GSK lifts guidance after strong Q3

GSK reported third-quarter sales of £8.5 billion, up 8% at constant exchange rates, driven by strong performance across its Specialty Medicines, Vaccines and General Medicines divisions.

GSK shares rose over 3% on Wednesday, and investors will hope the strong sales momentum gives GSK a fighting chance of breaking out of its decade-long trading range that has capped the stock around 1,800p.

The pharmaceutical giant’s Specialty Medicines unit led growth with sales of £3.4 billion, up 16%. HIV treatments generated £1.9 billion in revenue, rising 12%, whilst Oncology sales surged 39% to £0.5 billion.

Vaccine sales reached £2.7 billion, with shingles vaccine Shingrix climbing 13% to £0.8 billion and respiratory vaccine Arexvy jumping 36% to £0.3 billion. General Medicines contributed £2.5 billion, with respiratory treatment Trelegy posting particularly strong growth of 25% to £0.7 billion.

Higher sales across most divisions helped core operating profit increase 11% to £3.0 billion, whilst core earnings per share rose 14% to 55.0 pence.

For the year to date, GSK generated £6.3 billion in operating cash flow and £1.2 billion in free cash flow during the quarter.

Such was the strength of sales in Q3 that GSK upgraded its full-year guidance, now expecting 2025 turnover growth of 6% to 7%, up from its previous guidance of 3% to 5%. Core operating profit growth is forecast at 9% to 11%, whilst core earnings per share growth is projected at 10% to 12%—both metrics raised from the prior 6% to 8% range.

“GSK has breezed past third quarter forecasts with beats at both the top and bottom line,” said Derren Nathan, head of equity research, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Britain’s second largest pharmaceutical company’s vital signs are in excellent shape, with growth seen in all segments, as Dame Emma Walmsley passes the CEO baton to Luke Miels. The emerging cancer franchise saw the strongest growth at 39%. With new approvals for blood cancer treatment Blenrep and a recent deal adding a prostate cancer candidate to the research pipeline, the prognosis is promising. 

“Emma Walmsley’s left a parting gift for investors with the second upgrade of the year, with sales and profit guidance both moving into a new range. Full-year revenue is now expected to grow 6-7% with the underlying profit growth range moving from 6-8% to 9-11%. This is helped not just by the revenue uplift, but also a better product mix and improved efficiencies. The market remains to be convinced that GSK can meet its £40 billion sales target by 2031. The company’s certainly moving in the right direction but it’s now down to the new man at the helm to keep that momentum going.”

Next shares jump on raised profit guidance as weather helps boost sales

Next has upgraded its full-year profit guidance yet again after sales significantly outperformed expectations in the third quarter.

The fashion retailer reported full-price sales growth of 10.5% in the 13 weeks to 25 October, beating its own forecast by £76m.

Investors will be pleased to see that the strong performance has prompted the company to increase its fourth-quarter sales guidance from 4.5% to 7.0%.

“Next seems to have missed the memo on Britain’s slowdown,” said Mark Crouch, market analyst for eToro.

“The British retail giant has nudged up profit guidance for the fourth time in eight months, after third-quarter full-price sales rose an impressive 10.5%. While rivals have spent the year tripping over rising costs and cautious consumers, Next has managed to glide serenely through it all.”

Next shares were 5% higher at the time of writing as the stock continued its meteoric rise.

International sales proved the standout performer, surging 38.8% against last year. This far exceeded the 28.1% growth achieved in the first half and smashed the company’s guidance of 19.4%.

The company attributed its overseas success to two key factors. Next was able to spend 50% more on digital marketing than planned and achieved improved stock availability by consolidating its European warehousing operations with Zalando.

UK sales rose 5.4%, ahead of the 1.9% guidance but slower than the first half’s 7.6%. Management said they had underestimated the benefit of improved stock levels this year, after deliveries were delayed by disruptions in Bangladesh and global freight constraints last year.

“A double-digit rise in Q3 full-price sales and another profit upgrade show the group’s mix of disciplined inventory control and digital marketing is still working nicely,” said Chris Beauchamp, Chief Market Analyst UK at IG.

