Pets at Home Group has announced its preliminary results for the financial year ending 27 March 2025, revealing a tale of two divisions as the company navigated challenging market conditions.
Shares were fairly flat on Wednesday after the pet retailer and veterinary services provider reported group consumer revenue growth of 2.7% to £1.96bn.
CEO Lyssa McGowan said the group was becoming a ‘true pet care platform’ after a period of transformation. The term ‘platform’ relates to a focus on subscriptions, which are up 30%, and recurring revenues. The strength in subscriptions and the vets business has been essential in offsetting disappointing performance in the retail stores.
The vets business delivered consumer revenue growth of 13% to record levels. This growth was driven by increased customer visits, higher average transaction values, and substantial expansion in Care Plan revenues. Statutory revenues for the veterinary division rose 16.8% to £175.3 million on a like-for-like basis of 16.2%.
In contrast, the retail division revenue declined 1.8%. The segment was impacted by subdued growth in the pet sector, reflecting a challenging UK consumer environment, deflationary pressures, and normalising levels of new pet ownership following the pandemic boom.
Retail revenues fell 1.8% to £1.31 billion, with like-for-like revenue down 2.0%.
Overall group statutory revenues increased marginally by 0.1% to £1.48 billion, with like-for-like revenue declining 0.4%. Group underlying profit before tax rose 0.7% to £133.0 million, in line with company guidance, representing a margin improvement of 5 basis points.
“A ‘tail’ of two halves for Pets at Home this morning, as the retail side of the business continues to struggle due to tightened discretionary spending caused by the increased cost of living. As such, the purchases of new collars, beds or other toys and accessories are being scaled back from the family budget,” said Adam Vettese, market analyst at eToro.
“Pets at home are putting their best paw forward with the veterinary side of the business, which is continuing to show robust growth. This has helped offset weaker retail performance and brought overall results in line with market expectations. Pre-tax profit and earnings per share rose, reflecting operational resilience despite a challenging macro environment.”
Defence Holdings shares rose on Tuesday after the recently pivoted company announced a five-year strategic plan designed to capitalise on Europe’s expanding defence priorities.
Defence Holdings’ plan will target high-growth segments within the global defence market, which is currently valued at approximately $2.2 trillion.
The company was formerly Guild Esports and has shifted focus after Guild failed to secure financing to keep operations running and disposed of its gaming assets. Guild Esports was backed by David Beckham.
Defence Holdings’ strategic framework centres on drone warfare and aggregation, AI agents for defence operations, information and influence warfare, and critical infrastructure defence. These pillars reflect Europe’s renewed emphasis on sovereign defence capability whilst maintaining full NATO interoperability.
James Norwood, incoming Chairman of Defence Holdings PLC, highlighted the timeliness of their strategic shift. “Defence Holdings’ Five-Year Strategic Plan arrives at a defining moment for the UK and European defence landscape,” he said. Norwood has an extensive military background as a Royal Navy officer and subsequent experience advancing next-generation programmes at Raytheon Technologies.
Defence Holdings has set out its shop against a backdrop of significantly increased European defence spending following geopolitical tensions and security challenges.
Defence Holdings outlined a product-studio and buy-and-build model designed to capture opportunities within software-led defence segments across the UK and continental Europe. The company explained its five-year timeframe provides Defence Holdings with ample time to scale operations whilst maintaining agility in responding to emerging security requirements across European markets.
“Our new 5-year strategic plan sets a clear path for sustainable growth and value creation,” said Brian Stockbridge, Board Member of Defence Holdings.
“By focusing on disciplined investment, innovative product development and proactive management, we are confident in our ability to deliver long-term returns for our stakeholders and position the company at the forefront of our sector. I am particularly proud of the exceptional calibre of board members we have assembled – leaders with deep expertise across defence, technology, and capital markets.”
Dr Graham Cooley has increased his stake in spirits company Distil (LON: DIS) from 18.1% to 19.15%. The share price jumped 25.9% to 0.17p. This is the highest the share price has been since last October.
