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Why Price Differential for AML between Yahoo and Motley Fool?
GBX International Group, Inc. (OTC:GBXI) Confirms 2023 Strong Revenue Growth Guidance Projections by Combining Each Acquired Operating Company Product Release, Expects Strong Growth Sector by Sector Through its Multiple Product Releases into North American and International Markets
Remember 88e? The company next door $PANR is odds on to announce 2bn barrels recoverable. Currently at 92p with a conservative price target of GBX 280. Announcement due in 2 weeks https://www.lse.co.uk/ShareChat.asp?ShareTicker=PANR&share=Pantheon-Res
Remember 88e? The company next door is odds on to announce 2bn barrels recoverable. Currently at 92p with a conservative price target of GBX 280. RNS due in 2 weeks
Cineworld avoids bankruptcy with $1b debt... restructure? and $180m new loan
What about to punish the Wall Street again?
BlueJay Mining - OTC and LON - Which Exchange to create more profit?
Consumers Splurging on Pricey Alcohol Despite Rising Costs
Cryptos/NFT Investment Portfolio Tracker Template for Excel | Cryptocurrencies, NFTs, and more | Live Data & Calculations
Cryptos/NFT Investment Portfolio Tracker Template for Excel | Cryptocurrencies, NFTs, and more | Live Data & Calculations
The right way of DCA'ing during market volatility.
Investment Portfolio Tracker Template for Excel | Cryptocurrencies, Stocks, Bonds, ETFs, REITs | Live Data & Calculations | Digital Finance Tracker
Investment Portfolio Tracker Template for Excel | Cryptocurrencies, Stocks, Bonds, ETFs, REITs | Live Data & Calculations | Digital Finance Tracker
Alright, which one of you reatards is her current BF?
I let my ex buy me stocks and now need advice.
The uranium sector is evolving towards a growing global supply deficit, while the uranium price is still to cheap to incentivise new production + a couple uranium companies that have some catching up to do compared to peers
Haydale reports its FY2021 results, will increase capacity significantly with a new reactor. Absolute bargain.
Yoloed Life savings to Cineworld €41k at GBX 117. Now it's at 72, apparently became most shorted stock soon after I invested
Yoloed Life savings to Cineworld - €41k at GBX 117. Now it's at 72, apparently became most sortedy stock soon after I invested
Yoloed Life savings to Cinworld €41k at GBX 117. Now it's at 72, apparently became most sorted stock soon after I invested
European Metals Holdings $ERPNF - Largest Hardrock Lithium Deposit (Cinovec Project) in Europe with 4x upside potential, according to analysts
Clean Meat is at the brink of revolutionising the livestock and fishing industries, expected to hit the market this year. How to get in as a dirty retailer.
Opinions needed on my approach to investing long term and saving money for retirement!
I'm a little bit dum dum I searshed for 10 minutes and I can't figure out what GBX stands for
Mentions
Its GBX not GBP, its used to denote pence. So 29 GBX is 0.29 GBP.
"Berenberg Bank has recently updated its rating for [Rolls-Royce Holdings plc](https://www.google.com/search?q=Rolls-Royce+Holdings+plc&oq=Berenberg+Bank+rolls+royce&gs_lcrp=EgZjaHJvbWUyBggAEEUYOTINCAEQABiGAxiABBiKBTIKCAIQABiABBiiBDIHCAMQABjvBTIKCAQQABiiBBiJBTIKCAUQABiABBiiBDIKCAYQABiABBiiBDIGCAcQRRg80gEINTIyMWowajeoAgCwAgA&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&mstk=AUtExfAMPOwnjQF8Nf2WKNYZLBOcnwQNcbldlKREjwu0yWMhhDz3cSip272taaA7a49qrnQ-8V4PbE27qDmjzQjLGhutKDol2om8-62S9ugUzqrOGKrs92g6Nz_ZUE0p6Pjxx1bf9flv70C9k7Cs8vaorImfREQihGjHBfUUiayHyu7im_n1l3wHcZcZspMfo_k3qKh5b1Z37XP3pIgXTyYB65HA44kbrM9dUb_BqK43RL-sA3RcsawAqOmM52UUTIjzRErQOnhHW7AtAkdq3qke8jB6&csui=3&ved=2ahUKEwiFlcu-ju2QAxViODQIHcZQGyYQgK4QegQIARAB), raising it from a "sell" to a "hold" rating in October 2025, with an increased price target to GBX 1,080. This upgrade reflects Berenberg's positive outlook on the long-term growth of Rolls-Royce's engine delivery, particularly for large aircraft, and the company's improved internal performance, although the "hold" rating suggests caution remains. This is a change from an earlier "sell" rating in January 2024, which was based on concerns about the XWB-97 engine and the company's future plans."
