Ideas

A well-built oil stock that can weather price volatility

The equipment company is profiting from an offshore spending boom and has other tricks up its sleeve

Alex Hamer
Alex Hamer

The oil and gas industry does a good job of maintaining consistency while operating in volatile markets. It took a pandemic for Shell (SHEL) to cut its dividend for the first time since the second world war. 

While energy commodity markets have looked becalmed more recently, that doesn’t mean the industry has no issues. With a low oil price knocking cash flows, the majors are having to use debt to cover large buyback plans. But project spending has held up – investors are pushing for production growth.

The market has picked up on this, with buyers sending shares in project and auxiliary specialists Halliburton (US:HAL) up over 40 per cent in the past six months and Schlumberger (US:SLB) up 20 per cent. Some investors even saw the potential for intervention in Venezuela to pave the way for US services companies to repeat the gains of the Iraq war era before US President Donald Trump raided the presidential palace earlier this month. 

Hunting bull points

  • Sales set to climb from subsea rush

  • Successful cost-cutting programme

  • Dividend rising, plus cash for additional buybacks 

For London energy investors, Hunting (HTG) is the entry into this world. Rather than attempting full-service contracts or large projects (shown to be a tough game by the fates of Wood Group and Petrofac last year) Hunting makes parts used in various upstream oil assets, ranging from onshore shale to deepwater fields. 

The best performing units most recently have supplied offshore developments, which is not a surprise given the cuts to spending in the US shale industry. Big contracts have come from Guyana, where ExxonMobil (US:XOM) and Chevron (US:CVX) are spending billions on new fields, and the Middle East, including a record order from the Kuwait Oil Company (KOC). 

Hunting is large enough to handle orders such as the $231mn (£172mn) KOC deal but small enough that management has a firm hand on proceedings. It has restructured the business in recent years to reflect where investment is going in the industry, closing operations in Europe and the US and opening a new facility in Dubai.

Hunting bear points

  • Reliant on energy industry investment 

  • Shares can be volatile

Part of this work has been undertaken to limit the extreme cyclicality of earnings seen a decade ago. Between 2014 and 2015, the company’s cash profit fell from $272mn to $62mn as the initial shale revolution tailed off. This figure has been more consistent recently.

Last year, Hunting generated a cash profit of $135mn, which analysts see rising to $152mn in 2026. Another major KOC tender is also in the works, which could push sales up beyond current forecasts. 

As such, earnings growth has been incremental in recent years rather than explosive, but there has been serious progress since we last put Hunting forward as a buy idea two years ago

This has come in the form of higher sales and better cost control, leading to a larger cash pile and greater returns for shareholders. 

The cost cuts on this side of the Atlantic were unfortunately reflective of the broader energy sector, with around $11mn in annual spending saved from site closures in the Netherlands and Norway. Hunting has also slimmed down its Aberdeen operations.

“Oil companies today have too many [more attractive] places to go spend money,” said Hunting chief executive Jim Johnson, who argued that last November’s Budget had not improved the prospects for greater North Sea investment. “It’s just ridiculous to see such an asset going to waste.”

Hunting’s valuation does jump around given cash profits and pre-tax profits can swing from year to year (although they have settled down more recently), but given that the company is still valued at a discount to its net assets, we think an entry now still makes sense. 

At an enterprise value/earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda) ratio of around five, Hunting remains good value in our view, behind the major oilfield services companies but with enough scale to increase sales and profits in a meaningful way as the subsea spending boom continues. The dividend yield helps too, even if the recent share price rise has knocked it. 

Hunting splits its operations into a mix of geographic and product-based divisions. The largest operating segment in sales terms is North America, although this does not include the Hunting Titan business, which supplies the shale industry in the US and elsewhere.

The North America business generated sales of $175mn in the first half of 2025, split between its oil country tubular goods (OCTG), advanced manufacturing and other manufacturing sectors. The Asia Pacific unit, which has become critical to Hunting in recent years, brought in $154mn. 

Subsea and OCTG products had the highest Ebitda margin in the period, at 13 and 19 per cent, respectively. Hunting Titan has proved a drag on earnings in recent years, but cost cutting has seen it return to a cash profit more recently, with a margin of 5 per cent in the first half. This compares with less than 1 per cent for FY2024. 

A trading update this week pointed to further improvements within the subsea sector, with a boosted sales goal of $470mn a year by 2030 – a $220mn increase on the previous plan.

“[Subsea] is the highest margin product line we have,” said chief financial officer Bruce Ferguson. “If you look from now to the end of the decade, we’re looking at north of 20 per cent,” he added. 

The high-end target Ebitda margin is 22 per cent, compared with the group-wide goal of 15 per cent. In 2025, this margin was 13 per cent.

The margin goal is paired with the aim of $2bn in annual sales by the end of the decade. That combination is important – hiking sales merely through acquisitions is a common move for companies aiming for growth. 

Potential investors should also note management’s ambition to raise the dividend by 13 per cent a year by 2030.

If subsea is the sure-fire bet in the oil and gas space for Hunting, then the unit with the potential to surprise investors is the organic oil recovery (OOR) business. The division was originally developed by scientists to increase recoveries of oil significantly. Hunting purchased it for $18mn last year after its founders struggled to gain commercial traction.

The method is already in testing with major producers, and RBC Capital Markets analyst Victoria McCulloch said last year that “growth from the FES [subsea] acquisition and OOR businesses has the potential to accelerate the company’s margin progress [in 2026]”. The company has said OOR sales could be as high as $100mn within a few years. Ferguson said signing up would be a simple decision for producers. “It works. It’s easy to deploy. It is scalable.”

In the company’s words, OOR “manipulates the resident downhole ecology [and] offers operators an advanced tertiary oil recovery resulting in increased production, the lowering of lifting costs and significantly reducing H2S levels”.

In easier-to-understand terms, that ecology manipulation is achieved by adding certain nutrients into an oil reservoir that help to release trapped and residual oil. This may sound more like a small-cap pushing a breakthrough technology but the risks are low, given there is no need for significant manufacturing facilities or a large workforce to sell OOR. 

A decade ago, Hunting would have been rattled by the weakness in the oil price. But the resilience of the business and its vital role in projects being built by national oil companies and majors means it has more than weathered the current storm. It’s also a good one to have in your back pocket if oil markets wake up. 