Jangada Mines (LON: JAN) investee company Blencowe Resources (LON: BRES), where it owns 7%, has received further grant funding of $500,000 from the US International Development Finance Corporation with a further $1m to come. There had been a pause in funding as the new US government assessed spending. The funding does not have to be repaid. The share price was one-fifth higher at 1.2p, which is a new 2025 high.
Poolbeg Pharma (LON: POLB) has been granted orphan drug designation by the FDA in the US for POLB001 for treating cytokine release syndrome caused by T cell engager bispecific antibodies. This is a side effect of cancer treatments. POLB001 is ready for a phase 2 study. The status provides seven year exclusivity after US approval, plus tax credits for development spending. This is a $10bn market. There is potential for securing a partner for clinical trials. The share price rose 16.3% to 2.85p.
Energy supplier Chariot (LON: CHAR) has raised $6.1m at 1.4p/share and an open offer could raise a further $1m. The cash will be invested in wind generation, gas and upstream assets. Chariot plans to demerge its transitional power business in the second half of 2025. The share price improved 15.2% to 1.641p.
Energy assurance and optimisation services provider Inspired (LON: INSE) has received an indicative offer of 81p/share from HGGC managed funds. The Inspired board has indicated that it would be minded to recommend the bid if it was at this level and the acceptance condition did not rely on Regent Gas, which owns 29.4%, accepting the bid. Regent Gas Holdings is offering 68.5p/share in cash and says it wants Inspired to stay on AIM. This offer has been rejected. The share price is 9.15% higher at 77.5p.
FALLERS
Reduced frequency of services hit the ongoing business of cleaning services provider React (LON: REAT) hit ongoing interim revenues. There were also two paused contracts. In the six months to March 2025, revenues rose from £10.6m to £12.1m, but that was after a £2.8m contribution from 24hr Aquaflow Services, which was acquired in October last year. It also helped gross margin improve from 27.1% to 32%, which should be sustainable because contracts have been in cost increases from higher National Insurance rates. Admin expenses have increased ahead of growth and because of running two systems at LaddersFree while business is transferred to a new online platform. Underlying interim pre-tax profit was flat at £1.1m, excluding acquisition costs of £220,000. There are some positive signs, but management is cautious about the second half leading to a forecast downgrade. Full year pre-tax profit is expected to be flat at £2.1m, but earnings will be lower because of shares issued to finance the 24hr Aquaflow Services acquisition. The share price declined 22.2% to 56p.
Metals One (LON: MET1) has slipped 10.1% to 38.6525p even though proposed US policies will speed up nuclear reactor testing and boost US mining of uranium. Metals One has uranium projects in Colorado and Wyoming.
On Friday, DP Poland (LON: DPP) announced that auditing of its 2024 results has not been completed and the figures will not be announced until late June. The share price fell 5.26% to 9p.
ECR Minerals (LON: ECR) says initial drilling results from the Bailieston project confirm the presence of gold and antimony. Antimony was intersected in two of the first three holes. The share price dipped 4.65% to 0.205p.
The FTSE 100 surged higher on Tuesday after Donald Trump’s latest retreat in his scatter gun approach to trade policy.
In another seemingly manufactured dip buying opportunity, equities bounced back from a short, sharp selloff caused by the latest assault on global trade by Donald Trump.
Last week, a social media post outlining a 50% tariff on EU imports stopped the global equity market rally in its tracks, sending US and European equities into a one-day tailspin.
However, over the weekend, Trump eased market tensions by delaying the 50% tariffs from 1st June to 9th July. The delaying of tariffs is becoming a familiar playbook for the President, and global equity markets are becoming wise to the V-shape recoveries that have followed initial sell-offs.
Major equity indices recovered most of their losses after Donald Trump pulled back from the implementation of Liberation Day tariffs, and the latest attack on the EU has proved to be a smaller-scale repeat of the price action seen since the beginning of April.
Today’s rally has pushed the FTSE 100 within reach of its all-time highs at 8,871, with the index needing less than a 1% gain to trade at never-before-seen levels.
