We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Redde Northgate Plc | LSE:REDD | London | Ordinary Share | GB00B41H7391 | ORD 50P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-0.50 | -0.13% | 387.00 | 386.50 | 387.50 | 391.50 | 386.50 | 388.50 | 109,412 | 14:00:44 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Passenger Car Rental | 1.49B | 139.24M | 0.6141 | 6.30 | 877.49M |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
19/11/2023 11:54 | Interesting that a few weeks ago REDD shareholders were buying stock in bulk and now this. | boozey | |
19/11/2023 11:37 | schofi A nil-premium merger!!!!! I've got big holding in both so it's a no from me unless it can be proved to be a big advantage to both. As a holder in both a nil premium merger is likely to be a great outcome from your point of view - the potential efficiency savings and cross selling opportunites here by changing 2 into 1 look pretty clear to me. | rmillaree | |
19/11/2023 10:40 | Hope it doesn't go through. HFD's margins are pitiful (3%) and has a weak balance sheet with £349m of net debt. Noticed they have delayed interim results by a week, now 29th Nov.Don't have a position in REDD and this may mean I never will. | disc0dave46 | |
19/11/2023 08:23 | I don't think this is a bad idea. There would be a lot of costs that could be stripped out (you don't need 2 head offices etc.) and Redde would presumably have van repair/MOT work that they could push to Halfords. Plus Halfords is a very well known brand and may well help to get Redde's van hire side a higher profile. | rcturner2 | |
18/11/2023 21:26 | HFD own a big network of garages and tyre centres which might be useful for REDD. | riverman77 | |
18/11/2023 21:17 | Why would redde want to merge with halfords?! | russ1983 | |
18/11/2023 18:01 | Interesting - thanks. My route here was as a holder of Helphire @5p and its been a pretty decent journey. I've been a holder of HFD in the past and have always kept an eye on them. | skinny | |
18/11/2023 17:49 | A nil-premium merger!!!!! I've got big holding in both so it's a no from me unless it can be proved to be a big advantage to both. | schofi2 | |
18/11/2023 17:49 | Van rental outfit Redde Northgate has made a £1.4bn merger approach for the high street bike and car repair chain Halfords. It is understood that the pair have held detailed talks about a possible tie-up after Redde Northgate, which owns 130,000 vans and corporate cars in the UK and Spain, made a firm proposal to Halfords. A City source said Redde Northgate had proposed a nil-premium merger, but the discussions were abandoned because of disagreements over price. The Halfords board is thought to have concluded that any such deal on the terms laid out would have undervalued the company. However, it is believed that Redde Northgate could mount a fresh bid if the valuation gap between the two sides closes. It is understood that the Takeover Panel was informed of the discussions, which took place in the last few months. A source close to the negotiations said: “There were discussions about what an integration of the two businesses might look like but there were questions over the valuations of both companies. “Both share prices weren’t doing fantastically well at the time so there is nothing live at the moment. However, it could come back.” Founded in 1892, Halfords is one of the most recognisable and biggest names on the high street. It has roughly 12,000 employees, nearly 400 stores, and close to 650 garages providing full repairs, MOT’s and other services. Its annual turnover was £1.6bn last year. At current values, a nil-premium merger would value the combined company at close to £1.4bn. With its shares trading at 365p, Redde Northgate has a market cap of £843m. Halford’s shares were changing hands at 234p on Friday, giving it a stock market value of £512m. Halfords’ share price is up 8pc this year, but 20pc over the last month. Shares in Redde Northgate have fallen 12pc since the beginning of 2023, but have climbed 13pc in the last four weeks. For the time being, Halfords has its sights set on much smaller targets. The retailer is among the bidders for Wiggle, the online bike chain that collapsed into administration last month. Redde Northgate was created during the pandemic when van rental specialist Northgate joined forces with Redde, formerly known as Helphire, which sorts accident claims from businesses and company fleets. It went on to snap up the remnants of vehicle repair provider Nationwide Accident Services. The company’s customers were historically the smaller end of the market but it has added some large corporate clients including Royal Mail, as well as several government departments and local authorities. Chief executive Martin Ward has said that its customers prefer vehicle rental over ownership because it provides “flexibility over the cost of owning vehicles”. In recent years, growth at Halfords has increasingly been driven by its network of car garages, which are more profitable than selling bikes. Sales now represent 40pc of total group turnover compared with just 14pc five years ago. The company’s stated aim is to become “a motoring services-focused business”. It experienced a boom in cycle sales during lockdown but that soon fizzled out. Halfords used to be owned by pharmacy giant Boots before it was sold to private equity firm CVC in 2002. It returned to the stock market in 2004. Redde Northgate and Halfords both declined to comment. | schofi2 | |
17/11/2023 13:34 | Pretty much at NAV. | deanowls | |
17/11/2023 10:34 | I can see this being taken out by private money, way to cheap | swiss paul | |
15/10/2023 17:25 | Well spotted. Midas verdict: Ward and Vincent spent £260,000 of their own money buying shares last month. Their decision makes sense. At £3.17, Redde Northgate shares trade more like a stock in trouble than a business in growth mode. That is undeserved and should change as Ward takes the firm forward and investors gain confidence in his ability to deliver. In the meantime, Redde Northgate is offering a dividend yield of more than 7 per cent. Time to buy. | zho | |
15/10/2023 16:57 | Tipped today in the Mail on Sunday | boozey | |
12/10/2023 17:34 | very frustrating. hard to think of a trading reason except that the building and construction trades are big users of white vans and the news from that sector has been pretty poor over recent days. | eigthwonder | |
12/10/2023 17:22 | I wonder why the drops over the past few months? Waiting for the 400p + mark. Will it happen? | sfreeston | |
03/10/2023 10:47 | actually £200,000 the RNS wasnt that clear but he made 2 purchases today totalling 62451 and the CFO bought 18774 too. | dicktrade | |
03/10/2023 10:07 | CEO bought £100k worth of shares today | harris tweed | |
02/10/2023 18:01 | So why the 5% drop today? | deadly | |
26/9/2023 08:51 | Confident statement imo. | thelongandtheshortandthetall | |
08/9/2023 10:22 | Sold. At least I'll get the divi | volsung | |
31/8/2023 08:32 | 16.5p ex divi today | deanowls | |
23/8/2023 11:00 | Ex divi next Thursday 1st of September | bc4 |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions