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Will you be buying shares in Lloyds TSB?

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  • JoeCrystal
    JoeCrystal Posts: 3,381 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    :eek: Damn! I feel so sorry for him. But it is a risk he should be aware of.
  • tradetime
    tradetime Posts: 3,200 Forumite
    JoeCrystal wrote: »
    :eek: Damn! I feel so sorry for him. But it is a risk he should be aware of.

    Yep, and sadly I am sure there are a lot of those stories about.
    Hope for the best.....Plan for the worst!

    "Never in the history of the world has there been a situation so bad that the government can't make it worse." Unknown
  • sabretoothtigger
    sabretoothtigger Posts: 10,036 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Combo Breaker
    Sounds like he has not sold at all.



    Here is a big trade I saw last summer on another forum which has something in it to learn I guess :/


    Graph for period of investment discussed below:

    2n6x7pd.jpg
    http://www.shareprice.co.uk/LLOY/LLOYDS-BANKING-GROUP
    Okay, here goes, my £200,000 trade 21-Jul-08 08:55 PM

    As promised, here is my thread re my big gamble by purchasing lloyds shares....

    The funds cleared into my account this morning...£199,957 sent from the re-mortgage.

    Am damned annoyed at how much lloyds shares have rallied these past few days, if only I had got this money last Wednesday when they were below 300 pence per share!

    I am gambling that there will be a fall back in the next few days, so for today I just purchased 5847 shares at 342 pence per share, total cost £19,998 after stamp duty. I am using ETrade as the broker.
    Still sitting on £180,000 cash, so will update this thread as and when I make further trades!
    22-Jul-08 06:21 PM Today I took advantage of the drop in price from yesterday to purchase a further 7991 shares at 312 pence, total cost £24,998.

    I am still hoping that there will be a further drop in these shares and am holding back the remaining £155,000 in cash in the hope of purchasing below 300 pence per share.

    In any case, I want to purchase all the shares before they go ex-dividend on 6th August as the dividend income is key to my plan to still make a profit on the dividend over my regular mortgage payments.
    23-Jul-08 08:29 PM Today I sold the 7991 shares I purchased yesterday. Sold at 335 pence per share (purchased yesterday at 312p), netting a profit of £1784 after costs.

    Will use this profit to effectively cover my mortgage payment for the next month or so (which is around £960/month i/o) which also gives me more time to digest half year results etc etc and hang back on a large purchase if necessary.

    I am back to now holding 5847 shares purchased at 342 pence. Still hoping for a drop in the near future back towards 300/320 pence per share, where I will then purchase a large amount (£100k or so).
    24-Jul-08 07:52 PM Yeah....having a bit of fun being a day trader at the moment.....purchased 10,000 at 337 pence today; holdings currently are
    5847 @ 342p £19,998
    10,000 @ 337p £33,879

    Have set some limit orders to purchase tomorrow at 329p (5000) and 324p (5000) and to sell at 349p (10,000
    25-Jul-08 06:32 PM Today I purchased 21,729 shares at 321 pence, total cost £69,999

    Holdings to date:
    5847 at 342p £19,998
    10,000 at 337p £33,879
    21,729 at 321p £69,999
    Total invested to date £123,876
    £1784 made in a one day buy-sell trade

    Will invest the rest to bring total investment up to £200k next week.
    29-Jul-08 09:59 PM Purchased a further 12,291 shares at 324 pence recently...

    big day tomorrow with interim results so hope everything reported will be ok.
    30-Jul-08 07:33 PM Well am considering the interim results today.....

    very pleased with the dividend increase, a show of confidence from the board, and this will come in useful to me as I now hold 60,469 shares!

    Once you read past the "SHOCK 70% drop in profits" headline, these results are actually very strong across all three business divisions in the bank.

    I personally think that Lloyds results today now show that they have got all the real bad news (re credit write downs) out in the open now and can concentrate on continuing to build longer term profit growth etc.

