I thought exactly the same thing with Lloyds, certainlygoing to be some money to be made for the speculative buyer/seller
I took the plunge on Monday morning to put the remainder of my ISA allowance into Lloyd's Banking group @41.65...
I have been sitting on the sidelines for sometime watching the price steadily decline
It offers a pretty decent Dividend in current times and hopefully not too much downside (famous last words)..
be interested to hear of any others taking advantage of troubled times or are you hoping for further falls..
Last edited by SteveM112; 11th March 2020 at 13:20.
I thought exactly the same thing with Lloyds, certainlygoing to be some money to be made for the speculative buyer/seller
If the schools get closed and I’m grounded then I’m going to take advantage of the opportunity to spend more time with the family.
I don't think you will regret that trade in the long run, but i'm currently sitting tight.
I have a number of things, I'm looking at, but think this COVID 19 could get a while lot worse, so at the moment keeping my powder dry.
Some very juicy dividends out there at the moment.
Some of the Oil majors must be on ca 10/11% per cent dividends but given the oil price war that the Saudis and Russians are involved in you'd be a brave man to add money at the moment and I'd prefer to have a little more visiiblity on what damage COVID 19 might eventually do to companies ability to maintain those dividends.
Two words. Northern Rock.
Sent through the ether by diddling with radio waves
I filled my SIPP allowance last week, didn't quite catch the bottom but happy to have bought 8% down off highs at least. If things continue south I will likely move forward ISA and SIPP purchases to the start of the new tax year rather than later.
Still waiting for the market to hit bottom.
FTSE is at 5876, perhaps there is more to go over the coming weeks, but i could be wrong.
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We had 3,500 in March 2003 and March 2009 and 5,700 in February 2016. I'm really good at telling people what happened - less good at forecasting!
Switched my kids junior isa to a FSTE100 tracker. At 9% off from the January as a longer term view I don’t think you can far wrong.
I’m buying ...soon ...
Having just sold my business I am worried that the proceeds are sat in a bank account (Lloyds).
It's looking like an excellent time to invest in Nuka Cola bottle caps.
Are we at rock bottom now? 5546, or more to go. Wow 5% drop
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We are not yet bottomed out. Until yesterday we were only testing 1500 people a day and the UK had taken no major steps toward mass scale quarantine or restrictions on gatherings like other countries.
Not because we aren’t effected but because we are not picking up cases to the same extent. It is in no ones interests to pick up more cases. We can’t treat most of them anyway so why bother!?
From today the gov will test more people (up to 10k a day) so we will pick up more cases. This will appear to get a lot worse before (with some luck) spring and summer bring some reprieve...
I would not be making any big financial decisions now or in the next 4-6 weeks at least
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I would say no and possibly a long way to go, if CV breaks in the UK and US at half the contagion of Italy then the markets could plunder the abyss.
Lloyd's shares which opened this thread have now dropped to 39.37p today, it could go back into the 20's and that's the last time I purchased any of their shares!
Further to go - however unlike the 2008 financial crisis this bear market should be relatively short lived. I doubt anyone buying at current valuations would be disappointed by returns in 24 months time.
Anyone got any thoughts on the housing market? We’re in the process of selling and have found somewhere to buy but not sure carrying on is a great shout if CV is going to hit financial markets?
Which way do you think think it will move. Safe asset when stocks tumble.
This seems like a bonkers time to even consider investing in anything atm. I've liquidated quite a few of my investments and going to sit on cash for the foreseeable. If anyone thinks we are at or near the bottom is in for a sharp shock.
FTSE 100 just closed down nearly 11% today. The Dow closed 10% down. This isn't the time to be calling the bottom of anything. We are only just entering the bear market.
In the next few weeks housing will be next and potentially a quite a few probate sales offered after in the months ahead.
I'm thinking about cancelling year's employee shares and starting again. I'll lose a year but the difference of this year's buy price could be enough to make it worthwhile on a 3 year scheme.
National Grid is still better than it has generally been for the last 2 years.
Mainly because there was a big hike between Sept 2019 and end of Feb 2020 but now it seems to be feeling the effects and dropping hard.
I will get myself a lot of those because post corona nonsense it will bounce back.
The problem is how much will it fall ? That is the million dollar question.
If the Dow drops 5.6% tomorrow it will go below 20k. The Dow going below 20k will scare a lot of people more than the drop from 29k to where we are now. 18k isn't crazy given where we currently are.
and CV has hardly gotten warmed up in the USA yet...
Just like any other asset bubble, Rolex is next for the chop. LVs, batmans, SDs etc. will all start to head back towards list. It may take a few months but it’ll happen. It’ll be interesting to watch SC.
On the way up Rolex prices have tracked the Dow Jones, rocketing up after 2016. Let’s see what happens when the Dow Jones tanks
I see WoS are down 5.5% on the open this morning and down to ~250 GBX after a high of almost 400 GBX a month of so ago. Luxury goods can't be a high priority in times like this so will be interested to track how this goes. I said some time back, i've been on waiting lists for various things for 3 odd years without a single call or offer to purchase so if I soon get the call I know the back end has completely fallen out of the market.
True, but I think the usual in demand vintage watches will hold up well due to collectors and of course not being made anymore, they are an enjoyable investment for many people.
Saying that, these are unprecedented times so if your cash rich and want something vintage you may well get a desperate seller.
I’m going in with some shares but like others here I feel it’s got a way to go, the US is handling this virus in a very lazy lackadaisical way, mainly due to their health system, if it hits the US really hard markets across the globe with fall a lot further..
Some watches will hold up to certain degrees but once in recession 70% of the buyers will be gone. Speculators will be long gone. Only the truly wealthy who are unaffected by any recession will still be about and they won't be buying dlfull gold skydwellers just to get on the list for a pepsi. Likewise they won't be buying a stainless steel white Daytona for north of £20k or a Pepsi for £14k. Think we can all agree that's done.
Will be interesting to see how quiet the incoming thread is over the next few months and the the types of models being bought.