JTC agrees to £2.7bn acquisition by Permira
The deal gives shareholders a hefty premium, though not all analysts are convinced by the price. Christopher Akers reports.
The board of JTC (JTC) has agreed to a £2.7bn cash acquisition offer from investment firm Permira, which looks set to end a private equity battle for the FTSE 250 fund administration group.
The deal values JTC at 1,340p per share, a 49 per cent premium to the group’s share price in August before Permira made its first offer. The agreed enterprise value is a multiple of more than 26 times JTC’s adjusted Ebitda in the 12 months to June.
The takeover proposal was the sixth from Permira, while Warburg Pincus has made four. The extended put up or shut up (PUSU) deadline ends on 14 November.
Shore Capital analyst Vivek Raja said “we struggle to envisage [another offer] that is meaningfully higher emerging”, adding: “Either way, we think this is a good deal for JTC’s shareholders.” On the other hand, Investec analyst Michael Donnelly argued that “the price is a low one, and likely to disappoint many investors”.
Deal completion is expected in the third quarter of 2026. This is conditional on 75 per cent of JTC shareholders voting for the acquisition. Irrevocable undertakings have been given by more than 7 per cent of shareholders.
JTC gave several reasons why an acquisition would be beneficial for shareholders. These include currently limited options for debt-funded M&A and a UK fundraising environment which means that “JTC has been viewed as a sub-optimal counterparty in acquisition processes for strategic and transformational targets”.
In September, JTC reported 17 per cent revenue growth and a 15 per cent uplift in adjusted Ebitda in half-year results to 30 June. Earlier this month, the group completed the acquisition of trust and estate planning services business Kleinwort Hambros Trust for £20mn.
JTC shares fell 5 per cent in early trading on news of the Permira agreement, but have gained more than 30 per cent this year on the private equity bidding war. CA
Diageo hires former Tesco chief as new boss
Spirits maker Diageo (DGE) has named Sir Dave Lewis, a consumer sector veteran who led Tesco (TSCO) from 2014 to 2020, as its new chief executive.
The appointment brings to an end a five-month search during which former finance boss Nik Jhangiani had taken the reins as interim chief, following the departure of previous leader Debra Crew in July.
“Diageo has pulled a blinder by hiring the man who saved Tesco,” said Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell. Lewis is well-regarded in the industry, having successfully led Tesco through a difficult period, after spending 27 years at consumer goods giant Unilever (ULVR).
Jhangiani will continue as interim chief executive until the end of the year, before resuming his role as chief financial officer. The company said Deirdre Mahlan, who returned to Diageo as interim chief financial officer, “will continue to support Diageo through the transition”.
Diageo’s new boss will try to investigate a turnaround after a challenging 18 months in which the owner of brands such as Guinness and Johnnie Walker has issued multiple profit warnings, most recently at the group’s first-quarter trading update last week.
The company said it now expects net sales growth to be “flat to slightly down” for FY2026, after originally guiding for flat levels for the year. EW
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BAE Systems banks on more bumper orders
BAE Systems (BA.) chief executive Charles Woodburn said he was “confident in the outlook” for the business after securing sizeable new orders, with further deals expected to be announced by the end of the year.
The company has secured £27bn of orders year-to-date, with second-half deals already worth more than the £13.2bn secured in the first half. New orders include a £4bn deal for 20 Typhoon aircraft from the Turkish government last week.
The defence giant said there had been “no material impact” yet on its US business due to the government shutdown and is encouraged by the momentum in Congress to break the deadlock. However, it warned that if the shutdown were to drag on, it could potentially lead to payment delays.
BAE Systems remains on track to meet upgraded guidance given in July, which is for sales to grow by 8-10 per cent on last year’s total of £28.3bn, and for underlying operating profit to be 9-11 per cent higher than the £3bn earned in 2024.
Jefferies analyst Chloe Lemarie said BAE Systems remained likely to achieve a book-to-bill ratio of above 1 for the year, based on her revenue estimate of £30.2bn. The recent agreement with Norway to provide at least five Type 26 frigates is also likely to lead to a big order, but this may not be booked as revenue until next year, she added. MF
4imprint shares soar on upgraded guidance
Shares in 4imprint (FOUR) surged 18 per cent on Tuesday after the promotional goods group lifted its 2025 profit guidance and said full-year group revenue should land at the top end of analyst expectations.
The board now expects group revenue of at least $1.32bn (£1bn) and pre-tax profit of $142mn. That still marks a small dip on last year, with revenue down around 4 per cent and profit off about 8 per cent, but investors were clearly reassured by the improved outlook despite trade tariffs.
Group revenue for the first 10 months of 2025 was running 2 per cent below the same period in 2024, with order intake down around 3 per cent. Existing customer orders have held steady, though new customer orders have slipped 13 per cent year-to-date.
Margins have held up better than feared, with a gross profit margin just under 33 per cent and a double-digit operating margin intact. The FTSE 250 group said product cost increases linked to tariffs are being phased in more slowly than expected, easing some of the pressure on profitability.
Panmure Liberum expects consensus earnings per share to reflect the delayed tariff impact, which the broker expects will materialise in the second half. Analyst Joe Brent said $10mn of capital expenditure earmarked for the relocation of office space shows “confidence in future cash generation”.
“On the macro side, the risk of a US recession is still elevated, and small company sentiment appears to be wavering,” he added. The US promotional goods market grew by 5 per cent year on year in the third quarter, according to the Advertising Specialty Institute, although other trade bodies point to much more muted growth. VM
Hilton Food Group shares plunge on profit warning
Shares in Hilton Food Group (HFG) plummeted by more than a fifth on Tuesday after the company downgraded its full-year outlook and left a question mark over prospects for 2026.
The food retail supplier cited a “highly inflationary pricing environment” as weighing on demand. The firm now expects pre-tax profit for 2025 to come in at £72mn-£75mn, as opposed to the £77mn-£81mn range previously guided.
While the company expects its salmon unit to perform well over the festive period, its broader UK seafood division continues to suffer from lower demand for white fish. Matters are not helped by issues with its Foppen smoked salmon business, where exports have been disrupted as a result of US regulatory restrictions.
Implementation of a workaround has been further delayed by the US government shutdown, and it is now no longer expected to be operational by the end of this year. The company warned that achieving profit progression next year will be “difficult” as a result. EW
ITV in talks to sell its broadcasting arm to Sky
ITV (ITV) has confirmed that it is in early-stage talks with Sky to sell its media and entertainment business in a deal worth £1.6bn.
The media and entertainment business consists of ITV’s free-to-air TV channels and its streaming service, ITVX. It does not include the ITV Studios business, which has been the subject of previous takeover discussions. It makes programmes such as Love Island and Britain’s Got Talent, which air on its broadcasting channels, but it also sells to streaming platforms.
On Thursday last week, ITV reported that its studios arm remained on track to hit full-year targets after growing third-quarter revenue by 11 per cent to £1.35bn. Revenue in the media and entertainment business fell by 5 per cent, though, with chief executive Carolyn McCall blaming uncertainty around the forthcoming Budget for a slowing of advertising spend.
ITV’s shares are up by more than a fifth since the news of the potential sale, pushing up its market capitalisation to nearly £3.1bn.
Analysts at UBS had valued the media and entertainment arm at £1.5bn. If it was sold at that price and all of the proceeds used to buy back shares, it would mean earnings per share would increase by more than 20 per cent to 10p, valuing the remaining studios arm at just seven times earnings. MF
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