Share Name | Share Symbol | Market | Type | Share ISIN | Share Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Imperial Brands Plc | LSE:IMB | London | Ordinary Share | GB0004544929 | ORD 10P |
Price Change | % Change | Share Price | Shares Traded | Last Trade | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
-12.00 | -0.43% | 2,780.00 | 1,580,454 | 16:35:10 |
Bid Price | Offer Price | High Price | Low Price | Open Price | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2,772.00 | 2,774.00 | 2,800.00 | 2,770.00 | 2,790.00 |
Industry Sector | Turnover | Profit | EPS - Basic | PE Ratio | Market Cap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cigarettes | 32.41B | 2.61B | 3.1203 | 8.89 | 23.38B |
Last Trade Time | Trade Type | Trade Size | Trade Price | Currency |
---|---|---|---|---|
16:35:11 | O | 583 | 2,780.00 | GBX |
Date | Time | Source | Headline |
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17/2/2025 | 17:32 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
14/2/2025 | 18:07 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
13/2/2025 | 17:20 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
12/2/2025 | 17:34 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
11/2/2025 | 14:24 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Director/PDMR Shareholding |
06/2/2025 | 17:12 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
05/2/2025 | 17:13 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
05/2/2025 | 15:19 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Holding(s) in Company |
04/2/2025 | 17:41 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
03/2/2025 | 17:19 | UK RNS | Imperial Brands PLC Transaction in Own Shares |
Imperial Brands (IMB) Share Charts1 Year Imperial Brands Chart |
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1 Month Imperial Brands Chart |
Intraday Imperial Brands Chart |
Date | Time | Title | Posts |
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16/2/2025 | 19:38 | Imperial Brands PLC (formerly Imperial Tobacco) | 9,151 |
31/7/2020 | 13:48 | IMPERIAL BRANDS | 2 |
26/9/2019 | 07:25 | Imperial Brands Podcast on Trading Update | - |
Trade Time | Trade Price | Trade Size | Trade Value | Trade Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
16:35:11 | 2,780.00 | 583 | 16,207.40 | O |
16:35:11 | 2,780.00 | 9 | 250.20 | O |
16:35:10 | 2,780.00 | 412,565 | 11,469,307.00 | UT |
16:29:55 | 2,774.00 | 90 | 2,496.60 | O |
16:29:50 | 2,773.00 | 306 | 8,485.38 | AT |
Top Posts |
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Posted at 17/2/2025 08:20 by Imperial Brands Daily Update Imperial Brands Plc is listed in the Cigarettes sector of the London Stock Exchange with ticker IMB. The last closing price for Imperial Brands was 2,792p.Imperial Brands currently has 837,417,472 shares in issue. The market capitalisation of Imperial Brands is £23,221,586,499. Imperial Brands has a price to earnings ratio (PE ratio) of 8.89. This morning IMB shares opened at 2,790p |
Posted at 14/2/2025 12:22 by marktime1231 IMB still a bit subdued on the back of BATs slump. Folks wondering if combustible market volume is really set to shrink 2% as BAT forecast, or whether IMB is potentially vulnerable to regional regulatory and legislative shocks. The only niggle I have detected is that Logista has lost momentum as a result of European economic weakness.The contrast with BAT has been exposed and I wonder if there will be a rotation from those who are holding both. IMB has done most of the hard work reducing debt to a manageable level, and the relative scale of a much more powerful buyback is shining through. On which note I wonder if the recovery in IMB share price means the argument is swinging more in favour of other ways to deploy surplus cash. Another £1.25B buyback in 2025-2026, or would it be more effective to deploy some on debt reduction and augmenting the dividend? Even on flat financial performance we can be confident of more good news however the surplus is used. |
Posted at 10/2/2025 09:57 by redbaron10 I remember in the dark days for this share under Cooper's leadership, the haters of big tobacco and all it stood for, alongside the ESG investing mugs,we had some posters on here saying companies like IMB were dead ducks for the future and the share price was headed for a tenner.Haven't seen their comments for quite a while now! |
Posted at 27/1/2025 11:41 by marktime1231 Big tobacco being rewarded for backing Trump's election campaign. IMB sharing the benefit which will be felt more by those with a bigger presence in the US menthol market.I don't think you can put a ceiling on where IMB share price might reach while there is an ongoing aggressive buyback programme and the reliable prospect of enhanced dividends. Take some gains at a level you are happy with, but it would only make sense to sell out when there is the safe prospect of better long term income elsewhere. The question of what to do and when is likely to resolve itself with the next round of industry consolidation. I am minded to sit tight until then. |
Posted at 27/11/2024 15:39 by speedsgh The share price has risen pretty much unabated since April this year and following the more recent steepening of the increase, this is now on a forward yield of 6.1% (based on DPS 160.32p in FY25). Surely the share price is due a breather fairly soon? |
