on th whole, a good thing for us? |
and here we are offer at £7 |
Another go at £7 due soon? |
I presume the share price will be held back until Guinness Peak have sold their stake. |
they don't mention their hopes for the olympics. hopefully that will help next years results |
core aim holding and one all should look at, lovely set of results, real strength. |
hello hello hello; nice! |
increases in dividend always seem mean. i have it in my IHT avoidance portfolio and llok for good results from olympics |
non voting catching up, steady as she goes. bit of activity in the pub sector, |
so just me then, as usual, alone again! |
Glugg Glugg, skoff skoff! |
In my view a great 'AIM' stock to buy and hold, buying now may prove a good long term move, Still certain tax advantages and A GOOD way to get 'safe(ish)' exposure to AIM. |
I saw somewhere (trade press?) that if the acquisition goes ahead, the plan was to keep Geronimo Inns management in place to see if they can work their magic on the Young's Managed Estate. Not a bad idea IMHO - our Young's local (coincidentally quite close to a Geronimo pub) did so well under tenancy they took it back under Management....and made a complete dog's breakfast of it. |
Ah. But they do use barley!
"'£4 a pint looms amid soaring barley prices and VAT rise' 10 August, 2010
By Sarah Simpson
Your round-up of the news - August 10, 2010
The pub price of a pint of beer, which has doubled in the last 19 years, looks set to climb further next year as poor barley harvests in Eastern Europe and export controls imposed by Russia threaten to hit brewers while they are forced to push through VAT and duty rises. The average cost of a pint of draught lager was £1.40 in 1991 but rose to £2.81 last year, according to the Office for National Statistics figures analysed by the British Beer & Pub Association an increase of 68% ahead of inflation - The Guardian" |
They don't use wheat in ale! I think the main worries were about the huge lager brewers like Inbev, SABMiller etc. if there was a general hike in all grain prices due to drought shortages. |
Wheat price fears hit shares in brewers and food firms Continue reading the main story
Should we worry about high wheat prices? Shares in brewers and food producers have fallen on fears that rising wheat prices could hit their profit margins. |
well, i think the report most satisfactory. we dependent on city types continuing to spend, africa world cup and olympics in 2 years,plus a sunny summer will help |
Glad I am sitting big time in these. drink and food, what more could you ask for! |
results 19 nov, hope increase in Dividend etc, |
steady as we go....... Value will out......... |