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MRCH Merchants Trust Plc

578.00
1.00 (0.17%)
Last Updated: 11:20:32
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Merchants Trust Plc LSE:MRCH London Ordinary Share GB0005800072 ORD 25P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  1.00 0.17% 578.00 577.00 579.00 578.00 578.00 578.00 60,083 11:20:32
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Trust,ex Ed,religious,charty -19.53M -30.25M -0.2032 -28.44 860.51M
Merchants Trust Plc is listed in the Trust,ex Ed,religious,charty sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker MRCH. The last closing price for Merchants was 577p. Over the last year, Merchants shares have traded in a share price range of 477.00p to 579.00p.

Merchants currently has 148,877,887 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Merchants is £860.51 million. Merchants has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -28.44.

Merchants Share Discussion Threads

Showing 1151 to 1173 of 2950 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
16/12/2020
07:49
tks, plenty of info to research there
ctrader3
15/12/2020
22:47
If people have read my previous posts they'll know that the majority of my income comes from drawing down capital from funds. For me this approach has proved far more profitable than the dividend paying trusts and individual shares I own. I'm in the process of reviewing my holdings for 2021 with the view of possibly moving away from some of my funds to the equivalent investment trust ie Polar Capital Global Tech Fund to Polar Capital Tech Inv Trust. Purely to save on platform costs. During my research I've found some links which might prove useful to others. These provide data on the Top Performing Funds, Top Inv Trusts and Top ETFs to December 2020. Maybe of use.

hxxps://media-prod.ii.co.uk/s3fs-public/pdfs/TopfundsDec2020.pdf?avjChI78P6cBtpENF6i4y0PE4o_QKX8n=

hxxps://media-prod.ii.co.uk/s3fs-public/pdfs/ToptrustsDec2020.pdf?EHQncimmSjhtF7pIn4y80juj9gBoHFjs=

hxxps://media-prod.ii.co.uk/s3fs-public/pdfs/ExhangetradedfundsDec20.pdf?AiCi3Cg_WIfghe6HqSDWRnC8voCKMqyx=

zac0_4
14/12/2020
11:15
Thanks ct3 interesting.
tim 3
14/12/2020
10:59
Scottish Investment Trust proposed a final dividend of 6.1 pence which, if approved, will mean that the total dividend for the year will be 23.2 pence per share, an increase of 1.8% from 22.80 pence per share the year prior.

The company reported a target of declaring three quarterly interim dividends of 5.8 pence for the new financial year to October 31, 2021 and plans to recommend a final dividend of at least 5.8 pence for shareholder approval at its annual general meeting in 2022.

Looking ahead, Chair James Will said "the divergence of valuations within markets has reached new extremes, a position that we believe is unsustainable and likely to reverse."

ctrader3
10/12/2020
18:51
Hold both GSK and MRCH in my top 5 holdings - I recall they are planning to split into two companies, pharmaceuticals and consumer healthcare within the next year or so, think that could extract some value.
mister md
10/12/2020
16:50
Yes thought the same really surprised how they have performed particularly compared with AZN. Used to hold a fairly large amount in GSK directly but sold earlier this year.
tim 3
10/12/2020
15:34
Glaxo making an effort to recover, surprisingly poor performer this year
mister md
08/12/2020
12:24
Thanks Zac
pj fozzie
08/12/2020
12:19
Thanks for posting
panshanger1
08/12/2020
11:30
pj fozzie - here you go - Investment trust shares are often hit disproportionately hard in market sell-offs but, equally, they can do particularly well when markets are on the up – as happened in November. When vaccine news propelled the FTSE 100 index to its greatest monthly gain in 30 years many investment trusts made even greater share price gains. These included UK equity income fund Merchants Trust (MRCH), whose share total return of 24.3 per cent for the month to 30 November put it well ahead of both the FTSE All-Share and FTSE 100 indices.

However, 2020 has not been plain sailing for this trust. Its value bias – among other factors – mean that it has faltered more generally, and made a share price total return loss of nearly 13 per cent over the 12 months to the end of November.

