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NFDS Nthn.Foods

75.00
0.00 (0.00%)
Last Updated: 00:00:00
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Stock Type
Nthn.Foods NFDS London Ordinary Share
  Price Change Price Change % Share Price Last Trade
0.00 0.00% 75.00 00:00:00
Open Price Low Price High Price Close Price Previous Close
75.00
more quote information »

Northern Foods NFDS Dividends History

No dividends issued between 14 Feb 2015 and 14 Feb 2025

Top Dividend Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 11/2/2025 17:49 by blueliner
Another poor day -0.27%, [FTSE All-Share +0.05%]

LGEN just pipped BHP to be the worst faller, it's a strange outcome, my 2500 shares just mosey a long quietly for the dividend, then........

My best wishes Phil, I lost my sister just over 10 years ago, she was no age, hard to come to terms with.
Enjoying Yellowstone, some scenery there.

Another drab day, well done those in the Hebrides and adjacent mainland.
Posted at 02/2/2025 10:04 by mcunliffe1
Morning all,

thanks wllm for the table update. I will screenshot it as I'm rarely at the top of any lists. I can thanks BATS, ABDN and LGEN for most of the heavy work.

All three are decent dividend payers and that's why I bought them. My recent divi, from PHNX (31 Oct) I retained as cash. Same with BATS (1 Nov) - cash.

I have since changed my settings back to auto-reinvest as I have sufficient cash for this March drawdown and I have found that with banking the divi. as cash I am not using such for the purchase of shares when the time suits me. Thus, I'm losing that all critical compounding effect.

January provided no dividends for me other than RECI (also retained as cash) but as we move towards May that situation changes. If I 'drip' do I count the resultant increase in share value as a straight comparison to the value at end of 2024?

If so, that would be detrimental to the guys who do not auto re-invest.


I have jury duty starting tomorrow so may post less and if picked, not at all during court hours (two and a half hours a day isn't that 🤣). I'm hoping you hung-over mate, Dr Bio, isn't judging at Bolton Crown Court 🍺👍🙄
Posted at 15/1/2025 09:44 by brucie5
Skinny, yes, in absolute growth terms, particularly if they continue to control effective monopolies in their fields, but at what price to get in? I think the Telegraph article was interesting simply from point of view of what you can now get on UK stocks in yield terms, never mind the prospect of reversion to some kind of mean.
Or take the relationship between house prices and actual yields - after all the costs are taken out. I think we may look back on the UK market in ten years time in the same way one looks back at 1996 house prices.
CARD is an interesting example, being now again a growth share with a not insignificant dividend (>6%) dividend. You'd be lucky to get that return from a BTL rental, I'm thinking, let alone the upside, if its business plan prospers.
But CARD is at the bottom of my dividend yielders. I'm being well paid to wait.

Or put differently:
The rental on our family home, after subtractions for costs, maintenance and improvements barely gives us a 'profit' and certainly not in relation to the capital value. Yet the equivalent value invested in an ISA can give me enough to live. But of course the value of the house has risen 3/4 fold since we bought it in 1996.
Posted at 07/1/2025 10:03 by brucie5
Yesterday made my first trades of the year.

Bruciefolio: sold OXB to buy CLI. I seem unable to develop the necessary patience for stocks without dividends, though did do well out of OXB last year. CLI seems like an overlooked situation (don't they all!!) where you are paid to paid for the upside. Hopefully the dividend will enable me override my habitual impatience.

I continue too hold ONT as my single 'story stock'. Down a bit, but I think I'm willing to hold through 25 in the hope that the cup and handle will play out.

Bruciefolio now yielding 9.5%; down on the day, pretty much wiping out the New Year's gains.

3rd party income folio (managed for an income beneficiary): sold PLUS at long last, as a multibagger; to buy a new holding in WYN and top up ECOR and LIO. WYN has also recently appeared on a New Year's buy list, I notice, but the main attraction is the strength of the balance sheet, the unassuming but rock-solid business within the long suffering agricultural sector and the history of growing dividends. I held in in the same folio some years ago from a very low level and it multibagged; not expecting such from this buy, but I think the level is right to reopen a position. As to LIO, I hold it across several folios, at a loss; and it may or may not be a share for recovery this year. And ECOR is strictly for the very patient on a multi year view, if you want exposure to transition metals.
Posted at 02/1/2025 11:40 by brucie5
Morning Gents (-are there any Ladies present?)

Couple of things:
1. Wllm, can you tell me how best to communicate my starting position to you for this year's challenge? It seems a bit brutal to share actual capital values on the bb, though I know MC has done so.
2. From year to year I sometime rename my folio to underscore some learning point. At one point I called it the 'Cornucopia', or 'horn of plenty', just to remind myself never to become fixated with one share, or to overly regret mistakes, since the market offers constant new opportunities in unlimited supply. "Dividend folio" is waiting for me round the corner of 2026 when my wife retires and we'll be living for the most part off our ISAs. (Exciting or scary?) Maybe I should call it the "Scaryfolio", since our livelihoods will depend on it.
But here's the question: what greatest single priority/piece of learning or discipline do you investment experts wish to integrate into your approach this year? For me, I think it's to cut my trading down; I managed 106 sell trades last year, and I imagine a similar number of buys; amounting to a value of between 3-4 times the folio itself! So this year the Bruciefolio converts into the "Patient-folio", by which I intend to limit myself to no more than two trades a month. Though I will of course be investing all the dividends along the way.