|| || |What|Ticker|Bought|Buy in (USD)|Price Today (USD)|%| |Energy Fuels Inc.|UUUU|12.06.2025|5,34|20,340|280,80%| |Elite Pharmaceuticals|ELTP|12.06.2025|0,695|0,626|\-9,93%| |Empire Metals Ltd.|EEE|12.06.2025|18,85 GBX|51 GBX|170,60%| |Brainchip Holdings Ltd.|24Y|16.06.2025|0,1249|0,150|20,10%| |NeuroOne Medical Technologies|NMTC|17.06.2025|0,6643|0,950|43,00%| |QuickLogic Corp.|QUIK|18.06.2025|5,96|6,120|2,68%| |GSI Technology|GSIT|14.07.2025|4,5|4,560|1,33%| |Poet Technologies|POET|20.08.2025|4,8|7,630|59%| |Techgen Metals|TG1|10.09.2025|0,025AUD|0,036 AUD|44,00% |
Many thanks for the comment. I can also see the Euro denominated listings on Frankfurt and Stuttgart (even though they are not listed in EnSilica’s investor relations section on their website or the most recent annual report). London is the primary listing with the ticker ENSI, and it is priced in sterling (GBX specifically).
Ok - here's 2 names that I'm actively evaluating- no position yet. GBX - railcar manufacturing and some aviation exposure, low PE (cheaper than competitors), decent earnings, growth through recent acquisition of $4.4bn railcar portfolio from Wells Fargo, positioned to benefit from lower interest rates on it's debt load. AAFRF - fast expanding telecom provider in Africa, huge market tailwinds due to low mobile market penetration, underserved mobile fintech services and of course, rapid population growth. Comes with the typical macroeconomic and execution risks associated with the African market.
Values for me are in GBX and the stock in now trading at 655 GBX Can you convert your technical analysis to this measure?
Ended buying breaking my rule and dcaing more (ITWN), wanted TSM exposure in my tax adv account and I can't buy it there. The ETF currently has it at 33% weighting. On a side note, some of my ETFs are in GBX, some USD. Despite being up so much, the FX exchange stings a bit.
Of course not every win is 10x and I never claimed it was "easy". Risk is always 100% if naked one side or the other, upside is often between 80% - 250%, but I've seen 15x - 20x on a few occasions, as well. And you don't play every name, some are FAR superior and move more than others...I can't help all the morons buying 15% OTM Calls when AAPL moves 3.1% on average. My Big Winners from July 1: GBX, PRGS, BYRN, AEHR, and SPY (not ER, but using the same type of data). I used to be like you and had a similar response a few years ago to someone telling me something like this. All he told me was, "If you step back and remove the noise, indicators, and opinions...the market will tell you." Well I chewed on that for a bit. Then I got to work and put in the work. Enlisted a few people much, much more intelligent than myself to help. 2 years, millions of lines of data, screenshots, comparisons, AI, statistical studies, etc. Countless hours invested and dyslexia be damned. Now I'm confident that you are wrong just like I was wrong. Oh, it'll never be 100% accurate prediction method, not every return will be 1000%, and most people don't have the resolve to go as deep as I did...I'm tenacious. Other people lack the dedication. That said, the right data illuminates the most likely outcome. Statistical probability is it. Wins cover numerous losses if you play consistent sizing and play the best probability movers. What I am saying should annoy you, but you have two options now: 1) Dismiss it because it's the internet and most people are full of shit (very valid, especially on Reddit lol). Or 2) Spend some time actually digging a bit further. I have no desire for popularity, notoriety, or keeping up with the Joneses. Internet karma is dumb and Reddit is an echo chamber, but WSB is fun and entertaining! I came from nothing and am nothing. That said, if my middle of nowhere average dumbass can consistently profit week after week doing this (look how limited of ER plays there were the last few weeks), anyone else could. Good luck to you, nonetheless.
i only trade post earnings. STZ and GBX, pathetic sideways action bullshit.
