Good morning! We're expecting a lot of results announcements today, please stay tuned!
Phew! I think that's everything - let us know if we missed anything.
1pm: all done for today! Thank you for reading and thanks to Roland and Megan for making this truly a team effort today.
Companies Reporting
Name (Mkt Cap) | RNS | Summary | Our view (Author) |
---|---|---|---|
SEGRO (LON:SGRO) (£9.4bn) | JV to develop a £1bn data centre | JV with Pure DC for 56MW / £1bn data centre in Park Royal London. Expect to pre-let to hyperscaler. | |
Smiths (LON:SMIN) (£6.8bn) | Interim Results | Organic rev +9.1%, improved margins with adj EPS +14%. Full year guidance unchanged. | |
Kingfisher (LON:KGF) (£5.0bn) | Full Year Results | In line. LFL revenue -1.7%, adj PBT -7% to £528m. FCF stable at £511m. Share gains in main mkts. | AMBER (Roland) Kingfisher is arguably cheap and has a growing trade business. The group also continues to generate plenty of cash. On the other hand, a lack of growth highlights cyclical exposure, while onerous lease liabilities suggest a possible drag on future cash flow. I’m neutral at this level. |
Bellway (LON:BWY) (£2.9bn) | Interim results | In line. Completions up 12% to 4,577. Rev +12%, adj PBT +12% to £150m. Outlook unchanged. | |
Morgan Sindall (LON:MGNS) (£1.5bn) | Trading Update | Strong trading in Fit Out division means FY25 results to be slightly ahead of consensus. Other divisions are “broadly on track to perform in line”. | GREEN [no section below] (Roland) Upgrades to guidance are almost routine for this well-run and founder-led construction group. The shares have pulled back somewhat recently and look reasonably priced to me on a P/E of 11. The StockRanks concur at 98/100. |
Gamma Communications (LON:GAMA) (£1.2bn) | Full Year Results | In line. Rev +11%, adj EPS +13% to 85.1p. Growth in all business units. Confident outlook. | GREEN (Megan) I always long for something a bit more exciting from Gamma, but perhaps steady boring growth is all this company really needs to deliver. The numbers for FY2024 are as solid as ever. |
Fevertree Drinks (LON:FEVR) (£938m) | Full Year Results | Group revenue flat despite 12% growth in the US (the group’s largest market). PBT rose by 60% to £35.5m. This was mainly due to glass costs and freight rates normalising, generating a £17m saving.Outlook bolstered by strategic partnership with Molson Coors, but 2025 guidance unchanged for low-single digit sales growth and reduced EBITDA margin, as the US business transitions. | AMBER (Roland) [no section below] Fevertree has a strong brand and continued US growth potential. But it’s not clear to me if the company can regain the high profitability seen in the past. Last year’s 10% operating margin is fine for this sector, but a long way from the 20%+ seen prior to 2020. There could be a long-term opportunity here. But with the stock trading on a P/E of 30 and a flat earnings outlook for 2025, I’m most comfortable taking a neutral view at this point. |
A G Barr (LON:BAG) (£695m) | Full Year results | Operating margins widening ahead of plan to 13.6%. Sales +5% and adj pre-tax profits +16%. | |
AO World (LON:AO.). (£556m) | Trading Statement | LFL rev +7% to £1.1bn. FY adj PBT +30%, around “top end of guidance”. | AMBER (Graham) [no section below] |
M P Evans (LON:MPE) (£500m) | Full Year results | Revenue +14.8% to $353m, reflecting 13% increase in average mill-gate CPO prices to $823/t and lower fertiliser costs. | GREEN (Roland) [no section below] I think this is a good business with scale and a very respectable record in this sector. Sustainable oil increased to 69% of output last year and mgt are targeting further increases. Today’s 16.7% dividend increase to 52.5p maintains a record stretching back over 30 years. With y/end net cash of $46m, MPE is in a good position to make acquisitions. Palm oil pricing is a risk, but broker Cavendish has upgraded FY25 EPS estimates today, albeit below FY24 record levels. I remain positive given the strong balance sheet and track record. |