“Overseas growth was striking, with online sales up nearly 40%, suggesting its platform strategy has real international traction. The only worry is weakness in the UK as the domestic consumer cools, but even that looks well managed given Next’s track record of navigating downturns.”

Looking ahead, Next expects growth to ease – something it has warned of before, only to produce strong figures.

UK sales are forecast to slow to 4.1% in the fourth quarter as the exceptional first-half conditions normalise. Those earlier months benefited from favourable weather and competitor disruption.

Overseas growth is also expected to moderate to 24.3% in Q4 as the company cycles last year’s dramatic step-up. However, on a two-year basis, the momentum remains strong.

Next anticipates generating around £425m in surplus cash this year. It has already returned £131m through share buybacks but won’t purchase more shares at current prices, as those prices exceed its £121-per-share limit.

Instead, the retailer plans a special dividend of approximately £3.10 per share in January 2026, assuming no acquisitions materialise. The interim dividend of 87p per share will be paid on 5 January.

Total group sales guidance for the full year now stands at £6.87bn, up 8.7% on last year.

Alice & Bob partners with NVIDIA to accelerate fault-tolerant Quantum Computing

Quantum computing pioneer Alice & Bob has announced a collaboration with NVIDIA to integrate the chipmaker’s NVQLink architecture into its fault-tolerant quantum computing systems.

The partnership centres around NVQLink, NVIDIA’s open-source platform launched at GTC Washington this week that integrates GPUs into real-time quantum feedback loops, addressing a critical challenge in fault-tolerant quantum computing (FTQC).

NVQLink accelerates the development of logical qubits by enabling GPU computation alongside qubit decoding and calibration.

“In the near future, every NVIDIA GPU scientific supercomputer will be hybrid, tightly coupled with quantum processors to expand what is possible with computing,” said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA.

“NVQLink is the Rosetta Stone connecting quantum and classical supercomputers — uniting them into a single, coherent system that marks the onset of the quantum-GPU computing era.”

The collaboration between Alice & Bob and NVIDIA builds on existing ties between the companies’ quantum software teams.

Products, including Alice & Bob’s high-performance GPU simulation tool Dynamiqs, were developed using the NVIDIA CUDA-Q platform.

Alice & Bob believe NVQLink will enable better FTQC solutions, bringing forward timelines for practical quantum computing applications.

“We are thrilled to see NVIDIA’s NVQLink addressing the layers of the FTQC stack we’ve long considered critical: logical orchestration, decoding, and live calibration,” said Jérémie Guillaud, VP of Firmware at Alice & Bob.

“This launch is a clear signal that fault-tolerant quantum computers, such as Alice & Bob’s QPUs, are about to reach industrial maturity.”

Based in Paris and Boston, Alice & Bob aims to create the first fault-tolerant quantum computer. Founded in 2020, the company has raised €130 million, employs over 150 staff, and has produced experimental results that surpass those of major technology firms.

Advised by Nobel Prize-winning researchers, Alice & Bob specialises in cat qubits, a technology it claims can reduce hardware requirements for large-scale quantum computers by up to 200 times compared with competing approaches.

FTSE 100 creeps higher as interest rate and trade talk hopes boost sentiment

The FTSE 100 tiptoed higher again on Tuesday and was set to reach another record high amid hopes of a US interest rate cut this week.

The gains, however, were meagre compared to a rally in the US overnight, which saw the S&P 500 close over 1.2% as tech shares soared. S&P 500 futures were flat going into the open.

London’s leading index was just 4 points higher at the time of writing at 9,658.

Investors globally had a spring in their step ahead of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision tomorrow and were also buoyed by progress in US-China trade relations.

“There are hopes that trade relations between Washington and Beijing can thaw when Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping meet in South Korea later this week,” explained Derren Nathan, head of equity research, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Trade deal progress has been difficult but successful discussions could pave the way for lighter export restrictions on advanced technology to China, as well as preventing proposed Chinese tariffs on rare-earth minerals that are essential for semiconductor fabrication.  Meanwhile, markets are all-but-certain of a quarter point cut by the Federal Reserve Bank tomorrow, and confidence in another similar cut in December is high.”