Instructions unclear. Alter bought AST on the GBX @.43/share
I believe that Wisdom Tree has a UCITS compliant ETC (exchage traded commodity) fund that should be accessible in the UK. [https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHAU/wisdomtree/company-page](https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHAU/wisdomtree/company-page) [https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHGP/wisdomtree/company-page](https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHGP/wisdomtree/company-page) PHAU - priced in USD PHGP - priced in GBX These trade on the London Stock Exchange.
I believe that Wisdom Tree has a UCITS compliant ETC that should be accessible in the UK. [https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHAU/wisdomtree/company-page](https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHAU/wisdomtree/company-page) [https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHGP/wisdomtree/company-page](https://www.londonstockexchange.com/stock/PHGP/wisdomtree/company-page) PHAU - priced in USD PHGP - priced in GBX These trade on the London Stock Exchange.
Many stocks traded on the London Stock Exchange trade in GBX (penny sterling). 1 GBX = 0.01 GBP. Deliveroo PLC (ROO) trades on the London exchange for GBX 146.60 or GBP 1.46. The market cap is 2.19B. https://www.google.com/finance/quote/ROO:LON?sa=X&sqi=2&ved=2ahUKEwjmmPOygPaMAxUyiO4BHZQFOBUQ3ecFegQINBAc
That price is in GBX, not USD
it's 6GBX so 0.06, US version is .08 due to exchange rate. You can also buy ANIC direct from IBKR
100s in GBX. That's the trading currency in the LSE and 1 GBX is 1 penny, so 100 GBX is 1 pound sterling
rheinmetall: 935.80 € saab : 294.6 SEK kongsberg gruppen: 56.50 USD bae systems: 1356.82 GBX aerovironment: 155.30 USD kratos: 27.05 USD red cat: 8.91 USD ondas: 1.65 USD palantir: 124.62 USD bigbear: 8.42 USD !remindme 6 months
Thank you! To be fair, ther price target is GBX 16.50-17.50 so if it could reach that, would be amazing. I’ll definitely look into it
None of it is gibberish, I've posted my position but I will do a full proper dd post tomorrow, I have a million shares at 4GBX
4 GBX. 
If you see GBX or GBp it’s in British pennies.
I wish I could say, but my 1 regret has been not being stable in life to take advantage of it at 80GBX but it's been great on my portfolio
Dispite all my losses and even my -£900 from ACHR currently my net profit still covered that loss and that not even including my £1,500 +£15 profit from ACHR and all of my investments (not trades) originate from the pandemic, even my RR where I own 685 share and that even Me not being in healthy situation to trade resulting in me missing RR @80 GBX I'm still covered for any losses and incase my financial goes FUBAR and that's from day 1 of my journey
And this is precisely why I'm happy I sold at 7.50 I believe in the stock but I'm not comfortable gambling 🤣 $sony was a lesson for me and I was given 2 lucky chances in PLTR before it was a loss for me However I'm sitting on 5k not sure where to throw it (besides gambling it for 10% like today) besides 212 70 GBX daily interest
Speaking of SMR's. They all need fuel and thats where $ASPI comes in. #HALEU is the fuel required to power whatever small modular reactor Terrapower $OKLO $NNE $SMR $GBX $RYCEY builds. The ones capable to enrich to #HALEU grade is Centrus Energy, $ASPI & Russia state owned Rosatom. Russia enriches 44% of global #nuclear fuel capacity. LONG $ASPI
this is OG WSB DD. someone posts a dodgy DD of random stocks which could end up rocketing. I still remember the WSB fella who posted here a very lazy DD on Rolls Royce. I didn’t like his ideas, but his thesis was simple, if defence expenditure goes up, RR goes up. Bought stock at 93GBX, 2 years later it is 477GBX. You love to see it
TradingView says on one page that Raspberry Pi is 781 million GBX and says on another page that it's 781 million GBP. 1 GBP = 100 GBX. 1 GBP is slightly higher than 1 USD. Also, it says they have a share price of 395 GBX, which is the same as £3.95, and around 65 million outstanding shares, which would come to a market cap of approximately £240 million, which is neither of the options. It's more confusing than IBKR, which has a $50 billion market cap and a share price of $126 and 105 million shares outstanding ($126/share × 105 million shares = $13 billion). And Yahoo Finance isn't making things any less confusing. They say Raspberry Pi has around 200 million shares, which would come to a market cap of around $763 million (OK, so in this case Yahoo Finance's numbers add up and so they're probably the accurate numbers and TradingView somehow messed it up, but Yahoo Finance doesn't help with IBKR). TlDr: IBKR's market cap is not equal to its outstanding shares multiplied by its share price based on the data I got from Yahoo Finance and TradingView, and Raspberry Pi's market cap is equal to its shares outstanding multiplied by its share price on Yahoo Finance but not on TradingView, and I'm confused. But I think both companies are probably undervalued.
