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RR. Rolls-royce Holdings Plc

407.50
-5.60 (-1.36%)
01 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Rolls-royce Holdings Plc LSE:RR. London Ordinary Share GB00B63H8491 ORD SHS 20P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -5.60 -1.36% 407.50 409.10 409.30 417.40 407.90 413.00 18,472,730 16:35:15
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Aircraft Engine,engine Parts 16.49B 2.41B 0.2884 14.19 34.23B
Rolls-royce Holdings Plc is listed in the Aircraft Engine,engine Parts sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker RR.. The last closing price for Rolls-royce was 413.10p. Over the last year, Rolls-royce shares have traded in a share price range of 142.70p to 435.00p.

Rolls-royce currently has 8,363,784,583 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Rolls-royce is £34.23 billion. Rolls-royce has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 14.19.

Rolls-royce Share Discussion Threads

Showing 15676 to 15696 of 49600 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
13/6/2022
08:10
Selling RR & buying IGR , could give me 100% returns by end of month
blackhorse23
13/6/2022
00:30
Dr. Paul Dorfman, founder of the anti-nuclear so-called "Nuclear Consulting Group" is hardly an independent authority on nuclear energy.
jaka
12/6/2022
16:01
JPM probably sanctioned the article lol
vlad the impaler
12/6/2022
15:37
Looks a bit iffy for those pop up reactors.
Too much reactive waste.

ringosstar
12/6/2022
13:09
https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/developers-of-small-modular-reactors-hope-their-time-has-come/21808321?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIkpfSm_Cn-AIV4mDmCh158gX4EAAYASAAEgKzCvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds
dipa11
12/6/2022
09:24
Gerbil collection point, before crash


RR [...]
— Joseph (@VT_Impaler)

vlad the impaler
12/6/2022
09:22
https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/markets/article-10802659/amp/Rolls-Royce-fund-200-nuclear-apprenticeships-year-decade.html?ico=amp_articleRelated_with_images
dipa11
11/6/2022
18:48
SYME truly awful for holders there 86 pct lost Great to watch mind
drew lonmenob
11/6/2022
13:30
Try a cap 'H'.
corby3
11/6/2022
10:05
Best of Britain! Rolls-Royce 'highly likely' to build engines for AUKUS nuclear submarineshttps://www.express.co.uk/news/science/1623588/rolls-royce-engine-aukus-nuclear-submarine-deal-brexit-news-defence
jaka
10/6/2022
16:08
Stay out for now.
blueball
10/6/2022
16:03
https://polaris.brighterir.com/public/ig_design_group/news/rns_widget/story/x87z4jw/export
blackhorse23
10/6/2022
10:01
https://m.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/ROLLS-ROYCE-HOLDINGS-PLC-4004084/company/
dipa11
10/6/2022
09:42
"They took you to 80 for fun- Now they are back for 30
vlad the impaler
10/6/2022
09:34
Sure does. Prices going to double from here if nothing credible on that front spoon.

Not that oil is an issue. Refinery capabilities are basically zilch . Amazing foresight

vlad the impaler
10/6/2022
09:27
The UK Government needs energy options that replace OIL NOW

