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NFDS Nthn.Foods

75.00
0.00 (0.00%)
26 Jul 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Nthn.Foods LSE:NFDS London Ordinary Share GB0006466089 ORD 25P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 75.00 0.00 01:00:00
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
  -
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
- O 0 75.00 GBX

Northern Foods (NFDS) Latest News

Real-Time news about Nthn.Foods (London Stock Exchange): 0 recent articles

Northern Foods (NFDS) Discussions and Chat

Northern Foods Forums and Chat

Date Time Title Posts
27/7/202412:04Northern Foods - a Tasty Choice!88,680
24/3/202400:08Northen Foods1,748
07/2/201914:50NFDS YUMMY1
28/5/200903:15NFDS6
11/8/200816:56Ready Meals the growth area4

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Northern Foods (NFDS) Most Recent Trades

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Trade Time Trade Price Trade Size Trade Value Trade Type

Northern Foods (NFDS) Top Chat Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 26/7/2024 19:41 by blueliner
+0.81% folio, [FTSE All-Share +1.35%]
Saved the week
BA., VANL, BRWM, SDV, PHNX, leading gainers.
BERI, HICL, worst fallers.

On the week : +0.3%
Shares of the week : SCLP, IGG,
Faller of the week : WDS


Folio YTD +5.7%

Deli salad with Lisbon 'Porta 6' Regional Red.

Weather dry and settled, enjoy.
Posted at 26/7/2024 14:25 by philanderer
Skinny, I couldn't believe the price of blackberries in Sainsbury's this week. £2.25p for a small handful , about twenty blackberries. I've got eight ice cream tubs full of blackberries in the freezer that cost just a few stings and scratches on the hands and arms :-)
Posted at 20/7/2024 15:08 by pvb
kiwi2007 19 Jul '24 - 05:14 - 88563 of 88585

Philanderer - They love a good riot in Leeds. There have now been 21 recorded since the first Corn Price Riot in 1735. That includes The Leeds Dripping Riot in 1865 which has a real Yorkshire ring to it's name I feel..

"The Leeds Dripping Riot"?!

"What do we want? Free daily dripping on toast for all working, Yorkshire men! When do we want it? Now!"
Posted at 19/7/2024 18:12 by deanforester
2/7 on the quiz. Par for the course.

I'm down -0.581% on the day today (FTSE100 -0.608%), down -0.82% on the week (FTSE100 -1.19%) but up +6.48% YTD (FTSE100 +5.45% and HIX +6.41%).

Worst falls: TATE -2.38%, SGRO -1.84% and BLND -1.80%.

Best rises: SMDS +1.08%, BT.A +0.57% and IGG +0.47%.

Tate gave up yesterday's rise and the properties were down.SMDS reflects the price of its suitor in the USA. Does IGG benefit from its exposure as a sponsor of the test?

Cut the grass this morning, very hot. I went for a pub lunch with friends and supped two cans of Guiness 0-0 which went down very well.

Back to the cricket. No fish & Chips today.

DF
Posted at 22/6/2024 14:38 by aleman
Thanks, wllm. The gap from top to bottom looks to be narrowing.

Quite sunny today, making the breeze welcome. Been doing a little hedge cutting again but bins are full now.

Shopped at SBRY this morning. Their prices keep going up a little each week and they are starting to look expensive again, likecatching up with Morrisons. Why? MRW and SBRY got into trouble with private equity debt. The rest of us should not have to pay for it. Food manufacturers and Tesco said a few months ago they were seeing food price deflation and expected to cut prices so are SBRY profiteering. I'm not loyal enough to put up with it. If I'm going to be asked to pay more when wholesale costs have fallen, I might as well try M&S or Waitrose.