    As I said in earlier posts, this is a minimum 3 year investment for me...not in it to make a quick buck so I am going to sit back and enjoy the dividends for now and forget about the share price.
    30-Jul-08 10:23 PM Hi there Fundamental...thanks for your interest in my great financial adventure
    Since I received the chaps sum from the solicitor from my re-mortgage, these are the trades/shares I am currently holding (which have been purchased from the mortgage money) :-

    5847@342p (Etrade) £19,998
    10,000@337p (Etrade)£33,879
    12,291@324p(Etrade) £39,998
    21,729@321p(Etrade) £70,000
    6102@312p (Etrade) £19,107
    4500@305p (Etrade) £13,804
    60,469 in total as at 30/7/08

    I also bought and sold 7991 shares on the same day making a cash profit of £1784

    I am also holding around 20,000 furtherLloyds shares (including the 3000 mentioned on my other thread) but these are a combination of matured sharesaves (when I worked for LTSB) and shares that have been bought with cash (rather than the mortgaged borrowed money). Therefore, this other holding is being kept entirely seperate to my shares bought from my re-mortgage as mentioned above.

    Now that I have completed my portfolio of purchasing LTSB shares from the £200k I received from the re-mortgage, I intend to regulary update this thread with my profit and loss account of where I stand....I will continue to do this until this expirement comes to an end (which is hopefully when I sell all the shares again at a price of at least 450 pence, and then repay the capital I borrowed on the mortgage)

    Here is my profit/loss statement to date:-

    21/7/08 Chaps Fee £45.25 cost £45.25 loss

    23/7/08 B/S 7991 Shares £1784.40 gain
    £1739.15 profit

    Hope that clarifies exactly where I stand financially with this experiment. I intend to disclose every aspect of how things are going on this thead, so people that are interested can follow my fortunes (or mis-fortunes?) with me through the roller-coaster of the coming months!
    Richard
    13-Aug-08 09:35 PM Since my last post, have been taking advantage of the rising share price to sell off my lots of shares as they moved into profit

    5/8/08 Bou/Sol 4500 Shares +£676.47 £2415.62 profit
    7/8/08 Bou/Sol 2000 Shares +£291.30 £2706.92 profit
    11/8/08 Bou/Sol 6102 Shares +£950.50 £3657.42 profit
    12/8/08 Bou/Sol 21,729 Shares +£1566.64 £5224.06 profit
    12/8/08 Bou/Sol 12,291 Shares +£1413.40 £6637.46 profit
    £75,528 currently held in cash.

    So a healthy £6637 profit at the moment, took advantage of the big falls today and late yesterday to pile back in so am now currently holding:

    5847 @ 342p (Etrade) £19,998
    10,000 @ 337p (Etrade)£33,879
    3000 @ 330p (Etrade) £9959
    5000 @ 321p (Etrade) £16,065
    5000 @ 321p (Etrade) £16,065
    5000@ 318p (Etrade) £15,985
    2000@315p (Etrade) £6341
    2000 @307p (Etrade) £6180
    37,847 shares

    Have my first mortgage payment (interest only) on 25/8/08 which will cost me £1428 (larger than normal for the first payment) so this chunk will be taken off my profit figure. But am entitled to a dividend of £6380 for the shares held on ex-dividend date so will receive this 1/10/08.

    What I am hoping to show as this post continues is that it is possible to borrow a large sum of money, and actively trade in just one company and make an ongoing profit.

    Regards all.
    29-Aug-08 07:49 PM As its the end of the working month, here are my share transactions and profit/loss trades since my last post.


    22/8/08 Bou/Sol3000Shares
    +£240.10
    £6877.56 profit
    22/8/08 Bou/Sol 3000 Shares +£239.35 £7116.91 profit
    25/8/08 Mort Interest Payment -£1428.67 £5688.24 profit :(
    25/8/08 Mort Application Fee -£599 £5089.24 profit :((
    28/8/08 Bou/Sol 2000 Shares +£134.31 £5223.55 profit
    28/8/08 Bou/Sol 2000 Shares +£152.70 £5376.25 profit at 31/8/08

    Lloyds is going nowhere these last few weeks, seems to be moving steadily between 280p to 320p, not sure which way it will eventually break out of this, but I can't see anthing lower than 240/250 pence as a bottom for this share, time will tell I guess.

    Sentiment : Strong Buy

    16-Sep-08 06:04 PM Good comments, I agree.