Posted at 22/10/2024 23:09 by dmore2 #IMB share price to overtake Bats |
Posted at 14/10/2024 12:40 by laurence llewelyn binliner Consider when in FY2016 the share price was 4000 pence vs FY2023 (2000 pence) and 2250 pence now plus we have had the share buybacks on top to reduce the share capital for 2024/2025..SP 4000 pence / 2000 pence EPS 249.6 / 252.4 pence DPS 155 / 146 pence Operating profit GBP 3.5BN / 3.4BN Net debt GBP12.8BN / 8.4BN (-35%) Shares in issue 1.036BN vs 844M today (-18.5%) The company is well positioned, debt much reduced, the share price has a lot more catching up to do.. :o) If we look at the EPS/DPS being broadly similar there is a good argument for 5000 pence per share based on the reducing shares in issue, and the drop in net debt, 2500 could be just for starters as reducing inflation/interest rates drives funds looking for high yield stocks.. |
Posted at 03/9/2024 10:52 by marktime1231 The IMB share price cycle might have peaked for now, or it may well continue upwards. We are heading in to big dividend season so let's watch and see, I'm hoping for more progress.The upward pressure comes from the significant ongoing buyback, the belief at some stage there will be industry consolidation eg a merger with BAT, and the excellent yield while interest rates are starting to fall. The p/e here still says IMB is cheap rather than a risk-adjusted full price, whatever that is ... £24-25 perhaps. It may well be the case that IMB's ability to price up to counter falling volume will run out of steam. I don't buy the "accelerated" decline scenario, but yes tobacco volumes will continue to fall. Judging when to exit is always hard, but I understand the sentiment that at some stage we will all want to be out of this death stock. I have taken considerable capital gain by selling down some of the stock added when the share price was dirt cheap 4 and 5 years ago. Keeping the rest for now. The pre-finals trading update on 8 October worth waiting for. Of course taking the opportunity to pursue stocks where you see a better upside is a great reason to move on. Where to invest to capture the boom from falling interest rates is something we should all be considering. |
Posted at 02/9/2024 22:51 by wunderbar I last posted on this bb on 22 Nov 2022 with the share price at 2185p. I was optimistic we might hit my breakeven/exit point 2400p within 3-6 months given positive momentum at the time. Instead, it turned out to be yet another false dawn. As it transpired, 2185p turned out to be the high point of 2022, thereafter the share price embarked on a 10 month steady decline losing 632p [-29%] bottoming out at 1554p in Oct 2023. Talk about a kick in the b0ll0x.During this period I added to my position to get my average down to 2280p. Today, almost 7 years after my initial purchase, I finally pulled the trigger and bailed out at 2193p. I mentioned in my last post I was determined to claw back my entire stake despite being comfortably in profit if I included dividend income over the years. However, I reluctantly accepted defeat and booked a capital loss of 3.9%. If I factor in dividend income [inc. capital loss] it works out my investment has generated an average yield of 4.76% per year. All in all IMB has been a poor investment for me. As I’ve previously mentioned, my cardinal sin was averaging down too frequently during 2018-2019, this gung-ho approach spectacularly backfired with the share price falling over 1000p during these two years. Who remembers the cries of “it can’t possibly go below 2500p” and “surely won’t go under 2000p”. We all know how that turned out. Some might ask why have I sold up when the share price is only c.90p from my break even point. Well, plenty reasons. First and foremost, IMB has been on a fantastic run since April, climbing 532p [YTD low: 1662p / high: 2194p]. I just can’t see this rise continuing indefinitely, in my opinion it’s starting to look toppy hence decision to sell. Also note IMB hit a five year high today [albeit by a narrow margin] of 2194p before falling back to close at 2183p. I’m very wary we’re back to a similar level seen two years ago when share price peaked at 2185p, then fell off a cliff. Right now it’s hard to tell if IMB’s share price is consolidating at this level before its next leg up, or if we’re now at a point where a correction is imminent. Obviously I’m banking on the latter. But if we do see c.2300p in coming weeks/months then so be it. You win some, you lose some. My priority here is two-fold; firstly, protect my capital, and secondly, reduce my exposure to tobacco sector noting I also hold BATS which I think has more upside potential, a superior dividend, and far greater NGP exposure [noting BATS NGP segment achieved a positive operating contribution in 2023, two years earlier than it originally estimated]. I’m also wary the FTSE is not far off its all-time high. At 8364 it looks bloated to me and I’m worried a sell-off would possibly wipe-out a large portion of IMB’s gains. I don’t want to chance hanging around for another sharp fall in share price I should add it was never my intention to build a significant stake in IMB [significant in relation to size of my portfolio]. This being a result of overzealous buying in 2018-2019. Too many eggs in one basket is never a good idea, something I learned the hard way