The Bantams manager has said more transfer business is coming but the main business has been done. If the main business is letting your best centre-back go to a likely promotion rival, then we are likely to finish even lower next year and lose another 1500 season ticket holders. We were promised a cash injection by the owner when season tickets were on sale but have seen none of it yet. The fans are already starting to complain about our spinmeister CEO again.
Posted at 03/6/2024 14:49 by aleman
Tough one, MrP. Cashflows harder to predict than many. UK holders were disappointed by the dividend cut and there is a steady stream of sellers at whatever price they decide is enough for them. US are buying for a yield which is good by their standards. The dividend cut should yield extra cash to do another deal soon to buy assets to try maintain the dividend. Any news on such a deal is likely to drive the shares higher. Gas prices are low/improving. The supply side is weakening a little and there is strong demand in Asia. Ultimately the balance looks good for another upcycle in time, but DEC need a deal now while prices will be cheaper. Gas futures which drive most of DEC sales are still pretty respectable. I suspect they'll continue to slowly rise from here as UK sellers dry up and might be boosted by deal news. The 200-day average is coming into play for those that follow it which could bring a short-term up or down in a few weeks. Chartwise, there looks a favourable jump to £18 on steady news - but news is not always steady. Momentum is up so I reckon to hang on for a bit until there is a clearer reason to decide.
Posted at 23/5/2024 09:40 by aleman
UK PMI inflation commentary is a bit mixed but also seems to suggest more weakness to come (after national living wage gets passed on), especially in services. Does the MPC read these? Does CPI accurately reflect price pressure in the UK economy?

May survey data provided signs of a slowdown in inflationary pressures at private sector companies. Input price inflation dropped to its lowest level in seven months, reflecting softer rises in input costs across both sectors. Service providers experienced their weakest cost pressures in over three years, which partly reflected a reduced impact from the higher National Living Wage that was introduced in April. That said, the uplift in input prices remained much faster than for manufacturing companies. Amid the softer rise in input costs, private sector firms increased their selling prices to a weaker extent for the third month running in May, leading prices charged inflation to fall to its lowest level since February 2021. The cooldown was solely driven by the service sector, where some panellists indicated greater efforts to stimulate new work intakes amid competitive pressures. In contrast, goods producers raised their factory gate prices at the sharpest rate in a year, which firms mainly attributed to the pass-through of higher salary payments and material prices to clients.
Posted at 23/5/2024 09:26 by aleman
EU PMI narrative. Not sure how how input costs being up sharply again squares with them falling to a 3-year low. Nonetheless, the general tone is further moderation in inflation to come when EU CPI is already only 2.4%.

Rates of inflation of both input costs and output prices eased in May, but in each case remained above the pre-pandemic average. Input costs were up sharply again, with the pace of inflation only slightly softer than seen in April. Once again, the service sector was the principal source of inflationary pressure, with input costs rising rapidly. That said, the rate of services input price inflation eased to a three-year low. Meanwhile, manufacturing input costs decreased slightly again, though to the least marked extent in the current 15-month sequence of decline. The pace of output price inflation also softened in May, and was the weakest since November 2023. A slower increase in services charges was partially offset by a weaker reduction in manufacturing selling prices. Softer output price inflation was seen across Germany, France and the rest of the eurozone.

UK gilt yields seem to be rising significantly on the election news. Now suggesting 4 or 5 rate cuts in the next year, then 3, then one more a year or two after, bottoming at 3-3.25%. Are gilts worrying it is going to be spend, spend, spend into an already significant PSBR? There will be an immediate effect of this as fixed rate mortgage deals creep back up in the net couple of weeks. Housing transactions will likely slow again at a time when job loss announcements already seem to be on the increase. Let's hope those weaker inflation noises in PMIs are right so rate cuts don't disappear into the distance - again.
Posted at 26/4/2024 18:43 by blueliner
+0.57% folio, [FTSE All-Share +0.81%]
BA., BERI, BRWM, SDIP, leading gainers.

BHP share price affected by how high they will go to acquire AAL.

On the week +1.45%

Share of the week : CMCX +11.3%
Faller of the week : BHP -4.3%.

Folio YTD -0.78%

Chicken Balti tonight with Wine Soc own label Sauvignon Blanc.

April will be a fairly healthy month for dividends, with 2 more yet to be credited will add in next week.

Good weekend all.
Posted at 12/4/2024 19:35 by blueliner
+0.52% folio, [FTSE All-Share +0.72%]

BA., top riser, share price target lifted by Deutsche Bank.
INVP, worst faller, no idea why.

On the week : +0.40%.
Share of the week : PLUS +9.1%, was a new year tip from SCSW.
Fallers of the week, xd's take your pick : PHNX, AV.,CSN.
Folio YTD -1.3%.

Enjoy the better weather, will try and get to Trent Bridge tomorrow, v Worc.
Northern Foods share price data is direct from the London Stock Exchange