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SFR Severfield Plc

69.60
1.80 (2.65%)
03 May 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Severfield Plc LSE:SFR London Ordinary Share GB00B27YGJ97 ORD 2.5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  1.80 2.65% 69.60 66.20 69.40 69.40 66.00 66.00 141,246 16:35:29
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
Structural Steel Erection 493.61M 21.57M 0.0697 9.76 210.49M
Severfield Plc is listed in the Structural Steel Erection sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker SFR. The last closing price for Severfield was 67.80p. Over the last year, Severfield shares have traded in a share price range of 49.30p to 76.20p.

Severfield currently has 309,538,321 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Severfield is £210.49 million. Severfield has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 9.76.

Severfield Share Discussion Threads

Showing 5176 to 5186 of 7850 messages
Chat Pages: Latest  218  217  216  215  214  213  212  211  210  209  208  207  Older
DateSubjectAuthorDiscuss
05/6/2018
06:57
1.1556
CHF

la forge
05/6/2018
06:41
A referendum in Switzerland could fundamentally change the country's monetary system.
The vote will be on the introduction of the sovereign money initiative, which aims to end fractional reserve banking in Switzerland.
A fractional reserve banking system allows lenders to electronically create money to lend to borrowers.
The Vollgeld Initiative seeks to restrict banks from lending more than the amount of deposits they have on the books, ending their money creation function. The policy could make it much harder to borrow money.
The Swiss National Bank accounts for around 10% of the country's monetary supply, with the rest created by lenders.


A referendum in the small European nation of Switzerland could change the entire face of global banking, if the result goes the way of a campaign group known as the Vollgeld Initiative.

In June, a vote will be held to ask Swiss citizens if they back the introduction of a concept known as the sovereign money initiative. The initiative, if implemented, could lead to a seismic shift in the way Switzerland runs its economy, and possibly send ripples through other economies around the world.

The concept of the sovereign money initiative itself is a fairly complicated one, but fundamentally boils down to a change in what is actually recognised as money, and what is not.

Sovereign money is that money brought into circulation by the central bank of a given country, and according to Vollgeld Initiative campaigners, makes up around 10% of money currently circulated in the Swiss economy. The other 90% is either electronic or book money, and is created by non-central bank financial institutions — like regular banks.

Under the proposals put forward by the Vollgeld Initiative, all deposits made to regular banks in Swiss francs would not be placed on their balance sheets, but instead held by the Swiss National Bank, Switzerland's central bank.

"The Swiss National Bank alone will be able to create electronic money," the Vollgeld Initiative says in a paper explaining its proposed reforms.

"Banks won’t be able to create money for themselves any more, they’ll only be able to lend money that they have from savers or other banks, or even, if necessary, money that the Swiss National Bank has provided them."

The Vollgeld Initiative's main argument for such a system is that it would reduce the level of systemic financial risk in a country heavily dependent on its banking system. They tout the benefits of governments never having to bail out banks again.

Here's their full justification for the policy (emphasis ours):

Sovereign money in a bank account is completely safe because it is central bank money. It does not disappear when a bank goes bankrupt. Finance bubbles will be avoided because the banks won’t be able to create money any more. The state will be freed from being a hostage, because the banks won’t need to be rescued with taxpayers’ money to keep the whole money-transaction system afloat i.e. the “too big to fail” problem disappears. The financial industry will go back to serving the real economy and society. The money and banking systems will no longer be shrouded in complexity, but will be transparent and understandable.

"The initiative would introduce several fundamental changes to the Swiss constitution. It would declare that money is not debt, and that the SNB could distribute funds to the state or directly to households," Philippe Bacchetta, a professor at the Swiss Finance Institute, wrote for Vox EU.

If such an initiative passed, it could lead to advocates of a similar system in other nations to cause for change, possibly causing a ripple through the global financial system.

Switzerland is a nation famed for its referendums, holding votes on everything from getting rid of TV licensing, all the way to its notorious, and highly controversial, vote to ban the building of minarets, but the sovereign money vote — scheduled to be held on June 10 — could be one of its most significant ever.

While Vollgeld is aggressively lobbying for the change, Switzerland's major institutions are strongly opposed, with the SNB publishing a detailed argument against such an initiative.

"There is no fundamental problem that needs fixing. A radical overhaul of Switzerland’s financial system is inadvisable and would entail major risks," it said, noting that the Federal Council — the country's government — is also opposed to the plans.

"Today’s decentralised system is both customer-focused and efficient. Competition between banks ensures favourable interest rates and high-quality, modern and low-cost services," the SNB adds.

Another issue likely to arise from the introduction of sovereign money is that borrowing in Switzerland would likely grind to a halt, as banks would be unable to create new capital on their balance sheets to fund such borrowing.

Many do not believe the vote should even be held, with Bacchetta saying that: "The motivation and the specifics of the proposed reform in Switzerland have abstracted from current knowledge in economics."

"It is a weakness of the Swiss democratic system that citizens can vote on economic initiatives in the absence of this type of analysis."

In Switzerland, referendum questions need 100,000 supporting signatures to be put to a general vote. A vote is only considered valid if more than 40% of the population takes part. To win, you need a majority of the voting population and a majority in the number of cantons, or regions, that support the change.

la forge
29/5/2018
17:30
EUR CHF 1.1469 -0.0081
waldron
28/5/2018
07:46
1.1617
CHF

ariane
21/5/2018
09:00
EUR CHF 1.1719 -0.0022
the grumpy old men
18/5/2018
12:39
Been here a while and probably bought too high at the time. Decided to take my 1 per cent profit and move on.I wish you all the best and hope they deliver what I hoped for Best to all
hopeful holder
17/5/2018
16:13
EUR CHF 1.1824 +0.0001
waldron
17/5/2018
16:09
Swiss fund markets increase by CHF32bn over April
Written by Natalie Tuck
17/05/18

The Swiss fund market increased by CHF 32bn over April rising to CHF 1,137.3bn, according to data compiled by Swiss Fund Data AG and Morningstar.

The Swiss Funds and Asset Management Association (SFAMA) said this corresponds to a 2.8 per cent increase. Net inflows in April 2018 totalled CHF 2.2bn. Bond funds were out in front with inflows of CHF 1.2bn, followed some distance behind by commodity funds with CHF 472.5m and asset allocation funds in third place with CHF 388.5m.

Only two fund categories suffered outflows, and these were minimal: others (- CHF 97.1m) and money market funds (- CHF 73.0m). There were no changes in the ranking of the most popular asset classes: equity funds 42.12 per cent, bond funds 30.92 per cent, asset allocation funds 11.79 per cent, and money market funds 8.17 per cent.

The volume of assets entrusted by investors in Switzerland to the fund industry came to CHF 1,137.3bn in April 2018 (March 2018: CHF 1,105.4bn).

“The stock markets recovered from their two-month slump in April, returning to positive territory. This led to an increase in volumes on the Swiss fund market. Inflows of new money into investment funds continued and were in fact higher than in March,” SFAMA managing director Markus Fuchs, explained.

The CHF lost 1.81 per cent against the euro and 3.87 per cent against the US dollar.

the grumpy old men
16/5/2018
18:44
EUR CHF 1.1811 -0.0027
waldron
14/5/2018
09:16
EUR CHF 1.1958 +0.0008
florenceorbis
12/5/2018
08:16
EUR CHF 1.1949
maywillow
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