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SBRY Sainsbury (j) Plc

264.20
-0.20 (-0.08%)
02 May 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
  -0.20 -0.08% 264.20 264.60 264.80 265.00 262.00 264.20 9,925,045 16:35:05
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Grocery Stores 32.7B 137M 0.0581 45.58 6.24B
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 264.40p. Over the last year, Sainsbury (j) shares have traded in a share price range of 244.10p to 310.60p.

Sainsbury (j) currently has 2,356,866,697 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Sainsbury (j) is £6.24 billion. Sainsbury (j) has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 45.58.

Sainsbury (j) Share Discussion Threads

Showing 24076 to 24099 of 24200 messages
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DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
27/3/2024
09:24
"rapidly taking market share from tesco etc."???????


A year ago Tesco market share was 27.4% today it's 27.3% just 0.1% difference which is within the margin of error.

Since the start of the year Sainsbury's market share has fallen from 15.7% to 15.2%, which is the worse out of the big 5 supermarkets in the UK - therefore Sainsbury's management are delivering absolutely no growth what so ever, in fact they are currently delivering a decline.

loganair
27/3/2024
09:19
Stubbs the stock has underperformed, but this is a revitalised business and is rapidly taking market share from tesco etc.

Also the traders sold off when the management delivered a 3 year plan for growth which required capex for things like electric charging stations.

The company is setting itself up to be a powerhouse and the growth is exceptional givens its already big size. It’s cost cutting of 1b over 3 years and the share buy back this year (wonder when they will start ) means this can really only go one way given the company has an ebitda of 1.2b and you have to look beyond official numbers of profit to see the underlying profit and free cash flow.

For me this is at least a double in a few years along with divs on the way.

Clearly UBS agrees with me even if it took them a little longer.

havinthelasttoast
27/3/2024
09:02
UBS upgrades to buy from neutral Today and increases price target to 295 from 275

Toast told you at 2.46 :)

havinthelasttoast
27/3/2024
08:55
Havin - so agree. I sometimes wonder why there is so much negativity on this board. I think I asked Logan once whether he actually owned shares in this one (it may have been Tesco - sorry Logan) and he said he did. Oh well...perhaps he is just a negative person, glass half empty

meanwhile in the real world some more bull sustenance

unastubbs
26/3/2024
18:18
When I told you to buy at 2.46 not only was the technicals positive for a bounce but the data was very strong.

This will hit 300 soon.

Loganair the numpty must be short lol

havinthelasttoast
26/3/2024
12:31
They could let likes of asda merge into 1 rather to see so many aldi stores in so many locations
pirates4
26/3/2024
12:30
Where the monopoly play in this now, ?
pirates4
21/3/2024
11:54
Aldi has revealed its latest wish list of priority locations across London where there is "strong demand" for stores and is looking to build new stores – including Bromley, Beckenham, Richmond, Walthamstow, Wanstead, Winchmore Hill, Notting Hill, Chelsea, Kensington, Chiswick, Highbury, Hackney and Barnet.

As part of a £500 million investment to bring more stores to within the M25, Aldi is looking to open another 100 stores which would create around 3,500 new jobs in the region.

In addition, the supermarket says it is also on the lookout for sites to accommodate its Aldi Local store format, which are around 5,000sq ft in size.

Jonathan Neale, managing director of national real estate at Aldi UK, said: “We want to make high quality, affordable food accessible to all, but there are still many areas in the capital that don’t have access to an Aldi and, as a result, too many people have to make do with big prices at the traditional supermarkets.

“The locations we’ve identified are places where there is demand for our stores and we are committed to continue investing until we can bring our quality products and unbeatable prices to as many people as possible.”

loganair
17/3/2024
17:25
Tesco and Sainsbury’s issue resolved. Hardly a big deal in the scheme of things. Someone made a balls and didn’t test an upgrade well enough when deployed. It happens. Hopefully get a little fluff down tomorrow for a buying opp.
havinthelasttoast
17/3/2024
15:43
It's only going to get worse as they have no redundancy or back up when it fails and it will fail from time to time and that's the stupidity or relying 100% on modern technology and computer programming.

In days gone by, when things were done by people, if one or two became sick, the others could easily cover.

loganair
17/3/2024
11:00
Tesco's affected to an extent as well. They says it's not related but if not it's a bizarre coincidence.
bountyhunter
16/3/2024
17:33
This is why I never allow automatic updates on any of my devices.

Always wait until the Guinea pigs have fully tested updates for a few weeks at least, before allowing them on my phones and computers.

spob
16/3/2024
17:25
McDonalds had issues the other day and Tesco also having problems today.

Looks like windows update gone wrong or similar.