Pollen Street (LON:POLN) (£437m) | Full Year Results | Ahead of exps. AUM +29% to £5.4bn. PBT +24% to £49.6m. EPS 78.8p. Confident outlook. | GREEN (Graham) I'm upgrading my stance on this as I'm finding nothing to dislike and plenty to like about the growth story at this private equity and private credit fund manager. |
Warehouse Reit (LON:WHR) (£435m) | Final possible offer from Blackstone of 115pps/£489m. | Offer represents 39.6% premium to 24 Feb 25 close, but is 10% below Sept 24 NAV of 127.5pps. | |
Ashtead Technology Holdings (LON:AT.) (£433m) | Full year Results | Acquisitions contributed the majority of the 52% revenue growth (organic revenue +14%), which ‘exceeded financial and strategic objectives’. | |
Ab Dynamics (LON:ABDP) (£427m) | Trading update | In line with guidance updated in November for the year to August 2025. First half revenues +11% to £58m thanks to strong order growth especially from the Asia Pacific and North American regions. | GREEN (Megan) [no section below] I still miss the days of wonderfully high quality metrics at AB Dynamics, which have been eroded by the company’s long list of acquisitions in recent years. But the growth brought in by these acquisitions is exciting. A series of earnings upgrades in the last few months means EPS is now expected to rise 26% in FY2025. Management has set out ambitions to get operating margins back towards 20%. I’m staying positive. |
IP (LON:IPO) (£423m) | Full year results | NAV declined to £952m (down 15% per share). Cash proceeds from exits of £183m. | |
WAG Payment Solutions (LON:WPS) (£409m) | Full Year Results | Net revenue +14%, adj PBT -18% to €46.3m due to higher finance costs. FY25 outlook in line. | |
FD Technologies (LON:FDP) (£367m) | Trading Statement | Ahead of exps. ARR +13% to £81.8m, contract value added +33% to £18m. Losses reduced. | |
Henry Boot (LON:BOOT) (£283m) | Final Results | In line with expectations after stronger second half. Land and property sales marginally lower at £224m. NAV per share +3.6%. | |
Tullow Oil (LON:TLW) (£204m) | Full Year Results | Revenue and capex marginally down at $1.5bn and $231m. Net debt reduced to $1.5bn. Drilling resumed at key oil wells. | |
Regional REIT (LON:RGL) (£169m) | Full Year Results | EPRA NAV +17% to £340.7m. LTV reduced to 41.8% (FY23: 55%) through £100m placing. 7.8p divi. | |
Michelmersh Brick Holdings (LON:MBH) (£97m) | Full Year Results | SP down 4% | AMBER (Graham) [no section below] |
EKF Diagnostics Holdings (LON:EKF) (£93m) | Full Year Results | Rev falls (move away from lower margin products). PBT £6.3m (LY: £2.1m). Internal hire for CEO. | |
Personal group (LON:PGH) (£66m) | Full Year Results | Momentum carried through into 2025. Revenue up 13% to £43.8m, with pre-tax profit up 34% to £6.8m. | AMBER/GREEN (Roland) [no section below] Strong numbers showing 14% growth in insurance income and a 10% increase in ARR for the group’s benefits platform. Good customer retention and continued growth. Perhaps my main concern is that the insurance division is so profitable, with an apparent operating margin of nearly 50%. I wonder if this might be seen as uncompetitive by a regulator at some point in the future. However, I can’t help remaining broadly positive at the current valuation. |
Fairview International (LON:FIL) (£61m) | Interim Results | H1 PBT £1.15m (last year: £1.4m). Organic growth: existing capacity, acquisition or new build schools. | |
Ultimate Products (LON:ULTP) (£60m) | Interim Results | Trading in line with revised expectations. Expected flat topline. Margins to improve in H2. | |
Real Estate Investors (LON:RLE) (£50m) | Final Results | LTV falls to 25%. Makes a pre-tax loss due to revaluations. EPRA net tangible assets 51.3p. | |
Time Finance (LON:TIME) (£49m) | Trading update | Full-year to be at least in line with recently upgraded market guidance (rev £36m, PBT £7.5m). | GREEN (Graham) [no section below] |
