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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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.00 | 0.38% | 264.40 | 264.40 | 264.60 | 266.00 | 263.40 | 266.00 | 5,744,733 | 13:09:20 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grocery Stores | 32.7B | 137M | 0.0581 | 45.51 | 6.23B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
02/10/2019 22:43 | Actually most people did think it would go through. (myself not included) Which is why the share price shot up and stayed over valued for a long time Mr Coupe was singing about his share options when the share price jumped 22% in one day " Sainsburys are a big company, so they must know what they are doing " LOL people are so easily swayed by money/size | spob | |
02/10/2019 10:47 | Tesco and Morrison's are both really expanding their whole sale businesses which seems to be the area of growth and growth in profits. All Sainsbury's seems to be doing is spending ever more money to lower prices to keep their market share which seems to me how a clueless 5 year old would do things when it comes to retailing. Sainsbury's must stop trying to battle it out with Aldi/Lidl who are the food retailers who have the discount expertise. Tesco today said it now plans to open 150 more Express stores over the next three years - and four new supermarkets in the UK Ireland. The move will also see 153 Metro stores 'repurposed' with new counters in 692 stores next year. Ongoing changes will include a reduction in opening hours during quieter trading periods at the start and end of the day, | loganair | |
02/10/2019 10:30 | loganair 2 Oct '19 - 09:29 - 20442 of 20444 How come Tesco are being allowed to get away with such an acquisition with out it going to the CMA? wholesale and retail difference Coupe hasn't got a clue either.... ASDA/Sainsburys was SO stupid | muffinhead | |
02/10/2019 09:46 | Genrali - If little to no organic growth means a company is not successful. Can not be successful with M&A alone. Must invest in growth whereas Sainsburys invests to lower prices = lower margins = lower revenue = lower profits. I would much prefer Sainsburys to have 14% or even 13% market share with double the profit margins then 15.3% market share with much lower profit margins. | loganair | |
02/10/2019 09:30 | What else is Tesco doing: Online, Tesco plans to double its UK capacity, with the support of three new Urban Fulfilment Centres to be opened by Summer 2020, as part of plan to open more than 25 over the next three years. | loganair | |
02/10/2019 09:29 | How come Tesco are being allowed to get away with such an acquisition with out it going to the CMA? And what is Sainsbury's doing - nothing!!!!!! Booker to be boosted by Best Food acquisition: Booker sales growth was modest compared to last year as the business annualised against contract wins. With small business confidence remaining low Tesco supported retail and catering customers with increased promotional activity. To boost growth, Tesco has today announced the acquisition of the assets and operations of Best Food Logistics, adding a further £1.1bn of additional foodservice sales. | loganair | |
02/10/2019 07:32 | 2.20 x 0.20 = 0.44 2.20 - 0.44 = 1.76 | neilyb675 | |
01/10/2019 20:55 | tim 3 1 Oct '19 - 08:58 - 20431 of 20439 Sainsburys are ahead of the competition on minimum wage already paying 9.29 so a rise to 10.50 in 5 years is only 12% or less than 2.5% a year. My post was not specifically directed at Sainsburys. Think about how businesses with large workforces in service employment are going to deal with 5% compound wage inflation. Manufacturing is already in contraction. The current 5% compound minimum wage inflation started in 2015. So another 5 years is being proposed. The economic cycle started in 2009 so the expansion could absorb increasing costs. Higher wages also leads to higher employer pension and NI contributions. Do you seriously believe that the economy is going to expand for another 5 years without a recession? The average pretax profit margin for Sainsburys for the last 4 years comes in at 1.63%. The sector has overexpanded and there is ruthless competition. 2.5% wage inflation currently is too much for shareholders and is part of the reason the shareprice has been so weak for years My point is that Javid is irresponsible. Something has to give: ? price inflation...? employees laid off and service sector goes into recession..?corporat Whatever happens the discounters will further benefit in the supermarket sector imo | muffinhead | |