Company Details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
Hunting (HTG) £617mn 392p 400p / 245p
Size/Debt NAV per share* Net Cash / Debt(-)* Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
478p £32.6mn - 132%
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) CAPE
11 2.70% 9.10% -
Quality/ Growth EBIT Margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
8.40% 7.90% 1.80% -
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
27% 18% 17.40% -0.90%
Year end 31 Dec Sales ($bn) Profit before tax ($mn) EPS (c) DPS (c)
2022 0.73 -2 4.7 9
2023 0.93 50 20.3 10
2024 1.05 75.6 31.4 11.5
f’cst 2025 1.06 78 36.4 12.8
f’cst 2026 1.12 103 46.3 14.4
chg (%) 6 32 27 13
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now). *Converted to £
Economics

US output surges: Economic week ahead – 19-23 January

Will the US economy keep motoring along?

Dan Jones
Dan Jones

A third and final estimate of US third-quarter GDP growth will be released next Thursday. That follows the (delayed) announcement released on 23 December which showed that output grew at 4.3 per cent in the period, well ahead of economists’ predictions of 3.3 per cent growth.

Defence spending was a contributing factor, but Capital Economics also sees underlying strength in the economy, aided by surging exports and productivity gains. It forecasts that Q4 growth, the first estimate of which is due at the end of January, will be similarly robust.

Monday 19 January

China: House price index, industrial production, Q4 GDP, retail sales

Eurozone: CPI inflation

Japan: Capacity utilisation, industrial production

UK: Rightmove house price index


Tuesday 20 January

China: PBoC interest rate decision

Eurozone: Construction output, current account

UK: Unemployment rate


Wednesday 21 January

UK: CPI, PPI and RPI inflation


Thursday 22 January

China: House price index, industrial production, retail sales

Eurozone: Consumer confidence (preliminary)

UK: Public sector net borrowing

US: Q3 GDP, PCE inflation


Friday 23 January

Japan: BoJ interest rate decision, manufacturing & services PMIs (preliminary)

Eurozone: Composite, manufacturing & services PMIs (preliminary)

UK: Composite, manufacturing & services PMIs (preliminary), consumer confidence, retail sales

US: Composite, manufacturing & services PMIs (preliminary), Michigan consumer sentiment index

Companies

Currys & Qinetiq: Stock market week ahead – 19-23 January

A summary of key company announcements expected in the coming week

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

Monday 19 January

Trading updates: Marshalls (MSLH), XP Power (XPP) 


Tuesday 20 January  

Trading updates: 4imprint (FOUR), Cairn Homes (CRN), Gear4Music (G4M), Kier (KIE), QinetiQ (QQ.) 

Interims: Kromek (KMK) 

AGMs: Goldplat (GDP) 

Companies paying dividends: Pembroke VCT (3.5p)


Wednesday 21 January 

Economics: Consumer price index, producer price index, retail price index 

Trading updates: Currys (CURY), Galliford Try (GFRD), ICG (ICG), JD Wetherspoon (JDW), JD Sports Fashion (JD.), PensionBee (PBEE), Persimmon (PSN), Burberry (BRBY) 

Companies paying dividends: Northern 2 VCT (1.7p), Northern 3 VCT (2p), Northern Venture Trust (1.6p), Speedy Hire (0.3p)


Thursday 22 January 

Economics: Public sector net borrowing 

Trading updates: Associated British Foods (ABF), B&M European Value Retail SA (BME), Harbour Energy (HBR), Wickes (WIX) 

Interims: Ilika (IKA), TheWorks.co.uk (WRKS) 

AGMs: Auction Technology (ATG), Barings Emerging EMEA Opportunities (BEMO) 

Companies paying dividends: Sirius Real Estate (2.80447p)


Friday 23 January 

Economics: GFK consumer confidence, retail sales 

AGMs: SSP (SSPG) 

Companies paying dividends: Baltic Classifieds (1.1252p), Big Yellow (23.8p), Cranswick (27p), DiscoverIE (4.05p), Gore Street Energy Storage Fund (0.69p), International Biotechnology Trust (15.64p), JPMorgan Global Emerging Markets Income Trust (1.5p), Latham (James) (8.1p), One Health Group (2.1p), Personal Assets Trust (1.4p), Patria Private Equity Trust (4.4p)

Companies going ex-dividend on 22 January
Company Dividend Date
Brickability 1.12p 19-Feb
Solid State 0.92p 13-Feb
City of London Investment Trust 5.4p 27-Feb
Fevara 1.2p 13-Mar
WH Smith 6p 12-Feb
Funds

The pros and cons of tracker bond funds

They are not as popular as passive stock market plays, and there are plenty of reasons why

Val Cipriani
Val Cipriani

In the long-running active versus passive debate, the conversation tends to be centred on stocks. The concentration of global equity indices and how hard it has been for active managers to outperform over the past few years remains a live discussion.

Passive bond funds have not held the spotlight to the same extent, even though there are plenty of options for investors. They can be useful in a portfolio, but some say they have more drawbacks than their equity counterparts.

As with stocks, a key advantage is low fees. But experts don’t quite agree on how big the gap between active and passive costs is within fixed income.

“On average, active bond funds underperform the index, and this is mostly due to the higher fees they’re charging,” argues Matthew Bird, chartered financial planner at Falco Financial Planning. “As fees for bond funds can be similar to those for equity funds yet their expected returns are lower, one could conclude that the argument for passives is even stronger when it comes to bonds.”

Laith Khalaf, head of investment analysis at AJ Bell, agrees that passive funds have a cost advantage. But he adds: “This is less pronounced in the fixed income space, where active fund charges tend to be lower.”

In short, it very much depends on which funds you are looking at. For example, the four bond funds included in the IC’s Top 50 Funds list – TwentyFour Dynamic Bond (GB00B57TXN82), Royal London Sterling Extra Yield (IE00BD0NCB41), Rathbone Ethical Bond (GB00B77DQT14) and Premier Miton Corporate Bond Monthly Income (GB0003895496) – have ongoing charges of 0.79 per cent, 0.84 per cent, 0.65 per cent and 0.35 per cent, respectively. That means they range from the decidedly cheap to roughly in line with the costs of a global stocks fund.

So if you do decide on an active strategy, keep an eye on costs; what would be a reasonable fee for an equity fund might arguably count as more expensive for a bond fund.

On the other hand, if you choose a passive option, you should be aware that bond indices are not necessarily as conventional as, say, the MSCI World. “Whereas plain vanilla equity trackers are simple and straightforward, buying a bond tracker probably requires a bit more knowledge and experience to understand the characteristics of the index being followed, in particular its duration and credit risk,” says Khalaf.

So, regardless of whether you opt for a passive or active approach, you should check the factsheet and understand the kind of debt the fund is buying. There are all kinds of bond indices, from the very broad to the very specific, which allow you to target specific types of debt, currencies and duration.

The Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond index is a broad index that is often used as a proxy for the whole market, just as the MSCI All Country World is for stocks. It is tracked, for example, by the iShares Core Global Aggregate Bond ETF GBP Hedged (AGBP), which is included in our Top 50 ETFs list.

