Columbia Threadneedle Management Limited is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle Holdings Limited, which is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle Group (Management) Limited, which is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle Group (Holdings) Limited, which is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle AM (Holdings) Plc, which is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle (Europe) Limited, which is wholly owned by Columbia Threadneedle Investments UK International Limited, which is wholly owned by Ameriprise Financial, Inc.which which which |
Well,i'll take it as reassuring without going too deeply into the rather opaque world of holding declarations.There can be an unsatisfactory delay between time of dealing and notification of a share holding and i would guess that this share purchase was the reason why the shares shot from 390 to around 440 in short order the week before last.It could be the large buyer which Dominic C understood was in the wings a fortnight back. |
No great surprise that low, and better than the techmark index I suppose :) |
Well spotted Cousin.
takeiteasy,
Have you seen the fraction of healthcare in the MSCI? (page 2 pie chart) |
So Columbia Threadneedle (per the RNS detail) were down as 3.06% in the OXB annual report, so have built another 2% over the last 6 months or so. Their business also now includes the old F&C/I&S/BMO funds but not sure where the OXB position held. |
Ameriprise Financial, Inc. is an American diversified financial services company and bank holding company based in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[1] It provides financial planning products and services, including wealth management, asset management, insurance, annuities, and estate planning.[1]As of April 2022, more than 80% of the company's revenue came from wealth management.[1][2]Ameriprise was formerly a division of American Express, which completed the corporate spin-off of the company in September 2005.The company is ranked 245th on the Fortune 500.[3] It is on the list of largest banks in the United States. and was also ranked the 9th largest independent broker-dealer based on assets under management. It is one of the largest financial planning companies in the United States and is among the 25 largest asset managers in the world.[1] It is ranked 8th in long-term mutual fund assets in the U.S., fourth in retail funds in the U.K., and 27th in global assets under management |
Honestly never heard of them Tricky, but
(quote)
The company specializes in retirement-related financial planning for affluent clients. It offers variable annuities and life and disability insurance. It also operates Ameriprise Bank, FSB, which offers a variety of consumer banking and lending products and personal trust and related services. Since 2015, its asset management arm has operated under the name Columbia Threadneedle Investments. The company uses three principal brands for its businesses in the United States: Ameriprise Financial, Columbia Management and RiverSource.
(unquote)
We have seen Threadneedle before I think so maybe a bit of a tangled web here? |
So our accumulator is unveiled. |
Not impossible - interesting just how few firms from the health sector are linked to FTSE 250...look at the big investors in this area e.g. Mercantile IT close to zero investment in this sector and as you look at all the other names it follows a very similar pattern.
We need firms like OXB to build a strong and stable franchise that develops some level of dull and boring predictability that the institutional investors would be looking for using their so called " data screens" based on investment output stats on risk and return and market cap data.
This share seems so thinly traded that it takes a small puff of wind to more the dial up thank goodness near term so we do not need a huge push from bigger IIs but do hope later into 2025 that all the IR push we are making towards this cohort starts to show up a bit more.
Getting back over 430 today may bring back the momentum crowd...wdik.. |
takeiteasy,
I suspect that there's not that many of us. In happier times the sweeps would regularly get a lot of entries (up to 40ish) and of course not everybody would be interested in partaking. But a lot of disciplined holders would have bailed out long before the bottom. Have they come back since Frank's new regime? Maybe some of them.
You know my take. We have all been waiting for news for a long time. OXB insiders are way smarter than the average bear, they can see how the company is doing and technically had the opportunity to buy shares at half price. None of them did (even token amounts) which confirms to me beyond reasonable doubt that they couldn't.
That almost certainly means they know what is coming next and would be able to benefit from knowing something you don't. When will that news come? Tomorrow? This afternoon? February? Who knows? What we do know is that it takes as long as it takes for anything except pandemic vaccines.
That random wildcard aside, there are a couple of things which we know will happen in the next 15 working days. Those of course are the MSCI rebalance this week and the FTSE250 reshuffle at the end of those 15 working days.
If we get back into the MSCI then IMO that means a lot more for OXB shareholders over the next 3 months than whoever is declared winner in the latest US beauty contest.
We need to average at least +10p per day for the next 15 days to stand a chance of getting back into the 250. With no news from OXB then I think it all depends on buyers coming back if the MSCI review readmits OXB this week.
If not then likely the status quo until either big OXB news or the next quarterly reviews. |
Not all of us.... |
All this talk about US politics has scared all the OXB punters off today - they must read into this BB that the die hards have lost interest and are bored :) |
Time to let politics go and concentrate on our favourite subject, dear OXB. Til the morning, yn y bore! Looking forward to fireworks this week!!!! |
I promise to get back to OXB tomorrow and shut up about current events (or at least give it a try).
Last anecdote from the Winston Churchill school of study history because it's all happened before.
I honestly don't know if this story is true or just a good story, but the way I was told it was this:-
William Randolph Hearst is sat in his newspaper office and calls his top roving hack and photographer.
WRH "I want you to go to Cuba and cover the war" Reporter "What war?" WRH "The one which is going to start when our ship is attacked"
The reporters go to Havana and and an American warship explodes in the harbour starting the Spanish American war which got the USA the Philippines and lots of other goodies in the Caribbean whilst marking the end of Spain as a world power.
