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NRR Newriver Reit Plc

74.10
1.70 (2.35%)
21 Jun 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Newriver Reit Plc LSE:NRR London Ordinary Share GB00BD7XPJ64 ORD 1P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  1.70 2.35% 74.10 72.60 72.90 73.60 70.80 70.80 1,254,251 16:35:22
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Real Estate Investment Trust 73.6M -16.8M -0.0537 -13.58 227.89M
Newriver Reit Plc is listed in the Real Estate Investment Trust sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker NRR. The last closing price for Newriver Reit was 72.40p. Over the last year, Newriver Reit shares have traded in a share price range of 67.70p to 92.00p.

Newriver Reit currently has 312,603,487 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Newriver Reit is £227.89 million. Newriver Reit has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of -13.58.

Newriver Reit Share Discussion Threads

Showing 1451 to 1473 of 4350 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  66  65  64  63  62  61  60  59  58  57  56  55  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
02/7/2019
16:59
RCTurner2, I totally disagree. Well-run REITs remains a great investment with the backdrop of continuing low refinancing rates. Retail is tough, of course, but the better stuff like NRR is a fine investment in the long run. Cannot comment on the short term, but then I couldn’t give a stuff about the short term anyway other than an opportunity to switch between different REITs as they ebb and flow.

Rates and good management - the rest is all noise, some of it loud.

chucko1
02/7/2019
15:16
Any trough in the share price will not be seen outside a recession imv - provided
there is not a bid. Unless something extraordinary happens domestic UK will
look even uglier next year.

essentialinvestor
02/7/2019
15:12
Whilst the Woodford mayhem continues I have added to my position this afternoon. I'm scaling in so happy to add if it goes lower yet.

Woodford is now down to 11.8% which is still alot but my sense is that Woodford now has another month and won't be in a hurry and once it gets down to about 7% buyers will appear for fear of missing out. Also the shorters will become more concerned they have less opportunity to close into if that is their intention.

It would also be my view that Woodford won't sell down to zero with his new FTSE100&FTSE250 mantra. Timing the bottom is quite difficult

cc2014
02/7/2019
14:33
As I said before on this and other retail REIT threads, I would be very careful buying these sorts of REITs. There is serious damage to the sector coming up, we are at the start of this process not the end.
rcturner2
01/7/2019
23:14
Article in the I paper today , says £2.7bn write downs in retail property in the last year.
With more to come.
Bathstore in administration
200 Boots shops....

fenners66
01/7/2019
13:24
Is that really the total short position on this stock? That's pretty scary.
hugepants
30/6/2019
16:58
7.4% short position.
bondholder
29/6/2019
09:56
Starting to look attractive, but there are other much better property funds on similar or even larger discounts - CLS Holdings still doing very well, continuing to generate double digit nav returns and on 30% discount. Can't seem much reason to invest here when there are opportunities like that.
riverman77
29/6/2019
08:44
I'm more taken by the reports that other large market participants are offering into Woodford's distressed liquidity. The good and the viable company holdings are being taken out at what the buyers believe to be a heavily discount price. NRR is certainly viable, and we must consider the current price in context with the Woodford fund's extinction.
hpcg
28/6/2019
16:08
Woody shifted another 1% I see - poor old NRR.

Not yet seen another SJP sell.

spectoacc
27/6/2019
15:06
Brought a few, but mainly waiting till october. Any other reits that woodford or his ex mandates are off loading at present, thank you in advance?
hindsight
27/6/2019
00:45
Pay off existing debt, invest in energy efficient street lighting , upgrade to energy efficient buildings and pay off all the hangers on no longer required....

Ban vanity projects and collect outstanding debts..... and on day 2......

fenners66
26/6/2019
23:33
Councils are thinking long term. They can borrow 100% LTV, @ 1%, 50 year amortisation term. If you could borrow from central government at those terms what would you do?
zccax77
26/6/2019
22:14
Councils have no idea what they are doing...

Some bought over a year ago by councils will have already declined further in value.

So you think that where there is an excess of retail it can just be switched to offices and residential ?
Some can but who wants to live on a part High Street or have an office there?
Parking restrictions have helped to kill the High St as well and that does not change if you change a buildings use.

fenners66
26/6/2019
21:10
There is a retail park near me that the council has bought, all saying councils have no idea what they are doing.

This one is half empty, happily for the council all down at one end of the park.

I think it might be cut in half and we will see some new housing, who grants the planning permission needed?

I think some councils will do very well and business park owners will be well served to be very close to them...which of course is teaching my granny to suck eggs.

hernando2
26/6/2019
20:03
regarding excess supply and market rents, if rents fall substantially, then where viable, some retail parks / units will become offices / residential.

obviously, to be sustainable, rents have to be affordable so that retailers can make a decent profit, and they need to be well located to have good footfall. NRR seem to understand this better than other REITs.

m_kerr
26/6/2019
12:04
SpectoAcc
25 Jun '19 - 14:44 - 1217 of 1229

" Sure - NRR dropped a few percentage points of NAV last results - but the share price performance has very little to do with how the co is performing, and everything to do with stock sales and overhangs."

I acknowledge the share overhang is having an effect and said so, but you cannot look at the companies historic performance and claim that does not justify a share price move.

We know that if you work on what has happened or is happening now - you are too late , the market works on what it believes is going to happen.

How many times have we read great company results and seen their share prices fall - often because buried in the report is some warning that the future will not be as great as previously thought.

I read about Carpetrights results this morning - losses reduced from about £69m to £25m after their CVA - one of the first. But still losing a fortune.
Now there is an avalanche of CVAs and for every retailer that have not done one - their FD's should be knocking on their landlords door demanding rent reductions.

Fastest growing grocer last qtr ?

Ocado. No retail outlets.

fenners66
26/6/2019
11:02
Flyer, yes and no. There are 2 sellers and some opportunist sellers. The new SJP manager can do what they like with impunity; they are clearing up Woodford's trash and will not be held accountable. Secondly Woodford will have to sell. Thirdly there is an opportunist short sell opportunity, though as those shorting BCA Marketplace found out that is not a one way bet.

CWA1 - yes, if only. I think 190p is a fair value offering an 8% long term return accepting recession risk, rental and NAV decline and a more sensible distribution policy. That probably doesn't account for a Brexit induced depression, though I think NRR operates in the most resilient area of physical retail even so.

hpcg
26/6/2019
10:11
Starting to wonder if there is more than 1 forced seller in the market...
flyer61
26/6/2019
09:38
Direct link for download of Annual Report 2019...



Link also available here:

speedsgh
26/6/2019
09:36
On Monday SJP dropped from 4.4% to 3.9%, so guessing another half a % yesterday, same today - they'd still have c.3%! 150p may be a better target IMO, considering this constant drip, with Woody still to offload.
spectoacc
26/6/2019
09:30
Dear Sir/Madam. I would like to purchase some of your fine shares at the bottom of the long term share price. I would be grateful if you could, say, ring a bell when that position has been reached. Kind regards and many thanks for your help.
cwa1
26/6/2019
09:30
@hpcg
"The ex-SJP mandate portion being eliminated now. Approx 171p my next buy area."

By the end of day at the present rate of decline.

eeza
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