Share tips thread (Vol 2)
Discussion
Condi said:
jshell said:
Very long term, maybe. All my fund manager mates are avoiding Shell and heading for Total... I ditched Shell in March based on Covid and the utter shower of shyte that manages the company now. I think Shell is in real trouble, though they did report that another 7-9,000 jobs will go in the next 2 years.
Why do they see a difference between Total and Shell, given they are both fundamentally oil majors? All the Majors are very, very different. Most of them should look to Exxon for management and technical management processes...
vulture1 said:
So let's assume another big ish drop. What great dividend paying shares would anyone recommend for a nice long long term hold.
Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
Look at these:-Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/investing/shares/quest...
vulture1 said:
So let's assume another big ish drop. What great dividend paying shares would anyone recommend for a nice long long term hold.
Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
Tesco perhaps? Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
I assume capital preservation is a factor and not just chasing the largest yield at this point.
Man Group used to be good for a dividend but they've basically become an index tracker.
Edited by g4ry13 on Wednesday 28th October 18:05
g4ry13 said:
vulture1 said:
So let's assume another big ish drop. What great dividend paying shares would anyone recommend for a nice long long term hold.
Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
Tesco perhaps? Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
I assume capital preservation is a factor and not just chasing the largest yield at this point.
vulture1 said:
g4ry13 said:
vulture1 said:
So let's assume another big ish drop. What great dividend paying shares would anyone recommend for a nice long long term hold.
Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
Tesco perhaps? Lon rio tinto is my thinking?
I know you can get gains from growth as well but I have enough of those.
Anything I am missing out on?
I assume capital preservation is a factor and not just chasing the largest yield at this point.
I bought more BP because of the dividend but the price hasn't exactly held up well. Easyjet for dividend + growth if you feel brave!
jshell said:
Condi said:
jshell said:
Very long term, maybe. All my fund manager mates are avoiding Shell and heading for Total... I ditched Shell in March based on Covid and the utter shower of shyte that manages the company now. I think Shell is in real trouble, though they did report that another 7-9,000 jobs will go in the next 2 years.
Why do they see a difference between Total and Shell, given they are both fundamentally oil majors? All the Majors are very, very different. Most of them should look to Exxon for management and technical management processes...
If someone was holding a lot of Shell shares and had lost the value of a small house over the last few months would you cut your losses or do you think there will be some form of recovery?
I think Shell are moving away from oil into gas and electricity more so than other oil majors (they own a UK based electric supplier, for example), which is burning a lot of their cash at the moment but is intended to set them up well for the future energy needs.
Condi said:
jshell said:
Condi said:
jshell said:
Very long term, maybe. All my fund manager mates are avoiding Shell and heading for Total... I ditched Shell in March based on Covid and the utter shower of shyte that manages the company now. I think Shell is in real trouble, though they did report that another 7-9,000 jobs will go in the next 2 years.
Why do they see a difference between Total and Shell, given they are both fundamentally oil majors? All the Majors are very, very different. Most of them should look to Exxon for management and technical management processes...
If someone was holding a lot of Shell shares and had lost the value of a small house over the last few months would you cut your losses or do you think there will be some form of recovery?
I think Shell are moving away from oil into gas and electricity more so than other oil majors (they own a UK based electric supplier, for example), which is burning a lot of their cash at the moment but is intended to set them up well for the future energy needs.
As to future price, I'm sorry, it's Alice in Wonderland time.
What I will say is that we CANNOT live without oil, all electric from renewables is a lovely pipe dream so oil HAS to come back. Everything apart from wood, glass, stone, animal products and metal comes from nasty crude oil.
jsf said:
vulture1 said:
jsf said:
ATM said:
Has everybody seen Rolls Royce share price?
Horrible isnt it.vulture1 said:
jsf said:
vulture1 said:
jsf said:
ATM said:
Has everybody seen Rolls Royce share price?
Horrible isnt it.Condi said:
jshell said:
Condi said:
jshell said:
Very long term, maybe. All my fund manager mates are avoiding Shell and heading for Total... I ditched Shell in March based on Covid and the utter shower of shyte that manages the company now. I think Shell is in real trouble, though they did report that another 7-9,000 jobs will go in the next 2 years.
Why do they see a difference between Total and Shell, given they are both fundamentally oil majors? All the Majors are very, very different. Most of them should look to Exxon for management and technical management processes...
If someone was holding a lot of Shell shares and had lost the value of a small house over the last few months would you cut your losses or do you think there will be some form of recovery?
I think Shell are moving away from oil into gas and electricity more so than other oil majors (they own a UK based electric supplier, for example), which is burning a lot of their cash at the moment but is intended to set them up well for the future energy needs.
ATM said:
Anyone have a view on PHE? I dont have a position but as I see it trickling down I am wandering where could be good for an entry. Assuming as its AIM I'll either lose my money or make 10x and more.
I bought into Powerhouse Energy Group (PHE) back in July, as a long term investment. My view is hydrogen, fuel cells and energy from waste are all things that will need to be pursued in the future. We need clean energy, and we can't keep chucking our waste plastic in the sea without consequences. Someone is going to get it right, and the only way to be on the winner near the start is to buy shares in all the players. No doubt some of the companies concerned will fail, but without inside knowledge, which ones?. So far ITM Power (ITM) and Ceres Power Holdings (CWR) look like the two front runners, but that could all change if PHE pull a rabbit out of the hat, assuming they've actually got one in there...
g4ry13 said:
Condi said:
jshell said:
Condi said:
jshell said:
Very long term, maybe. All my fund manager mates are avoiding Shell and heading for Total... I ditched Shell in March based on Covid and the utter shower of shyte that manages the company now. I think Shell is in real trouble, though they did report that another 7-9,000 jobs will go in the next 2 years.
Why do they see a difference between Total and Shell, given they are both fundamentally oil majors? All the Majors are very, very different. Most of them should look to Exxon for management and technical management processes...
If someone was holding a lot of Shell shares and had lost the value of a small house over the last few months would you cut your losses or do you think there will be some form of recovery?
I think Shell are moving away from oil into gas and electricity more so than other oil majors (they own a UK based electric supplier, for example), which is burning a lot of their cash at the moment but is intended to set them up well for the future energy needs.
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