during Covid crash in March 2020 when IMB tanked all the way down to 1200p. I'm also mindful of future government intervention, further tightening of regulations. In the US the FDA's planned ban on menthol cigarettes is still pending but I'd expect a decision in the next 12-18 months. This is more pertinent to British American Tobacco. Given the accelerated decline in cigarette volumes, particularly US/UK, I have real concerns IMB’s Next Generation Products are not growing fast enough to counter this fall. In May, IMB reported NGP revenues jumped 16.8%, nevertheless this category is still loss making. I fear it's going to take a very long time to accelerate NGP profits to a level comparable to cigarettes. I think NGP growth rate needs to be significantly higher otherwise this could become a major issue at some point. They can't keep plugging the gap with price increases. I came across a Sharecast article back in May titled “pressures are building for Imperial Brands, says Jefferies”. Below are some snippets. Jefferies has lifted its target price for Imperial Brands following a strong set of first-half results from the cigarette, tobacco and vape group last week, but has maintained a 'hold' rating, saying that pressures are building for the company. The broker hiked the target price for the shares from 1,710p to 1,850p. "IMB's 1H24 was very robust. We continue to feel it is over-earning, however, which could mean difficulties at some point," Jefferies said, highlighting two key areas of risk in combustibles and reduced risk products (RRP). In combustibles, the broker said the industry volume backdrop in Imperial's core markets "continues to get worse and we don't see things improving", with first-half volumes in Australia, the UK and US down 25.3%, 15.2% and 8.7% respectively. "The key metric to assess, for us, is its fair share of RRP relative to cigarettes. This is a minimum requirement, in our view. IMB are way away from this hurdle rate on our estimates, with estimated US and EU combustible share in FY23 at 15.0% vs RRP stick equivalent share at 1.4%," Jefferies said. Improving this, the broker said, will require a material uplift in spend. END To close off, I must admit it seems strange no longer having IMB in my portfolio. It was a tough decision to sell but I feel I can put the proceeds to better use elsewhere, specifically targeting companies with potential to make significant capital gains. At this moment in time my top choices are BP, IPO, PZC, CNA and ADIG [all of which I already hold]. But there are plenty more on my radar such as Reckitt Benckiser, Diageo and Burberry to name a few. Would I consider buying back into IMB? Absolutely. But definitely a much smaller stake, and only at a price point I feel offers value for money. For me that would be 1600-1750p. Until then! |
Posted at 12/3/2024 12:44 by marktime1231 Further evidence about the effect of buybacks from BAT which surprised me a little. Not surprised that they are selling off the limited amount of ITC stock which they are free to divest, but I am surprised that they have committed all the proceeds to a buyback. Those of you fundamentally opposed will no doubt be furious, but somewhat cheered by the share price response.It smacks of desperation by Marroco, trying to stop the rot in BATs share price and respond to IMB / market pressure. But it has done the trick, a 3-4% rise since the rumour was outed yesterday afternoon, I suspect 3% will stick for a while. How is the ITC share price responding, where BAT will retain a 25.5% stake, and how much does this reduce future income / cash flow / profit by? Total proceeds of about £1,700M from a 3.5% ITC stake sale? £700M immediately committed to buybacks and it reads like the remaining £1B next year. Equivalent to about 3% of BAT mkt cap. Which is pee-ing in to the wind compared to IMBs programme. Which leaves BAT looking to free cash flow to continue to pay down debt to its modest target range of 2-2.5x ebitda. Which means it has to direct most of it to debt reduction for another 3 years or so. Not much for real dividend improvement nor for sustainable buybacks unless its finds other family silver to sell off. I remain much happier invested in IMB rather than BAT. |
Posted at 08/2/2024 13:14 by marktime1231 Well I don't see what was particularly exciting in BATs results. The thing which may have caused the share price boost is the announcement that it is looking again how to extract value from its India business ITC where it has a 29% stake which might be worth around $18B. It has been under pressure to sell up and reduce group debt but cited regulatory issues. Perhaps those hurdles are now being overcome.Modest revenue and profit performance, a dividend limping forward. Strong organic debt reduction progress, average interest rate has jumped from 4% to 5.2% (which compares to IMBs at roughly 4.8% in FY23), but still heavily saddled with about £36B borrowings (compared to IMBs approx £9.5B), it cannot commit to better dividend progress or buybacks unlike IMB. Next gen has started to make a tiny profit contribution. A 2% increase in quarterly dividends is below inlation. BAT yields about 9.5% compared to IMBs 8% as things stand, so maybe BAT was due an uplift. Quite why that is hurting IMB share price today who knows. |
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