Funds

Where tech managers are investing in the AI era

Tech funds are gradually moving away from the usual suspects

Val Cipriani
Val Cipriani

Should you own a tech fund? On one hand, it is the hottest sector in global stock markets and has been for a number of years; growth in this area has been impressive. On the other, technology already plays a dominant role in global equity indices, so any global tracker will give you significant exposure to the theme.

The Magnificent Seven accounted for a quarter of the MSCI World index as at the end of October, and 48 per cent of the MSCI ACWI Information Technology index. This makes it difficult for tech managers to outperform, and creates a significant risk of portfolio overlap. Plus, of course, tech stocks are not exactly cheap at the moment. The answer then might be: take a satellite position, treading carefully and knowing exactly what role it plays in your portfolio.

The table below lists some of the biggest technology funds and investment trusts in order of five-year performance, and shows how difficult it has been to outpace the index in the long term.

How tech funds have performed
Fund/trust/index 1-yr 3-yr 5-yr 10-yr
MSCI World/Information Technology index 20.5 117.5 142.4 700.3
Polar Capital Global Technology Fund (IE00B42W4J83) 48.9 167 116.8 751.4
Fidelity Global Technology (LU1033663649) 16.5 82.3 111.6 620.9
Polar Capital Technology Trust (PCT) 36.2 140 108 623
Janus Henderson Global Technology Leaders (GB0007716078) 21 117.2 107.6 532.2
Allianz Technology Trust (ATT) 31.4 137.7 86.5 727.5
Axa Framlington Global Technology (GB00B4W52V57) 19 73.5 67.5 472.2
T Rowe Price Global Technology Equity (GB00BD446K01) 20.1 126.1 29.7 //
Sterling total returns to 28 November (%). Source: FE

However, the past year tells a slightly different story, with almost all the funds broadly keeping pace with the index or outperforming it. The tech market has somewhat broadened out, with returns coming from more companies than just the usual suspects. It is in this context that holding a tech fund makes the most sense – as a way to gain focused exposure to technology stocks that are not quite big enough to have a prominent place in global indices, while still delivering impressive growth.

Arguably, for portfolio construction purposes, it would be simpler if tech funds looked beyond the Magnificent Seven stocks entirely. But that would have been disastrous for performance in the past. That’s one reason why these stocks still account for big proportions of tech funds’ portfolios. Even so, all the funds listed are underweight the group to varying degrees.

Some of the Magnificent Seven, such as Alphabet (US:GOOGL) and Amazon (US:AMZN), are technically categorised in other sectors and do not form part of the main technology indices. Many of the funds hold them even so.

But some tech strategies have been pivoting away from the Magnificent Seven in the past year. Between October 2024 and October 2025, Allianz Technology Trust’s (ATT) exposure to these stocks among its top 10 holdings declined from 42.1 per cent to 36.3 per cent; for Polar Capital Technology Trust (PCT), the weighting fell from 36.6 per cent to 30.9 per cent.

Allianz Technology completely sold its position in Amazon in October because the managers believe that “there are other stocks with a better growth versus valuation mix”.

One of the questions tech managers face is to what extent they should look beyond the US for promising tech bets; Asia, for example, has exposure to the growth potential of artificial intelligence (AI), but valuations tend to be more reasonable.

As the chart shows, Fidelity Global Technology (LU1033663649) and Polar Capital Global Technology (IE00B42W4J83) have the lowest exposure to the Magnificent Seven and to the US, respectively, in their top 10 holdings. The Fidelity fund takes a chunky bet on TSMC (TW:2330), which as at the end of October accounted for 8.1 per cent of the fund against 4.6 per cent of the MSCI ACWI Information Technology index. It also holds Samsung (KR:005930) in its top 10.

Polar Capital Global Technology only holds Nvidia (US:NVDA), Alphabet and Meta (US:META) in its top 10, has 14.6 per cent of the portfolio in the Asia Pacific region and 8.2 per cent in Japan. Both funds are somewhat less concentrated than their peers, with the biggest 10 positions accounting for 39.5 per cent and 42.4 per cent of the total, respectively – the index concentration here is 66.8 per cent..

Incidentally, it’s worth keeping in mind that Polar Capital Global Technology is a little different from investment trust stablemate Polar Capital Technology, even though the two share a manager in Ben Rogoff. The trust holds more companies (92 against 69 for the fund) but is more concentrated in its top 10 positions, which account for 52.4 per cent of the portfolio; the biggest bets are not exactly the same between the two, and historically performance has differed somewhat, with the fund outperforming the trust.