Bloomberg states that the index is a “measure of global investment-grade debt from 27 local currency markets” and comprises “treasury, government-related, corporate and securitised fixed-rate bonds from both developed and emerging markets issuers”.

As of the first week of January, the iShares ETF had just shy of 20,000 holdings and yielded 3 per cent. It invested just over 50 per cent in government bonds, including 19 per cent in US Treasuries, 8 per cent in Japanese government bonds and nearly 3 per cent in UK gilts. It was well spread across maturities, with a quarter in the zero-three years range, just over half in the three-10 years range, and a fifth in longer durations.

With a fee of just 0.1 per cent, it is certainly a quick, cheap and diversified way to achieve broad exposure. But there are a few things the ETF does not offer: exposure to high-yield bonds, for those seeking riskier assets; a significant allocation to UK gilts, which for UK-based investors often makes a lot of sense; and, of course, an expert manager making calls on how to navigate a complex market.

The index is also a useful comparator for strategic bond funds such as TwentyFour Dynamic Bond, Schroder Strategic Bond (GB00B7FPS593) and M&G Optimal Income (GB00B1H05718). Strategic bond funds invest freely across the fixed income space, making calls on bond types, duration, sectors and credit risk. Comparing their positioning to that of the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond index gives you a good sense of the characteristics of a fund. However, there can be big differences, and strategic bond funds are often riskier.

“There is a propensity for managers to take on credit or duration risk to juice short-term returns,” Bird says. “Many such managers were found out in 2022 in a rising rate environment.” Allocations depend on the fund in question, and you may well want some exposure to high-yield bonds in your portfolio, but again a good look at the factsheet is in order.

For example, as at the end of November, TwentyFour Dynamic Bond held only 2.6 per cent in bonds with a maturity of more than 10 years, meaning it had less exposure to longer duration bonds than the Bloomberg Global Aggregate Bond index. However, it had 11.5 per cent in high-yield bonds and an average rating of BBB+, implying more credit risk than the index.

Higher risk does tend to bring higher returns, and as the chart below shows, strategic bond managers have significantly outperformed the iShares Core Global Aggregate Bond ETF over the past five years, on average. But given that, for many investors, bonds are intended to reduce risk and volatility in their portfolio, some caution is warranted.

The alternative to owning one broad bond fund is using a mix of active and passive funds, targeting different areas of the market. But there are certainly areas where you don’t need anything more complicated than a tracker.

“There is arguably little value to be had from active management in the UK gilt fund market,” says Khalaf. “But once you start mixing and matching government and corporate bonds, in different currencies, then an active approach starts to become more attractive.”

Remember that you can also buy UK gilts directly. The capital gains element of the return is tax-free, so if you have assets outside a tax wrapper, buying low-coupon gilts is certainly a tax-efficient option. Funds do not enjoy the same treatment.

One reason that a mixed approach makes sense is that when you are looking at corporate bonds, opting for passive products means owning more bonds issued by companies with the most debt. Ben Yearsley, director at Fairview Investing, says he doesn’t like passive bond funds for this reason. “Bonds are all about avoiding the losers, not necessarily picking the winners. Passive just buys everything,” he says.

Passive bond funds that Bird likes include the Vanguard Global Bond Index (IE00B50W2R13), for broad exposure to global bonds; the iShares UK Gilts All Stocks Index (GB00B83HGR24), for UK government bonds; and the Vanguard UK Investment Grade Bond Index (IE00B1S74Q32), for sterling-denominated corporate bonds.

FINANCIAL PLANNING AND EDUCATION

‘I need £62,000 a year – how do I invest my £1.9mn?’

Portfolio Clinic: Our reader’s goals look achievable, but is his strategy too cautious? Val Cipriani finds out

Val Cipriani
Val Cipriani

“How should I invest for income in retirement?” is perhaps the most common question we receive in the Portfolio Clinic. The answer depends on individual circumstances; some readers have very realistic goals, while others need to rethink their whole mindset.

Chris is firmly in the first camp. He is 60 and looking to ensure that he can live comfortably off his portfolio for the rest of his life, in case he decides to permanently retire.

“I have not worked for four years since I sold my US-based business, UK office and London house, divorced and downsized my life,” he says. “I am open to working again if the right business opportunity arises, but my principal aim is to ensure my portfolio meets my long-term needs.”

The portfolio is worth a total of £1.9mn, including about £170,000 in cash. Chris needs an income of about £72,000 a year before tax, some £10,000 of which is provided by an escalating annuity; in seven years, he will also receive the state pension, but the rest must come from his investments.

Chris hopes to grow the portfolio by 2 per cent a year on top of the withdrawals. His starting withdrawal rate is likely to be around 3.3 per cent, so he is aiming for an initial total return of about 5.3 per cent to begin with. He is opting for a balanced strategy, with about 40 per cent of the portfolio invested in cash, bonds and gilts.

He says: “I have been saving and investing for about 20 years and consider myself business savvy, but I’m full of bias and blind spots. Historically, I deliberately avoided US stocks to balance the fact that all my business interests were in the US; for the past few years, I have considered the market overpriced.

“I have a bias towards the UK and Asia, as they are the markets I know best and where I live,” he adds. “I generally think funds are over-promoted and overpriced, but have been attracted to the discounts on investment trusts in the past couple of years. I am also a fan of renewables, from both an environmental and investment perspective.”

His portfolio is a mix of bonds, index funds, investment trusts and individual stocks. He says he splits his holdings into three categories: income (yields of at least 5 per cent and able to maintain their share price); income and growth (yield of at least 2.5 per cent and the ability to grow by 25 per cent over five years); and pure growth (companies that can grow by 50 per cent within five years).

“I am hopeless at momentum investing and am much better at picking value, although I often make terrible timing mistakes. For example, I bought Rolls-Royce (RR.) on the cheap but then lost patience, selling just before it recovered eightfold,” he says. “Despite some failures, I am fairly content with my portfolio and have no problem with a large number of holdings, as I enjoy taking an active interest in companies and brands. But I would welcome an expert set of eyes to see whether my portfolio is good enough to meet my goals.”

Chris owns a £650,000 flat in London and a property in Asia and lives between the two. He is hoping to leave at least £1mn for his dependant to inherit.

Have your portfolio reviewed by experts

Are you on track to achieve your goals? Do your investments deliver the right returns? Is your financial planning as tax efficient as possible?

If not, head to the Portfolio Clinic. You can have your portfolio analysed by experts who will provide ideas and recommendations to help you.

Email us at portfolio.clinic@ft.com to find out more. To read examples, click here.

This is a free service and all submissions are welcome, whether you are starting or have amassed millions. We don’t reveal your name so your anonymity is guaranteed.

