Bank Shares
Author
Discussion

The Jolly Todger

Original Poster:

2,744 posts

197 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
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With (most) banks shares pretty low right now, what are peoples opinions on them as a long term investment?

Take RBS for example, currently sitting around 23p.

I've not done any trading before but stick my savings in various places mostly low risk (bonds, ISAs etc.)

Would it be worth getting £500 worth of these as a bit of a punt?

Efbe

9,251 posts

183 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
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don't. things will get worse,

The Jolly Todger

Original Poster:

2,744 posts

197 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
quotequote all
Ok, thanks. Sounds like it might be a no-go.

Any little tips give me a shout (I'm not expecting dead certs or anything, just somewhere to bung a bit of cash with a reasonable risk/reward ratio). I've just opened a share dealing account and am looking for somewhere to get started.

F458

1,009 posts

186 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
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If you really want banks then the only one I would go near right now is Barclays. About £1.39 at close today.

Beardy10

24,592 posts

192 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
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Barge pole right now...things are really starting to unwind already.

There will be a good time to buy and I think Barlcays are probably the best bet (HSBC are better run but won't be anywhere near as cheap)....pains me to say it but in these situations it's all about management and Barclays have the best management. They also have the best business mix of the "cheap" banks.

Efbe

9,251 posts

183 months

Thursday 22nd September 2011
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Beardy10 said:
Barge pole right now...things are really starting to unwind already.

There will be a good time to buy and I think Barlcays are probably the best bet (HSBC are better run but won't be anywhere near as cheap)....pains me to say it but in these situations it's all about management and Barclays have the best management. They also have the best business mix of the "cheap" banks.
I wouldn't.

Barclays have far too much exposure to Spain/Greece etc, and if (when) it kicks off as is expected they will take it hard.
HSBC will have major issues with italy, same deal as with barclays.
RBS will likely take another nit as its not getting itself out of trouble well enough.
LBG, too big, will split. - that may be a good time to buy though.

how about google, with their new rival to facebook? :P (disclaimer: they may face monopoly issues soon)

Tyson1980

712 posts

173 months

Friday 23rd September 2011
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The Jolly Todger said:
With (most) banks shares pretty low right now, what are peoples opinions on them as a long term investment?

Take RBS for example, currently sitting around 23p.

I've not done any trading before but stick my savings in various places mostly low risk (bonds, ISAs etc.)

Would it be worth getting £500 worth of these as a bit of a punt?
£500 means feck all in the markets...dont mean to be rude..

Banks are a poor investment...they will never reach the dizzy heights of £5/share again..


digger_R

1,808 posts

223 months

Friday 23rd September 2011
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Tyson1980 said:
£500 means feck all in the markets...dont mean to be rude..

Banks are a poor investment...they will never reach the dizzy heights of £5/share again..
Not even when milk costs £5 a pint? (maybe next week?) wink

ringram

14,701 posts

265 months

Saturday 24th September 2011
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Problem is a lot of assets are held at Par when clearly the markets are saying some are only 40% or less than that.
So when people say bank capitalisation is less than book value, ask yourself just how honest those mark at par holdings are...
I think Morgan Stanley have 70% of the value of their capitalisation in Euro Sovereign debt for example..

(ie) Sort Eurozone issues out first then see whats good value.

DonkeyApple

63,761 posts

186 months

Sunday 25th September 2011
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Just sell and keep selling. No change in nearly 3 years. No sign this is going to change anytime soon.

Six weeks to save the Euro. wink

jonah35

3,940 posts

174 months

Sunday 25th September 2011
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DonkeyApple said:
Just sell and keep selling. No change in nearly 3 years. No sign this is going to change anytime soon.

Six weeks to save the Euro. wink
bank shares could be a pure gamble as no one knows what will happen, oil, healthcare etc could be a better bet.

DonkeyApple

63,761 posts

186 months

Sunday 25th September 2011
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jonah35 said:
DonkeyApple said:
Just sell and keep selling. No change in nearly 3 years. No sign this is going to change anytime soon.

Six weeks to save the Euro. wink
bank shares could be a pure gamble as no one knows what will happen, oil, healthcare etc could be a better bet.
Depends on whether you are long or short wink From a short perspective there is no better sector.

Every day I see retail punters buying banking stocks and it baffles me. We are looking at another recession, we have not even begun to unwind our excess credit and it doesn't look like we will be able to while growth stagnates or declines, unemployment is still falling, there is no wage inflation and we are talking about printing more money to shore up a financial system that could completely collapse on the back of the Euro which is a problem that could be resolved but not with the completely weak governance that exists.

There is not a single indicator on this planet that is yet pointing to banking stocks in the West being a buy. Everything is pointing short.

There are momentary blips where traders can take advantage but downside risk is magnitudes less than upside so no pro trader would buy on the upswings but just wait for the peak and sell into the next bout of weakness.

At some point the bankins sector will be a raging buy and it will be free money for the long side but there is nothing to indicate that this event is anywhere near the horizon.

You are probably correct in your other choice of sectors as well. Retail might be the next big short to keep an eye on.

