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TBK Ted Baker

626.50
0.00 (0.00%)
24 Dec 2024 - Closed
Delayed by 15 minutes
Share Name Share Symbol Market Type Share ISIN Share Description
Ted Baker LSE:TBK London Ordinary Share GB0001048619 ORD 5P
  Price Change % Change Share Price Shares Traded Last Trade
  0.00 0.00% 626.50 0.00 00:00:00
Bid Price Offer Price High Price Low Price Open Price
Industry Sector Turnover Profit EPS - Basic PE Ratio Market Cap
  -
Last Trade Time Trade Type Trade Size Trade Price Currency
- O 0 626.50 GBX

TED Baker (TBK) Latest News

Real-Time news about Ted Baker (London Stock Exchange): 0 recent articles

TED Baker (TBK) Discussions and Chat

TED Baker (TBK) Most Recent Trades

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Trade Time Trade Price Trade Size Trade Value Trade Type

TED Baker (TBK) Top Chat Posts

Top Posts
Posted at 26/3/2010 07:08 by tameboy
Great results! Back above 500 soon?
Posted at 09/10/2009 18:00 by gopher
Good company but share price had risen ahead of these lacklustre results and looks full given the outlook statement
Posted at 14/4/2009 15:10 by shroder
gentle does it..
Posted at 06/4/2009 09:05 by shroder
very nice and soon to be buying back own shares;
Posted at 01/4/2009 10:50 by shroder
Crossing important technical levels:
Posted at 01/4/2009 08:05 by shroder
Posted on the cc thread, any comments?
_________________________________________________________________________________

What's people's thoughts on the consolidation effect?

Basically those stores in the retail sector that are left standing and make it out the other side of this recession?


It looks like cc will make it through with much of their competition effectively gone, it's not just cc but anything in the retail sector especially fashion, tbk springs to mind here as a beneficiary also.
Posted at 23/2/2009 23:44 by gopher
Really quite surprised at the resilience of the share price - have had them on my watchlist but an entry point does not seem near
Posted at 19/1/2009 15:42 by shroder
LONDON -(Dow Jones)- Sportswear retailer JJB Sports PLC (JJB.LN) Monday said it will have to pay its banks GBP8.3 million in fees in return for an earlier agreement to postpone repayment of a debt.

JJB, which last week issued a profit warning and revealed its chief executive lost his 27.5% stake in the company, said an agreement with lenders Barclays PLC (BARC.LN), HBOS PLC (HBOS.LN) and Iceland's Kaupthing signed off in December would cost it GBP8.3 million in fees.

It also agreed to a higher margin on its repayments to Barclays and HBOS.

JJB said the three banks remain supportive and are considering providing new facilities.

At 1422 GMT, shares in JJB were down 1.85 pence or 19% at 8.15 pence, underperforming a lower FTSE All Share index, down 0.59%. JJB's shares have lost 92% over the last 12 months.

JJB said in December its lenders agreed to postpone repayment of a GBP20 million loan from Kaupthing due Dec. 14 to end-January, 2009. The banks also agreed to continue to provide it access to its credit lines with Barclays and HBOS. The three facilities give it access to about GBP75 million.

David Stoddart, an industry analyst at Altium Securities, said the GBP8.3 million and higher rates the banks wanted in return is "very, very expensive."

JJB will now need to pull off a planned sale of its health club business, otherwise it might find meeting these payments "challenging," Stoddart said. He said in current markets JJB would find it tough to get the GBP100 million it initially hoped for the health clubs.

Still, Stoddart said Executive Chairman David Jones, the former chairman of Next PLC (NXT.LN) and a retailing veteran, "is no fool" and if he can show the banks the company is making progress then they are likely to remain supportive.
Posted at 29/12/2008 12:17 by shroder
From The Sunday Times
December 28, 2008
Clothing chain Adams cut down by retail wipeout
Ben Marlow

THE retail crisis claimed another victim this weekend with childrenswear chain Adams, which has 260 stores in the UK and 116 overseas, poised to go into administration.

Adams, which makes clothes for Boots as well as trading through its own outlets, employs about 2,000 staff. It is expected to appoint accountants Price Waterhouse Coopers as administrator this week.

The demise of Adams, which follows hard on the heels of the collapse of Whittard, the tea and coffee retailer, and music chain Zavvi, comes despite record numbers of shoppers thronging UK high streets since Christmas to take advantage of the big discounts on offer.

