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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tesco Plc | LSE:TSCO | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BLGZ9862 | ORD 6 1/3P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-0.10 | -0.03% | 298.10 | 298.20 | 298.30 | 300.00 | 297.70 | 298.60 | 2,104,493 | 14:10:08 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grocery Stores | 65.76B | 744M | 0.1046 | 28.51 | 21.21B |
Date | Subject | Author | Discuss |
---|---|---|---|
01/9/2017 07:51 | The three top profit makers in the section worldwide are: 1st Walmart, 2nd Tesco, 3rd Carrefour. I wouldn't get too worried about Mystic Meg/Buywell's doom and gloom predictions. | vaneric1 | |
01/9/2017 07:36 | Re Carrefour This is a taste of what is in store for the UK BIG 4 Re TSCO I suggest those holding this take a long hard look at the NASDAQ TSCO chart in the thread header above If you follow chart patterns , and I do , this is looking IMO BAD , the NASDAQ TSCO chart is set up for another leg down Carrefour will add pressure to the downside the chart looks set to make I think Carrefive will be coming your way soon Amen for Amazon ( I have copyright on that) | buywell3 | |
01/9/2017 07:25 | Oh bye the way buywell3 you may want to share your pearls of wisdom with Carrefour, they certainly need it more than Tesco....... | toon1966 | |
01/9/2017 06:51 | 1st sept Deutsche buy tp 240p reiterates | philanderer | |
01/9/2017 06:39 | buywell3 - have you been abducted and held hostage by aliens for the last few years? Majority of people on this board are more than aware that the market dynamics have changed for the grocers and Tesco is no different. You should have posted this three (or more) years ago. I'd also like to point out the UK is a global leader in on-line shopping..... | toon1966 | |
31/8/2017 19:29 | Carrefour profit warning today hitting SBRY and TSCO according to the Telegraph. | philanderer | |
31/8/2017 18:47 | One of the biggest mistakes TSCO have made is opening up too many MEGASTORES That model is now a BUST ... and a costly one it will turn out The Discounters have come in with a more smaller leaner/meaner model which is working V the BIG 4 but is taking time. As roads get ever more busy and queues at checkouts never seem to get smaller unless you shop at very early or very late hours . Customers SIT ready in their abode ....looking and waiting for a NEW WAY ... sit waiting on their couch watching the box and wondering what to eat next. Iceland you will note are now offering a free delivery service No petrol or car needed No monies spent getting to or from the Supermarket No time wasted No TV missed No need to even get up off your @rse to place your order Us Humans are lazy bast@rds ... olde shoppes are dying in the high streets There is a NEW WAY to get your food and drink and other consumables coming very soon .... next year Amazon will start to show its UK hand in how it is going to steal the markets away from the olde fashioned stuck in the mud incumbents New Technology and New marketing methods With the customer put first in line for service and quality and price is coming our way. Thanks to the Yanks. Amen to Amazon | buywell3 | |
31/8/2017 11:09 | Found this - "I like the idea of "facings" in other words the number of packs". | alphorn | |
31/8/2017 10:56 | vaneric1 - try again, I've deleted the 'full-stop' at the end of the link. 'Lamb facings' - what are you talking about? | toon1966 | |
31/8/2017 10:37 | Rlivsey said 31 Aug '17 - 10:14 - 20596 of 20598 - "Surely £2 is not too much to ask. Sainsbury's and Morrisons well above ....." Could you please explain this comment? Just how many Tesco shares are in circulation compared to Sainsbury/Morrison's and what is their market cap? | toon1966 | |
31/8/2017 10:37 | Your link brings up a page not found message. toon1966 So what are 'lamb facings'? Not a term I've heard before despite running a grocery shop for sixteen years. | vaneric1 | |
31/8/2017 10:30 | Not sure if this is the reason for Tesco's fall today but Carrefour in France are having a bad day, down 14% | toon1966 | |
31/8/2017 10:00 | What's driving the decline today?Half year results due in @6weeks - should be positive | millie01527 | |
31/8/2017 09:14 | Surely £2 is not too much to ask. Sainsbury's and Morrisons well above ..... | rlivsey | |
31/8/2017 08:22 | Just this fella going the wrong way in my portfolio this morning :-) | philanderer | |
30/8/2017 17:13 | Union tells Tesco to be transparent over lamb sourcing The NFU has challenged Tesco to explain its lamb sourcing policy after it was found to be the only major retailer whose British lamb facings had decreased over the last 12 months. The UK’s largest retailer had the lowest percentage of British lamb facings at just 50%, according the AHDB Beef and Lamb’s June 2017 shelf watch survey. The survey, which covertly investigates 150 stores from the UK’s 10 largest supermarkets, found that Tesco’s British lamb facings had fallen by | johnwise | |
30/8/2017 14:03 | The UK food market and US food market are completely different as Tesco found out with the Fresh n Easy debacle. The UK consumer doesn't want the cheap and nasty cash and carry experience that is so prevalent in the US, also people talk about times changing with technology etc, however everything tends to move in cycles. The local Butcher, Baker and Deli were seen as finished 20 years ago but look at them now. Quality will always come out in the end and the established big boys have the added advantage of the ingrained advertising in the food industry that Amazon could only ever dream about. As for pensioners wanting online, surely with all the extra time on their hands a visit to the local supermarket would be more appealing than sitting transfixed to a screen housebound. I know which One I'd prefer........... | ladeside | |
30/8/2017 11:38 | It would make a lot of sense for the likes of Amazon to sell discounted non-perishable groceries in bulk online. I'd buy it anyway. I did buy 24 cans of Guinness Original for £20 including delivery last year from Amazon, the packaging was a bit OTT. | nerdlinger | |
30/8/2017 11:06 | Kwik Save was taken over by Somerfield who were later taken over by the Co-op who then found they'd bitten off more than they could chew and started dumping. Some of the Somerfields went to Booker who are now intending to merge with Tesco, others of the Somerfield/Kwik save group went to Tuffins who are now in serious decline, others were simply closed down by the Co-op and left empty for a decade until the Pound shops took them on but they didn't buy them they took them on lease and walked away from them if they didn't perform. The Co-op also has a hand in the Tuffins pie. | vaneric1 | |
30/8/2017 10:50 | If Amazon are serious about taking significant grocery market share in the U.K they need real estate presence and the quickest way to do that would of course be to make an acquisition. But who? Asda owned by Walmart, so not likely. Sainsbury's, takeover by Quatar group been mulled for quite a while plus the takeover of HRG might put them off. Co-op, maybe. Morrisons, maybe. Discounters, nope. But to get real presence, maybe Tesco ;) | dealer1972 | |
30/8/2017 10:32 | Co-op closes in on £130m Nisa takeover as Sainsbury's pauses talks | philanderer | |
30/8/2017 09:43 | In my opinion over the next 5 years the so called 'Big 4' supermarkets could lose as much as 5% market share to Aldi/Lidl with Aldi over taking Morrison to become the number 4 supermarket in the UK and closing in on ASDA the number 3 UK supermarket. However if Morrison's took over McColl's would most probably keep them as the 4th largest supermarket. | loganair |
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