Bing o

15,184 posts

236 months

Monday 26th September 2011
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Well, I'm continuing to buy DB shares through work. It's a play on some more of the big boys going down in the next few months, and our strong business model in APAC which is based on business banking as much as pushing funny money around derivative transactions.

Or should I just set fire to my £100 a month investment?

F458

1,009 posts

186 months

Tuesday 27th September 2011
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F458 said:
If you really want banks then the only one I would go near right now is Barclays. About £1.39 at close today.
Barclays £1.64 today smile

Efbe

9,251 posts

183 months

Tuesday 27th September 2011
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F458 said:
F458 said:
If you really want banks then the only one I would go near right now is Barclays. About £1.39 at close today.
Barclays £1.64 today smile
True

But other banks have the same % increase over this period: 113%

LBG closed at 32.4 on the 22nd, and is at 36.59
Barclays closed at 144.8 on 22nd, and is at 164

northandy

3,521 posts

238 months

Tuesday 27th September 2011
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IMO bank shares are still a short term buy and sell, there is still too much bad news to come. Unless you buy now and plan to hold say 3 years plus.

However there is money to be made on the volatility, proving you are brave, and willing to turn it into a long term play should it go south quickly.

I have bought and sold barclays 4 times in the past 6 weeks, and made some decent money. Had i left what i invested in a bank account it would have earned nothing.

There are (again imo) cheap stocks out there, aviva was very cheap last week, was showing a possible divi yield of 10% at one point.

robsti

12,241 posts

223 months

Tuesday 27th September 2011
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DonkeyApple said:
Depends on whether you are long or short wink From a short perspective there is no better sector.

Every day I see retail punters buying banking stocks and it baffles me. We are looking at another recession, we have not even begun to unwind our excess credit and it doesn't look like we will be able to while growth stagnates or declines, unemployment is still falling, there is no wage inflation and we are talking about printing more money to shore up a financial system that could completely collapse on the back of the Euro which is a problem that could be resolved but not with the completely weak governance that exists.

There is not a single indicator on this planet that is yet pointing to banking stocks in the West being a buy. Everything is pointing short.

There are momentary blips where traders can take advantage but downside risk is magnitudes less than upside so no pro trader would buy on the upswings but just wait for the peak and sell into the next bout of weakness.

At some point the bankins sector will be a raging buy and it will be free money for the long side but there is nothing to indicate that this event is anywhere near the horizon.

You are probably correct in your other choice of sectors as well. Retail might be the next big short to keep an eye
on.
Donkey if you had cash at the moment where would you put it if you had already maxes your cash ISA s ?

DonkeyApple

63,761 posts

186 months

Wednesday 28th September 2011
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robsti said:
Donkey if you had cash at the moment where would you put it if you had already maxes your cash ISA s ?
Tough to answer as everyone has different objectives and levels of risk.

I actually went to cash in Sep/Oct 2006. I had looked at what I did for a living, how I earned my income, where I lived and come to the descision that if anything bad happened in terms of my line of work then it would also mean that my investments would be decimated at exactly the time that you would need to draw down on them. The best option for me was cash. Pension, ISAs, cars and non 'home' properties all went to cash. My pension is split 90/10 between two ringfenced structures and the smaller pot is used for high leverage trading aiming for overall returns in excess of 10% of the total fund value per annum. I don't have any ISAs as they offer nothing for investment (no relief on divis and personal CGT allowances cover any structure cashing in and the fees are a scandal) and for trading you have spread betting.

Gold is also a massive scandal. Unregulated and the home of charletans. Any 'inflation' is clearly already factored in to the price, in Britain we don't need a transportable asset (this isn't yet the 3rd world) and the entry and exit fees are more shocking than a forex desk at a provincal airport.

If people are investing in gold for inflation protection they are going to get a nasty surprise and if they are doing it to protect their money from a doomsday scenario then they are also in for a nasty surprise as the physical won't be there, if it ever was, when they go and ask for it. It's also worth thinking about how you could buy a tin of beans from your bunker with a Krugerand biggrin People are being conned/duped out of millions by the usual suspects praying on the fear of the weak, elderly or lacking in specific knowledge. If you were going to set up a Ponzi scheme today, don't you think that selling invisible 'gold' in an unregulated environement, via an offshore entity, to scared people a good place to start?

If someone wants to store up assets for a doomsday scenario then they just need to think what products would be needed by a population post fiscal apocolypse and can be stored easily, doesn't take up too much space and can be subdivided into relevant parcels. Then they just need to go out into the garden and shoot themselves as it's all pointless. biggrin


marsred

1,042 posts

242 months

Thursday 29th September 2011
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DonkeyApple said:
Then they just need to go out into the garden and shoot themselves as it's all pointless. biggrin
Or buy RBS and go out in a blaze of glory, to be found hundreds of years later buried in the phoetal position clutching a contract note and an empty tin of beans wink

zac510

5,546 posts

223 months

Thursday 29th September 2011
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Well the OP did say he wanted to buy them as a punt rather than by making an intelligent investment decision.