BHP gives up pursuit of Anglo American
The Australian miner will still be keen to add other copper assets to its portfolio. Mark Robinson reports
BHP (BHP) has formally ruled out making a fresh takeover bid for Anglo American (AAL), drawing a line under renewed speculation that the miner was preparing another cash-and-shares offer for its London-listed rival.
The board confirmed the ‘Big Australian’ was no longer considering a merger, after the Financial Times reported on Sunday that the company was back in the buyers’ circle and had made a new approach to acquire the company.
“Following preliminary discussions with the board of Anglo American, BHP Group confirms that it is no longer considering a combination of the two companies,” the miner said in a statement on Monday.
“Whilst BHP continues to believe that a combination with Anglo American would have had strong strategic merits and created significant value for all stakeholders, BHP is confident in the highly compelling potential of its own organic growth strategy.”
The news comes just weeks before a 9 December shareholder vote on the $53bn (£40bn) ‘merger of equals’ between Anglo and Canadian copper producer Teck Resources (CA:TECK.B), announced in early September. In an all-share deal, Teck shareholders will be entitled to receive 1.3301 new Anglo American shares for every share they hold.
The deal would leave Anglo and Teck shareholders controlling 62.4 per cent and 37.6 per cent, respectively, of the newly combined entity, which is to be named Anglo Teck plc. Anglo American also announced that it would pay a one-time special dividend worth $4.5bn to its existing shareholders prior to completion.
The merger proposal is the latest in a succession of potential deals, as the mining industry rationalises and consolidates in response to evolving demand trends linked to the energy transition, including the widespread investment in national grids across the globe.
If the Anglo-Teck deal were to go through, it would mean that the combined miner would have more than 70 per cent copper exposure – the critical element linked to the transition.
And there’s plenty of interest in the space. Mining heavyweight Glencore (GLEN) had made overtures to Teck Resources in 2023, while BHP first proposed getting into bed with Anglo American last year in a $49bn deal.
Speculation around BHP’s new approach for Anglo American came within a few days of Glass, Lewis & Co – an independent proxy advisory firm – endorsing the proposed Anglo-Teck tie-up.
Although BHP is walking away, the long-term upward trajectory for copper prices is expected to continue driving consolidation in the sector. Smaller producers with faltering ore grades are likely to become more commercially attractive as the break-even level on deposits increases alongside higher underlying commodity prices.
Beazley disappoints as premium growth slows
The disappointing run in Beazley’s (BEZ) share price since the summer has accelerated after the specialist insurer reported markedly weaker than expected premium growth in its third-quarter trading update.
It was the most definitive proof yet that the insurance cycle has entered a softer phase; coverage is plentiful, competition is fierce and underwriters are now scrapping for whatever business remains, putting downward pressure on premium prices.
Gross written premiums rose by just 1 per cent to $4.7bn (£3.5bn) for the nine months, well below prior guidance. The cyber insurance line, once a growth engine, saw an 8 per cent drop in written premiums to $848mn.
Chief executive Adrian Cox acknowledged that “growth is running at the low end of our guidance, and below the level we delivered in the first half”. Consequently, Beazley downgraded its full-year growth outlook to flat to low single digits.
The company had previously signalled that it had missed the worst fallout from this year’s Los Angeles wildfires. This meant that management was able to upgrade guidance for the combined ratio outlook to the low 80s, though that is small consolation given the slowdown in top-line momentum.
Peel Hunt analyst Andreas van Embden said Beazley would focus on maintaining the existing business, with an estimated 1 per cent premium decline in 2026, while investing in new areas of growth. “As such, the management team believes it can rebuild growth towards its mid-single-digit target over the medium term,” he added.
Still, a business that is built around scaling specialist, higher-margin lines is now signalling a slowdown, and the market is reacting accordingly. JH
Fresh profit warnings at S4 Capital and M&C Saatchi
S4 Capital (SFOR) has downgraded its full-year net revenue outlook for the second time this month, with Martin Sorrell’s digital advertising agency now expecting like-for-like net revenue to fall by just under 10 per cent in 2025, compared with the previously guided upper-single-digit drop.