Have they tried switching everything off and on again. Lol

spob
16/3/2024
17:18
.
They are having major system wide issues today. Not just payment issues.

Customers dumping shopping at checkouts because can’t pay. Creating chaos for staff to put goods back.

Customers going outside to get cash from ATMs. Only to find the ATMs are not working either.

BBC saying some stores can’t even print the labels for the bread in the in-store bakery.

Also I have heard the online shoppers in some stores can’t pick new online grocery orders because their hand sets are not working.

More automation and a cash-less society is what we need. Hahaha 😂

spob
16/3/2024
12:56
Always annoys me this.They just put it down to a "technical issue " and that the end of it but what went wrong why wasn't it tested before going live across the company something as catastrophic that it brings virtually the entire company to a holt really shouldn't happen in this day and age when we are repeatedly encouraged not to carry cash.
tim 3
16/3/2024
12:22
.
Sainsbury's: 'Vast majority' of online deliveries cancelled over technical issues

Plus chaos in stores due to no contactless payments and self scan checkouts cash only. ATM problems too.

spob
16/3/2024
12:00
McDonald's yesterday - Sainsbury's today!!!!!


Sainsbury's has said it will be unable to fulfil the "vast majority" of online deliveries today after suffering "technical issues" at some stores.

The supermarket chain said the issues were due to "an error with an overnight software update" and had affected contactless payments.

In a statement to Sky News, a spokesperson said: "Unfortunately, this means we will not be able to deliver the vast majority of today's Groceries Online orders and we are currently unable to contact customers directly, but will contact them as soon as we can to rebook orders.

The supermarket's page on X was inundated with customers' complaints that their orders had not arrived this morning.


When will companies start to realize they need a back up to their computer systems of doing anything to fall back on so if the computer system goes down they can still operate manually.

loganair
16/3/2024
11:12
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-68584235So much for cashless Britain. Broke - yesCashless - no.
chachacha
15/3/2024
14:13
Web data continues to show great growth especially on app.

Also I predict Argos has just went flat in March and the trend is for growth the next quarter.

Monument is key and Sainsbury’s has all the momentum and the low profit number hides the real underlying strength of the business. With 1b of cost savings coming we will see this share double in the next 24 months in my view.

havinthelasttoast
15/3/2024
13:41
I say 50/50 you could be right about that havinthelastoast, Sainsbury's to be number one I mean. Definitely an obvious share to hold for income and gradual capital appreciation.
unastubbs
15/3/2024
13:38
Lucky for us we are prudently run with a large family holding and not P/E style short term thinking management.

Great hold the next years. Soon to be number 1 within a decade

havinthelasttoast
14/3/2024
12:26
All this adds up to, as per usual 'Private Equity' is destroying Morrisons in the single pursuit of making has much money as possible from leverage debt as they did with Woolworths, Debenhams and Toys R Us etc.
loganair
14/3/2024
12:06
Morrisons increased marketing spend by a fifth in 2023 despite £1bn loss:


Despite a near £1bn loss, Morrisons invested heavily in marketing in its most recent financial year. The supermarket chain spent £204m on marketing and advertising in the year ending 29 October 2023, a figure that represents an increase of around one fifth (21%) versus the same period last year.

The increased spending came as Morrisons revamped its brand, resurrecting ‘More Reasons to Shop at Morrisons’ in a major new campaign and revitalising its loyalty offering.

It was a bid for the supermarket to be “bolder” in its marketing, chief customer and marketing officer Rachel Eyre told Marketing Week at the time.

As top marketer Eyre heads off on maternity leave, former group commercial director Darren Blackhurst is set to step into the role on an interim basis. One of Blackhurst’s “first priorities” will be the company’s pricing strategy, CEO Baitiéh said, commenting on the appointment.

loganair
13/3/2024
19:52
Morrisons made a loss of more than £1 billion last year, driven by soaring debt financing costs.

The retailer, which was bought for £7bn by US private equity firm Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) in 2021, reported the heavy loss for the year to October 29 in freshly-filed Companies House accounts.

The £1.09bn pre-tax loss came after the company recorded a £1.52bn loss in the previous year.

It revealed the latest loss came after it paid out £735million of financing costs, which were linked to the firm's mammoth debts and higher interest rates.

The accounts showed the parent company - titled Market Topco following the takeover - had net debts of £8.5bn at the end of October last year.

In the last financial year, Morrisons also reported revenues of £18.35bn, down from £18.72bn a year earlier.

During the year, the company also reduced its staffing levels by almost 9,000 workers to just shy of 105,000 employees.

The retailer has come under significant pressure from the growth of discounter rivals, with Aldi overtaking Morrisons as the UK's fourth biggest supermarket chain in 2022.

loganair
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