A large cash pile and profitable subsidiaries generating more cash are a strong base for any company. That cash is not earning much in the way of interest payments. Investing in another profitable business will enhance earnings substantially.
The rating is already modest and will be reduced when acquisitions are made. The first acquisition since the sale of the underperforming part of the group has performed strongly.
There was pro forma cash of more than £8m following a property disposal, which is nearly two-thirds of the company's value. Some of this cash has been used to buy back existing s...
FTSE 100 holds on to weekly gains as the UK economy returns to pre-pandemic levels
The FTSE 100 was flat on Friday as the market digested a week of corporate updates and news the UK economy had reached pre-pandemic levels.
UK GDP rose 0.9% in November meaning the economy had completed its recovery to levels of activity saw before the pandemic. However, it must be noted these figures were taken before the impact of Omicron fully took hold in December, which is likely to see a reduction in activity.
“It’s taken 20 volatile months for the UK economy to finally clamber back up to where it had been before Covid wrought its damage. The speed of growth has caught many by surprise considering the lacklustre figures delivered the previous month, although October’s number have been revised upwards to 0.2%,’ said Danni Hewson, AJ Bell financial analyst.
Although London’s leading index is comprised of companies that largely earn revenue’s from overseas, we may learn in the coming weeks the strength in the UK economy is being replicated in other major global economies.
After a strong start to 2022, analysts remain positive on FTSE 100 shares, suggesting we could see the rally extend further as we progress through the year.
“As we enter 2022, 57% of all analysts’ recommendations are buys and just 9% are sells for constituents of the FTSE 100, the highest and lowest scores over the past eight years. For the FTSE 350 index 59% of all recommendations are positive ratings and just 8% negative ones, so even after last year’s healthy share price gains the analysts are more bullish than ever,” says AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould.
“Momentum players may feel inclined to go with the positive flow. Contrarians may take the opposite view as they bear in mind legendary investor Sir John Templeton’s maxim that ‘bull markets are founded on pessimism, grow on scepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.’
The FTSE 100 was trading at 7,560 in early trade on Friday. At this level the FTSE 100 index has added roughly 1% to its value on the week.
BP and Standard Chartered were the strongest weekly gainer, both adding close to 7.5%.
Helped by stronger oil prices, BP has been a significant contributor to the FTSE 100’s gains due to its large weighting in the index.
Banking shares HSBC, Barclays and Lloyds also posted respectable increases during a week anticipation grew around further increases to global interest rates.
Experian revenues grow
Experian posted strong results this morning, where revenues grew 14%.
Organic revenue was up 11% and organic growth in B2B revenues was 6%.
“We now expect organic revenue growth for the full year to be in the range of 12-13%, with total revenue growth now expected in the range of 16-17%, at constant exchange rates. We continue to expect strong EBIT margin accretion, also at constant exchange rates,” said chief executive, Brian Cassin.
Commenting on the results, Steve Clayton, Hargreaves Lansdown select fund manager, said: “Overall, this is a strong report from Experian, but few were expecting anything else. So on a weak day for the wider market, following tumbles on Wall Street overnight, it was always going to be heavy going this morning.”
“Perhaps on a stronger day these numbers would have been better received. Instead the stock is drifting lower by a percent or so in early trading. But when sentiment picks up, Experian is likely to still be growing strongly, which rarely stays out of fashion for long.”
TPG shares jump on first day of trading
TPG shares jumped almost 12% yesterday on the US Private equity giant’s first day of trading.
The group valuation surged to $10bn. It’s the biggest floatation in the US so far this year. TPG has almost $109 billion in assets and has investments in AirBnb, Spotify and many other companies.
“We will continue to build on the business in the way we have historically – organic growth, seeing opportunities and building into it,” said CEO Jon Winkelried.
“Our experience has been that if you choose the right company in the right sectors, they will grow through the market perturbations that you see at times like these.”
The group was founded by David Bonderman and Jim Coulter.
Cineworld revenues surge thanks to Spiderman
Cineworld revenues almost hit pre-pandemic levels last month thanks to hits such as Spiderman.
Like-for-like revenues worldwide were at 88% of December 2019 levels. Upcomnig films including Jurassic World: Dominion and a Mission Impossible film also hope to boost revenues.
“This recovery has been driven by an excellent slate of movies, including record-breaking Spider-Man: No Way Home, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, Venom, Black Widow, Dune, Free Guy, Eternals and No Time to Die,” said the group in a statement.
“We have seen recovery in theatre attendances across our geographies, which generated a positive cashflow performance for Q4. “Spider-Man: No Way Home” has shown the importance for studios of cinematic releases,”said chief executive Mooky Greidinger.
“Whilst there are challenges ahead, we are excited to welcome customers to our cinemas to enjoy the highly anticipated slate of movies throughout 2022.”