The other fund with a relatively low exposure to both the US and the Magnificent Seven is T Rowe Price Global Technology Equity (GB00BD446K01), which also has a sizeable position in TSMC. The trust’s long-term performance record does not look great at the moment, but it is interesting to see that the portfolio has more exposure to Europe than is standard in a tech fund – 14.6 per cent spread between the Netherlands, Germany and the UK, with ASML (NL:ASML) and German software company SAP (DE:SAP) in the top 10 holdings.

Keeping an eye on tech fund portfolios is also useful for stock ideas, and to get a sense of which companies managers think are more likely to do well in the artificial intelligence (AI) race at any given time.

Firstly, while software and data analytics company Palantir (US:PLTR) is the sixth-biggest company in the index, making up 1.7 per cent of the total, none of these funds has it in its top 10. Considering where the company’s valuation stands – it trades on a forward price/earnings (PE) ratio of around 169 times – this is somewhat reassuring to see. As concerns over an AI bubble mount, one of the reasons to opt for an active tech fund is to avoid the most unreasonably expensive stocks.

However, this doesn’t mean the funds don’t hold the company at all – it accounted for 0.7 per cent of Polar Capital Trust’s portfolio as at 31 July and 1.9 per cent of Allianz Technology’s as of 30 June, for example.

Among the stocks that managers do hold, an interesting one is chipmaker Micron Technology (US:MU), which features in the top 10 of Allianz Technology, Polar Capital Trust and Janus Henderson Global Technology Leaders. The company is up around 170 per cent in the year to date, but still looks reasonably valued at a forward PE of about 15 times.

Lam Research (US:LRCX), which supplies equipment to the semiconductor industry, is popular with the Polar Capital team and is held by both the fund and the trust in their top 10. The trust appears to have built its stake from zero over the past seven months or so. The stock is also a top 10 holding in the portfolio of all-out growth fund Blue Whale Growth (GB00BD6PG563), which while not strictly speaking a tech fund, does have a 44.6 per cent exposure to the sector.

On a similar note, the T Rowe Price fund has a 3.4 per cent position in media advertising company AppLovin (US:APP), which Scottish Mortgage (SMT) also bought over the past year. Scottish Mortgage, which has the advantage of being able to invest in unquoted companies, recently took a position in OpenAI competitor Anthropic. The company focuses on building safe AI for businesses, rather than targeting consumers, via its Claude models.

Companies

Sirius Real Estate and Senior: Big director share deals this week

Find out which directors are buying and selling shares in their own companies

Julian Hofmann
Julian Hofmann

Sirius Real Estate puts more skin in the game

Investors in listed real estate occasionally lament that management teams lack ‘skin in the game’, and that their long-term incentive programmes (LTIPs) prioritise balance sheet growth ahead of shareholder returns.

Participation is not an issue at Sirius Real Estate (SRE), where chief executive Andrew Coombs has recently added to his shareholding in the FTSE 250 real estate investment trust, buying up a further £48,000-worth of shares at 96p a share. This takes his overall shareholding to 0.81 per cent of the total issued share capital, or £16mn.

Coombs, who was in the market buying Sirius’s shares as recently as July, frequently buys the dip in the company’s shares. He often also makes disposals in late March ahead of the tax year-end.

Non-executive director Deborah Davis was also in the market last month, buying up £19,000-worth of shares.

Sirius has recently exited its close period after publishing first-half results for the six months ended 30 September. The company reported first-half funds from operations (FFO), a measure of cash flow, of €64.7mn (£56.9mn), a 6.6 per cent increase.

The company expects to meet analysts’ full-year FFO expectations of €133mn. It is targeting €175mn in the medium term.

Coombs’ LTIPs are weighted two-thirds towards balance sheet growth (net asset value per share plus dividends per share) and one-third towards total shareholder return (share price performance plus dividends) relative to a basket of mid-cap real estate peers. We would ideally like to see a greater weighting to the latter.


Senior chair buys into aerospace recovery

Aerospace has had a turbulent ride over the past few years, but there are definite signs that the industry is finally achieving a measure of stability. Senior (SNR) is a bellwether for the sector as its production is closely aligned with demand from the major manufacturers.

Therefore, it is notable that chair Ian King has increased his stake in the FTSE 250 engineering group with the purchase of 75,000 shares at an average price of 174p, spending £130,000 in the process to lift his total holding to 989,297 shares.

The transaction follows a period of steady operational progress. Recent trading updates have highlighted improving margins across Senior’s aerospace and flexonics divisions, supported by stronger volumes from large customers as global air traffic continues to rebuild.  

For example, Airbus (FR:AIR) has been lifting output steadily, with production of the A320 family heading towards 67 aircraft a month. It has a published target of 75 per month by 2027, notwithstanding last week’s recall and repair plans. Boeing’s (US:BA) 737 Max programme is also gradually stabilising, with medium-term production levels expected to be in the high 30s to low 40s per month, helping restore a more predictable flow of structural and fluid-handling components for Senior.

