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SBRY Sainsbury (j) Plc

259.60
-1.60 (-0.61%)
02 Dec 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Sainsbury (j) Plc LSE:SBRY London Ordinary Share GB00B019KW72 ORD 28 4/7P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  -1.60 -0.61% 259.60 260.20 260.40 262.80 259.20 260.40 4,717,545 16:35:10
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Grocery Stores 32.7B 137M 0.0580 44.86 6.17B
Sainsbury (j) Plc is listed in the Grocery Stores sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SBRY. The last closing price for Sainsbury (j) was 261.20p. Over the last year, Sainsbury (j) shares have traded in a share price range of 237.80p to 310.60p.

Sainsbury (j) currently has 2,360,471,449 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Sainsbury (j) is £6.17 billion. Sainsbury (j) has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 44.86.

Sainsbury (j) Share Discussion Threads

Showing 21901 to 21922 of 24400 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
13/4/2021
06:50
I do think one of these supermarkets needs to be swallowed up. Asda seem to be in the early stages of a major reorganisation that could allow them more share of the grocery market here in the UK. Sainsbury's seem to be flagging. Morrison's has a strong brand north of Watford. You'd think it would be the latter that would be swallowed up. Maybe a merger between Tesco & Sainsbury's in the future? to be continued...
leadersoffice
07/4/2021
14:29
During the most recent lockdown, Aldi and Asda have led the way in attracting more new customers in-store and online than other leading supermarkets, according to new research from shopper insights specialist Shoppercentric.

When asked which grocery retailer they had used for the first time ever during the latest lockdown, 7% said Aldi, 6% said Asda and 5% said Tesco. Only 4% of those surveyed said Lidl or Sainsbury’s, whilst just 2% said Morrisons.

Whilst the figures for Tesco and Sainsbury’s may be understandably lower due to the sheer number of people who had previously visited one of their stores, the data shows Aldi being the most successful of the others in attracting shoppers looking for money-saving deals.

loganair
06/4/2021
12:34
Kantar's latest figures show:


Iceland's market share is back down from it's lock down highs to pre-covid levels.

Co-Op has fallen from it's lock down high of 7.2% market share to below pre-covid levels.

ASDA's market share is now above pre-covid levels while Sainsbury's is still lagging 0.5% below pre-covid levels.

Ocado is still 0.4% above pre-covid levels while Symbols and Independents are 0.7% below their lock down covid highs.

loganair
30/3/2021
08:58
MARKET CORRECTION IMMINENT
the_man_with_the_pink_gun
29/3/2021
15:00
Scottish Mortgage manager and leading tech investor James Anderson has joined the chorus of asset managers shunning the Deliveroo listing.

Anderson, whose portfolio has chunky stakes in other food delivery platforms, said he would not participate in the Deliveroo floatation because its model is heavily reliant on London.

Anderson’s scepticism follows the rejection of the IPO by a host of UK fund giants, over concerns about the firm’s working practices.

Specialist ESG fund house EdenTree became the latest UK fund manager to reject the impending floatation, describing Deliveroo as the ‘antithesis of a sustainable business model’.

The company today knocked back the top end of its valuation expectations, from a previous range of 390p to 460p to between 390p and 410p. That brought its maximum market cap down from a previous high of £8.9bn to £7.5bn.

loganair
26/3/2021
10:32
A group of UK fund giants have indicated they will not be taking a bite of Deliveroo’s £8.8bn IPO as concerns mount over the firm’s working practices.

A combination of lack of investor power and poor working conditions for its delivery riders has turned BMO Global, Aberdeen Standard, Aviva Investors, L&G, CCLA and M&G off the fast food delivery company.

The concerns came as a study from the Bureau of Investigative Journalism found Deliveroo’s delivery riders were receiving less than the minimum wage after analysing 3,000 invoices from more than 300 riders over the past year.

Shareholder lobby group Pirc described the findings as concerning. ‘Investors considering taking a position in Deliveroo should familiarise themselves with these matters and the risks and responsibilities involved along with all other relevant factors,’ head of stewardship Tom Powdrill said.

Ticking time bomb:

BMO director of global equities Phil Webster said that Deliveroo faces significant competitive pressures, drawing attention to potential regulatory changes which could impact the firm’s profitability path, making it a ‘ticking time bomb’ and ‘uninvestable’.

‘Deliveroo faces significant pressure from the market leader, Just Eat Takeaway, which is investing heavily to improve its restaurant coverage and delivery proposition, through an “employed rider” model.’

‘We also see headwinds to Deliveroo’s revenue growth as we exit lockdown and customers return to dining out in restaurants. These revenue risks are further compounded by the issues around workers’ rights and a potential regulatory change, which would hamper its path to profitability.

Sustainability:

Aberdeen Standard Investments UK equity head Andrew Millington also categorically said his firm would not be taking part in the IPO. Governance concerns also leave him questioning the sustainability of Deliveroo’s business model.

‘We will not be taking part in the Deliveroo IPO as we are concerned about the sustainability of the business model.'

While M&G recognises the disruptive impact Deliveroo has had on the food services market, it also intends to give the IPO a wide berth.

