Games Workshop announces agreement with Amazon, shares rise

Table-top gaming company Games Workshop announced an agreement with Amazon to produce films, TV series, and associated merchandise.

Games Workshop shares have stormed higher over the past ten years as the popularity of their games grew, and they looked beyond the painting of figurines to digital gaming formats and entertainment, utilising their characters and branding.

The Amazon deal is something of a holy grail and is a testament to Games Workshop’s broad appeal, which is likely to be boosted when the productions are released.

Games Workshop rose 1.9% in early trade on Monday.

“Games Workshop, the producers of fantasy roleplaying games and miniature models have announced that their earlier co-operation agreement to explore licencing deals with Amazon Studios has progressed,” said Steve Clayton, head of equity funds at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Amazon have been granted exclusive rights to develop films and TV series set within Games Workshop’s Warhammer 40,000 universe with an option for further development of Games Workshop’s intellectual property in the movie and TV space.

“Perhaps the day will come before too long when parents can simply send their kids off to the cinema to watch this stuff rather than have to spend half their weekends doing the model-making and painting on Junior’s behalf? Whatever happens, Games Workshop are not predicting any benefit to income from the deal in the 2024 financial year, but investors still welcomed the news, pushing the shares up 2.5% in early trade.”

Director deals: Is Frontier Developments ready to bounce back?

Joy Hu, the wife of Frontier Developments (LON: FDEV) non-exec James Mitchell, acquired 145,000 shares in the AIM-quoted video games publisher at an average price of 113.27p each and 82,000 shares at an average price of 114.73p each.. The couple have a total holding of 347,044 shares (0.88%).
Senior independent non-exec Leslie-Ann Reid acquired an initial 20,032 shares at 99.8p each, while chief executive Jonny Watts bought 18,984 shares at 110.6p each and finance director Alex Bevis purchased 23,000 shares at 108.9p each.
The Frontier Developments share price has dived 86.9% this year and is ...

Aquis weekly movers: Essentially Group hit by discounted selling

Shares in Semper Fortis Esport (LON: SEMP) rose as shareholders agreed to the acquisition of Good Life + and the subsequent reverse takeover that occurs on 18 December. The share price rose 14.3% to 0.2p.

Fully listed Mears (LON: MER) has appointed Lucas Critchley as its new chief executive. The share price is 4.35% higher at 300p.

EPE Special Opportunities (LON: EO.P) had net assets of 300.48p/share at the end of November 2023. The share price edged up 3.23% to 160p.

Michael Heald has increased his stake in brewer Adnams (LON: ADB) from 21.4% to 23.5%. The share price increased 1.61% to 3150p.

FALLERS

Shell company Essentially Group (LON: ESSN) was hit by a spate of selling at prices well below the market price. There was some buying but not enough to offset the negative effects of those discounted sale prices. The share price slumped 35.3% to 45p.

Wishbone Gold (LON: WSBN) says visual inspection of core from recent drilling at the Cottesloe project in Western Australia show zones containing base metals while x-ray fluorescence scanning shows elevated base metals readings. Assay results will make things clearer. The share price is 17.6% lower at 1.4p.

Oscillate (LON: MUSH) non-exec John Treacy has bought an initial 880,000 shares at 0.54p each. The share price dipped 14.3% to 0.45p.

In November, Guanajuato Silver (LON: GSVR) increased month-on-month silver production by 23% to 295,284 ounces equivalent. The production improvement is set to continue into next year. The share price fell a further 9.09% to 15p, ahead of the departure from Aquis.

Marula Mining (LON: MARU) is involved with local partners in applications for graphite mining licences at the Nyorinyori graphite project and the NyoriGreen graphite project in Tanzania. New processing equipment has been installed at the Blesberg lithium and tantalum mine. The share price declined 0.95% to 13p.

AIM weekly movers: SmartSpace Software bid approach

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Venue management software supplier Skedda Inc has proposed an 82p/share offer to SmartSpace Software (LON: SMRT) valuing it at £25m. The share price has not been that high since 2021 and it jumped 103% to 70p, still well short of the bid level. JO Hambro, which owns 8.3% of the software developer, is supportive of the offer. Skedda believes that it can provide the financial backing that SmartSpace Software requires. The SmartSpace Software board is considering the offer. The company is currently loss-making.