“A mood of cautious relief is spreading after the long weekend, amid hopes for more fruitful trade negotiations between the United States and its global partners,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves Lansdown.
“There are no post bank holiday blues for the London market, with the Footsie in striking distance of the record high reached in February. More positive vibes are pulsing about the outlook for the global economy, with hopes that more scores can be etched on the doors of trade talks.”
There were few losers on Tuesday, with 91 of the FTSE 100’s constituents trading higher at the time of writing.
Rolls Royce and BAE Systems were among the top risers after Donald Trump and Moscow traded verbal criticism over the weekend that hit hopes of a ceasefire in Ukraine in the short term.
Intermediate Capital Group was the FTSE 100 top riser, gaining 3.9%, as it bounced back from selling after the release of its final results last week. JD Sport was another recovery story that rose more than 2%.
The risk on feel to Tuesday’s FTSE 100 rally left safe-haven stocks out of favour. Precious metals miners Fresnillo and Endeavour Mining lost their shine and fell by over 2%. The pair are still among the best-performing FTSE 100 stocks of 2025.
It will be interesting to see what occurs within the next day for the £1.4bn-capitalised GlobalData (LON:DATA) following the recent announcement of two possible bid proposal approaches.
Especially interesting considering that the declared mission for the group is ‘to help our clients decode the future, make better decisions, and reach more customers’ – so will it help its investors to decide what they should be doing with their shares?
In accordance with the Takeover Code, ICG and KKR are each required, by not later than 5.00 pm tomorrow, 28th May, to either announce a firm intenti...
India stands at the cusp of an energy transformation. Once plagued by power shortages, the country now aims to become a global leader in renewable energy, targeting a massive 500 GW of renewable capacity by 2030, with solar energy contributing 280 GW to this ambitious goal. To give some context, UK’s renewable energy capacity stands at 60 GW in 2024. Traditionally a coal-driven energy market, this solar-first approach leverages India’s natural advantage of abundant sunshine and the continuously declining cost of solar power generation. With solar renewable energy cheaper than coalfired power, it presents a win-win positioning for India to simultaneously address climate change concerns while meeting the country’s growing demand for power.
Source: Govt of India – Press Information Bureau MNRE: Year End Review, Dec 20. MNRE: Press Release: 2100603, Feb 25. Grant Thornton Report, Achieving 500 GW of renewable energy capacity by 2030, 2024. e indicates estimate.
The Solar Value Chain in India
The solar industry value chain consists of multiple stages: polysilicon production, ingot and wafer manufacturing, solar cell production, and finally, panel assembly. Currently, most Indian companies operate only in the final stage of solar panel assembly—the least technologically and capital-intensive part of the manufacturing process. This limited participation in the value chain creates significant vulnerability and dependence on imports, particularly from China, which controls approximately 80% of the global solar supply chain.
This dependence is now changing with backward integration into silicon wafer and solar cell manufacturing becoming the new buzzwords among Indian companies. With companies having achieved scale and profitability in panel manufacturing along with end product prices stabilising, companies no longer see price declines as a risk to their capital investment and are thus investing in capital expenditure. This vertical integration process is accelerating thanks to the government. Not only has the government provided a long-term vision on the size of the opportunity, but it has also actively incentivised the growth of the industry through various initiatives such as domestic content requirements for government projects, substantial import duties (40% on imported solar panels and 25% on imported solar cells), and Production Linked Incentives (PLI) to encourage manufacturing scale-up. New market opportunities have also been created by incentivising solar pump and rooftop solar projects in both rural and urban India.
In an effort to understand Indian companies’ positioning, we visited the plants of two leading companies, Adani Solar and Waaree Energies and were amazed by the sheer scale and size of the state-of-the-art fully automated plants. Their investments demonstrate the seriousness with which Indian players are approaching vertical integration and technological advancement in this sector.
From an investor’s perspective, the Indian market offers diverse investment opportunities across the solar ecosystem with pure-play manufacturers, independent power producers (IPPs) that develop and operate solar plants, as well as engineering,= procurement, and construction (EPC) companies that implement solar projects. This variety allows investors to participate in different segments of the value chain according to their risk appetite and return expectations.
