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  3. Busy couple of weeks on results front

Busy couple of weeks on results front

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Investments and Portfolios
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  • A Offline
    A Offline
    Adam Kay
    Global Moderator
    wrote last edited by Adam Kay
    #282

    All prices are taken after the US close. FX is taken at 23.30GMT. With trackers(Global) some of their holdings are on exchanges which have not closed/opened at that time so these specific holdings will not be that days close.

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    • R Offline
      R Offline
      Ronski
      wrote last edited by
      #283

      IIRC correctly it was 3pm UK time, but that may have changed.

      The real reason for the slowdown is because I'm approaching another milestone in my pension pot, and as always it stubbornly doesn't want to go over it 😢

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      • A Offline
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        Adam Kay
        Global Moderator
        wrote last edited by
        #284

        Hi Ron, There isn't a snap shot take at 3pm UK. I think it's all taken 23.30 GMT(for us) and by doing so it captures the UK close and the US close. The broker-dealer probably does take prices before then as they will supply data to many other asset managers and some of them may report(they do) at 10.30pm uk time (t0) particularly if they have a large exposure to UK stocks.

        I hope this helps

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        • P Offline
          P Offline
          PM3
          wrote last edited by
          #285

          "think" ?

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          • R Offline
            R Offline
            Ronski
            wrote last edited by
            #286

            Thanks for the confirmation Adam, I seem to remember the 3pm bit was a long time ago, and I thought it may have changed.

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            • A Offline
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              Adam Kay
              Global Moderator
              wrote last edited by
              #287

              3pm(UK) is 'around' the time that the days buying and selling is conducted.

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              • A Offline
                A Offline
                Adam Kay
                Global Moderator
                wrote last edited by
                #288

                UK financial markets are under severe pressure as gilt yields surge and sterling tumbles. As of today, 2 September 2025, the 30-year UK gilt yield has risen to 5.69%, its highest level since 1998. This is up from 5.27% on 24 June, when the Labour government took office, marking a 42 basis point increase. The sharp rise reflects deep investor concern over the government’s fiscal management, with fears that borrowing and long-dated debt issuance could escalate. Sterling has fallen over 1% against the US dollar, highlighting eroding confidence in the UK economy. Inflation remains sticky, public finances are under strain, and tax rises are now widely expected — a move that is likely to weigh on businesses and investment. Many are questioning Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ handling of the economy, with some speculating she could be replaced if conditions continue to deteriorate. Political and economic uncertainty are driving yields higher and market sentiment lower.

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                • D Offline
                  D Offline
                  Ducati996R
                  wrote last edited by
                  #289

                  Problem is thou …..none of her potential replacements seem to have a grasp on basic economics

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                  • A Offline
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                    Adam Kay
                    Global Moderator
                    wrote last edited by Adam Kay
                    #290

                    I think the issues are-and im staying apolitical

                    Trust gap: The rhetorical wriggling reinforces the idea Labour says one thing, does another. I recall the first budget was a big shock, given the promises made not to and then another promise 'not to ever repeat it'. And it would seem the chancellor is leaking her ideas to see the reaction in advance. A novel way of formulating policy.

                    Economic credibility vs political honesty: Reeves is trying to be “fiscally serious” for the markets, while telling the public it won’t hurt them. The problem is, ordinary voters feel the hurt in their rent, bills, and taxes—so the words ring hollow. And I suspect there might be a shortage of broad shoulders after November.

                    Long tail risk: If the perception hardens that Labour is “mealy-mouthed,” it can lose the moral high ground it’s been trading on since Johnson/Truss era Tory chaos. Anyone recall the recent 'tweet' about lowering bus fares for families, when in fact the fare went up.

                    I think it's fair to say, the public is tired of hearing the government pat themselves on the back when it is clear the economy is faltering -inflation is sticky, growth evades us and interest rates are high. I'm surprised the BOE lowered rates (political?)

                    It is one thing to raise capital for investment. It's another to raise income to spend it on 'stuff' and it would appear this government has no intention of reigning in spending of any kind.

                    And then you have the Minister for Housing, who has gone on record before, calling out legal avoidance and how wrong it is, only to do the exact same thing. Regardless of your political colours this is poor. I'm sure she did something previously to mitigate GCT on her cheap council flat-the flat she bought under a scheme she then withdrew. Or is it tax everyone with money just as long as it's not me.

                    The issue with the UK is low productivity, particularly in the public sector

                    The bottom line is, higher costs are exactly the same as taxes so high inflation, higher interest rates, higher business costs, landlords, property, you name it are ALL taxes on working people.

                    That's my brief take-all while staying agnostic of course 🙂

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                    • R Offline
                      R Offline
                      Ronski
                      wrote last edited by
                      #291

                      I'm sick of labour blaming the conservatives for everything (they've been in power over a year now!). I also haven't had a pay rise since very early last year, the reason, minimum wage going up (so lower paid colleagues have, narrowing the pay gap) and national insurance rises, amongst other increasing costs, and thus the company can't afford to pay us more - yet they can still afford very expensive holidays! Labour has literally taken money out of my pocket, and they said they wouldn't hit the working man.

                      They need to get a grip on why things cost so much, the Faroe islands built a tunnel system with an undersea roundabout with three tunnels coming off it, total cost circa ÂŁ500m. We on the other hand haven't even put a spade in the ground yet the lower Thames crossing has so far cost circa ÂŁ1 billion.

                      Its only going to get worse.

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                      • D Offline
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                        dingg
                        wrote last edited by dingg
                        #292

                        The tories are just as bad

                        Miss appropriation of funds for ppe
                        Eat out to help out
                        Covid furlough bollocks
                        Boris
                        Unable to follow their own laws during covid
                        J rees mogg
                        Chancellors dodging tax

                        Not to forget Liz Truss and Kwazi Kwarteng

                        The whole lot are a shitshow

                        Best keep politics for another place 😎

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                        • A Offline
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                          Adam Kay
                          Global Moderator
                          wrote last edited by
                          #293

                          Ron and anyone else-you are free to discuss politics if you wish. After all, it has an outsized impact on your investments. Some warranted and perhaps even more that is not and why we have a non UK tilt for the present period and have done for some time.

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                          The value of your investments can go down as well as up, and you may get back less than you invested.

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