HSBC was among the risers in London after the bank announced revenues that beat expectations and increased income guidance. The positivity around HSBC’s underlying performance offset the hit from provisions relating to the Madoff Ponzi scheme, and shares rose more than 3%.

“HSBC’s latest results show solid progress toward its 2027 goals, proving the bank can still deliver despite legacy headwinds, with a 14% drop in pre-tax profit linked to the Madoff Ponzi scheme,” said Max Harper, Analyst at Third Bridge.

“Revenue beat consensus expectations by 5.9%, with strength across both net interest income and fees. The $1 billion upgrade to NII guidance should be well received, reflecting how the bank’s streamlined operating model is driving greater efficiency and returns.”

Airtel Africa was the FTSE 100’s top riser, surging more than 6%, after half-year revenue rose more than 25%. Operating profits jumped 35% as customer numbers rose sharply over the period.

The biggest detractors from the positivity in London were the housebuilders and UK retailers, which were showing signs of budget jitters.

AIM movers: Idox recommends bid and RWS profit at the bottom of guidance range

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Idox (LON: IDOX) is recommending a 71.5p/share cash bid from Long Path Opportunities Fund. This values the public sector software and services company at £339.5m. Long Path has been a long-term shareholder, and it owns 12% of Idox. The belief is that as a private company Idox will be able to take a longer-term view and invest in new technology with the backing of Long Path. The share price jumped 25.2% to 70.6p.

Construction disputes and professional services provider Diales (LON: DIAL) expects a 2024-25 operating profit of at least £1.3m on slightly lower revenues of £42.6m, due to weaker Asia Pacific business. Pre-tax profit should also be £1.3m. Net cash was £3m at the end of September 2025. There is a strong pipeline of disputes business. The share price rebounded 14.7% to 19.5p.

Specialist cleaning services provider React Group (LON: REAT) says full year revenues were 21% ahead at around £25m, which includes an initial contribution from 24hr Aquaflow, which was acquired last October. Dowgate edged up its 2024-25 pre-tax profit from £2.1m to £2.2m. Strong fourth quarter trading meant that net debt was higher than expected at £5.2m. The share price recovered 13.2% to 51.5p, which is less than eight times estimated earnings, falling to less than six this year.  

Genedrive (LON: GDR) and its local distribution partner have signed a memorandum of understanding with the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia ministry of health to introduce the Genedrive MT-RNR1 ID Kit. This is a pilot that could extend to a national deal. The share price rose 10.2% to 0.535p.

FALLERS

ABCrescent Cooperatief U.A. has sold 8.22 million shares in Pulsar Helium Inc (LON: PLSR) at 38p/share. ABCrescent, which is associated with Pulsar Helium director Brice Laurent, still has a 4.81% stake plus 15.5 million warrants. Brie Laurent owns 17,570 shares. This follows the proposed acquisition of Hybrid Hydrogen, which owns mineral rights to 6,742 acres in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, for $80,000 in shares. The share price fell back 14.8% to 38.5p.

Richmond Hill Resources (LON: RHR) has lost some of its premium to the 1p/share placing and offer price when the mining company moved from Aquis earlier in October. The share price had held at 1.4p since the move, but it has declined 14.3% to 1.2p.

Translation and software services provider RWS (LON: RWS) estimates that it made a pre-tax profit of £60m on broadly flat revenues on a constant currency basis in the year to September 2025. The profit was at the bottom of the guidance range. There was growth in AI, but regulated industries business declined. Net debt was £26m at the end of September 2025. Since then, the company has been restructured. The results will be published on 11 December. The share price slipped 10.5% to 84.2p.

Gunsynd (LON: GUN) says analysis of historical data has identified a new high-grade silver zinc lead target at the Bear Twit project in Canada. The area is called Enyo, and the anomaly is 1.5km long and 500 metres wide. Gunsynd owns 18 million shares in Richmond Hill Resources. The share price dipped 5.45% to 0.13p.

Asset Division in Divorce Can Derail Long-Term Financial Stability

Divorce is one of the most significant life events that can alter long-term financial security. Dividing property, savings, pensions, and business interests often requires difficult decisions that influence not just immediate stability but future independence. Many individuals underestimate how much these settlements shape their standard of living for years to come. Careful planning, legal expertise, and awareness of financial risks are vital to avoiding mistakes and preserving security during and after separation.

