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Jefferies Sticks to Its Hold Rating for Celanese (CE)
Jefferies Sticks to Its Hold Rating for Celanese (CE)

Business Insider

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Jefferies Sticks to Its Hold Rating for Celanese (CE)

Jefferies analyst Laurence Alexander maintained a Hold rating on Celanese today and set a price target of $47.00. The company's shares closed today at $41.22. Elevate Your Investing Strategy: Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence. Alexander covers the Basic Materials sector, focusing on stocks such as MP Materials, Ashland, and Ecolab. According to TipRanks, Alexander has an average return of -2.1% and a 45.55% success rate on recommended stocks. In addition to Jefferies, Celanese also received a Hold from BMO Capital's John McNulty in a report issued today. However, on the same day, Wells Fargo maintained a Buy rating on Celanese (NYSE: CE). CE market cap is currently $5.19B and has a P/E ratio of -3.20. Based on the recent corporate insider activity of 36 insiders, corporate insider sentiment is positive on the stock. This means that over the past quarter there has been an increase of insiders buying their shares of CE in relation to earlier this year. Most recently, in May 2025, Mark Christopher Murray, the SVP – Acetyls of CE bought 1,479.00 shares for a total of $77,174.22.

We found Ireland's cheapest pint – with all beer on tap a tasty €4.50
We found Ireland's cheapest pint – with all beer on tap a tasty €4.50

Sunday World

time27-04-2025

  • Business
  • Sunday World

We found Ireland's cheapest pint – with all beer on tap a tasty €4.50

Family pub in Creeslough has a €4.50 price on all of its taps... and the locals and visitors are loving it John McNulty is happy to sell his pints at €4.50 for now A family-owned boozer in Donegal appears to be selling Ireland's cheapest pint — with all beer on tap for a tasty €4.50. McNulty's in the village of Creeslough is not only selling perhaps the country's cheapest pints of Guinness for €4.50, but all its other pints too, including Heineken, Tennent's and Smithwick's. Not only that, but a vodka there costs just €3.50, while a small bottle of wine is a price busting €4.50. 'I don't hear any complaints from the customers,' says owner John McNulty when asked about his bargain prices. John McNulty is happy to sell his pints at €4.50 for now 'I always say when I'm asked about it, 'it's €4.50 at the minute'. But it keeps going up, so I don't know if it will be that way for long. But that's the price it is at the moment. 'I was closed at the time of the lockdown and there were a lot of price increases. I hadn't put it up then so I'm catching up at the minute.' Single man John has been working in the pub since he was a boy. 'It's a family business, it's been in our family since 1964. It's a much older pub; it goes back to the 19th century,' he says of the boozer. 'I've been working here since I was young. I'm the owner of it maybe 15 years. 'It's a mix of a crowd. We were very busy over the Easter bank holiday weekend. 'Our busiest times are holiday times like during the summer, Christmas and Easter. Summer is when the visitors are around. 'We have a bar and a lounge. We do get a mix of people. 'I normally work in the mornings. But I'm never far away. I have staff there most of the time — I've three or four staff. Brian Brereton enjoys his pint 'We have music on a Tuesday night and Sunday night. It's a whole mix of music. 'We have card playing, darts playing, and we have a pool table as well.' John says Guinness would be his biggest seller. 'We just have the four taps, but Guinness would be our best seller. The Sunday World recently revealed how two pubs in Dublin's Temple Bar are now selling pints of lager for €11.45, and Guinness for €10.45. 'I wouldn't be away much and the way it is for me I can't comment on other places and how they operate their business. I wouldn't like to,' John says diplomatically when asked about those kind of prices. Tony Brereton with his Guinness John himself only drinks a small bit. 'I wouldn't really drink myself, not too much anyways,' he admits. He also reveals he knew some of the people caught up in the tragedy in the village, when 10 people were killed after an explosion in October 2022. 'I would have known some of them, and people there at the time too. The town is still in shock at what happened, absolutely,' he sighs. For now he's hoping to keep punters smiling with his delicious prices. 'I'm happy. It's a livelihood and a way of life, and that's the way it is. It's just sort of a village country pub and if it works then I'm happy with it,' he says. Visitors to the bar are thrilled with the prices and say that owner John is part of the charm. 'What a bar, €4.50 a pint,' says Dublin musician and DJ Tony Brereton. 'We're greeted by John pulling pints, who's always a gentleman. 'A year-and-a-half ago every drink was €3.70. Last year he put up all drinks to €4, now €4.50. 'It's still two euro cheaper than my locals.' Last month the Sunday World reported on how the The Auld Triangle on Dublin's Dorset Street is still selling pints of Guinness for under a fiver — at €4.95 at any time of the day. Drinkers are making the most of the cheaper pints While many rural pubs are selling pints of Guinness for €5, and some Dublin pubs such as Dis and Dat have promotional pints of stout and lager for €5 from Monday to Wednesday, the Auld Triangle is certainly the cheapest in the capital. In the Auld Triangle some of its lagers, such as Carling, Tuborg and Beck are €5, Carlsberg, Heineken and Bulmers are €5.80, while a pint of Beamish is €4.70. The price of a pint of Guinness in the nearby Temple Bar and Oliver St John Gogarty pubs in the tourist hotspot of Temple Bar is now an eyepopping €10.45, any time of the day or night. Both hostelries previously charged €9.95 for a pint of Guinness. And both of those bars are now charging a whopping €11.45 for most other pints, including Heineken, Carlsberg, Smithwick's and Bulmers. Spirits there range in price from €10.45 to €11.50, while a mixer on top of that is €4.95 and a dash €2. A glass of wine in the Temple Bar is €12. Last year we were first to report how the nearby Merchant's Arch was first to go through the €10 barrier for any pint, when it was charging €10.45 for a late night Rockshore Cider. Most of that pub's lagers and ciders, including Rockshore, are now €10.95 late at night, while a pint of Guinness there after a certain time will set you back €10.30. But the Wetherspoons chain still takes some beating. The Old Borough in Swords north county Dublin is charging a price busting €2.05 for a pint of a selection of ales, €2.95 for Strongbow cider and Fosters, €3.35 for Stella, €3.95 for Carlsberg and Coors. Its only stout on draught is Beamish, which costs €3.35 a pint. Wetherspoons' Dublin city centre branches are slightly more expensive.

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