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Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Virgin Wines Uk Plc | LSE:VINO | London | Ordinary Share | GB00BN33TR63 | ORD GBP0.01 |
Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
66.00 | 68.00 | 67.50 | 67.00 | 67.50 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wine & Alcoholic Bev-whsl | 59.01M | 1.38M | 0.0248 | 27.02 | 37.59M |
Last Trade Time | Trade Type | Trade Size | Trade Price | Currency |
---|---|---|---|---|
10:00:24 | O | 732 | 67.40 | GBX |
Date | Time | Source | Headline |
---|---|---|---|
05/6/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
28/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
23/5/2025 | 15:41 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Holding(s) in Company |
22/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
20/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
19/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
15/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
14/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Holding(s) in Company |
14/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
13/5/2025 | 07:00 | UK RNS | Virgin Wines UK PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
Virgin Wines Uk (VINO) Share Charts1 Year Virgin Wines Uk Chart |
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1 Month Virgin Wines Uk Chart |
Intraday Virgin Wines Uk Chart |
Date | Time | Title | Posts |
---|---|---|---|
10/6/2025 | 13:19 | Virgin Wines Plc | 126 |
Trade Time | Trade Price | Trade Size | Trade Value | Trade Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
09:00:25 | 67.40 | 732 | 493.37 | O |
08:02:42 | 67.40 | 1,500 | 1,011.00 | O |
08:02:41 | 68.00 | 1,941 | 1,319.88 | O |
08:02:41 | 66.00 | 98 | 64.68 | O |
08:02:41 | 68.00 | 73 | 49.64 | O |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 16/6/2025 09:20 by Virgin Wines Uk Daily Update Virgin Wines Uk Plc is listed in the Wine & Alcoholic Bev-whsl sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker VINO. The last closing price for Virgin Wines Uk was 67.50p.Virgin Wines Uk currently has 55,683,685 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Virgin Wines Uk is £37,308,069. Virgin Wines Uk has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 27.02. This morning VINO shares opened at 67.50p |
Posted at 27/3/2025 13:13 by battlebus2 I agree VINO is the better of the two. A lot of maybe in their plan. |
Posted at 27/3/2025 10:15 by backmarker Big rise in WINE this morning. Looks like they have a corporate plan too. Have to say it seemed to incorporate a lot of consultancy type stuff. One might not even know the business was about selling wine. Main theme seemed to be turning £40m excess stock into cash. But they do appear to have become profitable at last.VINO is still the better business, it just needs to grow a bit faster. |
Posted at 26/3/2025 09:34 by aishah Cavendish:Virgin Wines (VINO): CORP En primeur opportunity It takes time to make great wine and time to make great value. Virgin Wines is a direct-to-consumer (DTC) online specialist wine retailer with a growing and loyal customer base which displays a regular, repeat ordering pattern. Management has laid out ambitious plans to grow the business to +£100m revenue and £7.3m of EBITDA (Adj.) by FY30. In this period, the company will need to add c.70,000 customers to its active base. The business is already picking up momentum after a period of consolidation helped by deep understanding of its target customer. A new capital allocation plan supports the company’s growth plan. Surplus cash will be returned to shareholders through a share buyback programme. Investors with an eye for recovery stories should buy this ‘en primeur’ investment opportunity now, as we believe its share price could double or triple over this period. We initiate coverage of Virgin Wines with a 70p target price, implying 41% upside. |
Posted at 26/3/2025 07:32 by battlebus2 Results as expected with a substantial capital allocation plan which includes a share buyback. I like their approach even with no dividend at this time |
Posted at 19/3/2025 09:19 by backmarker Doing a lot better than WINE, and rightfully so.Question is, after a quick 50% rise will VINO repeat last year's performance and slowly sink back over the rest of the year ?It's looking even more competitive out there and there are only so many bottles of wine a population can consume, so where's the growth going to come from?I became aware of the new Winedrops offering in the last month. The idea of getting cut-price top-end wines appeals, but I did not like their opaque membership charges. It seems you have to sign up before they tell you what it's going to cost. Not for me. I am happy to pick up the odd bottle of Whispering Angel or Cloudy Bay at 25% off when supermarkets have their frequent promotions. |