NONE OF THE COMMENTARY BELOW SHOULD BE REGARDED AS ADVICE. IT IS GENERAL INFORMATION BASED ON A SNAPSHOT OF THESE INVESTORS’ CIRCUMSTANCES

Your goals are sensible and achievable. There is reasonable scope for £62,000 a year, increasing with inflation, and leaving £1mn as an inheritance, especially when properties are factored in. The main challenge is planning for longevity and matching that with a disciplined approach in a world of unknowns. According to ONS data, a 60-year-old man in the UK has an average life expectancy of 84, with a one-in-10 chance of reaching 97.

The current stocks weighting of around 57 per cent is broadly reasonable in my view, but some areas need attention. You have too much cash. I would hold around 12 months’ worth of expenses instead, so around £62,000. Inflation erodes the value of cash, and with UK interest rates expected to fall, while inflation remains stubbornly above the Bank of England’s target, it might offer poor real returns.

While I understand the attraction of renewables, at almost 10 per cent your exposure is excessive. Higher interest rates have hurt the sector, and while lower rates now and over the next 12 months may help, recovery is far from complete. There are also questions around government policy and subsidies – should these be varied or removed, it may impact the value of the assets and the dividends. Stick with a 4-5 per cent allocation to the largest funds.

Gilts offer value, but I would suggest diversifying into other bonds, including actively managed high-yield corporate debt. With your time horizon and risk capacity, the extra return could be beneficial.

You say you are comfortable with a large number of holdings, but the portfolio risks being over-diversified. Streamline it by asking yourself: ‘Would I hold 5 per cent [in] this?’ for funds, and the same at 2 per cent for stocks. This will help you focus on high-conviction ideas.

On avoiding US stocks, valuation concerns are justified, but this has been the case for many years without triggering a major correction. That isn’t to say it won’t happen, but some recognition of the US’s potential and financial dominance is worthy of consideration. The US market remains vast, offering both megacap stocks (which I agree are expensive) and mid and small caps at more reasonable valuations. Rather than ignoring the US, consider active global funds where the managers focus on valuations. With the excess cash and the proceeds from trimming your smaller positions, you could consider investing in the following:

  • RGI Global Income & Growth (GB00BTLMGS77). Global mandate, valuation-driven, active management, strong dividend focus. The team running this fund are not afraid to make contrarian calls.

  • JOHCM Global Opportunities (GB00BJ5JMC04). Actively managed with downside protection; ideal for de-cumulation where volatility, as well as outright returns, is important.

  • Lazard Emerging Markets (GB00B8QHFR21). Aligns with your Asia/EM preference; strong dividend generation and excellent performance.

  • Man High Yield Opportunities (GB00BJK3W057). Well-managed fund for long-term exposure to this crucial area of debt markets.

  • M&G Global Dividend (GB00B39R2Q25). Dual mandate for capital growth and income; proven dividend growth record and a useful ‘global’ mandate.

  • Pantheon International (PIN). This is my wild-card pick. It offers investors access to high-quality private equity exposure through a well-established manager with a strong long-term record.

Pantheon is not a typical recommendation for a decumulation strategy, as private equity trusts can be illiquid and volatile. However, as you enjoy active involvement with your investments and are comfortable with tactical positions, this could be a compelling way to play the investment trust sector.

Your goals seem eminently achievable – it’s nice to see one of these reviews where a yield of 5 per cent plus 5 per cent growth isn’t the minimum requirement. A yield of about 3 per cent plus a bit of capital growth on top is what you want. When your state pension kicks in, you will need less income, leaving more room for growth. Leaving at least £1mn to your dependant (pre-inheritance tax) also seems possible, ignoring unforeseen circumstances such as care home fees.

In my opinion, 40 per cent between cash, gilts and bonds is too high at your age. It should be closer to 20 per cent. I know you said you only need annual returns of 5 per cent or so, but you should probably aim a little higher.

Your three equity buckets are perfectly sensible – growth, income, and growth & income. But you should work out the overall yield to determine how much should be in each.

Given you say you are a poor momentum investor but are good at picking value companies, perhaps you should buy funds and trusts covering the more ‘growthy’ areas of the market, and focus your stockpicking on value.

I hold lots of the trusts and shares that you do, including Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY), International Biotechnology Trust (IBT), Montanaro European Smaller Companies (MTE), Finsbury Growth & Income (FGT), Aberdeen Asian Income (AAIF) and International Public Partnerships (INPP). But I can’t really see what your strategy is and whether you have thought about which holdings should be in which accounts.

It feels as though you have too many holdings. Having between 10 and 15 in the Isa and Sipp is OK, but what’s going on with your general investment account (GIA), which has 31? That’s too many; be brutal when culling.

It’s always dangerous being underweight to the US market, and you can buy the US without buying the froth. Look at Polar Capital Global Insurance (IE00B5339C57) or something like Barrow Hanley US Mid Cap Value (IE000MBI7KJ7) – funds that are mainly US-focused but invest in areas that have been left behind.

You say you like renewables – so do I. However, they are having a tough time, due to a mix of higher interest rates, oversupply, poor governance and the government announcing a review of whether the inflation indexation on past contracts should be changed from retail price index to consumer price index. Focus on the ones where the dividends are fully cash covered and that have cash left over to reinvest.

Finally, think about tax efficiency when it comes to gilts. You should favour low-coupon gilts and hold them outside your tax wrappers, [given] returns mostly come from capital gains rather than income, and are free of tax. This will leave you more space for high-income or high-growth holdings in the Isa and Sipp.

The Alpha asset allocation model

James Norrington, Chartered FCSI and associate editor, has created four asset allocation strategies for Investors’ Chronicle Alpha and portfolio clinic case studies.

We’ve also applied a tactical asset allocation (TAA) framework to help investors position themselves for current market conditions. Chris has been recommended a ‘moderate risk’ portfolio.

James says: “Our moderate-risk strategy maintains a healthy exposure to shares to avoid missing out on upside, but it offers a safety rope for investors worried about volatile markets. As of January, we tactically hold around 14.5 per cent in cash as a crash protection measure, but experienced investors, provided they have their liquidity needs taken care of, might find that too conservative. The MSCI World index ensures we are still heavily invested in US tech, but the other indices we track ensure a more diverse geographical balance than just investing to the global benchmark.

“For January 2026, our tactical signals have caused us to drastically reduce US dollar exposure. The UK bond allocation that we have moved into is spread across bonds with different times to maturity, reflecting that the market’s expectations for UK inflation could shift in either direction.”