$GBX railroads tanking as consumer dies The *Buffet* indicator.
Fuck GBX and everything about that earnings.. I expect DAL to shit the bed on earnings.. lets see if one of the two trades will translate
Bruh. Both GBX puts and calls fucked
Inversed my guidance and bought GBX calls instead after digging deeper — 😂
I owned GBX (Greenbrier) for a while when it was in the 20's. Made nice money. 50's is pretty damned optimistic for a mature rail car maker. High hurdle for them.
Calls on GBX, the rail infrastructure industry is in for strong forward outlook as manufacturing returns to NA.
Anyone playing GBX? Monday pre-market
Why puts on GBX? Their earnings should be good considering an increasing need for railcars
Looked at it, seems too unpredictable to play — I’d honestly recommend Puts on GBX instead
GBX earnings on Monday and I expect it to dump — you’re welcome
I hold Louis Vuitton and BMW for my European shares. Also Nintendo which is a Euro version of it's Nikkei listing (NTO.F) And I have shares in a few UK companies, which are traded in GBX, like Pershing Square, and Diageo.
Thank you for your reply. Yes it does say -1 for the position for the covered call that i sold. the covered call is for LSE:LLOY Aug16'24 60 Call the price at the time was around 54 UK options are also in blocks of 1,000 shares price is listed as pence (GBX) Looking into it some more the ask for the option to buy a call is now 6.90 which lines up with the MKTVAL number and which also marries up with the Unrealized P&L number. In short I'm happy to wait till expire date and if the underline stock is lower happy days I'll just write another covered call. if the shares are called away, I'm happy with the 10% gain I get.
I started in 99 but it was a long time before I had any idea about GBX, or bubbles. I had to *call* a broker on a brick phone to place orders. Wacky.
According to https://www.justetf.com/en/etf-profile.html?isin=IE00B5BMR087, it's USD on LSE and EUR on Euronext. You can also trade it in GBX on LSE under the ticker CSP1.
Yes - you have to look at the currency when you look at the quotes. In your example about Marks and Spencer - note how Yahoo Finance and Google Finance uses different notations: [https://www.google.com/finance/quote/MKS:LON](https://www.google.com/finance/quote/MKS:LON) - Google uses the notation GBX for pence sterling. [https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/MKS.L](https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/MKS.L) - Yahoo finance uses GBp (with little p) which I think is confusing. If you are unsure - on how your broker is quoting - you ought to call them. But I assume that sincee you mentioned HL - you are investing in pence sterling in the UK. Marks and Spencer also is quoted in EUR on the French bourses. And it also is quoted in USD on the US OTC markets. So it also depends which exchange you are looking.
Prices on the LSE are traditionally quoted in pence and not pounds. So - if you see something like GBX 100 or even GBp (little p) - that means £1. The use of GBp (with little p) is probably the most confusing imo and I wish websites wouldn't use that convention). Some brokers and website will use the 100p to avoid confusion. So yes - it's pence.
GBX is pence. So 1306.60 GBP is 1306.60 pence. Just divide to convert it to pounds.
I am not familiar with fashion brands other than really famous ones like Adidas. But if you refer to Superdry PLC, stocker ticker GBX is 9.99 usd right now. Doing decent.