Posted at 11/2/2025 10:40 by sphere25 From 28th January:"The Board continually reviews the Company's capital allocation policy and options include investment in organic growth, M&A, initiating a dividend policy and implementing this new Share Buyback Programme" Buyback GM on Feb 24th Weird one, nothing was happening here and now we have seen accumulation through the previous prints. This was followed by blocks of 25k being bought and more delayed prints hit from Friday: -75k bought @ 32.75p -105k bought @ 32.85p. Someone paid through the offer of 35p to acquire 50k @35.95p yesterday so someone is gobbling up what they can near the cash levels. Gervais Williams gave this a plug yesterday: 53 minutes 45 Just a brief mention when questioned on the one or two stocks that get the pulse racing for the rest of the year. VINO first name to come out. "Buying at cash balances....no downside....risk reward strong" Smithless, "At this moment in time, it looks like the market is saying most of that cash disappears with a sequence of losses year after year" Sorry if that wasn't clear. That comment was forward looking, not backward looking. What I was trying to say is that, with the market pricing the shares at net cash value, it is suggesting that losses will come in the future. So much so that, every loss will eat into the cash pile and that the value will match the net cash, or apply a discount to the market cap, solely on the basis of the net cash position..... forgetting that there is actually a business here. So a very very...ve-he-ery gloomy picture i.e. pretty much expecting the company to go bust. This is the thing about the market. We have gloomy multiples out there, loads on single digit p/e ratios. There are opportunities for short term profitable moves where they overshoot from gloomy to very gloomy (we can get back to gloomy), but VINO is a whole different level of gloomy. Even adjusting that cash for working capital movements, the market cap relative to the profits is an anomalous outlier. Even with all the macro gloom and the muted growth here and the cost pressures etc, it looks all in the price, so I suspect this is why these buyers are stepping in and gobbling up shares near the cash pile. There are forced sellers all over the smaller cap market. DIVI (funnily enough Gervais Williams involved again) out today saying this: "Investments in UK funds recently saw a first monthly inflow, after 41 consecutive monthly outflows" Hoorah? So overhangs all over the shop. But there is clear demand for shares here now so this could be forming a bottom now, which is why it is worth a watch. Hope that helps. All imo DYOR |
Posted at 10/2/2025 07:13 by backmarker The problem imho is sales volume growth: where is it going to come from? VINO now has a very efficient warehousing system. It could probably handle double the volume with ease. And it has trying to exploit this via its Warehouse lines. But with higher duties, higher taxes on income and a poor economic outlook, purchases of wine are unlikely to be growing any time soon. And given the dominance of the supermarkets that doesn't leave much room for the likes of VINO to expand. |
Posted at 07/2/2025 16:22 by backmarker So, there are a few other VINO watchers out there after all.I agree with most of what you guys are saying. This is an underpriced stock that, far from going bust, is in fine fettle.1. It is profitable.2. It has a growing cash chest.3. It is a very effectively and efficiently run company.4. It has a first class warehouse and delivery system. Only Amazon delivers quicker.5. It has excellent quality product with immediate returns if you don't like anything.6. Winebank is a clever customer loyalty scheme.7. It has a dynamic and innovative CEO.8. And more......So what's the problem? |
Posted at 07/2/2025 14:11 by smithless Sphere - don't know if I am missing something re your comment losses year after year. I have gone back to 2019 and the only loss was in 2023 although cash from operations was negative in 2021 and 2023. Cash from operation in 2023 was £5.5m, but was inflated by £2.5m due stock unwind - which I'm sure we will see more of in FY25. As for acquisition I can't see any, partnership yes. I bought a few the other day, just because if the cash is real, it looks cheap. Also if the GM gets the green light, buy backs (subject to how big the overhang is) can be very positive for the share price |
Posted at 25/7/2024 17:33 by backmarker Jay Wright is a man with a vision, one might say a lot of visions. And he will be dreaming up plenty of ways to expand the business. I don't believe VINO has enough clout yet to try for a reverse takeover of Laithwaites, and that business has been in transfer to the next generation for some time.But the likes of Tanners might be a target. (Averys went to Laithwaites some years ago, but operates independently within the group).The coming year will be an interesting one.As to share price, it should be a lot higher. The core business model and its central system is functioning well, the company is generating cash and is debt free. Working capital requirements to expand the company are low. Ideal situation.The only real factor to be tested is how much and how fast can they grow the business. And that will determine the share price.At the moment I think the company is somewhat under the radar . I believe that is about to change. |
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