The defence side of aerospace has also picked up, with steady demand for thermal management and precision components across land, sea and air platforms. Geopolitical tensions and higher Western defence budgets are helping to balance more cyclical civil aerospace.

Management recently reiterated full-year guidance for profit growth and further margin improvement, despite lingering supply-chain constraints in North America. With the share price still below pre-pandemic levels, buying from the chair is a positive sign.   

Buys
Company Director/PDMR Date Price (p) Aggregate value (£)
The Beauty Tech Group  Laurence Newman (ce) 25-Nov 280 29,776
The Beauty Tech Group  Andrew Showman (PDMR) 25-Nov 280 54,590
The Beauty Tech Group  Simon Cooper 25-Nov 280 54,590
Checkit Kit Kyte (ce) 26-Nov 18.7 35,992
Fuller, Smith & Turner Sir James Fuller 24-Nov 632 22,120
Grainger Simon Fraser (ch-d) 15-Nov 183 27,450
Halfords Henry Birch (ce) 27-Nov 139.8 99,975
Revolution Beauty Iain McDonald (ch) 27-Nov 2.5 24,900
Roquefort Therapeutics  Dr. Darrin Disley 21-Nov 1.7 85,000
Senior Ian King (ch) 26-Nov 173.9 130,403
Sirius Real Estate Andrew Coomb (ce) 24-Nov 95.7 47,850
Sirius Real Estate Deborah Davis 24-Nov 95 18,986
Sells
Company Director/PDMR Date Price (p) Aggregate value (£)
Harworth  Chris Birch (PDMR) 24-Nov 160 56,862
Tate & Lyle Claudia Vaz de Lestapis * † ★ 26-Nov 1,489 74,436
Velocity Composites Emma Bridges (ce) * 26-Nov 15 50,000
*All or part of deal conducted by spouse / family / close associate. † Converted from non-sterling currency. ★ Depositary receipts.

 

Companies

Begbies Traynor & RWS Holdings: Stock market week ahead – 8-12 December

A summary of key company announcements expected in the coming week

Mark Robinson
Mark Robinson

AGMs: Aberdeen Asia Focus (AAS), Amedeo Air Four Plus (AA4)

Companies paying dividends: Ashmore (12.1p)


Interims: Begbies Traynor (BEG), Moonpig (MOON), Naked Wines (WINE)

Companies paying dividends: GCP Infrastructure Investments (1.75p), Fidelity Emerging Markets (19.8p), YouGov (9.25p)


Interims: Redcentric (RCN)

AGMs: Abingdon Health (ABDX), Ashoka India Equity Inv Trust (AIE), Baillie Gifford Japan Trust (BGFD), BATM Advanced Communications (BVC), Gattaca (GATC), Marwyn Value Investors (MVI), Virgin Wines UK (VINO), Volution (FAN)

Companies paying dividends: BlackRock Smaller Companies Trust (16p), Cavendish (0.3p)


Finals: RWS Holdings (RWS)

AGMs: Bluefield Solar Income Fund (BSIF), Fairview International (FIL), Fidelity Special Values (FSV), R8 Capital Investments (MODE), Tristel (TSTL)

Companies paying dividends: Murray Income Trust (9.5p), Scottish American Investment Co (3.95p), Brunner Investment Trust (6.25p), Fidelity Asian Values (20.5p), Springfield Properties (2p)


Friday 12 December

Economics: Monthly GDP, index of services

AGMs: Thor Explorations (THX), Ultimate Products (ULTP), Westmount Energy (WTE)

Companies paying dividends: Airtel Africa (2.163228p), Aquila European Renewables (0.5712p), B&M European Value Retail SA (3.5p), C&C (0.0208), Card Factory (1.3p), CML Microsystems (5p), DCC (69.5p), Kainos (9.8p), Motorpoint (1p), Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust (1.6p), BlackRock American Income Trust (3.44p), Greencoat Renewables (€0.02), Gattaca (2p), James Halstead (6.05p), New Star Investment Trust (1.85p), SThree (5.1p), Lancashire Holdings ($0.75)

Companies going ex-dividend on 11 December
Company Dividend Pay date
Vertu Motors 0.9p 16-Jan
Associated British Foods 42.3p 09-Jan
Fuller, Smith & Turner 7.85p 02-Jan
Polar Capital Holdings 14p 09-Jan
Sirius Real Estate € 0.0318 22-Jan
Henderson High Income Trust 2.775p 30-Jan
Investec 17.5p 30-Dec
DSW Capital 1.2p 16-Jan
Cranswick 27p 23-Jan
Speedy Hire 0.3p 21-Jan
Chelverton UK Dividend Trust 2.5p 08-Jan
News

News round-up: 5 December 2025

The biggest investment stories of the past seven days

Valeria Martinez
Valeria Martinez

Budget tax hikes carve into bookies’ profits

A sharp rise in gambling taxes could threaten margins across the sector. Erin Withey reports

UK-listed bookmakers Rank Group (RNK), Entain (ENT) and Evoke (EVOK), plus US-listed Flutter (US:FLTR), have counted the cost of chancellor Rachel Reeves’ tax rises announced in last week’s Autumn Budget in the hundreds of millions.