The fund firm’s head of corporate finance and stewardship, Rupert Krefting, told reporters. ‘Whilst we acknowledge the disruptive impact that Deliveroo has had on the food services market, we still see risks to the sustainability of its business model for long term investors,’ he said.

‘This is largely driven by the company’s reliance on gig-economy workers in the UK as informal employment contracts potentially fall short in offering the value, job security and benefits of full employment.’

The concerns of these influential investors casts a shadow over one of the biggest London floats for a home-grown tech company.

loganair
21/3/2021
11:41
On-line shopping is not Green as it leads to strongly individualised customer demands for broad product range with many variants and a constant out put of new products.

The average product life cycle in the 1970's was 7 years, by 2000 had shrunk to 3 years and today just 2 years.


The message being pushed on people is to consume more - that consumption is good and saving and mending is bad, low to non-existant interest rates to encourage people to borrow more money and therefore to spend more money on consumption and to continually buy the latest product.

Sainsbury's seems to be more and more about selling more stuff, more cheaply thereby continually reducing their margins which reduces their profits, instead of selling less stuff at increased margins to increase their profits.

Sainsbury's had their highest profits in the 1970's to 1990's when their margins were over 7%. 7% margins on £15bln turn over is more profit then 1.5% margin on £25bln turn over.

Therefore I would be far more happy for Sainsbury's to reduce their turn over if it means much higher margins rather then to go for market share by reducing margins to increase turn over thereby reducing their profits.

loganair
20/3/2021
10:23
6 month chart looks very pretty. What will happen when (if) this passes 250p.
chiefbrody
16/3/2021
18:09
Supermarkets selling a meal deal that when cooked results in underdone chicken?

Ain't gonna happen, so I wouldn't take any notice of 'MyLondon's link.

poikka
16/3/2021
17:29
'I compared Amazon's new meal deal to Morrisons and Sainsbury’s and one stood out' - John James - MyLondon
loganair
15/3/2021
19:52
spod: If your prediction is true will that be good for Sainsburys or bad or neutral?
netcurtains
15/3/2021
19:48
I said before that I predict total UK online grocery spending over the last 12 months will be the peak and will never be surpassed when adjusted for inflation

meaning that total uk market share of online grocery spending will never be higher than it has been in the last 12 months

I stand by that prediction

spob
10/3/2021
07:22
Questor: two years ago Sainsbury’s was in trouble, but the world has changed. Buy
Questor share tip: solid digital presence should shield grocer from cheaper rivals, while a cost-cutting drive may boost cash

telegraph - today!

unastubbs
05/3/2021
11:23
The best cannabis stock in the UK

Will be producing 200 TONS which is worth £400m.

Current mkt cap £6.4m

50# of shares not in open market

BOD own 30%

Have GW Pharmas growers (GW just got sold for £7b)

ANA has the most land (30-50 hectares) out of all the cannabis stocks

They will be no 1 in the UK just like Canopy Growth is in USA

Current share price 1.08p






I would take a position if I was you as it’s the fastest growing sector in the world.

gordan ghetto
05/3/2021
10:24
maybe that bids coming
harleymaxwell
04/3/2021
16:19
No honesty with this share price just manipulated to go down.
scaff55
04/3/2021
07:24
============ Amazon has landed in the UK as buywell predicted ===============

An 'Amazon Go' store is to open in Ealing London within a week

The Amazon Go store is a cashless queueless 'pick your items off the shelves' and Go concept which has been working in the USA since 2018

The concept uses AI and cameras to track purchases made ie picked up and imo seems ideal for quicker cleaner supermarket shopping in a pandemic or endemic situation.

Amazon have 30 such planning applications made for Amazon Go stores in the UK at the moment

One would imagine that other established Supermarkets will have to adapt or Go under

dyor

buywell3
03/3/2021
19:38
Despite significant ongoing costs associated with protecting colleagues and customers from COVID-19, we expect that the vast majority of Sainsbury's stores will remain open this year. We will therefore forgo the business rates relief on all Sainsbury's stores again this year. We will also forgo the business rates relief on all standalone Argos stores once they re-open.
loganair
03/3/2021
19:37
Sainsbury’s is to cut 500 head office jobs while another 650 jobs are at risk as the supermarket closes one of its online grocery packing centres although the supermarket said it hopes to redeploy most of the 650 staff to neighbouring stores. .

The majority of workers at the group’s “dark store” fulfilment centre in Bromley-by-Bow, London, which was the first to open in 2013, are expected to shift to working in Sainsbury’s stores. By March next year, more than 20 stores in and around the capital are expected to expand their online packing capabilities, enabling Sainsbury’s to deliver thousands more orders each week.

The UK’s second largest supermarket will also close offices in Coventry and Victoria in London and move out of two of the five remaining floors it occupies at its London head office in Holborn, another two floors at its Avebury office in Milton Keynes and one in Manchester as many staff permanently switch to working part-time from home.

loganair
03/3/2021
11:31
Ground Hog day here again today, down by the end of the day but all above board LOL
scaff55
02/3/2021
16:44
They should rename it Sainsburys Down, Fixed to keep falling stay clear.
scaff55
02/3/2021
11:38
Having a reasonable pull back, might be tempted if S1 is hit

Support1: 215.50p Support2: 179.30p

ny boy
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