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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Stock Type |
---|---|---|---|
Public Rec. | PUG | London | Ordinary Share |
Open Price | Low Price | High Price | Close Price | Previous Close |
---|---|---|---|---|
34.00 | 34.00 |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 25/9/2007 09:58 by nickcduk Results were decent enough I thought this morning. Debt is being reduced nicely and once the exceptional items start to fall away it will become more apparent to investors how cheap PUG is at current levels. It also has strong defensive qualities versus the rest of the wider recruitment sector. |
Posted at 08/6/2006 18:15 by amberspyglass hlo has a recruitment management team and is prepared to announce when they get contracts. pug for some reason seems to think that 4 x £5m contracts awarded are not important enough to be bought to attention of prospective investors. |
Posted at 03/5/2006 14:05 by cloudfall Word has just got to get out now. Doesn't matter how good value it is if no one is looking. Hopefully some investor mags will pick up on this. BTW: Of those of who think this is a buy, how many have rated it as such on ADVFN? |
Posted at 07/2/2006 21:26 by rivaldo Darkinbad, the point to note is that goodwill amortisation is ignored as irrelevant by analysts and most in the City, rightly imo, which is why the adjusted EPS figure pre-amortisation and goodwill is the one to note.The market expectations which we now know will be met are for £3.9m PBT (i.e pre-amortisation and exceptionals), or 11.2p EPS, giving a historic P/E of just 3.4. PUG made £2.25m adjusted PBT in H1, and should therefore have made £1.7m in the weaker H2. The company has stated that "trading in 2006 has started well with continued growth in organic revenues across all sectors", and with 10.6p EPS expected for 2006 (£5.4m PBT) for a P/E of 3.63, PUG appears to me to be an opportunity for once for private investors to get in at the bottom of a cycle. |
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