Despite this, its investment team has stuck to its target of generating a high and rising income with a good total return. Simon Gergel, the trust’s manager, notes that a focus on good yields in the medium term has added some portfolio continuity, meaning no fire sale of holdings that suspended or cut their dividends.

“We look at companies with good yields in line with the market in the next 18 months – not just today,” he explains. “The reason for that, almost exemplified by this crisis, is companies can cut dividends. We’re not forced to sell just because [a company] has cut its dividend.”

The trust will receive a “significantly lower” income from its holdings this year due to dividend cuts, according to its board. But the board has also vowed to use its revenue reserves to cover any shortfalls. Merchants was recently trading on a 6.5 per cent yield.

Mr Gergel, like many investors, also expects a return to dividend payments in selected sectors and has not deviated from the portfolio’s slight value bias. But a challenging 2020 has inevitably forced some changes.



2020 changes

The trust's asset allocation has changed this year, with Mr Gergel making it more defensive while also trying to capitalise on “anomaliesR21; and mispricings in the market. This has involved taking money out of some cyclical names, for example, the coronavirus outbreak prompted Mr Gergel and his team to call time on positions in Prudential (PRU) and Sirius Real Estate (SRE). They also remain wary about companies with uncertain business models in post-pandemic life.

“We held Informa (INF), which runs trade shows and exhibitions,” he says. “[But] there’s a question mark, long term, about whether people will still go to trade shows. Companies might send people to a trade show but they won’t send 10 – they might send five. Where we have companies with a question mark, unless we’re confident they’re very cheap, we’ve been looking to get out. So we sold Informa.”

This caution extends elsewhere. In a year when share price tumbles have meant that some weak companies trade on high dividend yields, Mr Gergel notes that much of his team’s time has been spent “trying to avoid value traps”. They never buy holdings purely for income, but instead seek solid businesses that look under priced. Doing this has led them back to a variety of high-profile UK names this year, and they have a preference for businesses that look resilient and defensive. They added Next (NXT) amid the retail slowdown earlier this year, with a view that online sales have become “a dominant part of the profits”.

And Mr Gergel believes that Next will pay dividends in the future.

He also bought Vodafone (VOD) and BT (BT.A), stocks he had not held for around half a decade and previously viewed as value traps. Mr Gergel argues that sector consolidation, politicians now acknowledging the importance of fibre optic cables and broadband, and the possibility of lighter regulation have changed this sector's outlook.

“Having been under huge pressure from competition and regulation, the sector might have more benign regulation and competition, and looks cheaper,” he explains. “They have defined earning streams – customers stay with them unless they leave. It’s not like a retailer where you have zero sales unless someone comes to your store or website.”

Mr Gergel and his team have also topped up a position in Imperial Brands (IMB). They believe that prices in the tobacco sector have grown more attractive in the past 18 months. They also added to National Grid (NG.) and SSE (SSE) in the belief these are “resilient businesses and monopolies”, even if some regulatory pressures remain.

They have favoured housebuilders but grown cautious on debt heavy businesses, prompting a move out of Vistry (VTY) and into Bellway (BWY). And they hold DFS Furniture (DFS) – a pandemic-oriented play.

“We like things associated with house building,” he says. “People have sat on their sofas a lot and might realise they’re not that comfortable any more. We want businesses that are defendable against the internet: it’s hard to sell sofas on the internet [as] people want to touch them, but also you need people to deliver them.”

zac0_4
07/12/2020
14:51
Hi Speedsgh,

Are you able to post a synopsis of what Gergel said? (for the benefit of those of us who do not subscribe to IC)

Cheers,
PJ

pj fozzie
07/12/2020
13:24
Recent written interview with Simon Gergel in Investors Chronicle...

Merchants' Gergel: We spend lots of our time trying to avoid value traps -

speedsgh
04/12/2020
21:59
Still at a discount to NAV.

Be nice if GSK pulled its weight!

tim 3
04/12/2020
14:35
if u look at the long term chart in the header, the 450p area was support in the
past.
TA states that support areas may offer resistance and vice versa.
At least one piece of TA worth paying attention too > support and resistance areas.
likely to have another attempt to break thru next week, otherwise profit
takers may arrive.

ctrader3
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