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 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.35 | 0.28% | 125.00 | 125.00 | 125.10 | 125.75 | 124.70 | 125.00 | 24,424,752 | 16:35:09 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gen Contr-single-family Home | 3.51B | 349M | 0.0986 | 12.69 | 4.41B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
02/8/2024 15:52 | Jugears "YOU HAVE BEEN REPEATING THIS SINCE COVID- When will it happen???? You're sound like you're panicking. Why's that? Reality sinking in and you're overexposed here? You don't like my Feb 2022 post. Why's that? The post, foresight, is still true, even after 2.5years. sikhthetech20 Feb '22 - 15:26 - 5884 of 5899 Edit <...> When the housing market crashes, no HB is immune from the crash. Likewise, listed HBs are not immune from stockmarket falls or movements." | sikhthetech | |
02/8/2024 15:50 | DvD, sT and Sikhthetech, It is all panning out as I have been telling you over the last few years. You have called it wrong and made fools out of yourselves and the market is playing you for fools, lol. Expect earning growth to continue in 2025 and also in 2026. BoE base rate at 6% Absolutely no chance. Q3 2024 interest rate reduction? Absolutely every chance. And my prediction came true, as expected. Looks like I am going to be correct yet again. Nothing more to see here. | beckers2008 | |
02/8/2024 15:37 | You talk utter rubbish jugears. The index is down 1.35% as of writing this, and TW is in that index. The house-builders are falling disproportionately because the sector has been hyped and that realisation is beginning to sink in with the market. Every house-builder has reported poor results and the shareprices have risen despite this. Investors are cashing out now. A trickle today, soon to be a flood. | danvandan | |
02/8/2024 15:30 | Oh & that 30k sick was from the last official figure in 2019!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Now watch the american market go back now ours has closed. | jugears | |
02/8/2024 15:29 | Tly been hyped by sikh now falling as I expected it would, as you & I know sikh days like this do happen in the stock market, nothing to panic about it is not one sector it is all, it is a job today to find any share that has fallen less than circa 5% it is definitely not the just the hb sector by a very long way. Exactly sikh savvy investors like me do plan a head like when I bought a shed load at 30-37p, 200k at 98p & over 300k at 89p. the markets have had a slight wobble, it might continue for a few days but there is no escaping the fact that the uk has a huge housing shortage that wont be filled very easily, interest rates are falling & buyer confidence is returning, 100's of thousands of people have delayed buying a house since covid, they wont wait for ever, I think another 1/4 point drop in interest rates is all it will take to see buyers return, I'm told that hb's are already enquiring how quickly suppliers can increase production, £1.80 Next IMEO, Now how long have you been repeating yourself sick? YOU HAVE BEEN REPEATING THIS SINCE COVID- When will it happen???? sikhthetech20 Feb '22 - 15:26 - 5884 of 5899 Edit <...> When the housing market crashes, no HB is immune from the crash. Likewise, listed HBs are not immune from stockmarket falls or movements. Govn support, provided during pandemic, has ended. Repossessions which were stopped during pandemic are legal again. Around 30k homeowners in severe mortgage debt. Inflationary pressure, interest rate rises, NI rises, Council tax rises, energy price rises all impact affordability. | jugears | |
02/8/2024 15:26 | New Council Tax being mooted as 0.5% of house value, updated yearly. | spawny100 | |
02/8/2024 15:25 | ‘ but either house prices need to fall or rates need to fall - because of affordability.’ Or the ‘uk optimum ptpolation trust’ need their optimum population reduction to 30m ? | kreature | |
02/8/2024 15:11 | At this point, the house-builders are a screaming short - today's reported shorts will be interesting. I'll be surprised if the hedgies haven't reloaded on Barratt et al. | danvandan | |
02/8/2024 15:09 | HB sector has been hyped, a dose of reality is sinking in. Affordability is a major problem. Labour want to build 300k homes pa or 1.5m over the 5 year term in the hope it will keep house prices stable. Really? Watch the demand fall and supply increase. From 2 years ago: sikhthetech - 15 Sep 2022 - 12:01:16 - 9345 of 13788 The fact is during the previous housing market crash, there was a more favourable investment market for BtL investors. It was worth being a B2L investor. Now the market for 2nd homes/B2l is no longer so. Investors don't wait until the last minute until changes in law come about. Savvy investors plan ahead, think what's happening in the future and how it will impact their investments, whether it be property, shares etc. A housing market crash would be enough for lots of B2l investors to quit. Beckers, Fenners, Imastu and Angers don't understand those basic points. Watch the supply rise and the demand fall. | sikhthetech | |
02/8/2024 15:06 | The other shocking detail in the results was the huge increase in cladding remediation costs. TW management had a curiously mealy-mouthed way of expressing this in terms of the increased cost in 'tenders' instead of just admitting that costs had gone up. I suspect that the reason for this coy phrasing has something to do with the other claim in the results that build-cost inflation had abated and would benefit margins in the second half. The immediate increased cost of replacing cladding really contradicts the claim that inflation has subsided - when the full effect of hundreds of government pushed new housing schemes by small regional developers hits, the cost of building materials will go up significantly. This is the wheel on which TW's profits will be broken; labour and materials go up, selling prices go down, profit margin evaporates along with the dividend. Jennie Daly will deserve a medal if she can escape from these closing walls. | danvandan | |