DJT puts, possibly GBX puts idk yet
Is anybody buying GBX for earnings?
Yes, decays to an insane extent over time. https://markets.ft.com/data/etfs/tearsheet/summary?s=3LNG:LSE:GBX
Morningstar on CCL: Given the improving visibility from strength in current-year bookings, we plan to raise our $22 (GBX 1,800) fair value estimate by a high-single-digit rate, which leaves Carnival shares at a midteens discount after a high-single-digit post-print pop.
Nah I figured it out. It's because this is from London stock exchange stock that trades in GBX, and since then in same period GBP has gone down in comparison to USD.
I will copypaste my reply to you that I made to another person below. Actually now I realized, and I am too tired I guess and should go to sleep so wasn't thinking properly. It's because this stock trades at London stock exchange and it trades in GBX. Considering that since I bought it GBP has gone down in comparison to USD that's where the mystery lies in I guess.
I will copypaste my reply to you that I made to another person below. Actually now I realized, and I am too tired I guess and should go to sleep so wasn't thinking properly. It's because this stock trades at London stock exchange and it trades in GBX. Considering that since I bought it GBP has gone down in comparison to USD that's where the mystery lies in I guess.
Actually now I realized, and I am too tired I guess and should go to sleep so wasn't thinking properly. It's because this stock trades at London stock exchange and it trades in GBX. Considering that since I bought it GBP has gone down in comparison to USD that's where the mystery lies in I guess.
I'm currently based in the UK so I've gone for the GBX versions personally. Thanks for letting me know though, I had no idea about a new ETF from Invesco!
Not sure how limit orders work in this regard, but my theory would be that the commission and spread put the buy-in price enough above the value of the stock to cost more than 15.80GBX. But yeah, again, I have no clue. Just my guess.
HMEM seems to trade in USD vs HMEF seems to trade in GBX . The performance then is measured in both base currencies So if you hold HMEF that is priced in GBX and GBX goes down vs other currencies (USD/EUR/JPY ect) HMEF would go up just do to exchange rate fluctuations
I just googled "option contract specifications LSE": https://www.cftc.gov/sites/default/files/groups/public/@otherif/documents/ifdocs/orgfbotlseexhbta4160506.pdf Under "UK Stock Options": **Multiplier** 100 or 1000 Shares, as per the Exchange’s Product List This may change in specific cases in accordance with the Recalculation Rules. **Currency** GBX, British Pence, p **Quotation display** Option Premium in GBX up to two decimal places GBX = pence sterling, 1/100th of a pound
May I suggest checking out WAB alongside GBX.
* Gonna try my luck long on UNP ahead of their ER in 3 weeks. * Thesis: sympathy play of today’s GBX meltup . If railcar orders are up, maybe rail earnings are too
Thanks, I'm now quite sad at finding out what GBX means.
LSE trades in pence (GBX), so 12 pounds, which would be indeed 13.96 euro.
You would be very surprised as I have gotten very nice [returns on GBX](https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/GBX/chart?p=GBX#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--) (currently out of it), TRN less profitable but still good returns due to their other businesses. As shipments increase, stock price rises.
I would look at the railcar manufacturers including repair like TRN and GBX. With new regulations coming down due to recent accidents, they are well positioned.
Nobody's answered you, so I'll give it a shot. Not sure I understand your question correctly, but maybe the confusion is due to the currency: to be clear, GBX refers to pence, not pounds. So the ETF you're looking at is worth £7.7934 per share (seven quid). So if you're looking to invest, say, a thousand quid, you'd have to buy around 128 shares in that ETF: 128 shares × £7.7934 + £6 fees = £1,003.55 Hope that helps.
As a UK resident, is there any reason to invest into VOO over CSPX? CSPX is accumulating, but also in GBX.