Not 2.3 or 4 years from now

Boris

You need to get some seriously better advice

buywell3
10/6/2022
09:26
From Moneyweekhttps://moneyweek.com/investments/stocks-and-shares/604944/should-you-buy-rolls-royce-shares?ampIt survived the pandemic, but will Rolls-Royce ever be the same again?Rolls-Royce survived the pandemic-induced collapse in the aviation industry – its biggest market – but it still struggles to create value for shareholders. So, asks Rupert Hargreaves, should you buy Rolls-Royce shares?Over the past 15 years, Rolls-Royce (LSE: RR) has lurched from disaster to disaster and shareholders have had to bear the pain. The stock has produced an awful total return (ie including dividends) of -1.2% per year over the past decade-and-a-half, compared to 5.4% for the FTSE All Share. In some ways, this performance is surprising. Rolls is one of just two organisations that essentially control the global market for narrow-body aircraft engines. It also designs, produces and maintains the nuclear technology in the Royal Navy's submarine fleet. These are not markets where customers are willing to sacrifice quality for price. If an airline owns a plane with Rolls-Royce engines, it will not skimp on service and maintenance spending. That practically guarantees a recurring income from annual servicing and parts. Moreover, it can take a decade or more to design and test a new engine – most other companies just do not have the time nor the money to pursue this. There are also plenty of reasons why the Royal Navy is unlikely to shift its nuclear contract to a different supplier – and the navy isn't the company's only major defence customer. It recently signed a 30-year, $2.6bn contract with the US Air Force to replace engines for its B52 planes. So in theory, Rolls essentially dominates two specialist markets where it seems unlikely the firm is going to face much in the way of competition any time soon. However, even with these competitive advantages, it has still struggled to create value for shareholders. Why has Rolls-Royce struggled despite its competitive advantages?Virtually all of the company's current issues are a direct result of the coronavirus pandemic. Rolls has four main markets. In order of size these are civil aerospace (£4.5bn in revenues in 2021?), defence (£3.4bn), power systems (£2.8bn) and so-called new markets (£2m). Two of these four businesses are highly profitable. Defence generated underlying operating profits of £457m last year and power systems earned £242m. The other two arms lost a combined £240m. Civil aerospace, the largest division by revenue, reported the biggest loss of £172m. The civil aviation arm is a fascinating business. The bulk of its revenues are tied to the sale of aircraft engines. Over the past few decades Rolls has installed 15,400 engines on planes of all shapes and sizes. However, the group does not make money from the sale of equipment (in 2019 and 2021 it made a small loss). The real money is made after the sale. Rolls-Royce does not break out exactly how much it makes from each service contract, but to give you some idea of the potential profits, the operating margin at the civil aviation business in 2019 was 1%. That is, income from service contracts offset all operating costs, research and development costs, the cost of selling engines at a small loss and other expenses (mainly joint ventures). Even without the full picture this makes it clear that the business is highly lucrative. Unfortunately, during the past two years this lucrative revenue stream has fallen off a cliff. Engines require servicing after a number of hours in the sky. So if planes aren't flying there's no need to service the engines. As a result, service revenue dropped by 41% between 2019 and 2021 and the operating margin dropped to -4%. The company's past performance is no guarantee of future potential While the enterprise has a competitive advantage in the civil aviation market, it's still at the mercy of industry trends. And if sales drop suddenly, Rolls-Royce can't cut spending to match. It takes as long as 16 years to train an aerospace engineer so the firm needs to hang on to its skilled workers. Before the pandemic, the company was on the way to a healthy cash flow yield, but survival quickly became the name of the game in 2020. Management is confident that the business can return to form this year. It is targeting an operating margin in the high single digits and expects trading cash flow to exceed operating profit. These targets are promising, but I'm worried that the pandemic has done irreparable harm to Rolls-Royce. During the past two years it has cut more than 9,000 jobs, mostly skilled engineers, which will be hard to replace.It also sold its ITP Aero business to raise £1.4bn. ITP – which is responsible for the maintenance of the Spanish Armed Forces' engines – was one of the corporation's valued defence assets. On top of this, group net debt ballooned from £1.3bn in 2019 to £5.2bn at the end of 2021 and the number of shares in issue (following a cash call in 2020?) has jumped from 5.5bn to 8.4 billion. Overall, Rolls-Royce is a smaller, more leveraged entity than in 2019. Until management can prove it is back on a sustainable footing, it's very hard for me to put a value on the enterprise.While the company might be one of the UK's most storied engineering groups, it's not necessarily a great investment. Without concrete earnings and cash flow figures, I'd stay away from the shares.
foreverbull
10/6/2022
08:35
Not feeling good for RR , sold mine & bought IGR , share price prediction 600% rise at 2022
blackhorse23
09/6/2022
21:48
Would certainly think they maxed out what they could from 80, right there. And what perfect timing as usual re markets
vlad the impaler
09/6/2022
21:33
Has the current share price , top trading channel been hit today does the team think ?
buywell3
09/6/2022
21:21
JPM gang will be making the most of what they

"Foresaw"

mq9 reaper
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