Xaar (LON:XAR) (£48m) | Full Year Results | SP +12% Rev -13%, adj. PBT -89% (£0.3m). Results “solid”? 2025: renewed optimism for the medium-term. The adjusted PBT forecast for2025 from Progressive has reduced from c. £200k to -£300k. Checking my notes from September, this forecast was previously as high as £1.6m. | AMBER/RED (Graham) [no section below] Leaving my mildly negative stance unchanged as I've been disappointed by this advanced printing company's financial results too many times in the past. Today's CEO commentary is optimistic and suggests that the ceramics market is nearing its trough, but how would we know? No revenue growth is forecast this year and the fresh downgrade to the profit forecast - into negative territory - leaves me with little faith in the recovery. At least the company still has a positive net cash balance (£9m) and a tangible balance sheet net worth of about £50m. |
Journeo (LON:JNEO) (£45m) | Full Year results | Rev +8% (£50m). PBT +33% (£5m). Cash £14m. Strong order book, unprecedented pipeline. | GREEN (Megan) Is there a bit of identity crisis going on here? This has the potential to be a high growth company, but it doesn’t seem to be behaving as such, with very little investment in 2024. Still, it’s got potential for more impressive growth and the shares aren’t prohibitively expensive. |
Getbusy (LON:GETB) (£25m) | Full Year Results | ARR +6% to £21.6m. Adj. EBTIDA £1.5m. Actual profit ~breakeven. Revenue outlook: in line. | |
Mission (LON:TMG) (£25m) | Full Year results and results of placing | Rev +1%, headline operating profit +80% to £9m, in line. Actual PBT +15% to £3m. Outlook: in line. | |
Kakuzi (LON:KAKU) (£18m) | Full Year results | Agricultural company reports in Kenyan Shillings. Pre-tax loss despite fair value asset gains. | |
Sareum Holdings (LON:SAR) (£16m) | Interim results | Completed Phase1 clinical trial. H1 after-tax loss £1.2m, in line. Cash £4.1m plus raised £1.1m. | |
Titon Holdings (LON:TON) (£8m) | AGM TU | Trading is slightly ahead of the Board's expectations. Net operating loss on an improved trajectory. Outlook: in line. Estimates from Shore Capital: adjusted PBT -0.1m in the current year. Market outlook remains challenging. | AMBER/RED (Graham) [no section below] This manufacturer of ventilation systems and window/door hardware is still loss-making but should be close to breakeven for the full year. The most recent balance sheet (Sep 2024) showed tangible equity of £10m. So there's plenty of asset backing but the assets have struggled to generate meaningful profits. I'm downgrading this slightly to AMBER/RED, to reflect the heightened risk (e.g. delisting risk) that goes with unprofitable nano-caps. Harwood Capital now own 28%. |
CPPGroup (LON:CPP) (£8m) | Full Year Results | PBT -£2.7m (LY: -£5.7m). Cash £9.7m. Change management programme completed. |
Graham's Section
Pollen Street (LON:POLN)
Up 5% to 750p (£457m) - Full Year Results - Graham - GREEN
This is a growing asset manager and an investor of its own funds that I’ve been slowly familiarising myself with.
The opening paragraph of today’s results is worth quoting in full:
2024 has been a pivotal year for Pollen Street with strong financial performance and strategic progress marked by growing Asset Management revenue and profits together with consistent Investment Company returns. Assets under Management ("AuM") increased 29%, with healthy growth across both private equity and private credit strategies. Pollen Street has entered 2025 with strong momentum and, with continued focus on its core specialisms, it looks forward to continued growth towards its medium-term target of £10 billion total AuM.
The medium-term target represents a near-doubling of current AUM (£5.4m).
Today's summary income statement shows a 72% increase in “Fund Management EBITDA”, from £14.9m to £25.7m. This is what I’d hope and expect to see from a fund manager that is scaling up - higher income dropping down efficiently into profits.