01/10/2019 19:25 | Regarding Mr Rogers I get the feeling running Argos was too much like a proper job. LOL | spob | |
01/10/2019 14:43 | I didn't realise you were a priest. Could you pray for my shares? | she-ra | |
01/10/2019 14:34 | In my whole working life, Sundays and Bank holidays were considered as normal working days. | loganair | |
01/10/2019 14:26 | loganair - It took you 10 years to take the hint? | she-ra | |
01/10/2019 13:24 | I have never understood this getting paid extra for working Bank Holidays and Sundays? In my last 10 years before I retired I worked 9 New Years Days and 8 Christmas Days and never got paid any extra for doing so also the same for working many, many Sundays. I was paid standard pay up to a certain number of hours worked then paid extra if worked any more hours and that was it. | loganair | |
01/10/2019 12:38 | I think the pay rise last year was quite a clever move it was partly paid for by Cutting what were basically outdated practices like premiums for weekends that only some older staff got and getting rid of paid breaks.He knew it was only a matter of time before the £10 minimum came in so by doing it early he gave Sainsburys an edge when recruiting as well as holding on to existing staff. | tim 3 | |
01/10/2019 09:28 | Henry Ford Understood That Raising Wages Would Bring Him More Profit. A century ago, the Ford Motor founder shocked the world of business by doubling wages to $5 a day. No altruist, he was playing a long game—one today’s short-sighted CEOs can’t fathom. | loganair | |
01/10/2019 08:58 | Sainsburys are ahead of the competition on minimum wage already paying 9.29 so a rise to 10.50 in 5 years is only 12% or less than 2.5% a year. | tim 3 | |
30/9/2019 23:12 | Sajid Javid, the Chancellor, launched plans to hike the minimum wage from £8.21 now to £10.50 over the next five years 5% compound wage inflation for another 5 years More immigrants coming to UK! In 2015 the politicians started this annual compound wage inflation pilgrimage, no productivity needed, garbage | muffinhead | |
29/9/2019 19:36 | Sainsbury’s recently unveiled its own new strategy, announcing plans to make cost savings of £500 million through cuts to store numbers, integrating some more Argos stores into larger Sainsbury’s sites and using more technology to make shopping easier. | loganair | |
29/9/2019 18:29 | Stop worrying, loganair, and sell your Sainsbury's shares. I'm holding these having bought more a few weeks back. The only thing I'd add regarding the recent update is that they didn't mention the store upgrades. I don't see any meaning behind that, though. | poikka | |
28/9/2019 11:07 | When I look at Sainsbury's I see a worrying list of time-weary set of pledges to restructure the business which has been on going for at least the past 10 years. | loganair | |
26/9/2019 11:11 | spob 25 Sep '19 - 10:13 - 20422 of 20424 0 1 0 Has anyone noticed the never ending "one off" costs to save money, every year for the last 30 years God, you've been following SBRY for the last thirty years. I do commiserate. Repeated "one-off" costs are of course not exceptional and a very punctilious and intellectually disciplined management would not treat such costs as exceptionals. | cjohn | |
26/9/2019 11:10 | CJohn - Sainsburys has fewer Freeholds then either Morrison's who have the most and Tesco. I disagree, Sainsburys has a too small amount of Freeholds which is a financial negative. | loganair | |
26/9/2019 11:07 | Loganair 13 Sep '19 - 10:56 - 20402 of 20423 0 1 0 My understanding on a supermarket sale and lease back and supermarket will pay around 6% per year on the lease which means after around 17 years, the supermarket will have paid all the money they got for the sale of their asset however they'll will continue to pay the 6%. If a Supermarket sale and lease back for £50mln, will pay £3mln per year lease. After 17 years the supermarket will have paid £50mln in lease and will continue to pay £3mln per year for the lease on an asset they once owned but no longer do so. Actually after a while the supermarket will be paying more than £3mln per year as every so often their will be a review and reviews only mean one thing, an increase in the amount to be paid on the lease. All good stuff, Loganair. And precisely why SBRY's large amount of freehold property is a financial plus. | cjohn |
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