02/8/2024 14:58 | Martyn, with all my shares down around 5% today across the board its been nice to top up on a few. | jugears | |
02/8/2024 14:52 | As I said, the economies in many areas are struggling - today in the US perhaps the market has finally had a dose of reality? UK stocks follows US stocks (generally). The property people I know say business is slow, far from brisk. There just are not the high numbers of buyers out there. Why? Affordability! Will this effect the share price of house builders? All depends on what spin they can put on the figures! Most new build buyers need mortgages, so rates reducing will help, but either house prices need to fall or rates need to fall - because of affordability. | uhound | |
02/8/2024 14:36 | jugears, that's misinformation. The main index is down 1% but the house-builders are down almost 3%, and if you look at the high point this week of 163p, TW is down 5% from there. Interestingly, the fall began as soon as the results presentation started, so evidently the brokers were not thrilled by what they saw. I suppose what's more surprising is that the share price hasn't fallen faster and deeper. The results were truly grim with profit margin dropping by 2.4% (from 14.4% to 12%), selling prices to private buyers down by a similar amount to Barrat's at around 6%, saved partly by the big increase in 'affordable homes' prices to come out at 1% down overall. The trajectory though is clear; prices are either static or falling at the top of a price curve. Expect selling prices to begin falling faster from here on. The long awaited cut to interest rates has finally happened and the share price has reacted by falling. The market is beginning to see through the hype. A quarter point from the base rate makes practically no difference to the housing market; average house prices are over-valued by as much as £100k by my estimate. The bubble is sitting there, ready to burst. 163p looks like it was the top. The share price is way over net asset value, and with no relief in sight and government action likely to bring more housing supply, more build-cost inflation and more competition to TW's customer base, I reckon we will be on the way down to the NAV price (124p) quite soon. | danvandan | |
02/8/2024 14:33 | Wait until monday morning and the shorters get stung, all a game really. | martyn9 | |
02/8/2024 13:44 | Becks, the problem with sick is he would like us to believe that TW are the only share down today but so is the rest of the market by the same amount, but hey give him credit he's 4p up on his short! | jugears | |
02/8/2024 13:32 | Jugs, We had and took an unbelievable opportunity in the 80's which we took, the trolls sat on the sidelines swiping away with their usual negative dross... And lost! Remember the adage "When a fool comes to market, the merchants rejoice' Well, there has been many fools here who proclaimed they shorted. But I doubt they have any skin in the game, because, largely they are... Fools! Lol, just lol! | beckers2008 | |
02/8/2024 13:24 | Sick, you will be the last person to know when I load up, as I have said before I would buy circa £1.00 so why would I load up today?, do I think we will see a pound again? Not a chance but its no great loss I already have a substantial holding here anyway.As I have said before many many times! I do not expect this to go up in a straight line, perhaps you should go to spec savers??? Apart from the financial markets & lets face it they panic about everything I don't really think that what is or is not happening in the good old bad USA is going to influence your average uk house buyer. we seem to get these volatile swings every summer when the big boys are on their 6 week holidays, I don't expect to see much happening in the markets before September anyway. | jugears | |
02/8/2024 12:51 | Jugears "these will be back up next week" "incidentally my friend says footfall to his Web site is now up 20% since yesterday lunch time! " That's great, so with so much confidence, you're loading up with that 500k you've been talking about, aren't you? Go on, prove you're not just BS. | sikhthetech | |
02/8/2024 12:09 | Jugears/Becky, There you go, the fantastic news jugears/becky/cupra kid were waiting months for... Hindsight posters out again... As I, Sunshine and others have been pointing out for ages, the USA markets (inc housing market) does impact the UK. sikhthetech14 Dec '23 - 12:02 - 17219 of 18705 Edit There you go, as expected. The reasoned posters were right. The UK does follow the USA. Jugears was wrong again. sikhthetech20 Feb '22 - 15:26 - 5884 of 5899 Edit <...> When the housing market crashes, no HB is immune from the crash. Likewise, listed HBs are not immune from stockmarket falls or movements. Govn support, provided during pandemic, has ended. Repossessions which were stopped during pandemic are legal again. Around 30k homeowners in severe mortgage debt. Inflationary pressure, interest rate rises, NI rises, Council tax rises, energy price rises all impact affordability. | sikhthetech | |
02/8/2024 11:49 | I'm fixed up with a new Mazda 3 hybrid, got a good deal for mine now I have to wait until they bring in the colour my wife liked:) | gbh2 | |
02/8/2024 11:25 | gbh2, i hope your not buying an electric car, V8's rule sod net zero ;) | martyn9 | |
02/8/2024 08:45 | Becks,that's exactly what my friend in the States has been saying for months. LOL back to £1.60 next week. | jugears |
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