News

News round-up: 16 January 2026

The biggest investment stories of the past seven days

Alex Hamer
Alex Hamer

Rio Tinto and Glencore in $200bn merger talks

Negotiations for a copper-focused FTSE 100 megadeal come after Glencore touted its growth prospects last month. Alex Hamer reports 

A long-expected deal between Rio Tinto (RIO) and Glencore (GLEN) is in the works again, the two companies announced last week. A combination would create a dominant player in the copper market, largely due to the expansion options Glencore has in its portfolio.

Glencore said: “Glencore notes recent media speculation and confirms that it is in preliminary discussions with [Rio Tinto] about a possible combination of some or all of their businesses, which could include an all-share merger between Rio Tinto and Glencore.”

The structure would see Rio Tinto, as the larger party making, an offer for Glencore.

Before the potential merger announcement, Rio’s shares were close to 2023’s all-time high of around 6,300p, giving it a market value of £78bn. Glencore shares have not been as strong, trading almost 30 per cent below the high of 2023, with a market value of £48.5bn. Yet both companies have surged as the copper price has risen in recent months.

Rio has until 5 February to make an offer or confirm an intention to make an offer, under takeover rules. The announcements said there was no certainty that an offer would be made.

Rio Tinto’s shares have fallen 7 per cent since the talks became public, while Glencore is up 8 per cent.

The world’s top mining companies are looking for ways to grow exposure to copper as China’s economy moves on from the boom years that drove high iron ore prices for the past two decades.

Glencore chief executive Gary Nagle used last month’s capital markets day to put his copper wares on show. “We have a base business of terrific producing assets and . . . what we believe is the best portfolio of projects in copper to grow this business,” he said.

Nagle also said Glencore could almost double its production of the red metal within a decade to 1.6mn tonnes a year with the assets currently on hand. Rio Tinto’s current copper output is just under 900,000 tonnes a year.

Copper is in high demand because of its use for electrical wiring, and due to a lack of major new mines coming into production in recent years. Rio has already invested heavily in growing its output, through the Oyu Tolgoi underground mine in Mongolia and the stalled Resolution project in the US. 

RBC Capital Markets analyst Ben Davis said a merger would work for both sets of shareholders. “This deal could be a win-win for both parties, providing Rio with the copper it needs and diluting iron ore exposure while unlocking value for Glencore [shareholders],” he said. RBC’s estimate is that a tie-up would be 60 per cent Rio, with Glencore’s coal assets spun off before completion.

BHP (BHP) will undoubtedly be concerned and working out the possibility of an interloping bid,” Davis added.

BHP sought to buy Anglo American (AAL) in 2024 before the smaller company found its own source of new copper tonnes in the merger with Teck Resources (CA:TECK.B). Glencore tried to buy Teck in 2023 but was rebuffed by the controlling Keevil family and so had to settle for the company’s Canadian coal assets.

It is likely that a reshuffle in the two companies’ portfolios would come alongside a combination. “We see few similarities between these two outside of an appetite for copper growth, and few obvious synergies beyond marketing and corporate,” said BMO analyst Alexander Pearce, who agreed with RBC that “coal would make an uncomfortable bedfellow for Rio Tinto”. 

A spinout of Glencore’s coal assets with Rio’s iron ore business could make sense given the weaker growth prospects compared with copper. Pearce said the Anglo-Australian miner would likely want to hold on to the $5bn-$7bn (£3.7bn-£5.2bn) in annual free cash flow that iron ore provides, however. 

There is also crossover between Glencore’s significant trading business and Rio’s marketing department. 

“Glencore’s trading arm would sit uneasily within Rio’s operating model, given cultural differences,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Alon Olsha. “Yet the chance to actively trade Rio’s vast iron ore volume might be too hard to ignore.”

Rio Tinto was seen to be open for deals after a change in management last year. Jakob Stausholm resigned in May amid reports that he was pushing back against a possible Glencore deal, leading to a rift with chair Dominic Barton. 


Whitbread boosted on improved cost outlook

Whitbread (WTB) lowered the expected hit from higher business rates by up to £15mn alongside its third-quarter trading update, helping the shares recover further from the November Budget. 

The FTSE 100 hospitality group said it expects the cost of the changes to business rates announced by chancellor Rachel Reeves to be lower than first thought, now estimating £35mn for FY2027, compared with the initial forecast of £40mn-£50mn. 

The company also returned to modest UK like-for-like sales growth in the third quarter, with Germany on track to break even in FY2026. Total sales for the period were £781mn.

The news nudged the shares up by 6 per cent. The Budget had triggered a sell-off that knocked the share price by 17 per cent within a few days. 

Despite the slight improvement in outlook, Whitbread chief executive Dominic Paul said the “proposed changes to business rates are damaging for the overall sector” and pledged to “continue to press the UK government for changes”. 

It has been a busy time for management outside of the lobbying activity. Whitbread has also come under fire in recent weeks from US activist investor Corvex Management, which pressed the hotel chain to rethink its £3.5bn investment plan. An update on this five-year plan will come alongside the FY026 results in April. 

“We are exploring a variety of options in order to further drive profits, margins and returns,” said Paul. 

The company also announced the sale and leaseback of another nine hotels, worth £89m, over the quarter. The buyer is LondonMetric (LMP), which said it would bring in annual rent of £5mn from the portfolio. It spent £44mn on five Premier Inn hotels last year. EW


Trustpilot beats forecasts after short seller attack

Revenue at Trustpilot (TRST) rose by a fifth last year, ahead of consensus forecasts, helping the company’s shares partly recover from a short seller attack in late 2025. 

The online review platform’s adjusted cash profit is also set to be ahead of expectations, while new bookings climbed almost 20 per cent. 

Management at Trustpilot added that they would extend the current buyback programme by $13mn (£9.7mn), after finishing the year with $48mn of cash despite completing $72mn of share repurchases last year.

The shares climbed by 9 per cent but are down by about a quarter over the past year. They dropped last month after short seller Grizzly Research issued a report accusing the company of running “mafia-style” campaigns that pressured businesses into buying subscriptions to improve their ratings, and claiming it added fake reviews for paying customers.

Trustpilot described Grizzly’s accusations as “categorically false”, arguing that it had 200 people working on “trust and integrity” who had removed 6.7mn fake reviews (involving both paying and free customers) from its site. The company said in its trading update that it is also “implementing new AI-enabled fraud detection technology” to remove fake reviews. MF


THG sales bounce back but margin questions remain

THG (THG) reported its strongest sales quarter in the last three months of the year, with revenue from continuing operations up 7 per cent, boosted by improved sales from its nutrition business.

This brought second-half revenue growth to 6.7 per cent, which was ahead of its guided range of 3.9 per cent to 5.9 per cent.

The increase meant THG delivered its “first full-year growth since 2021”, chief executive Matt Moulding told analysts, highlighting a difficult market backdrop over that period.