Is it true? Who knows. Would a country blow up their own ship and want the press on side to gain assets to make it a world power? Would it surprise you? |
I have never looked to political leaders to be examples of moral rectitude or providers of moral guidance.From feted heroes of distant history,to the likes of Lloyd George and JFK,flawed individuals have achieved power.I don't even expect to learn the complete truth.Russian missiles in Cuba in 63 but no mention of US missiles in Turkey,weapons of mass destruction in Iraq ,we are drip fed selective information so we will conclude what powerful lobbies,political and military,want us to believe.I'm not a conspiracy theorist but i do believe that the powers that be,invariably connive to keep the general public pretty much in the dark,exaggerating this and underplaying that,according to their agenda.A benign dictatorship seems increasingly acceptable in my advancing years :) |
sj,
I actually know somebody who is basically in the process of planning their return from Portugal right now. I think 15 great years but they want to come home now. The tax incentives to get them out there were fabulous and it's an extremely cheap place to live (apart from buying cars - though there is a dodge to take one with you I think), but the downsides are the weather (great most of the year but 3 months of just too hot) and the fact that though you can pick up some conversational language, for anything official you are usually relying on the kindness of strangers.
I know a few Brits who have emigrated to the US and made a go of it. Pick one of the states without state income tax (9 of those I think) and you get to keep quite a large lump of what you earn. The major downside of course is the healthcare costs - especially regarding insurance as you get older. For the very wealthy you can simply wing it but for mortals then insurance is essential and very costly.
I'm not sure there is any perfect place - but my compromise would have to be somewhere "nice" i.e. I wouldn't be living in the middle eastern desert to save a few quid on tax. |
This is just a bit of oversimplified misinformation that is popular on twitter and actually stands up to very little scrutiny.
The covid lockdowns actually had a very marginal effect on overall CO2 output. They reduced the CO2 output by about 5% for one year. You can see the graph here
hxxps://www.iea.org/reports/co2-emissions-in-2023/emissions-grew-in-2023-but-clean-energy-is-limiting-the-growth#abstract
The problem is that CO2 production is roughly twice what is in an estimated sustainable level. So for 2021 the CO2 output was still c190% of a sustainable level. That would only lead to to a small to negligible effect in the rate of increase of CO2. It would not be enough to reduce the CO2 level let alone have any effect on the temperature.
The NOAA CO2 measurements can be seen here
hxxps://gml.noaa.gov/ccgg/trends/
I'm not sure what you mean by I know it could detect no change, but what perhaps might help others is that every climate scientist in the world cheering on net zero was saying that the Mauna Loa Observatory lasers were going to prove their science.
Can you give me some references to back this up?
Harry S Truman1 Nov '24 - 13:05 - 9064 of 9086 0 4 0 Jez,
I get your point. For me the most important issue of our time is the new religion that we can control the weather if we try hard enough.
The costs of this are astonishing and of course we had a planet-wide experiment of much larger restrictions (no flights, confined to home, travel restrictions) during covid and the best instruments on the planet for measuring atmospheric CO2 (on Hawaii) could detect no change.
I know it could detect no change, but what perhaps might help others is that every climate scientist in the world cheering on net zero was saying that the Mauna Loa Observatory lasers were going to prove their science. Since then there has been silence.
So if we couldn't alter atmospheric CO2 with the covid lockdown and we therefore have no proof for the theory of our CO2 emissions controlling the weather, it's just basically economic suicide for reasons of mass population control really isn't it?
Because of that I would always vote for whoever was brave enough to meet the climate puritans head-on, which means if I was an American I would vote Trump. |
Yes GJ , it's amazing that anyone with 34 felony convictions and a rape conviction, who incited an insurrection, sold "Top-Secret" files to foreign nations, and an inveterate lying thief could EVER be considered a candidate for POTUS. I guess we live and learn...🤔 |
The office of President of the USA should be greater than the President who holds it. Many poor presidents have at least held the office well. Others have demeaned the office they serve. |
Harry,Yes, I did watch the videos of the riots, and they very much confirmed all that I had read and seen before.Some people acted in what appeared to be almost bemused good nature, but others were out for blood. However, five people died, so it was serious, but Trump thought not. That sums him up. I'm a full blooded right of center libertarian, but could never support a man like that, even in the face of a Harris shaped alternative.And yes, you are right about the risks of Greece: like many previously communist led countries, it has history of expropriation! My (half hearted) musings have everything in excess of living expenses simply moved straight away from the SIPP into Overseas Bonds, domiciled in Guernsey, which would remove that risk. (Anyone else here got experience of those vehicles? SIPPs and ISA's have pushed them off the radar, but with labour in power I think that may change).And yes too to your observations regarding European migration: almost (?!) as much a mess as in the UK. At the moment, Greece (Crete) is home to a huge number of (illegal) migrants from Albania, Morocco, and Georgia. Everyone else moves on, hoping to get to Germany, Sweden or the UK, which are seen as the easy touches. |
red,
Just out of curiosity, when they eventually (and reluctantly) released the CCTV footage of the Jan 6th "riot / insurrection" at the Capitol Building, did you see any of it? If not then worth a look in comparison to what is considered "mostly peaceful" when it suits. Very stiff sentences handed out for the former / no bond bail for the latter.
I would be cautious about moving money to Greece. You may find out that ends up being a much worse decision than leaving it here. Appreciate you will have a long think before you do anything and technically Euros are Euros, but what if Greece decides that the only way out of some future problem is for everybody to chip in, or worse, decides to squeeze "the rich".
Did you hear the German leader the other day with his latest proposal to solve mutty's open door migration mess? Basically Germany and the northern states will take the Ukrainians who have come via the northern route and all the others (Africans, etc.) who come via the med route with be "allocated" to the southern states.
You might say "oh he can't do that", but what if all the major contributors to the EU (the northern states) decide he can?
Extended holidays for as long as it's pleasant and suits you would strike me as the best compromise. |