For the record, the Bruciefolio managed a ytd of +4.17%, which would have come overwhelmingly from the supporting firepower of dividends. This is what worries me somewhat about my approach, come the year of the Scary-folio 25.

In the meantime, here's the line-up:
APAX, ASHM, CAML, CARD, CLIG, CSN, DUKE, GCP, GSF, HEFL, IPX, LGEN, LIO, MNG, NESF, ONT, OXB, OSB, PHNX, POLR, RCH, RECI, RWS, SBLK, SEIT, SERE, SOHO, SNWS, SQZ, SUPR, TFIF, VSL
Posted at 02/1/2025 09:51 by aleman
Good morning. Frosty and sunny here. It's wonderful after a very gloomy 2024.

I have had a productive wet cough for 3 days now. I feel fine except I get out of breath a bit if I do anything. It feels a bit like mild Covid - except Covid levels are the lowest they've been,


Gfinity, Meikle, Tribe, Ironveld - 4 companies notified suspension this morning for 2025's first day of trading. Must be a record. That's a great start to 2025 ...

Do those that have retired just take the income from dividends and not worry about the capital values?

I ALWAYS worry about capital values. Falling capital value makes you worry you have picked bad investments that will see dividend cuts. A slow rise is comforting. A rapid rise is good but makes you feel nervous enough to take some profits/consider changes to your portfolio. If the whole market has risen, there are fewer reasonably priced alternatives to choose from. I will probably worry a bit less when (if) my state pension kicks in but I might worry more before that when (if) Mrs A retires early.

Dividends take priority, though. I tot up dividend forecasts a couple of years ahead to get a portfolio forecast. Not all shares have forecasts (esp investment trusts) so you have to estimate yourself. I try to be realistic. (For instance, if energy prices remain subdued in coming months, I might cut the estimated green energy production dividends after this year.) A modestly rising projected dividend income is comforting in the same way modestly rising current capital values are.
Posted at 17/12/2024 12:29 by brucie5
SBLK a bit of a shocker. Disappointing to hear familiar rhetoric about greater benefits to shareholders from buybacks, while cutting dividends, when dividends are integral to the buy case, as opposed to the sell case, which is all too evident in the share price! But also underscores Dean's message about over due dependence on any one dividend payer.
In the meantime, infrastructure ITs are moving to lower lows as gilt yields rise, further calling into question whether their dividends are serviceable. I had though to discount my own revenue stream by 20%; now more realistically, I'm not so sure.
Bruciefolio down .7% as a I write.
HIX -.9%. Allshare -.8%

RWS does seem to be one bright spot and anyone interested in charts might wish to take a look. I see a potential trend reversal, which seems to be building. Scores well on Stocko, too, including 'Best Dividends'.
Posted at 09/12/2024 16:50 by brucie5
HIX on a roll, up 1.27%. Against which the Bruciefolio a mere + .065%; but with almost twice the dividend yield.
By contrast the allshare up +.042%, so happy with that.
SQZ board leader.

Anyone heard of /used SDIV? AkaGlobal X SuperDividend UCITS ETF - currently yielding 11%.
Posted at 29/11/2024 16:53 by brucie5
Thanks to both who offered their ideas - it can be good to talk as you never know where the next good idea will come from. I'm trying to reduce my trading and focus on holding a steady universe of shares that produced income sufficient to my needs in 18 months time, with a risk discount of 20% to current paper yield. In the meantime, using each month to top up. I no longer focus on building up capital so much as dividends, though my eye does sometimes wander to shares where I can see significant capital gains in lieu of dividend. Trouble is, I tend to be less adept with these as I lose patience too easily. I do think this is an extraordinary time for UK dividend investors, but only time will tell whether we have been foolish or wise. There are so many possible variables out there.
Good weekends all. May I say that I really enjoy the cordial, good manners on this thread. Long may it last.
B5.
Posted at 26/11/2024 10:45 by brucie5
Interesting to hear your various investing stories. Like Gateside, I was a teacher for some years, but without the full time consistency to build up a pension adequate to my eventual needs, which was three years ago, when I decided to take what was due to me. But then ago, having a creative side-hustle i always knew this would be the case so started investing as soon as I had the means to do so, which was largely during five years in Hong Kong during the early nineties - crazy times before handover. I remember one of my first investments, HSBC, as it was then, doubling within about a year.
Like most others here, my family takes little interest, except to note that I could afford to retire, and my missus will be able to pre-retire quite shortly, thanks to dividend income. Though I have also passed what there is of the in-law's inheritance down to them in the form of pre-invested folio each, against such time as they may wish to buy a house. They very much like the idea of that, but still show little interest in knowing how it's done. I keep telling them it would be a good idea to learn, as they might not have pensions to speak of when they're my age. But what young person thinks they'll ever need a pension? I think they're also more presently concerned as to whether there will be a world to live in.

In portfolio news, I bought more GSF, aka 'doubling down'. But I feel strongly, though not incontrovertibly, that this is way oversold, even if they need to temper that 14% dividend.

At as at 11.41am the Bruciefolio is down .19%, as against the HIX (-.3%) IUKD (-.2%)
and the all share (-.39). So a good morning so far, relatively speaking, though some mixed news from SQZ, which is another 5% holding, fortunately bought mainly from hereabouts for the dividend.

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