Pollen Street also earns income on its own portfolio, so that its total EBITDA is £57.5m. This is converted extremely well into £49.6m of after-tax net income.
I note that the company returned £48m to shareholders in 2024 - more than 10% of the current market cap.
Outlook: their priorities for 2025 are all eminently reasonable. They want to complete the fundraising efforts for their latest private equity and private credit funds, grow AUM towards the £10bn target, pay a progressive dividend, and return capital to shareholders through buybacks “subject to relative attractiveness compared to other value-creation opportunities”.
The €1 billion fundraising target for their latest private equity fund (mentioned here) was surpassed by the end of 2024.
CEO comment excerpt:
2025 has started well with continued fundraising momentum, solid asset performance and a promising pipeline of deployment opportunities. Looking ahead, we are strategically positioned to capture future growth with our specialist focus, diversified investor base and long track record of performance setting us apart.
Graham’s view
The company claims to have a specialist focus - I want to dig into this a little.
In private equity, their strategy is “buying and building great businesses serving the financial ecosystem across five key sub-sectors”, namely:
Payments
Wealth
Insurance;
Technology-enabled services
Lending.
In private credit, they provide “asset-based lending ("ABL") to mid-market companies across Europe”.
We provide funding to support everything from building homes, to funding SMEs, to vehicle financing…
Our team focuses on the mid-market where we believe the greatest opportunity and largest financing gap exists meaning we can create the most favourable risk-reward profile. This has increasingly led to Pollen Street having a reputation as the "go-to" provider in the market.
So it seems to me that the private equity strategy is very well focused on particular sectors, whereas the private credit strategy is more focused on a particular size of company rather than any specific sectors.
Their fund management fee rate on AUM was a very healthy 1.5% in 2024. This is much higher than we see at conventional fund managers (more vulnerable to competition from passives). Pollen Street are guiding for their rate to be 1.25% - 1.5% long-term.
On the balance sheet there is net equity of £579m, of which about £350m is tangible.
I’m going to upgrade my stance on this to GREEN as this is my second time looking at Pollen Street in recent times. I’m finding almost nothing to dislike and plenty to like:
The StockRank is 97 - it’s classified as a Super Stock.
PER only about 10x.
Operating leverage kicking in as the fund management platform grows
Attractive fee rates.
Shareholder orientation with lots of cash being returned to shareholders in a mix of dividends and buybacks.
There must be some risks I’m missing - please let me know in the comments!
Megan's Section
Gamma Communications (LON:GAMA)
Up 4.5% to £12.60 (£1.21bn) - Full year results - Megan - GREEN
Gamma Communications (LON:GAMA) never does an awful lot to generate huge excitement. It’s a telecoms company, operating across Europe and developing (or acquiring) communications technology to support businesses.
But it’s always been high quality. In the last five years, sales growth has averaged 13%, operating profits have climbed by an average 14%, operating margins have averaged 14.5% and ROCE averaged 23%. In 2022 and 2023, those super high quality metrics took a little bit of a stumble (nothing too drastic, but enough to stop the previously high performing share price in its tracks). It’s good to see that in 2024, those quality metrics seem to have returned to previous strengths.
Strong sales growth across the board
Underlying sales growth driven by price rises and greater uptake of newer products was reported across both of the group’s core divisions (business and enterprise). And this was supported by the first-time contribution of three acquisitions.
Debtor days for the company have risen slightly to 55 (that means it takes an average of 55 days for the company to collect the cash for services delivered), which isn’t anything too concerning.
Gross margins have widened slightly, which means the cost of delivering its services hasn’t risen as quickly as sales have. Operating costs ticked up slightly owing to the expenses arising from acquisitions. But overall operating margins have returned to 15.5%.
Resilient cash flows to fund further acquisitions
Cash generated from operations fell slightly to £117m, equivalent to an operating cash conversion of 129%. Capital expenditure was also slightly lower than the previous year at £19.2m - the majority of which was spent on development costs (and a small fraction on maintaining the network infrastructure).