Former ITM Power (LON: ITM) boss Dr Graham Cooley has acquired a 6.6% stake in Distil (LON: DIS). This follows the drinks company’s £765,000 fundraising at 0.35p/share. The share price improved 68.8% to 0.675p. This is the highest the share price has been since July.

Eurasia Mining (LON: EUA) has resolved its dispute with former legal advisor Gowling WLG. A settlement has been paid, but not figure was put on this. A winding-up petition has been dismissed. The share price rose 56.7% to 2.35p.

Powerhouse Energy (LON: PHE) finance director Ben Brier acquired 6.53 million shares at an average price of 0.306p each and chief executive Paul Emmitt purchased an initial 3.57 million shares at 0.2797p each. The share price recovered a further 50.9% to 0.43p.

FALLERS

There is a continued decline in the share price of energy and water efficiency company Eneraqua Technologies (LON: ETP) after the announcement that two local authorities are delaying spending. There is also a £900,000 exceptional charge relating to defective equipment. A loss of £6m is forecast for 2023-24. There was a 35.2% share price decline to 40.2p.  

Beacon Energy (LON: BCE) is continuing to clean up the Schwarzbach-2 well in onshore Germany.  A sand jetting operation is planned for January in order to build up to full production. Current production is 40 barrels/day. The share price is one-third lower at 0.09p.

Red Rock Resources (LON: RRR) raised £500,000 at 0.075p/share. This will be invested in lithium production and export operations in Zimbabwe, gold studies in Burkina Faso and working capital. The release of capital from the DRC is likely to be delayed until after next week’s election. The share price slumped 30.2% to 0.075p.

There was a spate of selling before the publication of interim results for Indus Gas (LON: INDI). Revenues fell from $27.4m to $26.2m, but pre-tax profit held up at $22.6m. There was net debt of $187m at the end of September 2023. The share price slid 29.1% to 86.5p.

AIM movers: Getech delays and Leeds Group becoming cash shell

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Leeds Group (LON: LDSG) is selling loss-making Hemmers-Itex Textil Import Export for £657,000. Leeds Group will retain three properties worth £5.21m. The disposal requires approval by shareholder and German authorities. The company will no longer have any trading activities and will become a cash shell. The share price has recovered 21.1% to 11.5p.

Future Metals (LON: FME) is raising £1.7m from a one-for-four entitlement issue at 1.6p/depositary interest. The cash will be used for drilling and exploration at the Eileen Bore project and to progress the feasibility study for the Panton Project.  The share price is 13% higher at 1.525p.

UK Oil & Gas (LON: UKOG) says the explosives permits have been secured for the penetration of Pinarova’s 9.625-inch casing. UK Oil & Gas has a 50% non-operated interest in Pinarova-1. The operator AME will decide the date for the resumption of testing. The share price is 10.6% ahead at 0.026p.

Foundries operator Chamberlin (LON: CMH) has received more than £1.85m of orders for its Scunthorpe-based large cast iron products foundry during November. The current order book is worth £4m. Group revenues and pre-tax profit are expected to grow this year. The share price increased 10% to 0.44p.

FALLERS

Getech (LON: GTC) says delays in projects mean that full year revenues will fall short of forecasts. Cavendish has cut its expectations from £5.1m to £4.2m. Getech is cutting costs, but the 2023 loss is likely to rise from £3.1m to £4.4m. H2 Green is being scaled back and partners are sought. Getech has been diversifying away from oil and gas data into developing critical metals and green energy activities. Getech has still not sold Kitson House to bring in additional working capital. The share price slumped 26.2% to 5.35p.

Jubilee Metals Group (LON: JLP) is raising £10m at 5.5p/share. This will be spent on a copper waste rock dump in Zambia. There could be 350 million tonnes at sampled grades of 1.5% copper. Jubilee Metals will form a special purpose vehicle with International Resources Holding RSC and Jubilee Metals will own a minimum of 30%. The waste rock dump will cost $30m, payable in stages. The share price slipped 16.9% to 5.65p.

