquisitions. “I think we’re going to see a lot more of it, and a lot of it will be in response to these deals,” Mr. Shields said. Some acquirers will be seeking added reach and diversity. “When companies consolidate, one of the things they are looking for is to be able to provide a greater array of product expertise to brokers and clients,” Mr. Shields said. Companies must expand cautiously, however. “There’s definitely benefits to diversification in insurance, but acquirers must have the expertise to operate in the various market segments,” or risk dragging down performance, Mr. Auden said. “Scale is important to effectively compete in a consolidating market and potentially absorb some of the volatility we’ve seen in 2017 due to catastrophe losses,” Mr. Gharib said. “A global (insurance and reinsurance) company needs a large geographic footprint to access business and generate diversified and sustainable earnings.” Mr. Shields says he remains skeptical of the absolute value of scale, “but if executives are worried about scale, they are going to pursue acquisitions that help them with it.” The insurance sector’s move toward a more digital future will also spur some deal activity. “We see a range of likely M&A activity forming part of the overall transformation of the sector in the short-to-medium term,” Ernst & Young said in its report. “The question of ‘buy or build’ has become central to many insurance M&A decisions and will continue to underpin consolidation as well as targeted acquisition of capabilities.” Insurers continue to invest into insurtech businesses, Ernst & Young said, partly in response to the ongoing question of buy or build, but increasingly as a way of accessing and operating in emerging “digital ecosystems.” | speedsgh | |
13/3/2018 09:31 | price movements this morning don't seem to relate to trades. | manrobert | |
06/3/2018 15:49 | Thanks Speeds, Thing is the FX rate was fixed at noon on the R/D, and the above is still 'approx'. Maybe it's just a bug-bear of mine as I like knowing what to expect come the P/D, and the actual/reliable rate is hard to come by IME. Also useful for me, as my broker are pretty useless at publicising the correct figure, AND also at processing the correct sum. Hence it's something I need to watch pretty closely; though perhaps less material of an issue these days when the Specials aren't in play. | jrphoenixw2 | |
06/3/2018 15:44 | From LRE website...HTTPS://ww | speedsgh | |
06/3/2018 15:37 | Has anyone got advice of the FX rate yet for the 21-March div? Should have been fixed on the R/D 23-Feb. As usual I can't find the number, though I understand some brokers are better at this than others, incl mine. | jrphoenixw2 | |
23/2/2018 13:08 | No Special then again in 2018.That is why the share price has tanked since results.Better opions elsewhere atm with currently over 5/6% dividends !!! | garycook | |
23/2/2018 10:21 | It’s not a hard market, just a better one, says Lancashire Holdings (19/2) - Despite 2017 catastrophe losses driving rate increases at the January 1st, 2018 renewals season, the shift in demand and supply remains insufficient to push the sector into a hard market, according to Paul Gregory, Lancashire Holdings Group Chief Underwriting Officer (CUO) and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Lancashire Insurance Company (UK) Limited. “While conditions are better, the shift in demand and supply is not material enough to push us into a hard market, just a better one,” said Gregory, speaking during Lancashire’s fourth-quarter 2017 earnings call. Overall, Lancashire management expressed positivity about market conditions and said the industry is heading in the right direction after years of falling rates and the high level of catastrophe losses experienced in the third and fourth-quarter of last year. However, there’s a need to be realistic stressed Lancashire, highlighting that while rates have improved they didn’t increase as much as the firm would have liked, and that it’s important to remember that the marketplace is still going to be challenging in 2018. “Yes rates are up and that’s great,” said Alex Maloney, Lancashire Group CEO, “but rates need to go up to a more sustainable level over a period of time,” he added. As underlined by both Maloney and Gregory, the market definitely improved at 1/1 and has to some extent turned a corner, with noise of more disciplined underwriting in the market, something Lancashire expects to continue. But demand appears to be relatively flat, and with the abundance of reinsurance capital in the space, from both traditional and alternative sources, the industry doesn’t seem to be approaching a hard market environment. Maloney explained that were it a hard market then Lancashire would have raised more capital to take advantage of the opportunity, but ultimately he doesn’t feel the market has moved enough to take on more risk. However, he explained that Lancashire is well positioned to take advantage of opportunities that do exist, and if the market dynamics shift and more opportunities arise throughout the year, the firm is well placed and able to access capital when needed. During the call, Maloney also explained that the firm bought exactly the same amount of reinsurance protection for 2018 as it did for 2017, which, “is a clear indication of our view of opportunity for 2018, and a clear view of the availability of reinsurance at 1/1.” At the same time, Lancashire revealed that it grew the limit sold by its third-party capital vehicle Kinesis Capital Management by roughly 30% at the renewals, suggesting that this may have risen to roughly $425 million for 2018. Lancashire clearly feels the marketplace will remain challenging in 2018, and despite improvements at 1/1 which could persist throughout 2018, underlined its realistic approach to current market conditions that call for discipline as well as a desire to take advantage of any opportunities. | speedsgh | |
21/2/2018 19:35 | That is the CFO's second open market purchase since results were released on 15/2. In fact there has been concerted buying by the board since results which currently amounts to c£465k. Remains to be seen whether they are merely attempting to support the share price or whether they genuinely believe the shares are substantially undervalued at the current price level. Only time will tell. 16/2/18 Michael Dawson (NED) bought 3,800 @ 588.5p = £22,363 16/2/18 Peter Clarke (Non Exec Chairman) bought 16,000 @ 566.9p = £90,704 16/2/18 Elaine Whelan (CFO) bought 20,000 @ 589.5p = £117,900 16/2/18 Alex Maloney (CEO) bought 21,700 @ 573p = £124,341 19/2/18 Samantha Hoe-Richardson (NED) bought 1,409 @ 567.75p = £8,000 20/2/18 Robert Lusardi (NED) bought 5,000 @ $7.89 (c564.5p) = c£28,225 20/2/18 Elaine Whelan (CFO) bought 13,500 @ 557.5p = £75,262 By way of comparison 2016 Final Results released on 16/2/2017 were followed by just a single open market purchase: 28/2/17 Michael Dawson (NED) bought 7,200 @ 693p = £49,896 | speedsgh | |
21/2/2018 16:16 | Not exactly enough to account for it but every little helps:- | cwa1 | |
21/2/2018 16:02 | Boom... So what gave it the kick up the... ? | jrphoenixw2 | |
16/2/2018 13:54 | Lancashire Holdings' (LCSHF) CEO Alex Maloney on Q4 2017 Results: Earnings Call Transcript - | speedsgh | |
16/2/2018 13:49 | Buy from the IC : Never say never, but it seems less likely that claims going forward will be as high as in 2017. Premium rates are already hardening, and after recent weakness, the shares are trading on just 1.5 times forecast net tangible assets, giving room for some upside. Buy Last IC View: Hold, 735p, 28 Jul 2017 | bulltradept | |
16/2/2018 12:08 | Short term sentiment will make this a good medium term buy at some point over the next few weeks, I reckon these will go sub £5.50, I'd be looking to buy at under £5.25. | eastbourne1982 | |
16/2/2018 04:20 | Friday de-risking might not be pretty. Volume yesterday was 2.86m/460k=621% 30-day average. | jrphoenixw2 |
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