Gamma rarely leans on its debt facilities to acquire new businesses and the same was true in 2024, with £24.9m of cash spent on the three acquisitions (or £12.5m net of the cash brought in with those businesses). Net cash inflows after taking into account the acquisitions, £27m of share buybacks and £17m of dividends was £17.8m.
Asset-lite business model
Both Gamma and its acquisitions are very light on assets. Most of the value on the balance sheet lies in the cash (£154m at the year end) and the value of its intangible assets, many of which are customer contracts.
The same is true of the businesses Gamma acquires. In 2024, the three newly acquired businesses brought in £21.7m of intangible assets, £10m of which was in customer contracts.
Megan’s view:
There’s really nothing bad to say about Gamma Communications. It’s generating cash which it uses to fund a sensible acquisition strategy and expand its footprint, especially in Europe. The market has been unimpressed of late, despite the fact analysts keep upgrading their forecasts. Based on current expectations for the year to December 2025, Gamma is trading on a quite-reasonable 13x forecasts. I have no reason not to stay Green. But investors really shouldn’t expect anything other than consistent (boring) growth.
Journeo (LON:JNEO)
Down 1% to 260p (£44.5m) - Full year results - Megan - GREEN
I am often surprised to find out that companies which provide vital infrastructure systems (like the technology which powers real-time information systems in transport hubs) are small companies listed on Aim.
The good news is that for these types of companies (and Journeo is one of them), the opportunities for growth are exciting. In 2024, the company made just under £50m of revenue selling its technology and transport management systems to the operators of rail, bus and airport travel hubs, mostly in the UK. Not one customer contributed more than 10% of the total revenue and there are plenty more of these types of customers who could be persuaded to use Journeo’s services.
In 2024, the 8% sales growth was largely thanks to a series of significant purchase orders across both of the company’s main divisions. The Fleet division signed two purchase orders for the company’s camera monitoring systems (designed to improve the safety of buses) with organisations operating bus services in London. The Passenger Systems division welcomed a number of new councils in the UK as customers.
Signing new customers is significant because most of the services provided are quite sticky. Although recurring revenues only contributed 14% of the total sales, customers signing up to install Journeo cameras in all their buses are unlikely to switch to another supplier any time soon. That means that it doesn’t cost the company very much to keep its customers and most of the operating expenses go towards signing new customers. Operating margins are climbing towards 10% - a good sign of this improving operating leverage.
Megan’s view:
I am struggling to really identify the type of stock Journeo is. It’s been listed since 2006 and it’s been a star growth company in the last five years, but it’s still not trading on a particularly steep price to earnings multiple.
Earnings have risen at a phenomenal pace in the last couple of years and they’re up another 46% in these numbers, which is ahead of consensus analyse expectations.
But the forecasts for next year are less impressive and investors seem wary of this - the share price has dropped sharply in the last year and the market hasn’t responded especially positively to these numbers.
There are questions that the company should maybe start to pay a dividend - after generating £7.5m of cash but only spending just over £1m on investing and financing activities. I would argue that it’s not a dividend that should be paid for, but a more aggressive growth strategy, one that can sign up slightly more material contracts which promise to deliver more recurring revenues.
I can’t tell which way this one is going to go, but leaning on the numbers and the statistics (which is what we like at Stockopedia) suggests that this is a decent investment. The quality metrics are ticking in the right direction and there is definitely scope for some further earnings upgrades if the company can keep up its track record of signing new customers. GREEN.
Roland's Section
Kingfisher (LON:KGF)
Down -12% to 246p (£4.4bn) - Final Results - Roland - AMBER
Today’s results from B&Q and Screwfix owner Kingfisher have received a poor reception, despite appearing to be in line with expectations.
For the first time in over six years, we grew our market share in all key regions. We delivered profit and free cash flow in line with or ahead of our initial guidance, with strong delivery against our strategic objectives.
Kingfisher is the biggest mover in the FTSE 100 today and is also a member of Ed’s 2025 NAPS portfolio, so I thought it might be worth a closer look on this crowded results day.
