How to buy and short Diageo shares
Diageo shares are a popular choice for traders across the globe. Find out how you can get exposure to this giant in the beverage industry with this step-by-step guide.
How to trade Diageo shares
Derivatives, such as CFDs, enable you to speculate on upward or downward share price movements without taking ownership of any physical shares.
Follow these steps to trade in Diageo shares:
Buying Diageo shares
- Create or log in to your IG trading account
- Search for ‘Diageo’ in the search panel
- Choose your position size
- Confirm the trade and monitor your position
You can speculate on the share price with derivates in order to:
- Get full exposure with a 20%-25% deposit on almost all of our tier one shares1
- Hedge your positions with CFDs and offset any losses against potential profits
How to short Diageo shares
You can go short on Diageo share price by speculating on downward price movements. The benefits of short-selling include the ability to profit from falling share prices, and the opportunity to hedge against any existing investments or long positions.
Short-selling Diageo shares
- Create or log in to your IG trading account
- Search for ‘Diageo’ in the search panel
- Choose your position size
- Confirm the trade and monitor your position
Diageo’s live market price
Diageo shares: the basics
Diageo shares are listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) under the ticker DGE, where it is a constituent of the FTSE 100. It also has secondary listings on the New York Stock Exchange (DEO) and Euronext (GUI).
Strong fundamentals make Diageo shares a popular choice for investors. The company’s shares have historically performed very well, with a 56.7% share price increase over the past five years, despite the wider market decline caused by the coronavirus pandemic.3 Diageo delivered a robust set of full-year 2020 results, and the company remains positive that alcoholic beverages will remain highly attractive in future.
Diageo pays a dividend twice a year – split approximately 40/60. In 2020, the dividend was 69.88p per share.4
What is Diageo’s business model?
Diageo’s business model can be broken into two segments:
- Premiumisation – where the aim is to reach more consumers, ‘increasing the penetration of spirits around the world’4
- Sustainability and responsibility – which focuses on reducing harmful alcohol use, protecting natural resources and increasing diversity in the workplace
Diageo has more than 200 brands, including Smirnoff, Johnnie Walker and Guinness. It sells these beverages in more than 180 countries around the world, with its biggest revenue producers being scotch and beer.
Diageo key personnel: who manages the company?
Diageo has several executives that manage the company in different regions across the globe. The key players are:
Ivan Menezes | Chief executive |
Kathryn Mikells | Chief financial officer |
Ewan Andrew | President, global supply and procurement & chief sustainability officer |
Debra Crew | President, Diageo North America |
Cristina Diezhandino | Chief marketing officer |
Sam Fischer | President, Diageo Greater China and Asia Pacific |
Alberto Gavazzi | President, Diageo Latin America and Caribbean, global travel & sales opex |
John Kennedy | President Europe, Turkey and India |
Anand Kripalu | CEO, United Spirits Limited |
Dan Mobley | Corporate relations director |
Siobhán Moriarty | General counsel & company secretary |
Mairéad Nayage | Chief HR officer |
John O'Keeffe | President, Diageo Africa |
How to analyse the Diageo share price
Buying or selling Diageo shares must always be based on a solid foundation of both technical and fundamental analysis. It’s important to study Diageo’s financials and other factors that affect the business before using your capital to deal shares or trade derivatives. You should also analyse the health of the economy and its sectors, review news reports, study the competition, and gather all other relevant information before making a trading or investment decision.
- Technical analysis is concerned with chart patterns, technical indicators and historical price action
- Fundamental analysis is based on the fundamentals of a company, including its net revenue or profit and loss statements
Some popular technical indicators are:
- RSI, which assesses the momentum of assets to gauge whether they are in overbought or oversold territory
- Moving averages, which can help to determine the direction of the current trend
- Stochastic oscillator, which enables you to identify the end of one trend and the beginning of another
Some popular fundamental metrics are:
- Earnings per share (EPS): determine the value attached to each share and whether the business is profitable or not by calculating Diageo’s earnings per share (EPS). To calculate EPS, divide Diageo’s profit by the number of outstanding shares
- Price-to-equity (P/E) ratio: outline how much you need to spend on Diageo shares to make $1 in profit. To calculate P/E, divide Diageo’s current market value per share by its EPS
- Return on equity (ROE): measure how much income the company makes on assets compared to shareholder investments. To calculate ROE, divide Diageo’s net income by stakeholder equity
- Dividend yield: compare the company’s annual dividends to the share price. To calculate dividend yield, divide the dividend amount by the share price, and then multiply by 100
Learn everything you need to know about fundamental analysis
Buying and short-selling Diageo shares summed up
- Derivatives enable you to speculate on share price movements without taking ownership of shares
- Buying or selling Diageo shares must always be based on a solid foundation of technical and fundamental analysis
1 Deposits on leveraged trades are 20%-25% for 99.14% of tier one shares (correct as of 1 June 2020). For more information, view our share trading margin rates
2 Tax laws are subject to change and depend on individual circumstances. Tax law may differ in a jurisdiction other than the UK.
3 As at 9 November 2020
4 Diageo, 2020
This information has been prepared by IG, a trading name of IG Markets Limited. In addition to the disclaimer below, the material on this page does not contain a record of our trading prices, or an offer of, or solicitation for, a transaction in any financial instrument. IG accepts no responsibility for any use that may be made of these comments and for any consequences that result. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of this information. Consequently any person acting on it does so entirely at their own risk. Any research provided does not have regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any specific person who may receive it. It has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Although we are not specifically constrained from dealing ahead of our recommendations we do not seek to take advantage of them before they are provided to our clients.
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