XL Media (LON: XLM) has lowered guidance for the full year. The online performance-based marketing company says December trading will fall short of expectations. Cavendish has cut its revenues forecast from $57m to $50m, while earnings have been slashed by two-fifths to 2.3 cents/share.  The share price declined 11.7% to 6.5p.

Atlantic Lithium (LON: ALL) has completed a placing raising £4.2m at 23.35p/share. This will fund the development of the lithium project in Ghana. The share price fell 6.18% to 23.55p.

H&M shares rise despite flat Q4 sales

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Despite flat Q4 sales, the Swedish fast-fashion brand’s H&M shares rose on Friday as the company announced 4% sales growth in 2023.

Despite the 4% yearly growth, which came around as the side effects of the pandemic ending, H&M’s net sales for the period from September 1, 2023, to November 30, 2023, remained unchanged compared to the same quarter last year.

“H&M will be hoping for a last-minute rush of shoppers buying clothes for Christmas given how its fourth quarter period to the end of November was disappointing,” said AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould.

Excluding Russia and Belarus, there was a 3% increase in SEK (Swedish Krona) currency and a 1% decrease in all local currencies.

Overall, H&M Group’s net sales declined by 4% in local currencies compared to the corresponding quarter last year.

“Like a lot of fashion retailers, H&M has suffered from having too much stock, which it needs to offload. The only way to do that quickly and efficiently is to sell these items at a discount. That’s bad for group profit margins,” Mould added.

Furthermore, the problem did not affect H&M alone.

“Inditex has seen a slowdown in growth, and ASOS and Boohoo are also finding life a lot harder,” said Russ Mould. “Consumers are being more cautious with spending on fast fashion, and there is also fierce competition from the likes of Shein,” he added.

Trainline shares soar as DfT scrap plans for a ticket app

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Trainline shares had jumped 14.78% at the time of writing on Friday as the UK Department of Transport (DfT) abandoned plans for its own ticketing platform.

Unexpectedly, on Thursday, the Department for Transport (DfT), headed by Mark Harper, revealed its decision to forsake the plans for establishing a ticket-selling website and app for Great British Railways in a move to generate revenue and decrease costs for customers.

The DfT said on Thursday that they “confirm that we are not pursuing plans to deliver a centralised Great British Railways online rail ticket retailer.”

The plans for an app were initially introduced in May 2021, and the government’s platform would have directly rivalled Trainline.

But for now, the railway company’s stock prices shine as the abandonment of the DfT app “removes a potential competitive threat for the business in its core market,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.

Trainline’s “focus can now turn to the company’s efforts to expand in Europe, where rail travel is more reliable and affordable, and as it consolidates its position in its domestic market,” Mould added.

This year, investor worry escalated for Trainline as the possibility of a new online retail rival loomed in the UK, posing a threat to its dominant 62% market share, as noted by analysts from JP Morgan. 

“Trainline is a well-known brand, and its app has good functionality, but the initial reaction to plans for a state-backed app, when the shares fell more than 20% intraday, shows it is vulnerable to fresh competition,” said Russ Mould.

FTSE 100 consolidates after landmark week for global monetary policy

The FTSE 100 was broadly flat on Friday as London’s leading index consolidated after a landmark week for global monetary policy.

This week, the Federal Reserve sent strong signals to the market that they are well and truly done with the hiking cycle and were eyeing interest rate cuts next year.

Markets have quickly priced in up to 150bps in rate cuts by the Federal Reserve during 2024. The level of cuts predicted by futures markets is at odds with the Fed’s own projections, but there is a clear consensus US interest rates will fall next year.

Global stocks soared after Wednesday’s Federal Reserve instalment, with their dovish tone underpinning a risk-on rally.

The ECB and BoE provided their thoughts on interest rates yesterday.

While Europe and the UK’s central banks weren’t as dovish as the Federal Reserve, they certainly weren’t as hawkish as they have been in recent months.

“The FTSE 100 started the day modestly higher, consolidating its big gains from yesterday but not showing signs of extending its rally,” said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

After starting the session higher, the FTSE 100 was trading down 0.3% at 7,627 on Friday.