2024/25 results summary (y/e 31 Jan 25): trading commentary in today’s results highlights focuses on the positive factors – Kingfisher says it gained market share “in all key regions” and expanded its ecommerce operations in UK, Ireland, France, Poland and Iberia. Trade penetration also improved through the group’s main brands (excluding Screwfix, which is already focused on trade).
The UK was more resilient than France, with LFL sales up 0.2% despite a 7% LFL decline in big-ticket sales such as kitchens. In contrast, LFL sales in France fell by 6.2% with weakness across all categories.
Online is becoming an important channel for the group. Total ecommerce sales rose by 8.3% to £2.5bn last year, accounting for 19% of group sales (23/24: 17.4%). Most of these are click-and-collect, so won’t necessarily reduce the need for a large, costly store estate – but online capabilities may help to protect and enhance Kingfisher’s market share.
Turning to the numbers, there are not many positives on offer:
Sales down 0.8% at constant FX to £12,784m
Gross margin up 0.5% to 37.3%
Adjusted earnings down per share 5.2% to 20.7p
Reported earnings per share down 44.7% to 10.1p
Dividend unchanged at 12.4p per share
The improvement in gross margins did not translate into an improved operating margin figure, even at an adjusted level – Kingfisher’s retail profit margin fell by 0.4% to 5.4%.
At a statutory level, operating margin fell to 3.2% (23/24: 4.5%). This is well below historic average levels:
Perhaps the only bright spot was cash generation. The company’s own measure of free cash flow was stable at £511m (23/24: £514m). However, my sums suggest a slightly lower figure of £466m, versus £501m in 23/24. Not a disaster – but a more material decline.
Even so, Kingfisher’s cash generation remains a significant attraction – £466m of free cash flow gives a c.10% free cash flow yield after today’s drop.
The only problem I can see with this is that if the business doesn’t return to growth soon, future cash generation could be threatened by onerous leases.
My sums suggest net lease liabilities on the balance sheet of £440m (23/24: £486m). This reflects the present value of future lease payments, in excess of expected cash generation from these stores. In other words, it seems that a substantial proportion of Kingfisher’s store estate is potentially loss making.
These figures are regularly recalculated and may improve if trading picks up. But as things stand, this is a headwind to future profitability and free cash flow.
Outlook: Kingfisher is guiding for an adjusted PBT of £480m to £540m for 25/26, with free cash flow of £420m to £480m.
Adjusted pre-tax profit last year was £528m, so taking the mid-point of this fairly wide range suggests to me that adjusted PBT could fall to £510m this year. Assuming this drops through similarly to earnings, this appears to be a downgrade from previous expectations for a recovery in earnings this year:
Earnings estimates have trended downwards for much of the last 18 months:
Assuming flat earnings would leave Kingfisher on a P/E of 12 with a 5% dividend yield after this morning’s slump.
Roland’s view
Fundamentally, I think Kingfisher’s problem is that it’s pushing on a piece of string. CEO Thierry Garnier may be improving operations, but the group’s end markets are weak. Kingfisher’s long-term share price chart tells the story of its dependence on consumer spending and housing cycles – the shares are trading at similar levels to 20 years ago:
However, this business continues to generate plenty of cash and the shares can deliver a decent result for investors who are willing to trade in and out of them. The 5% dividend yield also continues to look fairly well supported to me, providing a useful income.
Meanwhile, a further £300m buyback programme could theoretically create shareholder value, as Kingfisher stock is currently trading below its book value of £6.3bn.
In my view, Kingfisher is reasonably cheap and remains in reasonable financial health. On the other hand, profitability is weakening and the company is exposed to headwinds such as next month’s minimum wage and NI increases.
In addition to this, Kingfisher appears to have very little ability to stimulate customer demand and is instead dependent on economic conditions and consumer sentiment.
The StockRanks scored Kingfisher highly prior to today, but I think this rosy view could be downgraded when the algorithms digest today’s results. I’m going to go AMBER here to reflect the combination of value and today’s downbeat guidance.
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