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SBRY Sainsbury (j) Plc

264.60
2.80 (1.07%)
Last Updated: 12:17:27
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
  2.80 1.07% 264.60 264.40 264.60 264.80 261.00 261.00 1,006,733 12:17:27
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Grocery Stores 32.7B 137M 0.0580 45.62 6.18B
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 261.80p. 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 £6.18 billion. Sainsbury (j) has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 45.62.

Sainsbury (j) Share Discussion Threads

Showing 22026 to 22049 of 24400 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
03/8/2021
10:31
Approaching 300p.

Fast.

Bears squeeze imminent.

18 month high and gathering upwards momentum rapidly.


ALL IMO. DYOR.
QP

quepassa
03/8/2021
09:23
Shorts closing I guess.
chiefbrody
03/8/2021
08:23
Short squeeze?
rolo7
02/8/2021
16:27
Shorting reduced to 7.03% today One step towards the reduction of short Good luck to long time holder
dipa11
01/8/2021
20:52
Russian supermarket which claims to be cheaper than Aldi and Lidl arrives in the UK

It wants to open 300 sites in the UK over the next decade.

Mere UK business development manager Aleksandr Chkalov told The Grocer: “On 14 August we will be glad to present our new retail model: a real hard discounter, with no shelves, no service, no convenience, just the lowest prices.”

It will have up to 1,200 products and sell brands such as Cusheen toilet paper, Maxsonic batteries, Reach sanitising wipes and Warrior energy drinks.

loganair
30/7/2021
19:47
Shorting reduced to 7.54% today One step towards the reduction of short Good luck to long time holder
dipa11
28/7/2021
09:33
Not at mine.

Fully stocked with everything.

But their inventory management seems much tighter which is a big positive from a management/financial control/shareholder perspective and means there is much less waste with items going past their dates.

Also, they appear to be adopting many aspects of the winning ALDI/LIDL formula which is to offer fewer choices of the same products.

Pulling out of wholesale is also a part of their re-focusing.

Not surprised that the share price has repeatedly been hitting two year highs in the past few days.

Looking for an imminent 300p.


ALL IMO. DYOR.
QP

quepassa
28/7/2021
09:25
tim3 unfair comparision as sbry store will most likely do home delivery from store wheres as mrw is customers only.
rolo7
28/7/2021
09:11
There were so many items out of stock at Sainsburys that decided to try Morrisons.

Difference was night and day not one item I needed was out of stock.

Concerning.

tim 3
22/7/2021
21:43
Today shorting increased to 9%And price are steady + 35% or more purchase @ closing Yesterday was my remark"This is on takeover target as shorting was hold for long time now it has increased to 8.5% and still price is on hold upper side This is my thought. What about your view?"
dipa11
22/7/2021
09:21
Iceland need money by end of month to meet payment terms of the takeover
rolo7
21/7/2021
17:12
This is on takeover target as shorting was hold for long time now it has increased to 8.5% and still price is on hold upper side This is my thought. What about your view?
dipa11
21/7/2021
10:20
Sainsbury’s has unilaterally decided to close down its wholesale business and therefore stop supplying the SimplyFresh group with Sainsbury-labelled products.

SimplyFresh announced this morning that as a result of Sainsbury’s decision it no longer has an ongoing agreement with the supermarket as a supplier.

A Sainsbury’s spokesman said: “As part of our plan to put food back at the heart of Sainsbury’s, we are simplifying our business so we can focus on what matters most to our customers – lower prices, exciting new products and convenient ways to shop.

“To deliver our plan we must prioritise what we do. We have just started talking to our retail partners and colleagues about what this means for the future of wholesale and it will be a gradual process.

loganair
19/7/2021
10:49
Yes indeed.

Sainsbury's are redeveloping their sites already. That's the big hidden value in the estate waiting to be exploited at a time of severe housing shortage.

You are probably talking about the major redevelopment in Hendon in North London which is a pretty built-up area.

It is likely that other city-edge and town-edge sites would command far shorter redevelopment time-lines.

But the Hendon site shows what is possible. A massive 1300 new homes and other mixed used.

This is a link to an article about it in the Retail Gazette:-

hXXps://www.retailgazette.co.uk/blog/2021/06/construction-begins-for-new-sainsburys-flagship-in-hendon/


That's a big attraction for USA private equity houses who are now actively chasing the sector.



ALL IMO. DYOR.
QP

quepassa
19/7/2021
10:19
Redeveloping sainsburys sites takes a very long time and is also very disruptive


They are doing one near me

it is a TEN YEAR project ! assuming no delays


the car park has been closed

and they have built a tiny 2 storey car park in the corner of the existing car park

I wouldn't take my car there during peak hours

because I know you would have no chance of finding a parking space

spob
18/7/2021
19:52
Interesting story about Morrison's opening a store and a concept that could go anywhere with no check outs or self scan basically you scan the app on the way in and it automatically charges to your card.Really has gone from offering customers a choice to them being forced to use them.In a few years things could look totally different more and more shops I go in have just one till open mainly for customer service.
tim 3
18/7/2021
14:20
that's a very interesting point quepassa. i would have thought that would only be viable in areas of very high land prices, mainly in and around london. it's difficult to know whether the sites they own in london are freehold or not, overall it's 50% freehold, but who knows if they sold off the london sites.
m_kerr
18/7/2021
13:19
Div reinvestment Friday/Tomorrow.Lovely looking 1 year chart. Can the run continue and turn the 3 year chart around...
chiefbrody
17/7/2021
16:09
What the private equity houses have spotted is the redevelopment potential of the sites.

Keep the cathedral like superstores as single storey and build another five stories of flats over them.

Just as nobody wanted warehouses a decade ago which have now become a highly sought-after real estate asset class, the same is happening with supermarkets.

John Lewis points the way and has already started redeveloping a number ofsites as a way of becoming a mainstream professional residential landlord to build further stable income streams against a volatile high-street income stream.

Current valuations are not yet up to speed with and factoring in the potential for mixed-used redeveloment of thousands upon thousands of super/hyper-markets.

But this is where the future incremental values lies

ALL IMO. DYOR.
QP

quepassa
17/7/2021
13:50
a rudimentary analysis of the freehold estate (50% freehold), and a £524m rent bill, at a 5% yield, gives you a portfolio worth £10,500m. 5% is cautious, many sites in the south east would be worth perhaps 4-4.5%.

sale and leaseback is unattractive, as you can issue bonds at 3-3.5% nowadays, plus you don't lose control of the land, and don't have long liabilities at 20 years or so, with fixed uplifts. i did the calculation to show that a buyer could borrow most if not all of the purchase price secured against property.

problem is they expect to generate only about £500m free cash flow per annum, so effectively without that rental shield they wouldnt be making any money at all. it's not like morrisons who had 86% freehold ownership, plus manufacturing and distribution assets.

debt secured against freehold property nowadays is about 4%, plus supermarkets are highly saleable assets nowadays.

m_kerr
09/7/2021
12:13
Thank you rolo7.
imperial3
09/7/2021
06:56
296p according to stockopedia, debt is coming down fast or will, more profitable in h1 as argos loss making stores have closed/closing...
rolo7
08/7/2021
12:19
Does anyone know what the net asset value per share is ?
imperial3
07/7/2021
15:56
Shorting reduced to 6.42 % today Let see how much time will take for further reduction Good luck long time holder
dipa11
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