Adjusted cash profit expectations remain unchanged, though, with the consensus forecast standing at £74.7mn, or a margin of 4.4 per cent.

THG has had to contend with higher whey prices, which Moulding argued has weakened annual profitability by around £65mn since its 2021 float. “It will come back down, because that’s what happens with commodities over time. But the market has seen explosive growth,” he said.  

The company has also spent more on marketing, with an additional £3mn allocated in the final quarter. Panmure Liberum analyst Anubhav Malhotra argued that the higher costs incurred “raises questions on the level of investments required” to deliver growth. “We continue to feel that the group has much to prove around its ability to deliver sustainable profitable growth and generate cash”, he said.

Net debt remains “elevated” at around £200mn, with free cash flow for 2025 likely to remain in negative territory, he added. 

Borrowings are down overall, however, after THG hived off its lossmaking ecommerce fulfilment arm, THG Ingenuity, in December 2024. This came alongside a £70mn equity raise last March, which underpinned a refinancing. THG also secured £103mn from the sale of its Claremont Ingredients business in August.

The consensus cash profit forecast for 2026 currently sits at around £100mn. At that level, “you’d expect to be generating in the region of £20mn-£25mn of free cash flow next year”, deputy chief financial officer Matthew Rothwell said alongside the trading update. MF

Companies

Prospective IPO shows a personal approach can still pay off

The death of in-store retail has been greatly exaggerated

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

It’s nearly 30 years since Amazon (US:AMZN) made its first sale, a book authored by Douglas Hofstadter entitled Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought. Hardly a page-turner, but there was most certainly method in Jeff Bezos’s madness.

Bezos realised that books were not only easy to package and transport, but that traditional physical booksellers couldn’t hope to match the breadth of Amazon’s online offering. Once sales achieved critical mass, the ecommerce group was able to broker significant discounts with publishing houses, which, in turn, enabled it to offer sizeable discounts to punters. That drove its market share, a practice sometimes referred to as ‘penetration pricing’. But perhaps the most significant feature of the early business model employed by Amazon was that it was scaleable – books were just the start.

The story is all the more remarkable given that ecommerce was something of a novelty in the mid-1990s. The UK – perhaps a nation of online shopkeepers – was quick to embrace change, so by the end of last year online traffic accounted for just under a third of total UK retail sales. The US hasn’t been quite so receptive to change, but one in every five dollars of spending in the US retail market is now made in the ether.

Once the direction of travel was assured, high-street retailers in the UK scrambled to expand their online channels, with varying degrees of success. The related investments appear justified given the steady year-on-year increases in online traffic, but recent developments suggest that the rise in ecommerce volumes is anything but inexorable.

Retailers are increasingly pursuing ‘omnichannel’ strategies designed to shore up customer loyalty and retention rates, with focus on a more personalised retail experience, not only in-store but also on websites and mobile apps. Retail analysts now take the view that Gen Z – potentially the most important retail cohort by 2030 – are increasingly disenchanted with the sterile nature of online retail, opting instead for in-store experiences, especially for product choices that can be informed by human input, such as buying a book.

This may help to explain why Elliott Investment Management, owner of Barnes & Noble and Waterstones, is mulling over a potential initial public offering for the booksellers, with London the most likely host, according to reports. Barnes & Noble has opened dozens of outlets in the US over the past couple of years, and is planning to roll out another 60 stores during 2026. Ironically, it has even taken over some of the premises used by Amazon in its ill-fated foray into the physical bookshop space. The accelerated expansion comes after nearly two decades of dwindling store numbers. Meanwhile, Waterstones has snapped up erstwhile UK rivals such as Foyles and Hatchards.

The man credited with turning around the fortunes of Barnes & Noble, and indeed Waterstones beforehand, is James Daunt, a former banker with JPMorgan who had previously founded an eponymous UK bookshop chain. Both of the big booksellers were on the ropes when he was handed the reins, but he recognised that they needed a differentiator to set them apart from what had gone before, and to ward off the rapacious online challenger.

In a 2025 appearance on the Fixable podcast, hosted by Anne Morriss and Frances Frei, Daunt conceded that Amazon had gone about selling books “much more effectively and efficiently”, so he came to the conclusion that traditional retailers needed to make “browsing much more enjoyable”, allowing “customers to navigate the shops in a more intuitive way”, as opposed to a lumpen transactional settlement. He also stopped accepting payments from publishers for in-store promotions which, he reasoned, would not only reduce the percentage of books that had to be returned to publishers, but also support margins through a reduction in discounted sales.

Daunt prioritised “retention and the accumulation of knowledge” among staff members, meaning both Barnes & Noble and Waterstones instituted a “completely new organisational structure” with a focus on “career paths and ladders”. That translated into fewer staff on greater pay and increased motivation to make browsing among the bookshelves a rewarding ‘experiential’ affair, to plagiarise another dreadful term much favoured by marketing folk.

Whatever Daunt brought to the table, it’s had the desired effect. Needless to say, the bureaucrats at the London Stock Exchange will be praying for confirmation of the prospective listing in the near term. It will also provide a potentially lucrative ‘off-ramp’ for Elliott, which is in the process of building its war chest to exploit fresh opportunities in 2026.

News

Should investors mimic Mike Ashley and buy shares in Grainger?

The retail kingpin has invested in the residential landlord

Hugh Moorhead
Hugh Moorhead

Investors have long imitated one another in their search for gains. The stockpicking world is littered with copycat Warren Buffetts, while the Unusual Whales Subversive Democratic Trading ETF (US:NANC), which tracks the disclosed trades of Democrat lawmakers in the US, has outperformed the S&P 500 by 10 percentage points since its inception in February 2023.

But what about aping Mike Ashley? The maverick billionaire disclosed a 3 per cent personal stake in residential landlord Grainger (GRI) on 7 January, and investors ought to ask themselves if his lead is worth following.

Ashley had made plenty of public bets before, normally on struggling retailers through Frasers Group (FRAS), the £3bn consortium in which he owns a majority stake. Its investments include German fashion house Hugo Boss (DE:BOSS) and online retailer THG (THG).

However, he also has plenty of experience investing in real estate. Frasers has amassed a sizeable property portfolio in recent years, primarily shopping centres. In December, the company announced the acquisition of Swindon Designer Outlet, one of the UK’s top five outlets by footfall.

Shopping centres have experienced a small renaissance in recent years following a decade-and-a-half of steeply declining values. Large listed Reits including Hammerson (HMSO) and Land Securities (LAND) have been seeking greater exposure to this asset class.