    As I said at the start of my thread, I am looking for this as a three year deal, so I view the madness of the past two weeks as interesting, rather than panicking.

    I still predict we are not at the bottom, hence why I am deliberately holding back some of my funds to be able to take advantage of a purchase below 250 pence per share. I bought some today at 260 pence and sold late afternoon at 280 pence, netting a further £700.

    I am looking foward to receiving my first juicy dividend on the 1st October and will be updating my positions to date then.

    Sentiment : Strong Buy

    13-Oct-08 04:16 PM Well I've been pretty quiet lately, and I am sure that some of you have been wondering what has happened to me so here is my update.

    I will have to be brief as I am on suicide watch and am only allowed a few minutes to write this update before I am put back in my padded cell. :)


    I think its fair to say that I didn't expect recent events to happen!!!!!!!!!!

    Without going into too much detail I am holding a large bulk of shares at an average purchase price of 320 pence (£100K or so) and the rest of my £200k cash has been in and out like a yo-yo actively day trading in LLoyds TSB.

    I wish I could turn the clock back but had I sold my entire holding a week ago on Friday afternoon 3rd October I would have walked away at that point with an overall profit of around £40,000 (including the £10k dividend I received 1/10/08)

    However, I didn't sell and what has happened in the last 2 weeks just defies belief, the fall in LTSB share price has been incredible.

    Taking the current share price of 150 pence, I am sitting on a paper loss of around £60,000. Of my £200k, around £160k is in Lloyds TSB shares, the most expensive at 340p and moving down from that price in neat little bundles every 5p or so down to 208 pence. I still have £40,000 in cash from the original £200k

    My plan which looked relatively failsafe on paper is in tatters; I had always figured that if the shares fell there would be the back-up of the dividend instead, which would at worst cover the mortgage payments. Now we know that there will be no dividend for at least 2 years so that is out the window.

    What do I do know? Well, I am certainly not going to sell at a massive loss. I feel that bank shares have been massively over-sold due to total panic and loss of confidence. When it is all completed, I also think the HBOS merger will be fanastic for the future earnings of this company. I, like many shareholders, feel totally misled by the information I had on Lloyds TSB. Both the company and all reports said that Lloyds was relatively immune to the downturn and well capitilised. That certainly looks like it was not the case now.

    The biggest winner out of all this will undoubtedly be the government, who receive massive stakes in the main banks at knock down prices together with the high guaranteed yield of their preference shares. I do expect Lloyds shares to remain volitile for the rest of the year then settle down around £2.

    I have no doubt that in three or five years this will be a bank back to top form making large profits on business with better-than-today margins, together with the huge cost savings that will certainly be extracted from the merger. I can only hope that the shares recover to the average price I need of 275 pence in order to recover my losses.

    I guess that I can take some comfort that in the scale of the history of LTSB share price, an average price of 275 pence is a good one, rather than say the £5 they were a year ago.

    Keep faith people, you don't lose anything unless you sell!
    11-Nov-08 07:03 PM Yes I'm still here and still alive, although I did like that comment about the electricity being cut off.

    Actually, since my last post a couple of weeks ago I am feeling quite smug with myself, especially today.

    Despite being stuck with many Lloyds shares that I had purchased between 330p and 220p (it seemed a good price at the time), I have been doing some daring 'averaging down' recently. By that I mean I have been selling all my Lloyds shares at a given price, and then quickly buying back within a day or two at a cheaper price. For example, I sold my entire holding of around 70,000 shares yesterday for 198.4p and purchased them all back again today for 181pence. This is the fourth time I have managed to do that now in the last 2 weeks and so I have been able to hugely cut my overall losses down by around £35,000. My average purchase price now is between 160 pence and 320 pence.