Why is it showing in £ like that? When I Google it shows much less and in GBX - new to this don't judge me 🙃
LSE: BOIL *Baron Oil on the way up again. Up 13% today 0.14 GBX
Thoughts on ticker GBX $25 puts expiring 1/20 and BBBY 1.5 puts expiring 1/16?
hey who knows the story of $BP on the LSE in GBX vs the NYSE USD price??? I see an LSE close today at 493.5 GBX....which best I can find translates to $5.625...shouldn't the prices almost line up? What am I missing? Cheers
Most public companies will have an investor section on the company corporate site that describes the different stock issues. For Rio Tinto - you can find it here - [https://www.riotinto.com/invest/shareholder-information](https://www.riotinto.com/invest/shareholder-information) Rio Tinto trades on the LSE, ASX, and NYSE in the local currency. On the LSE, many stocks like RIO.L price in GBX or penny sterling. Notice on the Rio Tinto web site that it's converted to GBP. The differences in prices reflect currency differences. Note that in the US - it's actually an ADR (American Depository Receipt). Some ADR's will have a ratio which can make the price also look different by some ratio. In the case of Rio Tinto - an ADS equals 1 common so the difference is likely due mostly to currency differences. You may find the Rio Tinto shareholder FAQ helpful which describes the 3 different stocks on each exchange here - [https://www.riotinto.com/en/invest/shareholder-information/shareholder-faqs](https://www.riotinto.com/en/invest/shareholder-information/shareholder-faqs)
GBX refers to penny or pence (i.e. cents), not pounds (GBP). It's still a penny stock, trading at £0.074 (which reconciles with your $0.09). Separately, do be careful what you invest in...
Well, it says GBX right under the share price, which is Pence Sterling
Greenbrier Co (GBX), railroad freight car producers, and AZZ, metal coating, welding solutions, and electrical equipment, report on Monday. You thinking they'll give bad forward guidance?
Totally ! Sell it all except Apple (and maybe NIO) Take the $$ from ZOM, BNGO, IDEX, GBX, COIN and put it into an ETF that tracks NASDAQ or S&P. Alternatively, you can look at 'quality' individual stocks, the ones with strong fundamentals (the ones people can't live without) MSFT and GOOGL come to mind. I like to look at the current market like the "best quality" that's usually out of my range as being on sale and a great buying opportunity. My last sale purchases were in 2009 (MSFT $20, QLD $11(adj for splits). Slow and steady wins the race! Good luck.
ZOM, BNGO, IDEX, GBX..all going to zero in the future. AAPL & Nio is good, COIN is a tossup
TIL. Is that why stock prices are displayed in GBX instead of £?
Okay, so, I feel like I'm being pretty dense, but I've been trying to find out why I can't buy a Foreign Stock directly through Fidelity. It doesn't even show up. The Stock is listed as (actual ticker censored) "LON: XXXX" everywhere I look currently and sometimes "XXXX.L" and is trading for about 2.50GBX. When I try and find the company on Fidelity (yes I have international trading enabled) I can only find an entirely different 5-letter ticker (starting with FT, call it FTXXX) that trades at $0.0250. What is the deal? Can someone please explain this to a noob like me?
HR7902 was just introduced in the house with 29 co sponsors. It gives huge tax incentives for railroads to get rid of their older rolling stock and replace with new or substantially refurbished. Look RAIL, TRN, and GBX to all moon if this is passed. These are the 3 largest US rail care manufacturers/refurbishers.
Exactly. I'll hold anywhere between 1-10 stocks. Right now I just have 2. I have a list of 6 railroad stocks I'm watching and learning about. On March 8th, (It's on paper in front of me), I wrote down the 6 stocks and their price. I'll see what they do since I identified them. Then I'll start picking some price targets to see which stock does what I think it will do. Once I've established that I appear to understand one or two of the stocks, those are the ones I will buy. For anybody interested, those stocks are: CSX UNP NSC CP GBX CNI Why am I watching them? Simple. Fuel costs. As fuel costs increase, rail becomes more attractive. With a trucker shortage as well, it starts to make sense that rail is a good way to move a volume of goods. I'm also watching the transportation industry as a whole. Forecasts and employee hiring has been cut with FedEx, UPS and even Amazon. I'm trying to confirm what that means. Does that mean there is a slowing? Or does that mean companies are shifting from parcel (small packages) to volume-based shipping which is more likely to ship via LTL/Freight and rail? I may watch these for a while. The 2 outcomes I will have is either I find a sleeper that does really good if the economy cools and I get in ahead of it being in the news, or I find a really solid investment that I would want to go long on. But either way, I pick a specific area and I become hyper-focused on that one. There's a lot of people who watch CNBC or Jim Cramer and they're an inch deep and a mile wide. I used to work for a Fortune 100 company, and during our earnings calls we would be completely dumbfounded at not only the questions from the investors, but what the talking heads would say on TV. They would get things completely wrong, the ENTIRE group of them. Then in 1 or 2 quarters when we posted solid numbers or a solid decline, they would act completely surprised and our stock would make big moves.
