4Lun·

Today I received a brown letter from the tax office in my letterbox. 📬

On Friday the 13th... oh dear...

But contrary to the bad fears due to the date, an unexpected windfall of money from the overpaid taxes came back into the house.


The "play money" was divided among the adults. 💁🏻‍♂️💁‍♀️


While the wife was thinking about beauty 💇‍♀️ , 🦷 or a handbag 👝, my part was bought in $OMV (-0,67 %) at a price of [€36.66]. The low current share price and the stable dividend were the reason for the purchase.

This added a European company to the portfolio. This means that one of the largest (if not the largest) stock corporations in Austria has become part of the portfolio.

The 27.5% withholding tax does indeed reduce the appetite for dividends, but at least not all the money is only invested in 🇺🇸 or Germany 🇩🇪. So I will learn how the withholding tax from Austria 🇦🇹 works. I wish $OMV (-0,67 %) and all my fellow shareholders a stable share price and hopefully demand for fossil fuels for a long time to come. ⛽️ 🚢

14
5 Comentarios

Imagen de perfil
I've had them on my watchlist for ages but never found a way in for some reason 😀
Imagen de perfil
@Hotte1909 🗣️wenn not now 👋🏼Wann Then❔❓ 🎼🎵🎶🎵
1
Imagen de perfil
@Psychorex Yes, I've just taken another closer look at them. Do you think the bottom has been reached?
Imagen de perfil
@Hotte1909 For me it was enough with 4.xx% over 52 weeks low. There is always someone who buys cheaper, but in the long run I think the entry price is very fair. P/E RATIO 7.69
Imagen de perfil
@Psychorex yes, the price is also fair. But German and Austrian shares in particular are strange. Take a look at $KSB. Sales, profits and margins are rising. The share price is falling. P/E ratio is below 8 for all competitors the P/E ratio is around 15 or higher.
Únase a la conversación