The Hidden Financial Risks of Divorce Settlements

Splitting assets involves more than simply dividing property or savings. Each decision carries consequences that may extend for decades. Accepting an apparently fair share without understanding tax obligations, growth potential, or liquidity often leads to difficulties later.

For example, pensions and retirement accounts are frequently overlooked or undervalued. Focusing only on cash or property can create an imbalance, leaving one party at risk of financial hardship in later life. Seeking guidance from Huddersfield divorce lawyers provides clarity and ensures that settlements consider both immediate needs and future economic realities. Their regional knowledge helps account for local property values and national regulations, offering tailored advice.

Mistakes such as treating all asset types as equal or ignoring future tax burdens reduce the effectiveness of a settlement. Carefully examining each asset prevents costly oversights and secures better outcomes.

Tax Consequences That Affect Post-Divorce Finances

Taxes have a major influence on how valuable assets truly are after division. Cash, investments, pensions, and property come with different tax treatments. Ignoring these differences can make settlements that appear fair on paper highly unequal.

Pensions, in particular, require careful planning. Early withdrawals or misjudged divisions can significantly reduce their long-term value. Similarly, shares or investment accounts can create unexpected liabilities if their tax implications are not considered. Property sales following divorce may also lead to capital gains obligations that erode financial stability.

Legal support from divorce lawyers in Huddersfield ensures these issues are addressed before finalising agreements. Awareness of potential tax outcomes helps both parties protect their wealth and avoid unpleasant surprises in the years ahead.

Business Ownership Complications During Divorce

Dividing business interests is often one of the most complex aspects of a settlement. Accurate valuations are difficult to achieve without professional expertise, and disagreements can cause delays. Each spouse may have differing expectations of value, leading to further conflict.

Couples usually face three options: one party buys out the other, continue as co-owners, or sell the business. Each route has distinct financial implications. A buyout requires capital or loans, co-ownership demands clear agreements, and selling involves timing decisions and potential tax costs.

Family lawyers in Huddersfield often recommend drafting shareholder agreements or other legal documents to outline management responsibilities and reduce future disputes. With professional guidance, business divisions can be managed fairly without draining the resources both parties rely upon.

Strategic Financial Planning Through Specialist Advice

Fair asset division depends on full financial disclosure and accurate valuations. Without these, key assets may be overlooked or undervalued, leaving one party disadvantaged. Divorce solicitors in Huddersfield experienced in complex settlements often work with accountants or financial specialists to ensure that hidden or intricate assets are identified and included.

Alternative resolution methods, such as mediation, can reduce costs and stress compared to court proceedings. With the right legal and financial guidance, these approaches can deliver workable settlements that protect long-term stability. Choosing professional support designed for high-asset or complicated divorces guarantees that every detail has been considered.

Rebuilding Financial Stability After Divorce

Once a settlement is reached, individuals must focus on rebuilding. New financial realities may include reduced income, divided pensions, or changed insurance arrangements. The first step is drawing up a realistic budget, followed by reviewing retirement contributions and investment strategies.

Debt allocation also demands attention. Joint loans or credit accounts should be separated to avoid damage to credit scores. Transferring debts into individual names provides clarity and prevents lingering obligations from undermining future finances.

Insurance is another essential element. Life cover, health policies, and property protection often need reviewing and updating. These adjustments ensure that new circumstances are reflected and ongoing commitments, such as maintenance payments, are safeguarded.

Building a Strong Financial Foundation for the Future

Recovering financial stability after divorce requires ongoing effort. Monitoring accounts, keeping track of credit reports, and revisiting budgets regularly ensures that progress is maintained. Over time, these practices reduce uncertainty and reassure that financial independence is being rebuilt.

Those who take proactive steps often find the adjustment smoother. With support from divorce solicitors in Huddersfield and financial professionals, individuals can rebuild their wealth and regain confidence in their ability to plan. The process may take time, but steady progress leads to renewed independence and security.

The division of assets during divorce can shape financial futures for decades. Taking professional advice from divorce solicitors in Huddersfield, alongside support from financial specialists, ensures that settlements are fair and sustainable. Combining legal expertise with practical planning makes it possible to secure long-term stability and begin the next chapter on stronger financial ground.