According to retail analyst Springboard, shops were 2.3% busier on Boxing Day than on the same day last year. London's West End, which includes Oxford Street, Regent Street and Bond Street, experienced a 3.5% increase in custom as half a million shoppers descended on the area for the day.
Related Links

* Zavvi goes under in more High Street pain

* Whittard collapses as EPIC plans a deal

The frenetic activity masks a grim outlook for retailers. Among the firms thought to be vulnerable are: Focus DIY, which is renegotiating its rental arrangements and has closed stores; specialist camera shop Jessops, which has given warrants on shares to HSBC in return for a loan extension; and greetings-card chain Clinton Cards, which is reliant on short-term financing. Others are Sir Tom Hunter's garden-centre business Wyevale, which has completed a debt-for-equity swap with its banks; and quoted furniture shop Land Of Leather, which has rejected offers for the business.

Even the largest players are not immune to the downturn. Analysts now think Marks & Spencer will be forced to issue a profit warning when it unveils its interim management statement next week. City sources think, however, that it is unlikely M&S will have to reduce its dividend payment to shareholders immediately, although that could follow later in the year.

There is also the prospect of a high-street shake-up triggered by the sale of assets now part-controlled by the government of Iceland following the collapse of Baugur, the Icelandic investment firm, and Icelandic banks, which were heavy investors in British retailers.

Icelandic ministers were said to be considering a rapid sell-off of their newly acquired assets, which could put household names like House of Fraser, Hamleys and Karen Millen into play. But retail bankers cautioned that the complicated ownership structure of the groups meant few were completely controlled by the Icelanders, but had multiple investors.

The demise of Adams comes less than two years after it was rescued from administration by entrepreneur John Shannon for £15m.

Shannon, who made a fortune selling his stake in shoe chain Stead & Simpson, had hoped to turn Adams into "Topshop for kids".

Shannon's restructuring of the company enabled it recently to turn in a small operating profit of £1.3m. Turnover for 2008 was £160m, leading chief executive David Carter-Johnson reportedly to say that the company was out of "intensive care".

However, a sharp deterioration in trading, combined with overwhelming competition from supermarket chains, has left it unable to service all its debts. It is understood that pressure in recent weeks from a number of trade creditors pushed the company over the edge.

The chain owes £10m to Burdale, an arm of the Bank of Ireland, and just over £20m to Shannon, who owns 100% of the company's shares. Both are expected to get most of their money back.

The company is expected to continue trading while it begins the search for a new owner. Any buyer is likely to reduce the number of stores by at least 20% and focus on its best-performing outlets. The company had already closed 42 branches before it was bought by Shannon.

As well as the Adams chain, the parent company also owns the Mini Mode children's clothing brand designed for Boots and sold in 330 of the chemist's UK stores. Boots and J Sainsbury, the supermarket chain, are regarded as possible buyers for the Adams brand.

News of Adams's troubles comes days after three large retailers, Whittard, Officers Club and Zavvi, named in The Sunday Times the previous week as being on a "critical list", slipped into administration.

Insolvency specialist Begbies Traynor has predicted the collapse of between 10 and 15 national retail chains by mid-January as the recession bites.

Last week, Seymour Pierce retail analyst Freddie George interviewed 22 large retailers and concluded: "It's official - this will be the worst Christmas for many years . . . the weak sales trend and the intense discount activity will continue well beyond January 2009, and lead to a further step down in 2009/10 profit forecasts."

Company Watch, the independent analysis firm, said it could identify 20 or more retailers that were extremely weak financially.

"Some of these we term 'waterskiers'," said chief executive Guenter Steinitz. "These are profitable companies with balance sheets that are severely stretched and are kept afloat only so long as they have sufficient continuing profitable sales pulling them along. As soon as that stops, they find themselves in deep water with no lifeline, and they're gone."
Posted at 07/8/2008 19:08 by liarspoker
Volume at 5,788 would indicate shares traded.

The share price is up so that would suggest more buys than sells.

Don't trust the ADVFN trades page though when it comes to buys and sells as often they put the trade in the wrong column.

For example say that I buy a share at 100p online with a 10 second decision period. The price moves up before I buy to 105p at mid price ( half way between bid, sell, price and offer, buy, price. I am still able to buy at 100p but ADVFN's system records my buy at 100p as a sell because it comes in under the mid price.

I hope that makes sense. ;o)
TED Baker share price data is direct from the London Stock Exchange

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