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-   -   Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply? (https://www.cableforum.uk/board/showthread.php?t=33695389)

Damien 11-10-2013 19:23

Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-24488144

Quote:

The hugely oversubscribed sale was priced at 330p a share, valuing the 500-year-old firm at £3.3bn. At one point, the price hit 459.75p.

Private investors received 227 shares each. In all, more than 225 million shares were traded on Friday.
Probably it seems. Obviously you want it to go up slightly or stay the same but you don't want it to jump by almost a third.

Osem 11-10-2013 20:17

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
The opening price is pretty meaningless. What's more indicative of the 'true value' is what level the price stabilises at in coming months.

I dare say all the RM staff who got shares will be delighted anyway and now they'll have more of an incentive to make 'their' business a success.

SnoopZ 11-10-2013 20:34

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
I wish i had bought shares but i never knew about it.

TheDaddy 11-10-2013 20:52

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by SnoopZ (Post 35631039)
I wish i had bought shares but i never knew about it.

You ain't missed much mate, I tried for five grands worth and got 749 pounds worth, the maximum any one was allowed incidentally, I don't think it should've been sold of and just like everything else privatised it's been given away :(

Nidge41 11-10-2013 21:09

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
They could have made £2.7billion if they'd sold at a higher price.

---------- Post added at 22:09 ---------- Previous post was at 22:07 ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by Osem (Post 35631034)
The opening price is pretty meaningless. What's more indicative of the 'true value' is what level the price stabilises at in coming months.

I dare say all the RM staff who got shares will be delighted anyway and now they'll have more of an incentive to make 'their' business a success.

I bet the posties will be selling theirs next week when their share certificates come through. Correction, they've got to wait 3 years before they can cash them in, 5 years if they want to avoid tax.

thenry 11-10-2013 21:58

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Whats happened to the pension debt RM has.. had?

TheDaddy 11-10-2013 22:17

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by thenry (Post 35631079)
Whats happened to the pension debt RM has.. had?

We the tax payer have taken that on

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-17423461

thenry 11-10-2013 22:29

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
so RM now has standing debt of 1.4bn

news.sky.com/story/1140451/royal-mail-secures-1-4bn-debt-deal

hmm.. i reckon some people are getting carried away with their top level pricetag. somewhere inthe middle could have been achieved.

nomadking 11-10-2013 22:35

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
The inital price will have been based on worth of business. After that the share price will be affected by people treating the shares as a easy way of making money and not a longer term investment. X will buy shares based on what the buyer Y thinks buyer Z will pay for them. This increase the share price. Same thing happens with house prices. People buy a house expecting to make an easy profit in a years time from somebody else who will in turn hope to make an easy profit in another years time.

Chris 11-10-2013 22:35

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Damien (Post 35631014)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-24488144



Probably it seems. Obviously you want it to go up slightly or stay the same but you don't want it to jump by almost a third.

You need to wait at least 3 months before you get the beginning of a meaningful answer to that.

Damien 11-10-2013 22:45

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris (Post 35631088)
You need to wait at least 3 months before you get the beginning of a meaningful answer to that.

Didn't the Government give up most of it's share in the initial offering? EDIT: No, turns out they didn't. So hopefully the price isn't a fluke and is the worth of the business.
---------- Post added at 23:45 ---------- Previous post was at 23:41 ----------

Quote:

Originally Posted by nomadking (Post 35631087)
The inital price will have been based on worth of business. After that the share price will be affected by people treating the shares as a easy way of making money and not a longer term investment. X will buy shares based on what the buyer Y thinks buyer Z will pay for them. This increase the share price. Same thing happens with house prices. People buy a house expecting to make an easy profit in a years time from somebody else who will in turn hope to make an easy profit in another years time.

The share price reflects what the market thinks the company is worth.

When you're doing an IPO you don't want to price it too high so that the offering is undersubscribed but you also don't want to leave money on the table. The share price changing too much from it's initial pricing is not what you want, at least not if you're the one selling those shares.

TheDaddy 12-10-2013 01:01

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Damien (Post 35631089)
Didn't the Government give up most of it's share in the initial offering? EDIT: No, turns out they didn't. So hopefully the price isn't a fluke and is the worth of the business.
---------- Post added at 23:45 ---------- Previous post was at 23:41 ----------



The share price reflects what the market thinks the company is worth.

When you're doing an IPO you don't want to price it too high so that the offering is undersubscribed but you also don't want to leave money on the table. The share price changing too much from it's initial pricing is not what you want, at least not if you're the one selling those shares.

70% of the shares weren't available to plebs like us, they we're reserved for the high rollers like pension funds and sovereign wealth funds. The government kept 37.7 percent in tax payer hands iirc

Hugh 12-10-2013 07:47

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
"High rollers like pension funds" that pay the pensions of ordinary retired people.......

Osem 12-10-2013 08:39

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Yeah, we wouldn't want our pension funds to make money would we. That way we can all retire on a healthy diet of fresh air and blame those evil Tories for that too... :rolleyes:

Osem 12-10-2013 09:10

Re: Was Royal Mail sold too cheaply?
 
Anyone who's ever owned share knows they go up and down for all sorts of reasons and the opening price is rarely an indicator of anything other than demand chasing limited supply. When the demand slows the price will fall and that will have much less to do with the 'value' of the company or its assets.


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