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Share Price movements since Jan 1st

Posted: February 4th, 2024, 12:11 pm
by tjh290633
I keep a record of the movements in the prices of my shares from the start of each year. Here is the situation at the end of last week:

02/02/2024                   

Epic Change Yield
GSK 11.10% 3.67%
BA. 5.54% 2.40%
RKT 5.42% 3.27%
IMB 3.57% 7.75%
BATS 3.03% 9.87%
DGE 2.82% 2.79%
IMI 1.96% 1.56%
ULVR 1.71% 3.89%
HLN 1.04% 1.29%
LGEN 0.96% 7.56%
TSCO 0.10% 3.85%
VOD 0.06% 13.46%
TW. -0.07% 6.53%
UU. -0.24% 4.42%
PSON -0.39% 2.26%
WDS -1.02% 11.16%
BP. -1.60% 4.80%
NG. -1.65% 5.43%
AV. -1.93% 7.50%
AZN -2.26% 2.25%
SGRO -2.75% 3.10%
SHEL -3.89% 4.09%
S32 -4.39% 3.92%
BLND -5.06% 6.17%
TATE -6.45% 3.12%
RIO -7.41% 5.89%
ADM -7.82% 4.12%
IGG -8.62% 6.49%
BT.A -9.91% 7.06%
PHP -9.97% 7.21%
SSE -10.10% 3.59%
BHP -10.43% 5.72%
SMDS -10.54% 6.51%
LLOY -11.31% 5.95%
KGF -11.80% 5.74%
Av.Chg -2.64% 5.27%

As always there are some patterns to be observed. No particular correlation with yields. FTSE100 -1.52% by the way.

TJH

Re: Share Price movements since Jan 1st

Posted: February 4th, 2024, 6:38 pm
by OhNoNotimAgain
After the optimism in December that interest rates could be coming down it was perhaps to be expected that buyers’ remorse set in during January and depressed equity markets. Not only were hopes of lower interest rates scaled back but geopolitical tension, especially in the Middle East, raised concerns that growth in the near-term may not be as buoyant as previously expected. The interruption to shipping, raising freight costs and hence inflation, were the main concern. Worries about the pace of growth in China, especially around its property market, were also a factor. This had a specific negative impact on commodity prices which was evidenced by the Material Sector recording the largest drop in the UK market in January by some margin.
The Energy and Financial sectors also reported falls, although only about half as much as Materials. Expectations that business failures are set to rise in the near term probably impacted sentiment towards financial stocks. Weakness in Energy is slightly surprising as oil prices trended higher during January as tension rose in the Red Sea and Persian Gulf.
However, there were positive returns from several sectors; including Consumer Discretionary and Staples, demonstrating that the public still has money to spend and wants to spend it. A positive return from Industrials was also a welcome development and backs up the continued economic growth narrative even though it is much weaker than desired. Unusually, changes in foreign exchange rates were not a significant factor in the equity over the month as sterling remained about the same level against the dollar.

Re: Share Price movements since Jan 1st

Posted: February 4th, 2024, 6:44 pm
by Lootman
OhNoNotimAgain wrote:there were positive returns from several sectors; including Consumer Discretionary and Staples, demonstrating that the public still has money to spend and wants to spend it.

May I add a few more YTD examples?

Facebook/Meta, up 37%
Nvidia, up 37%
Netflix, up 20%
Amazon, up 14%
MicroSoft, up 11%

So much for the theory that mega-cap stocks are too big to give good returns. These are 5 week returns people!

Re: Share Price movements since Jan 1st

Posted: February 8th, 2024, 11:54 am
by OhNoNotimAgain
So not Tesla then?