Even after ongoing cost cuts, that worse-than-expected revenue decline is set to flow through to the bottom line: operational Ebitda is now forecast at £75mn, below the £81.6mn company-compiled market consensus.
Management blamed lower project-based revenue, client caution and a slower ramp-up of new business wins. The one area of stability was the balance sheet, with S4 maintaining its £100mn-£140mn year-end net debt target.
M&C Saatchi (SAA) also warned on profits, the ad agency revealing that the unprecedentedly lengthy US government shutdown had hit its high-margin Issues division, which normally delivers a chunky share of fourth-quarter revenue and profit.
As a result, the company now expects a like-for-like net revenue drop of around 7 per cent for the 2025 financial year, or 1.5 per cent excluding Australia, and operating profit of between £26mn and £28mn. That implies a margin of around 12.5 to 13 per cent and falls short of guidance given at the half-year point.
The Australian arm is still in turnaround mode after a sharp slump during the first half, with restructuring and management changes under way. To soften the blow, the board has committed to launching a £5mn share buyback programme over the next 12 months.
Management said the Issues division should return to double-digit growth in 2026 once US public sector work gets back to normal. VM
Domino’s and Hilton Food chiefs bow out
Andrew Rennie, chief executive of Domino’s Pizza (DOM), has stepped down with immediate effect after just over two years at the helm of the FTSE 250 business.
Chief operating officer Nicola Frampton is taking over on an interim basis, with the search process to identify a permanent successor under way. Shore Capital analyst Katie Cousins described the move as “unexpected” and a “loss to the business” given Rennie’s “wealth of experience”.
Rennie had worked at Domino’s for more than two decades, and his departure “by mutual agreement” marks the latest executive reshuffle at the struggling pizza delivery group. The shares are down more than 50 per cent over the past year.
Interim finance boss Richard Snow is set to be replaced by Andrew Andrea, who will join from drinks company C&C Group (CCR) in March. As a result, the company’s planned 9 December capital markets day has been postponed.
Hilton Food Group (HFG) also announced leadership changes this week. Chief executive Steve Murrells left with immediate effect, after agreeing with the board that “now is the right time to search for a new leader to take the business forward”.
Non-executive chair Mark Allen has been promoted to executive chair to oversee the search for a new boss. Murrell’s exit follows a profit warning earlier this month, which sent the shares down by more than a fifth on the day.
The company blamed ongoing operational issues at the group’s smoked salmon business, Foppen, and subdued demand for white fish hitting its UK seafood division. The outcome of a strategic business review is scheduled for 29 January. EW/VM
Mobico guidance slips amid audit overhaul
Mobico (MCG) has warned that full-year adjusted operating profit will land at the lower end of its £180mn to £195mn guided range. The group blamed tougher competition in its UK coach division, fewer passengers using its UK bus services and losses on a WeDriveU contract in the US.
The National Express parent said it has launched a “comprehensive” cost-cutting programme and confirmed it would not redeem its hybrid bond at the first call date. That means the coupon will reset in February 2026. Panmure Liberum estimated a new rate of around 8.1 per cent, adding roughly £19mn a year in interest costs from 2027 onwards.
Mobico also announced it had appointed KPMG as its new auditor after the resignation of Deloitte, prompting an immediate shift of the financial year end from 31 December to 31 March to give the firm more time to complete its work.
“While this avoids the shares being suspended (assuming the audit of the extended 15-month period is completed by the end of July), this hardly inspires confidence,” said Panmure Liberum analyst Gerald Khoo.
Unaudited results for the 12 months to December 2025 will be released by the end of March next year, followed by audited accounts for the 15 months to March 2026 by the end of July. The shares are down more than 70 per cent over the past year. VM