Ashley and the Frasers management team, ever on the lookout for mispriced assets, clearly agree. “Physical retail is central to our elevation strategy,” Frasers’ chief executive Michael Murray said last month, referring to the company’s broader corporate plan.

Beyond Frasers, Ashley has previous when it comes to investing in Reits.

He built a stake of more than 10 per cent in West End landlord Shaftesbury, now Shaftesbury Capital (SHC), in February 2008, before reportedly selling it on a mere month later.

He has also invested in developments through his Mash Holdings vehicle, which reported its FY2025 accounts this week. The accounts included a £2.8mn impairment on developer Strawberry Place Newcastle, which is in the process of being struck off from Companies House.

The year before, Mash booked £25.6mn in impairments, largely relating to the reorganisation of another Ashley-controlled company, McGrove Developments. This company is working on a Chelsea residential project on the site of a former John Lewis warehouse.

Ashley has built his stake in Grainger through a spread bet, a derivative that allows him to gain exposure to movements in the share price without owning the underlying shares themselves or their voting rights.

Instead of the usual activist approach, he may instead simply be seeking exposure to a UK rental market that has attractive dynamics for investors. A spokesperson for Frasers declined to comment.

Although rent increases are normalising after a few years of alarming growth, according to a recent report by property portal Zoopla, there remains a long-term imbalance between supply and demand.

This mismatch may grow in the coming years as landlords face an ever-greater regulatory burden from the likes of the recently passed Renters’ Rights bill.

A recent survey by the National Residential Landlords Association of its members reported that one-fifth of single property and two-fifths of multi-property landlords were looking to shrink their portfolios in 2026.

Institutional landlords such as Grainger, which has a £3.5bn portfolio of 11,000 rental properties, mostly apartments, should benefit. The company prizes sites with strong transport links in fast-growing cities.

Chief executive Helen Gordon said she was seeing healthy, if normalising, demand on a site visit this week in east London. “We are beginning to see a significant uptick in enquiries and lets in January, following a quiet leasing period in the run-up to Christmas; [this marks] a return to seasonality which was normal market behaviour pre-pandemic,” she said.

Grainger reported 98 per cent portfolio occupancy in 2025.

The company hopes to grow FY2026 like-for-like rental income by 3-3.5 per cent off the back of this demand, in line with its historical average. This appears punchy given that Savills forecasts that UK rents will increase by just 2 per cent in 2026, albeit other agents are more optimistic.

Gordon argued Grainger operates in the mid-market segment where demand is currently higher than at either the premium or lower end of the market, supporting price increases.

Ashley may therefore view Grainger’s defensive income streams and a healthy 5 per cent dividend yield as a prudent complement to other, more cyclical investments in his portfolio – or as a hedge against any signs in Frasers’ festive sales data of a weakening UK consumer.

He may also see Grainger’s shares as a more efficient means of gaining exposure to the rental market than buying his own portfolio.

Grainger is trading at a 25 per cent discount to its most recently reported net asset value. Trading on 17 times analysts’ 2027 earnings estimates, it screens as relatively expensive versus peers, but few Reits offer such a defensive revenue mix.

Economics

Why the UK market rally isn’t a vote of economic confidence

Are FTSE 100 stocks a success story, a haven from AI hype, or both?

Hermione Taylor
Hermione Taylor

The FTSE 100 kicked off 2026 by reaching a new high of 10,000 points. And the index was no slouch in 2025, either: it rose by more than 20 per cent last year, outperforming the S&P 500. This is a remarkable achievement, especially when you consider that the FTSE 100 wasn’t buoyed by tech giants riding a wave of AI exuberance. 

The FTSE 100 is dominated by banking, mining and defence companies – and in 2026 this skew could again attract, rather than deter, investors. For a time, these companies felt rather staid compared with chipmakers and chip users, but now they offer a welcome refuge from AI speculation. After years of underperformance, it doesn’t hurt that they look like a bargain, too. For investors spooked by US policy uncertainty and fears of a tech bubble, the FTSE can offer valuable diversification. 

The chancellor, who has tried to encourage share ownership in the UK, celebrated when the index hit new highs. Rachel Reeves posted on X: “The FTSE 100 breaking through 10,000 points for the first time is a vote of confidence in Britain’s economy and a strong start to 2026.”

Few would disagree with the latter point – in fact, the government could probably have made more of it. In the chancellor’s Mansion House speech last summer, she said that “for too long, we have presented investment in too negative a light, quick to warn people of the risks without giving proper weight to the benefits”. If you’re looking to get people interested in the UK stock market, the FTSE 100’s latest performance is as good a hook as you could hope for. 

But the first part of the chancellor’s post looks more overblown. It’s very difficult to draw conclusions about the strength of the UK economy from the performance of the FTSE 100. Only 23 per cent of the index’s revenues are generated domestically, compared with 24 per cent from the US and 22 per cent from the Asia-Pacific region. These international revenue streams mean that the index frequently zigs as the UK economy zags.  

So it would also be wrong to misread investors’ desire for diversification as a vote of confidence in the UK, especially when some evidence points in the opposite direction. Figures from the global funds network Calastone show that 2025 was the worst year in more than a decade for withdrawals from equity funds, with net outflows from British investors reaching £6.7bn over the year. 

UK-focused funds fared particularly badly, with outflows of almost £10bn. Even worse, this marked the tenth consecutive year of withdrawals. Mixed-asset funds (which have no commitment to investing domestically) fared far better, attracting net inflows of almost £12bn, while safe-haven money market funds had a record year, absorbing a net £5.8bn in new cash. Rising prices were not enough to draw UK investors to British shares. 

The government might want to nudge UK households into stocks, but Calastone data suggests that it inadvertently deterred investors last year. Figures show that the months of October and November each saw outflows of more than £3bn, before a dramatic slowdown in redemptions in December. Edward Glyn, Calastone’s head of global markets, said that the pattern “is a clear indicator that the months of pre-Budget speculation contributed to the record outflows in equity funds”. 

Given a more benign backdrop, however, domestic stocks could have a better year in 2026. Ben Russon, co-head of UK equities at ClearBridge Investments, thinks that the UK offers a “vibrant market brimming with opportunity”. Thanks to high savings levels, rising wages and expected interest rate cuts, he sees scope for a consumer-driven revival, benefiting stocks more focused on the home market. Around 40 per cent of FTSE 250 revenues are generated in the UK – almost twice the large-cap index’s share. If this benchmark rallies, it would be a more convincing vote of confidence in the economy. 

Ideas

This unloved tech giant is entering a new era

A range of new products and services means investors will soon reassess the consumer stock’s share price

Arthur Sants
Arthur Sants

For most of the past 15 years, Apple (US:AAPL) has been the most valuable company in the world. There were brief moments when it lost its place to Microsoft (US:MSFT) or Saudi Aramco, but it soon regained it. That was until last year when, without a compelling AI story and under pressure from legal threats, it fell decisively behind Nvidia (US:NVDA).