HSBC beats revenue estimates and upgrades income guidance

HSBC shares rose on Tuesday after the bank announced strong underlying performance that shone through provisions related to the Madoff Ponzi scheme.

Net interest income for Q3 increased 15% to $8.8bn compared to last year, reflecting higher deposits and an 11bps jump in net interest margin to 1.57%.

“HSBC’s latest results show solid progress toward its 2027 goals, proving the bank can still deliver despite legacy headwinds, with a 14% drop in pre-tax profit linked to the Madoff Ponzi scheme,” said Max Harper, Analyst at Third Bridge.

“Revenue beat consensus expectations by 5.9%, with strength across both net interest income and fees. The $1 billion upgrade to NII guidance should be well received, reflecting how the bank’s streamlined operating model is driving greater efficiency and returns.”

HSBC’s PR strategists deserve a pat on the back after releasing the provision for the Madoff scandal yesterday and getting the bad news out of the way before announcing Q3 results that were broadly positive.

“While the Madoff-linked hit saw profit come in below expectations at a headline level, on an underlying basis the business is performing well and, crucially, somewhat better than the market was expecting,” said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

“A key metric for any bank is net interest income – the difference between what the bank pays out to savers and receives from borrowers in interest – so the boost to guidance here and double-digit quarterly growth are significant.

“They back up CEO Georges Elhedery’s assertion that HSBC is becoming ‘a simple, more agile, focused bank’.

The disposal of the group’s Argentinian business was reflected in the most recent period through cost reductions. Although disposals also impacted revenue, the streamlining of the business to focus on core markets can be seen as a positive.

HSBC shares rose 2.8% on Tuesday.

Pulsar Helium shares tank as director dumps holdings

Pulsar Helium shares fell on Tuesday after a company managed by a Pulsar director sold a £3 million stake in the helium firm.

ABCrescent Cooperatief U.A. (ABC), where Pulsar Helium director Brice Laurent is a managing partner, sold 8,223,684 shares on October 27, 2025. The shares were sold in the UK at 0.38 pence each, raising approximately £3,125,000.

After this sale, ABC still holds a significant stake of 7,276,316 shares, representing 4.81% of the company, plus 15,500,000 warrants.

If ABC exercised all its warrants, it would control 22,776,316 shares, representing about 13.65% of Pulsar. Separately, Mr. Laurent personally owns 17,570 shares and holds options for 450,000 additional shares.

The sale follows a rally in Pulsar Helium shares after the firm announced a helium discovery at its Topaz project in Minnesota.

At the time of the release, Pulsar said the discovery ranks ‘Topaz amongst the highest accumulation of naturally occurring helium-3 ever publicly reported in a terrestrial gas reservoir worldwide’.

evoke shares rise after revealing broad-based growth in Q3

evoke shares rose on Tuesday after the betting and gaming group announced a 5% revenue increase to £435m in the third quarter, marking its fifth straight period of year-on-year growth as all three operating divisions expanded.

The owners of William Hill, 888 and Mr Green maintained their full-year guidance, reiterating expectations of achieving an adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 20%. The company gave investors reason to be cheerful by saying it was confident it could deliver adjusted EBITDA ahead of current market expectations.

evoke shares were 4% higher at the time of writing.

Growth was broad-based. UK&I Online revenues grew 1%, with an 8% rise in sports offset by a 2% decline in gaming.

International revenues climbed 8%, driven by double-digit growth in Italy, Denmark and Romania. Spain saw a slowdown, whilst non-core markets declined.

Retail delivered 6% revenue growth. Both sports and gaming advanced 6%, the latter benefiting from new gaming cabinets rolled out earlier this year.

Denmark was a real bright spot following migration to evoke’s in-house platform, with Q3 growth of 19% and monthly revenue reaching all-time highs.

In Italy, 888 continues gaining casino market share whilst William Hill has returned to pre-migration daily revenue levels after addressing sports product gaps on the Exalogic platform.

“During Q3 we continued to execute against our strategy which is transforming our long-term competitive capabilities and building a more efficient and profitable business,” said Per Widerström, CEO of evoke.