Cash is paying ca. minus 7-8% right now. The interest rates are rising in many countries. We are likely to be heading for a recession (In UK, USA & Europe). Stocks will be the best long term place to be. (> 5 years), but we could be in for more volatility over the next year or two. Trading platform comparison [https://monevator.com/compare-uk-cheapest-online-brokers/](https://monevator.com/compare-uk-cheapest-online-brokers/) Consider one or two of these world ETFs as a good place to start. (There are others). HSBC MSCI World UCITS ETF https://markets.ft.com/data/etfs/tearsheet/summary?s=HMWO:LSE:GBX Invesco FTSE RAFI All World 3000 UCITS ETF https://markets.ft.com/data/etfs/tearsheet/holdings?s=PSRW:LSE:GBX Xtrackers MSCI World Minimum Volatility UCITS ETF 1C https://markets.ft.com/data/etfs/tearsheet/summary?s=XDEB:LSE:GBX Xtrackers MSCI World Value UCITS ETF 1C https://markets.ft.com/data/etfs/tearsheet/holdings?s=XDEV:LSE:GBX
Bare with me because this is long but I believe I can explain all of those funds and what tight USD/ GBP situation is all about: The funds you named are all ETFs: iShares Core S&P 500 GBX: This tracks the S&P 500 index which is designed to match the performance of the index of the largest 500 public US companies. iShares Core MSCI EM IMI: This is a fund of thousands of companies in emerging market economies. Vanguard FTSE Developed Europe: This is a fund of mid- cap companies from a variety of countries with developed economies in Europe. iShares MSCI World Small Cap: This tracks the performance of small cap companies from all across the world. iShares S&P 500 Information Technology: This tracks the performance of companies in the S&P 500 index, but just the ones which are information technology companies. iShares NASDAQ 100: This tracks the 100 largest companies traded NASDAQ index, which are predominantly US but also non- US companies. The NASDAQ exchange has all sorts of companies but in general tends to be more technology oriented. iShares Core MSCI Japan IMI: This tracks the performance of companies in Japan across large, mid, and small cap. Vanguard FTSE Developed Asia: This tracks many large and mid cap companies in Asia. iShares FTSE 100 GBP: This tracks the companies in the FTSE 100 which are the 100 largest companies traded on the London Stock Exchange (mostly British.) Vanguard FTSE 250 GBP: This tracks the next 250 largest companies on the London Stock Exchange after the top 100. On the currency issue, you will see that many of those ETFs are currency hedged to the British Pound. The goal of this is that those funds attempt to “hedge out” currency risk related to investing in non- British companies and being a fund in British pounds. If the hedge works, then the fund should return the returns of the companies they track regardless of changes in exchange rates between their local currencies and the British pound, so a sudden drop in the value of their currency shouldn’t hurt your rate of return when the hedge is successful. I don’t know your current boyfriend well enough to say if he is right or wrong, because who knows, he may be a brilliant trader, but at afar it sounds like he may be an EXTREMELY risky investor while your ex has a more long- term and diversified approach to investing. I also don’t know what is right for you and can’t speak specifically to you, however, I would say that that ETF portfolio seems well balanced for an equity portfolio and the currency hedge also makes sense for a diversified equity portfolio. So, I can’t comment on what’s right for you or the investing skills of your current boyfriend but I would make a warning using the NASDAQ index as an example. Thousands of people quit their jobs and thought they were a genius in the late 90’s/ early 2000’s until 2002 when the index dropped by 78% from its high. In London in 1973-1974 experienced the FTSE crashed. People who think they’re geniuses lose everything trading risky options and crypto every day and in market crashes experience catastrophe, so, if your bf is a brilliant trader and has the skills to run a hedge fund then have fun being fabulously wealthy, but be careful and take a look at r/wallstreetbets if you need any current examples. That diversified portfolio your ex created is very much in line with what I have seen for diversified equity portfolios during years of working in the finance industry.