Russ Mould continued to explain, “This may reflect the mixed messages coming from central banks this week. The market might be left feeling as if it has stepped through the looking glass. The Federal Reserve, despite a resilient US economy, is happy to talk rate cuts while the Bank of England and the European Central Bank, who face a much less rosy economic backdrop, are pouring cold water on hopes for a pivot.

“Perhaps the Bank of England and ECB remain concerned about energy prices and any possible inflationary pressures they might bring with winter upon us. America’s relative energy independence largely insulates it from this threat.

“Asian stocks pushed ahead as they reacted to the Fed’s dovish stance. The resulting weakness in the dollar tends to be good news for emerging markets.”

The FTSE 100’s miners were a beacon of light on Friday, posting strong gains on a day most other sectors traded negatively.

St James’s Place was the top faller after brokers cut their price target. The wealth manager shares were down 3.5% at the time of writing.

DS Smith was the top gainer, followed closely by miners Glencore, Anglo American, and Antofagasta.

Atlantic Lithium completes placing to fund Ghana lithium project development

Atlantic Lithium shares were weaker on Friday after the lithium miner completed a successful placement to fund development at its operations in Ghana.

Atlantic Lithium has raised A$8.0 million (approx. £4.2 million) through an institutional placement of 18,181,819 new shares at A$0.44 per share.

The proceeds will fund early works and permitting activities for its lithium project in Ghana, support an upgraded resource estimate in Q3 2024, and provide working capital.

Canaccord Genuity acted as lead manager, and Wilsons Advisory & Stockbroking as co-manager on the placement.

The fundraising comes as Atlantic Lithium aims to deliver Ghana’s first lithium mine after recently securing a mining lease for its project.

“Through the support of our existing institutional shareholder base and in welcoming a number of new institutions onto our register, we are pleased to have successfully raised A$8 million,” said Neil Herbert, Executive Chairman of Atlantic Lithium.

“As we await the completion and the receipt of the funds from the Minerals Income Investment Fund’s investment, as well as the completion of the off-take process that is currently underway, the proceeds put the Company in a strong position to continue advancing the Ewoyaa Lithium Project at pace.

“The Placing enables us to fund the numerous activities that are underway or imminent that seek to add further value to the Project, aligning with the growth ambitions of the Company.

“With a number of key milestones ahead of us, we look forward to providing further updates on our progress in due course.”

Potential banking failures biggest financial market crash risk – BullionVault

Recent research by BullionVault highlighted that nearly one-third (32.9%) of investors in precious metals consider banking failures to be the most probable trigger for a financial market crash in 2024.

Concerns about an economic recession (31.9%) and geopolitical conflict (15.4%) followed.

The survey has been run each year since 2014, and this year included 2002 individuals in the UK.

“While geopolitical turbulence has put a rising floor beneath gold prices so far this decade, investors now see financial and economic instability as the biggest risks for 2024. Physical bullion continues to appeal as a hedge against such turmoil, boosting confidence in gold’s underlying uptrend even at this year’s new record prices, said Adrian Ash, director of research at BullionVault.

The price of gold in GBP per ounce has experienced a notable increase of 6.9% throughout the current year.

BullionVault reported that in December, Gold achieved record highs in all major currencies except the Swiss Franc.

Furthermore, despite inflation being a huge concern for investors a year ago, it is not perceived as a major threat in the upcoming year.

While the respondents identify banking failures as the most probable cause of a financial market crash next year, their primary reason for investing in physical bullion is their concern about underlying currency debasement and inflation (33.9%).

Looking forward to 2024, monetary policy remains the leading factor at the forefront, with 25.0% of respondents emphasising its significance, followed by geopolitics at 22.0% and government deficits at 20.8%.

“While geopolitical turbulence has put a rising floor beneath gold prices so far this decade, investors now see financial and economic instability as the biggest risks for 2024. Physical bullion continues to appeal as a hedge against such turmoil, boosting confidence in gold’s underlying uptrend even at this year’s new record prices,” said Adrian Ash.