    Apart from that, I don't really have anything else to add to my earlier post, am still looking forward to the HBOS merger and seeing the benefits of this in the longer term, and of course, like most people here, looking forward to the dividend starting again, which looks to be only a year away now, with a shares dividend to be paid for the full year 2008 also.
    11-Nov-08 07:05 PM I also forgot to mention that the mortgage that I took out for £200k to purchase the shares has also reduced hugely in cost, I took a tracker rate of base rate plus 0.75% so from next month my I/O payment is only at 3.75% and has reduced down by around £340 per month, so that has also been some good news for me.
    http://uk.messages.finance.yahoo.com/UK_Stocks/threadview?m=tm&bn=UKF-Stocks-LLOY.L&tid=1571&mid=1571&tof=132&frt=2
  • JoeCrystal
    JoeCrystal Posts: 3,381 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    This is so depressing to read _pale_
  • sabretoothtigger
    sabretoothtigger Posts: 10,036 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Combo Breaker
    Not sure if this good or bad relativity
    28-Jan-09 10:55 PM ............he has stated that he is out of Lloyds, after incurring a £40k loss, and has now invested heavily in a single share again - this time BT.
    If you want my opinion BT are an awful investment but I guess the yield looks nice and they are a utility so maybe its not as bad as holding lloyds


    Lloyds is the countrys most widely held share afaik and of course in addition all tax payers hold them
  • sabretoothtigger
    sabretoothtigger Posts: 10,036 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Combo Breaker
    The genius of hindsight. Risk management is number one I always hear and Im crap at it personally because who likes to sell at loss but sometimes that what is needed.

    Selling bank shares early Jan and buying at their lows could have wiped out previous losses with the 100% gain they had

    Barclays went from 190 to 50p and then 100p.
    So even if you originally bought Barclays at £3.80, trading down like that would have meant you lost no money overall, I think thats how the city guys must do it plus they dont have commission to worry about really
  • tradetime
    tradetime Posts: 3,200 Forumite
    Totally nuts, but I guess people like him feed the market so I can't complain.
    Hope for the best.....Plan for the worst!

    "Never in the history of the world has there been a situation so bad that the government can't make it worse." Unknown
  • NPowerUser
    NPowerUser Posts: 409 Forumite
    Mortgage-free Glee!
    What I find sad about David Peters is the fact he had all his money tied up in Lloyds and RBS.

    I often thought someone with all that money and background, would try and diversify into more than just two stocks and both in the same sector.

    There must be thousands affected up and down the UK ranging from a few thousand pounds losses up to millions. Very sad indeed.
  • tradetime
    tradetime Posts: 3,200 Forumite
    The genius of hindsight. Risk management is number one I always hear and Im crap at it personally because who likes to sell at loss but sometimes that what is needed.

    Selling bank shares early Jan and buying at their lows could have wiped out previous losses with the 100% gain they had

    Barclays went from 190 to 50p and then 100p.
    So even if you originally bought Barclays at £3.80, trading down like that would have meant you lost no money overall, I think thats how the city guys must do it plus they dont have commission to worry about really

    Trading is a game of risk management, to me it is always about the risk, if you do not control your risk, you may get lucky, and if it is a big enough gamble you may make enough to walk away, however it is rare that anyone is in that position, so after one lucky gain they are emboldened to do it again and again, soner or later the market will swallow you up.
    Hope for the best.....Plan for the worst!

    "Never in the history of the world has there been a situation so bad that the government can't make it worse." Unknown
  • sabretoothtigger
    sabretoothtigger Posts: 10,036 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Photogenic Combo Breaker
    It is dam hard to keep a level head. I think its easier on the guys playing with someone elses money, its their job but they are slightly more distanced from any instant gain
    Maybe trading within a sipp works better as you wont see it for a decade or more

    Barclays at 50p was all risk it felt to me, I could see the 50p turning point but who is to say they wouldnt disappear over night.
    An option or covered warrant on Barclays would have been an acceptable risk in comparison it seems, I know very little about that market and its dynamics though, looks extreme
    http://uk.warrants.com/services/quotes/searchall.php?code=BARCLAYS

    I saw an offer for a free book, not sure if it would discuss fine details though.

    Just a free offer I just spotted that you might like:

    Quote:
    logo_tradefair5.gifTradefair - Naked Trader offer

    Fill out the details below to receive your free copy of the Naked Trader by Robbie Burns
    http://www.global-investor.com/tradefair/index.htm


    Tradefair is a spreadbet company both in sports and stocks. Not sure what the catch is exactly but it seems a reasonable offer and a book worth reading as Mr Burns seems a level headed bloke from what I've read previously
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