Last year started badly for Apple. Its hardware revenue had been stalling for a while, and then the so-called ‘liberation day’ tariff announcements sparked a sell-off in its stock. For a period, the Chinese tariff rate was raised to over 100 per cent, which would have required Apple to charge more than $2,000 (£1,492) for an iPhone to generate a profit.

Although many felt this unworkable tariff rate wouldn’t last long, no one knew how far or how fast it would fall.

It turned out that for Apple, China tariffs would be almost entirely removed within a month, as by the end of April chief executive Tim Cook had secured exemptions for the iPhone maker. However, the company was still facing structural issues, and by the summer its shares were a fifth lower than they were at the start of the 2024. This weakness is part of the reason why the shares now look attractive again.

Even though it is almost 20 years since the first release, Apple remains heavily reliant on the iPhone, with the device making up half of its sales.

iPhone revenue growth has been largely flat over the past four years. Replacement cycles have been lengthening, with customers tending to hold on to their phones for between three and four years. This is the result of a combination of increased pressure on consumer finances and the inability of Apple to create a new phone people are excited about.

Apple bull points

  • New iPhone product cycle

  • Strong free cash flow

  • Cheap valuation relative to peers

Indeed, most of the group’s recent revenue growth has come from the services business.

This includes the App Store, where Apple historically took a 30 per cent cut of all transactions. It also includes Apple Music and Apple TV, as well as selling advertising space on Apple News. On top of this, it receives $20bn a year from Alphabet (US:GOOGL) to make Google its devices’ default search engine. In the past four years, services have risen from 20 per cent of revenue to 26 per cent.

Since services sales can be delivered at a lower cost, they generate a much higher margin and now comprise 42 per cent of Apple’s total gross profit.

Last year, though, services revenue came under threat from the courts. In April, a US judge found Apple in contempt of a previous court order that forced it to allow developers to provide users to link users to purchasing options outside the App Store. After this, Spotify (US:SPOT) rolled out a link to its website where users could subscribe directly, bypassing Apple’s purchasing system. Others have since followed suit.

As yet, Apple’s services revenue has been relatively unaffected. A survey by investment bank UBS found that one in five Apple customers would never use an external link for payments, while most others would require a significant discount to consider it. The bank acknowledges that the ruling presents “a potential long-term risk to Apple”, though, as countries such as Australia and Japan adopt similar stances.

Apple bear points

  • Slow hardware growth

  • Threat of lawsuits

  • Tariff uncertainty

The slow iPhone growth and legal attacks, combined with a perceived lack of an AI vision, have all been a drag on Apple’s share price. In the past 12 months, its share price has risen by just 10 per cent, compared with 71 per cent for Alphabet and 36 per cent for Nvidia. In fact, over the past three years it’s been the worst performing of the Magnificent Seven stocks.

This means Apple’s shares are comparatively cheap, compared with its big tech rivals. And unlike most of the ‘Magnificent Seven’, Apple hasn’t spent billions on AI computing, which means it is still generating a healthy free cash flow. Its forward free cash flow yield of 3.5 per cent is the joint highest of the Magnificent Seven alongside Nvidia, another capital-light business.

For the past few years, the market has rewarded the companies that were placing the biggest bets on AI computing. The early consensus was that to win the AI race companies needed to have the most Nvidia graphics processing units (GPUs).

Apple declined to participate in this. Initially, that looked like a bad move, but this year the narrative could shift. Doubts are creeping in about the sums that have been spent by some of these companies.

Meta (US:META) chief executive Mark Zuckerberg tried to ease concerns during the company’s third-quarter earnings call in October, telling investors that although there was a risk of an “overshoot” on spending on AI computing power, this didn’t matter too much as there was “a lot of demand for other new things that would be built internally”.

Meta’s shares still dropped 14 per cent on the day and are down 10 per cent in the past six months. Apple, meanwhile, is hoping it has found a lower-cost way to capitalise on AI advances.

Instead of building out data centres, Apple has focused on new product releases, including the iPhone 17, which came out in September. Its fourth-quarter earnings only included one month of sales of the new phone, but iPhone revenue was up 6 per cent year on year, and would have been higher still but for supply constraints limiting potential sales.

The new iPhone isn’t a significant departure from recent models in terms of aesthetics. Instead, most of the innovation relates to the chip powering it. Apple designs its own chips and the new phone contains a more powerful chip, the A19, which allows it to more easily run AI features such as live translation on the phone.

Apple is also investing in its own data centres, called Private Cloud Compute, but these are only used when a task is too complex to run on a phone or Mac. When iPhone users are talking to Siri the task will never need to leave the Apple ecosystem.

The hope is that this improved AI capability will encourage more customers to upgrade their hardware, rather than holding on to their older phones until they break. Broker Raymond James believes the iPhone 17 platform and the “deeper integration of GenAI capabilities” could be a “catalyst for a healthy upgrade cycle after a number of generally lacklustre years”.

Next year, Apple plans on releasing another three high-end models, including a new foldable phone, according to Bloomberg. A new AI-enabled version of Siri is expected to be launched in March.

The focus in the early part of the AI race has been on computing power, as reflected in Nvidia’s growth. However, to justify this spend, consumers will need ways to use all of the models that are being trained, and that’s where Apple enters the fray. OpenAI already knows this. It’s why the company has employed the original iPhone designer Jony Ive to create a new products team, with the ambition to build the next generation of AI hardware.

Yet Apple remains the dominant consumer electronics company, with more than 2bn customers. It is also on the brink of a big product upgrade cycle. This makes it unlikely that it will be displaced by any product that OpenAI is able to create.

At the start of last year, Alphabet was the cheapest company among the Magnificent Seven. It ended up being the best performing stock of the group. At the start of this year, Apple is in the same position. The AI story has passed it by so far, but this is the year that could change.

Company Details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
Apple Inc. (AAPL) $3,828bn $259.04 28,862c / 16,921c
Size/Debt NAV per share* Net Cash / Debt(-)* Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
499c -$57.7bn 0.3 x 94%
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) CAPE
31 0.40% 3.60% 42.8
Quality/ Growth Ebit Margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
32.00% 75.60% 8.70% 17.90%
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
-18% 11% 0.40% 5.60%
Year End 30 Sep Sales ($bn) Profit before tax ($bn) EPS (c) DPS (c)
2023 383 114 613 96
2024 391 124 675 98
2025 416 133 746 102
f’cst 2026 452 145 824 108
f’cst 2027 483 158 914 112
chg (%) +7 +9 +11 +4
source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now)