The story doesn’t stop here. India’s vision is to not only be self-reliant but also become an important export hub for renewables in the world for those looking for an alternative source to Chinese solar products. The US is one of the biggest importers of solar cells and panels. With restrictions on China, this opens up a great avenue for India and it is highly profitable too. In FY24, India’s solar products exports to the US were almost $2bn.
So, is it all Sunshine?
Having interacted with a dozen of the listed companies across the ecosystem, our main concern remains China and its dominance across the value chain ranging from polysilicon to cells.
Source: CLSA, CPIA, Companies, Dec 23
Irrational behaviour can have a domino effect. The dependency is not only in the supply chain but also in technological know-how where China is a leader and innovator. As Indian companies backward integrate, the capital intensity also increases, putting at greater risk the investment whenever there is a change in technology, which typically happens every five years. Our other concern stems from domestic competition. The entry barrier in module manufacturing is low, with the capital expenditure for 1GW of solar module manufacturing capacity at approximately $31 million (INR 2.5 bn). This has attracted a lot of companies, including first-time entrepreneurs, to set up capacities. Hence, it is a highly competitive industry. With the entire ecosystem backward integrating, the buyer/seller equation is itself undergoing a change. Supply is catching up with demand quickly. Consolidation seems inevitable.
The key question remains how we participate in this theme of renewables. We have absolutely no doubt that solar renewable energy is the answer to meeting India’s rising power demand of 6-7% per annum. Solar addresses all the fundamental requirements of cost, time, ease of usage, scalability and, of course, ample sunshine. As the industry evolves, we are in a wait-and-watch mode, closely tracking the business models and leaving no stone unturned to identify the eventual winners. There also remains an extended ecosystem of transmission, battery, glass and other inputs riding piggyback on the solar growth story.
Important Information: The information in this document does not constitute or contain an offer or invitation for the sale or purchase of any shares in the Fund in any jurisdiction, is not intended to form the basis of any investment decision, does not constitute any recommendation by the Fund, its directors, agents or advisers, is unaudited and provided for information purposes only and may include information from third party sources which has not been independently verified. Interests in the Fund have not been and will not be registered under any securities laws of the United States of America or its territories or possessions or areas subject to its jurisdiction, and may not be offered for sale or sold to nationals or residents thereof except pursuant to an exemption from the registration requirements of the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”), and any applicable state laws. While all reasonable care has been taken in the preparation of this document, no warranty is given on the accuracy of the information contained herein, nor is any responsibility or liability accepted for any errors of fact or any opinions expressed herein. Past performance is not a guide to future performance and investment markets and conditions can change rapidly. Emerging market equities can be more volatile than those of developed markets and equities in general are more volatile than bonds and cash. The value of your investment may go down as well as up and there is no guarantee that you will get back the amount that you invested. Currency movements may also have an adverse effect on the capital value of your investment. Investing in a country specific fund may be less liquid and more volatile than investing in a diversified fund in the developed markets. This Fund should be seen as a long term investment and you should read the London Stock Exchange Listing Prospectus published in December 2017 (the ”Prospectus”) whilst paying particular attention to the risk factors section before making an investment. Please refer to the Prospectus for specific risk factors. Where reference to a specific Class of security is made, it is for illustrative purposes only and should not be regarded as a recommendation to buy or sell that security. This document is issued by RGI Fund Management (referred to as River Global) and views expressed in this document reflect the views of River Global and adviser Saltoro Investment Advisors Pvt Ltd as at the date of publication. This information may not be reproduced, redistributed or copied in whole or in part without the express consent of River Global and River Global Investors LLP is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority in the United Kingdom. River Global Investors LLP is a signatory to the UN Principles of Responsible Investment.
Likewise (LON: LIKE) chairman Paul Bassi bought 500,000 shares in the floorcoverings distributor at 19.038p each. That is a £95,190 investment and takes his stake to 1.42%. He is the fifth largest shareholder.
