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Aviva plc shares

caveat_emptor
Posts: 765 Forumite


Can anyone explain the latest Aviva share wheeze? They are issuing a class B share that will be converted to cash and paid to the shareholder. At the same time the value of the class A shareholding is being devalued by the amount of the of the class B shares issued. So after this the shareholding will have the same value as it was at the start. What is the point?
Named after my cat, picture coming shortly
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Comments
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There's no wheeze. Just a mechanism to allow Aviva to return excess capital back to shareholders in the most cost efficient manner. The published company circular provided a full explanation.1
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Never let the perfume of the premium overpower the odour of the risk0
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Interesting as my late mother has 204 Aviva shares which I was looking to sell off then saw this. So from watching that video basically you end up with less shares for the same monetary value but actually own a larger % of the company per share once this is all finalised in May?0
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P1Fanatic said:Interesting as my late mother has 204 Aviva shares which I was looking to sell off then saw this. So from watching that video basically you end up with less shares for the same monetary value but actually own a larger % of the company per share once this is all finalised in May?On 31/05/22 or thereabouts you'll receive £207.44 (204 * 101.69p) in your brokerage account or by cheque or direct deposit from the registrar, depending on how you hold them.You'll own the same proportion of the company. Net net, all other things remaining equal, you won't be any better or worse off.0
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P1Fanatic said:Interesting as my late mother has 204 Aviva shares which I was looking to sell off then saw this. So from watching that video basically you end up with less shares for the same monetary value but actually own a larger % of the company per share once this is all finalised in May?0
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Thrugelmir said:P1Fanatic said:Interesting as my late mother has 204 Aviva shares which I was looking to sell off then saw this. So from watching that video basically you end up with less shares for the same monetary value but actually own a larger % of the company per share once this is all finalised in May?0
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Thrugelmir said:There's no wheeze. Just a mechanism to allow Aviva to return excess capital back to shareholders in the most cost efficient manner. The published company circular provided a full explanation.
Named after my cat, picture coming shortly0 -
caveat_emptor said:Thrugelmir said:There's no wheeze. Just a mechanism to allow Aviva to return excess capital back to shareholders in the most cost efficient manner. The published company circular provided a full explanation.0
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caveat_emptor said:Thrugelmir said:There's no wheeze. Just a mechanism to allow Aviva to return excess capital back to shareholders in the most cost efficient manner. The published company circular provided a full explanation.1
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I currently hold 275 Aviva shares. I'm now going to have to be forced to buy additional shares to round it up to a multiple of 100 or I end up losing 75 shares as there'll be no fractional shares!Consolidating sucks if you're after the dividend. Whilst the initial value of the shares remain the same, since you'll have less units you'll have a smaller multiplicator.0
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