We could not find any results for:
Make sure your spelling is correct or try broadening your search.
Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Taylor Wimpey Plc | LSE:TW. | London | Ordinary Share | GB0008782301 | ORD 1P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
3.15 | 2.41% | 133.70 | 133.45 | 133.55 | 133.80 | 131.40 | 131.90 | 7,850,959 | 16:35:19 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gen Contr-single-family Home | 3.51B | 349M | 0.0987 | 13.53 | 4.72B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
24/6/2021 09:51 | Here here totally agree with that. | jugears | |
24/6/2021 09:44 | UP10 going way under 98p is nonsense, tho there is never any guarantee your reason sounds like scare tactics to scare newer shareholders that might have lost money already while getting very nervous and are sitting on the fence thinking of selling. No one thinks there is going to be a housing crash in 2021 or EVEN 2022. The prices might go up more or level off or even drop a bit. near every report I have seen suggests this. Huge demand for housing. Not enough houses being built. //record order book.// record house prices.// cash in the bank.// Huge land bank. Possible new rules could come in to help the housebuilder build even more which TW as one of the bigger builders could take full advantage of building many more houses Profits already locked in for the first 6 months probably around 450m. New rules in place and extremely unlikely the government would risk closing down the country again. | karv1 | |
23/6/2021 16:47 | Looks like it's only the suckers buying these, while the grown-ups are bailing out! | up10 | |
23/6/2021 11:57 | Thanks wfl. Ongoing CMA investigation into leasehold scandal. Aviva and Persimmon to change leasehold terms after UK watchdog probe | sikhthetech | |
23/6/2021 10:53 | up10 see you have made a return now TW has gone down does that mean we have to read the same old story you came out with months ago are you a TW investor don’t think so but if it goes to 98p will you be a buyer? | gaygay3 | |
23/6/2021 10:20 | LOL It's going much lower than 98p. As I said before, these HB's have got p!ss poor performance, there's much better performance and far less risk to be had in other sectors | up10 | |
22/6/2021 16:58 | Right. Like you did at 98p? | imastu pidgitaswell | |
22/6/2021 16:57 | With Stamp Duty ending next week, we're firmly in the interesting period. I'm still expecting these to be significantly lower over the next few months and will look at buying in if & when the challenges are factored into the share price | sikhthetech | |
22/6/2021 15:08 | I completely agree on the result - house price inflation way ahead of wage inflation for more than 30 years. The haves get richer, social mobility destroyed etc etc. I might dispute whether the intentions of consumers and housebuilders were to do that - I would say it is more the results of politicians doing what politicians do - kick the can down the road and let somebody else deal with the deferred debt burden. But it doesn't really matter what the cause was. But that has little to do with housebuilder share prices with their current financial profiles, in this market, on their current earnings multiples, with the current and prospective developments re planning and demand. Sorry, but you are conflating social and economic developments in a Western democracy on an island (an interesting topic) with the price of Taylor Wimpey shares. There is a very little amount of overlap - but that's all. sikh - that is truly desperate. And that's before I noticed you putting the same C&P on the VTY thread. Are you going to put it on any other threads? Or are we the Chosen Ones? | imastu pidgitaswell | |
22/6/2021 13:51 | Property transactions are slowing. "The latest figures released by HMRC have revealed that UK residential property transactions reached 114,940 in May - a 3.9% dip against the previous month, but still 138.2% higher than May 2020. When non-seasonally adjusted, transactions totalled 103,100 and were 123.4% higher than May 2020 and down 8.7% against April 2021." | sikhthetech | |
21/6/2021 13:17 | I simply Filter losers, 20 odd years at this game has taught me that I cannot convince a Loser, that I don't care what he or she thinks or writes! | gbh2 | |
21/6/2021 12:48 | Mug punters piling back in, you have to laugh. I'd take this small rise as a selling opportunity. | up10 | |
21/6/2021 10:37 | No, he lost most his savings on bitcoin and decided it’s a good time Now! to enter US tech. Wow what a plonker | shouldhavesold | |
21/6/2021 09:16 | Rinse and repeat! | kurdmam63 | |
21/6/2021 08:19 | 160p we've hit my next Purchase target :)) | gbh2 | |
19/6/2021 20:19 | gay, "why should I sell my shares when my average is just below £1" Nothing wrong with that. However, for me, why should I buy if I believe the shares are going to fall significantly based on the challenges mentioned? It's what makes a market, there'll be some who believe the future is good and will load up, some who don't, some sitting on the fence and undecided. The market needs first time buyers to maintain a supply chain. The H2B scheme with regional caps, unaffordable mortgages, rising interest rates rec all make it harder for them to get on the property ladder. | sikhthetech | |
19/6/2021 17:37 | £499 for first time buyers aged 22-29. £207,000 for a one or 2 bedroom flat , ( don’t forget the lease and service charges.) on top each month. | sunshine today | |
19/6/2021 17:34 | BBC today : According to data collected by Rightmove, sold prices for all types of property in Cornwall rose by 15% compared to 2019. When looking only at flats – a more common purchase for first-time buyers – they had also increased, with a 4% rise since 2019. The average price of a flat in Cornwall last year was £207,566. When you compare that to the average salary, you can see the problem. The median weekly pay in the south west of England in 2020 was £558, dropping to £499 for people aged 22-29. That’s a pre-tax yearly salary of approximately £25,950 – so a flat costs nearly ten times that. | sunshine today |
It looks like you are not logged in. Click the button below to log in and keep track of your recent history.
Support: +44 (0) 203 8794 460 | support@advfn.com
By accessing the services available at ADVFN you are agreeing to be bound by ADVFN's Terms & Conditions