The company joined AIM in August 2021 when it raised £10m at 25p/share. Back in August 2021, Paul Bassi bough 2.2 million shares at 25p each. In May 2024, he sold two million shares at 16p each.
Chief executive Tony Brewer, a former boss of market leader Headlam (LON: HEAD), is the largest shareholder with 11.1%. He sold one million shares at 17p each in early April.
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Smarter Web Company (LON: SWC) has raised a further £6.83m at 49p/share. It has purchased a further 39.51 Bitcoin for £3.13m. The total holding is 58.71 Bitcoin at a total cost of £4.54m. The additional funds will be used to buy more Bitcoin. The share price jumped 123% to 69p.
Coinsilium Group Ltd (LON: COIN) subsidiary Forza! will be transferred an initial 15 Bitcoin. Coinsilium will announce purchase of Bitcoin by Forza! Institutional investors are interested in investing in Forza! The Coinsilium share price improved 18.9% to 5.35p.
Res Privata NV has raised its stake in WeCap (LON: WCAP) from 11.3% to 13.6%, while Peel Hunt has a higher shareholding of 19%. The share price rose 11.6% to 0.96p.
Newbury Racecourse (LON: NYR) director James Richardson bought 2,878 shares a 625p each and his total shareholding is 5,515 shares. The share price increased 10.6% to 625p.
Global Connectivity (LON: GCON) says that the value of its 2.8% stake in Rural Broadband Services has fallen to £3.9m, which is equivalent to 1.3p/share. The share price is 9.09% higher at 1.2p.
Mendell Heloum (LON: MDH) has an option to acquire M3 Helium, which is continuing work on the Rost 1-26 well recompletion project. The share price improved 9.09% to 3p.
Arbuthnot Banking Group (LON: ARBB) stated at the AGM that trading was in line with expectations in the first four months of the year. Activity is showing signs of picking up. There were loan and lease assts of £2.36bn at the end of April 2025. Deposits rose 3% to £4.26bn. There was an annualised 17% increase in assets under management in the wealth management division. Shore Capital forecasts a dip in full year pre-tax profit from £35.1m to £28.5m. That assumes a further 0.25 of a percentage point cut in interest rates. The share price edged up 2.72% to 942.5p.
FALLERS
Dermatology treatments developer Incanthera (LON: INC) is finalising an agreement with a global direct to consumer and it will launch the Skin + CELL product range in return for royalties on sales. There are 100,000 units in stock ready for sale, and they should be sold by March 2026. This will improve gross margins and provide positive cash flow. The share price dipped 9.09% to 5p.
Valereum (LON: VLRM) is investing $1.35m in DigiShares in four tranches up until July. DigiShares owns a real estate tokenisation platform called RealEstate Exchange. The share price fell 5.37% to 4.85p.
Executive search firm Norman Broadbent (LON: NBB) revealed at its AGM that second quarter trading is materially ahead of the same period last year. Recent appointments are helping to enhance growth, and the company is moving into the Middle East market. This should ensure a return to profit this year. The £96,000 CBILs loan has been repaid. Shareholders approved the 35-for-one share consolidation, and it was well-timed considering the good news. The adjusted share price improved 45.3% to 147.5p.
TheWorks.co.uk (LON: WRKS) improved sales and margins in the fourth quarter and guidance has been upgraded. EBITDA for the year to April 2025 has been raised by £1m to £9.5m on flat revenues compared to £6m in the previous year, while the 2025-26 figure is increased to £11m despite the National Insurance headwinds. Net cash has improved to £4m. The share price rebounded 41.4% to 38.6p.
Ironveld (LON: IRON) says sales of DMS grade magnetite from its Bushveld project to offtake partner Sable Platinum should commence shortly. Production ramp-up from stockpiles is underway and the product meet market requirements. Demand is exceeding expectations. Ironveld is set to shift from a development company to fully operational business. The high purity iron, vanadium and titanium project is on the northern limb of the Bushveld Complex in Limpopo, South Africa. The share price increased by two-fifths to 0.0525p.