“With Retail continuing the improving trend from Q2, all three divisions were in growth during the quarter. Whilst our refined approach to UK Online marketing to drive improved profitability slightly held back our top-line performance, we are pleased to have recorded our fifth consecutive quarter of profitable growth,” said

“We have clear plans in place to support an improvement in revenue during Q4 through continued acceleration in product enhancements, including retail sports and our recently launched new William Hill Vegas app. We are also making ongoing improvements to our customer lifecycle management capabilities. Alongside this, the improvements we have made to the operating model and efficiencies in our cost base mean we remain confident of achieving our implied Adjusted EBITDA guidance, which would outperform market expectations.”

The company is deliberately reducing marketing spend on 888 to improve returns, whilst delivering strong double-digit contribution growth across both brands.

The group successfully launched its Final One Standing free-to-play game, attracting over 300,000 entrants in the first week with strong conversion to cash activity.

New accumulator products, including an omni-channel Acca Boost, are driving improved customer engagement and higher structural win margins.

AIM movers: Conygar Investment sells land to Stena Line and Bioventix hit by weak China revenues

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Conygar Investment Company (LON: CIC) is selling its 203-acre brownfield land at Rhosgoch in Anglesey to Rhosgoch Property, a subsidiary of Stena Lin. The net proceeds will be £18.3m, compared with a valuation of £2.5m. NAV was £63.8m (107.5p/share) at the end of March 2025, but since then there has been a £750,000 loss on the sale of a Virgin Active gym. The share price increased 19.6% to 30.5p.

Light Science Technologies (LON: LST) has won an AgTech contract worth £500,000. It will design and supply a modular vertical farming system for the Nottingham Trent University Smart Agricultural Research Centre. This includes nurturGROW lighting, sensorGROW sensors and Tomtech control technologies. These products will be manufactured by the contact electronics subsidiary. The share price rose 8.47% to 6.4p.

Synthetic DNA products developer 4basebio (LON: 4BB) says a global pharma partner has begun dosing patients with an mRNA product developed with 4basebio’s opDNA template. The share price improved 6.9% to 775p.

One Health Group (LON: OHGR) has made a strong start to the year. Surgical procedures jumped 16% and interim revenues were 17% higher at £15.5m, which is 10% higher than forecast. EBITDA is expected to be higher than the previous year and Panmure Liberum anticipates a figure of more than £1m. Cash is £10.8m. There have been delays in building the surgical hub, but it should still be open by the end of 2026. There is normally a second half boost from the NHS demand when it is trying to reduce waiting lists. Changes in administration provide uncertainty, though. That is why the full year pre-tax profit forecast of £2.3m is unchanged. The share price gained 6.79% to 236p.

FALLERS

Monoclonal antibodies developer Bioventix (LON: BVXP) reported a dip in revenues from £13.6m to £13.1m, while pre-tax profit slipped 6% to £10.2m. There was pricing pressure in China, where revenues declined 29% to £2.4m. The newer Alzheimer’s-related portfolio quadrupled revenues. Further declines in revenues and profit are expected this year. The share price slid 18.3% to 1900p

Great Western Mining Corporation (LON: GWMO) says soil sampling at the Huntoon copper project in Nevada shows elevated levels of tungsten, copper and zinc. The soil geochemical anomaly has been extended to more than 2.8km. The consistency of anomalies suggests a larger than anticipated mineralised system. Further analysis will help to design a new drilling campaign. The share price fell 7.69% to 1.8p.

Landore Resources (LON: LND) is raising £1.47m at 4.125p/share. The cash will be spent on the BAM gold project at the Junior Lake property in Ontario, Canada. An updated mineral resource estimate is due to be published. The share price declined 7.61% to 4.25p.

First Development Resources (LON: FDR) has raised £1m in an oversubscribed placing at 3p/share. Each share comes with a warrant exercisable at 5p each. The cash will be used to speed up exploration at the Selta project and focus on rare earth targets at Ingallan and Nintabrinna West. There will also be exploration for gold in another part of the project area. There will also be limited spending on the Wallal gold copper prospect. The share price dipped 6.15% to 3.05p.