Sorry just realised I haven't responded to this. I did a bit of my own Intrinsic Value analysis, then compare notes with MorningStar's Fair Value. I usually start buying when it is about 30% below the IV/FV. So far I have positions in: 1. IMB on LSE: FV around 2,900GBX, I started around 1,700GBX before the war broke out...... But I have averaged down with some 1,6xx and 1,5xx, so currently AVG 1,650GBX. Will continue to add if it's below 1,600. 2. RNO on PAR. FV around €92, I also started before the war @ €34! Have since averaged down to €29 with some purchases as low as €21. This is my least confident so I am mostly just holding. 3. INGA on AMS. FV around €14. I started @ €9.90 when it first dropped 10%, but have averaged down to €9.4 with prices as low as €8.01! I'll continue to buy when it's around €8.1 - €8.6. Not possible at the moment before of last few days' rise. 4. WLN on PAR. FV around €91, my average is €38.75, will continue to add if it's below €40. I'm usually buying US stocks, but the recent events in Europe caused (1) big drops in European stocks and (2) stronger USD vs EUR/GBP. So I put about 10% value of my total portfolio into these 4, hopefully for some capital gain + FX gain in the next few years.
GBX = Great British Penny.
Sorry - my bad, 42GBX - Mkt Cap 581m I've followed AMC/GME for coming up to a year now, and I'm genuinely intrigued by it. I can't fathom why, if it's not true/won't happen, it's traded so heavily in darkpools and reportedly traded as much as it was in 2021. I'd appreciate some thoughts from a non-all in, all AMC forum.
**For the ADRs** It says 128,660,000 shares of RentoKill ADRs which closed $39.49 = $5.08 billion \+ cash of $1.3 billion = 6.380 billion / 121.1489 million TMX shares = **$52.67** per share From Document: Under the terms of the Agreement, Rentokil Initial will issue to Terminix shareholders at closing aggregate consideration comprised of approximately 643.29 million new Rentokil Initial shares (representing approximately 128.66 million American depository shares (“ADSs”), based on a 1:5 ADS to Rentokil Initial share ratio) and approximately US$1.3bn in cash. **or for the English shares** 584.80 in pounds \* 0.0132 USD/GBX = $7.73 price in USD of english shares 5.3094 english shares to TMX shareholder \* $7.73 = $41.05 \+11.00 in cash for TMX shareholders = **$52.05** From Document: The cash election consideration and the stock election consideration will be equalized to the value of the aggregate consideration per Terminix share, as measured by the value of 5.3094 new Rentokil Initial shares and $11 in cash as of the second day prior to closing. Either way, Im getting about $52 for something selling at 45.08. I don't get why there is an approximate upside of 15% just sitting there.
GBX, Trinity, GATX. BRK owns UTLX.
Guessing he's referring to this: [https://finance.yahoo.com/news/inspira-technologies-announces-2021-third-133000456.html?guccounter=1&guce\_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce\_referrer\_sig=AQAAAIVo50h76ON71GBX6O3jrachZjKO5sabKZYTtEycVOmKPtu25U6TZtjFWNChnvIUjFj7qEyQDx2KlPFNQ4jhZaIVB9c3c88B3TMR-UqHbuD1fwS7v6xD2JijLIOlpX37PKx8Ag7cPgIu8mV04nYhNgIRuC-oY\_PTluIjFB7c9rht](https://finance.yahoo.com/news/inspira-technologies-announces-2021-third-133000456.html?guccounter=1&guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIVo50h76ON71GBX6O3jrachZjKO5sabKZYTtEycVOmKPtu25U6TZtjFWNChnvIUjFj7qEyQDx2KlPFNQ4jhZaIVB9c3c88B3TMR-UqHbuD1fwS7v6xD2JijLIOlpX37PKx8Ag7cPgIu8mV04nYhNgIRuC-oY_PTluIjFB7c9rht)
How do you feel about rail freight stocks in general? GBX makes rail freight components, for example. I live on the west coast and I’ve never seen so many trains running as the last 2 months or so. I’d imagine that components, like many other things, are in high demand. Curious about what others here think.