Chain manufacturer Renold (LON: RNO) has received two bid offers one is 77p/share in cash from Webster Industries and the other is 81p/share in cash from a consortium comprising Buckthorn Partners LLP and One Equity Partners IX, L.P. The share price rose 38.6% to 74p.
FALLERS
Healthcare services provider Totally (LON: TLY) is considering offers for subsidiaries. This is the only practical way to pay off liabilities. However, the proceeds may not be enough to meet all liabilities. The share slumped 79.3% to 0.3p.
There was significant disappointing news from Pantheon Resources (LON: PANR) during the week. First, an initial unstimulated flow test from Megrez-1 in Alaska showed production dominated by water, which was consistent with the previous test in the area. Management will assess the data, but it currently says no recoverable oil resource should be associated with the Lower Prince Creek interval. Second, the flow testing of the Lower Sag 3 reservoir level in the Megrez-1 well was also disappointing. The well is suspended. The focus will switch to Ahpun West, and the Dubhe-1 well will drill this year. Final investment decision on Ahpun West should be in 2027. The share price dipped 41.6% to 24.75p.
Ascent Resources (LON: AST) is acquiring a 49% interest in oil and gas leases in Colorado operated by Locin Oil Corporation and a 10% in oil and gas leases in Utah operated by ARB Energy. US-based geologist David Patterson will take over as chief executive and there will be cost savings. The first purchase costs $2.5m, including shares at 0.5p each and a $1.9m convertible loan note. The second purchase costs $750,000 in shares. The deal includes rights to earn a 50% economic interest in incremental production from these leases. There is an option to acquire a further 23% interest in the leases. A fundraising will generate £1.35m at 0.5p/share with £224,000 used to pay back part of the RiverFort secured loan with $100,000 converted into shares at 0.7245p/share. The share price decreased 38.2% to 0.525p.
Cybersecurity software company Acuity RM (LON: ACRM) raised £421,000 at 1p/share. This will finance sales and marketing, plus further product development. The share price slipped 25.9% to 1.075p.
The FTSE 100 was heading for another positive week as London’s leading index notched up marginal gains in early trade on Friday. That was before Trump posted on social media that he was recommending a 50% tariff on the EU starting 1st June.
The FTSE 100 gains evaporated, and the index sank over 1% after Trump fired his latest shot in the trade war with the rest of the world.
Despite gyrations in global equities caused by concerns around US debt this week, the FTSE 100’s resilience and weighting towards defensive ‘safe-haven’ stocks overcame the worst of the concerns.
However, the threat of such a large tariff on the EU blew this out of the water, and the index was down 1.1% at the time of writing on Friday.
Trump’s social post undid strong gains recorded on Friday morning, with the FTSE 100 trading down 150 points from the highs.
“The FTSE 100 was propelled by AstraZeneca and Rolls-Royce which made the biggest contribution in terms of index points. The more domestic-focused FTSE 250 also nudged ahead, driven by a range of sectors including financials and real estate,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Miners were stronger on Friday morning with Anglo American topping the leaderboard as shares gained more than 4%. The sector was mostly negative following Trump’s post.
easyjet was higher as it rebounded from a sell-off yesterday on the back of its half year report. A number of positive broker price target upgrades would of helped attract interest in the stock. Bernstein raised its target to 575p and Barclays now has a 730p target. Goldman Sachs reduced their target slightly to 624p.
Games Workshop was the top faller after the tabletop gaming firm said they didn’t expect the sharp increase in licensing fees to continue into the next year.
“Games Workshop has enjoyed terrific success with licencing assets for the Warhammer 40,000: Space Marine 2 video game,” Russ Mould explained.
“There’s a warning that licencing gains seen over the past 12 months won’t be matched in the new financial year, which explains why the shares have pulled back on the trading update. However, the pipeline looks strong enough to keep most investors on side. In addition to another Space Marine game being developed, it has all the licencing income from a deal with Amazon to look forward to.”
Games Workshop shares were down 4.8% at the time of writing.