The government is almost doubling remote gaming duty, which applies to online casino games, from 21 per cent to 40 per cent from April next year. The tax on online sports betting will also go up from 15 per cent to 25 per cent in 2027. The rate for high-street betting, however, will not change from the current 15 per cent.

Ladbrokes owner Entain expects an additional £200mn in annual costs for its UK and Ireland online business as a result of the move. Analysts at Berenberg said the figure could be even higher, suggesting a total of £233mn before any mitigation measures are taken into account.

The company said it would immediately cut back on marketing and promotional activities, which it hoped could offset up to 25 per cent of the impact.

Meanwhile, Paddy Power owner Flutter said it expected higher duties to result in a $320mn (£240mn) hit to its 2026 adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, increasing to $540mn in 2027 as the higher online betting rate comes into force.

Shore Capital analyst Greg Johnson said the ‘bricks over clicks’ measures in the Budget favour in-person gambling over online. The government’s removal of bingo duty is estimated to provide a £6mn benefit for Mecca Bingo owner Rank Group, he added.

The Office for Budget Responsibility said it expected the tax hikes to result in behavioural changes among consumers, which could hit gross gaming yields by up to a third. This is because operators are likely to pass on up to 90 per cent of the additional cost to customers, either by raising prices or by reducing payouts.

Berenberg suggested the hit to profits could trigger more M&A in the sector, as smaller operators struggle and become acquisition targets for larger competitors. “The usual playbook is: taxes reduce margins initially and drive a wave of exits and consolidation,” the investment bank said.

“Exiting operators then drive a redistribution of market share to those companies with scale that choose to remain in the sector. Marketing spend is then usually reduced, allowing for margins to be recovered. Given the fragmented nature of the online casino market, we think Entain and Flutter remain well positioned to benefit from this.”


Bank of England eases capital requirements for UK banks

The results of the Bank of England’s (BoE) latest financial stress tests of the UK’s largest banks led to welcome news for the sector on Tuesday, as the central bank’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) announced it would cut its benchmark for system-wide tier one capital requirements. 

From 2027, UK banks will need around 13 per cent of risk-weighted assets to be held as a buffer against financial shocks. That is down from the current 14 per cent, and will potentially free up a considerable amount of capital.  

The BoE said the stress tests found that the “banking system is sufficiently well capitalised to continue lending to creditworthy households and businesses in a severe but plausible macroeconomic stress”. 

NatWest (NWG), Barclays (BARC), Lloyds (LLOY), HSBC (HSBA), Nationwide, Santander UK and Standard Chartered (STAN) released statements confirming that they had comfortably passed the stress test exercise. NatWest, for example, said that under the stress test scenario its capital buffer would have fallen to 11.1 per cent, from its current level of 14.2 per cent. 

The FPC pointed to changes in the financial system since its first assessment of capital requirements in 2015 as reasons for softening capital rules. These included “a fall in banks’ average risk weights, a reduction in the systemic importance of some banks, and improvements in risk measurement”. 

It found that buffers remain critical for absorbing losses, but noted evidence that banks are often reluctant to use them. The FPC, which also highlighted the UK’s more stringent leverage ratio requirements compared with the US and the EU, expects the updated framework to give banks greater confidence to use capital for lending.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Benjamin Toms said the FPC’s review was “constructive but not an instant game changer”. He added that a 0.5 percentage point reduction in banks’ ‘pillar 2A’ requirements from 2027 would free up £8.5bn of capital for the banks in RBC’s coverage. JH & CA


Infrastructure trusts’ megamerger hits buffers

Infrastructure trusts HICL Infrastructure (HICL) and The Renewables Infrastructure Group (TRIG) have abandoned plans to merge into a £5.3bn infrastructure giant, bowing to pressure from a number of HICL shareholders who were unhappy with the deal.

The group, which includes Capital Gearing Trust’s (CGT) manager CG Asset Management, had argued in a letter to the board that the deal benefited the trusts’ manager, InfraRed, as well as TRIG’s shareholders, while HICL’s shareholders were being “left to suffer”.

One of the key concerns was that the two invest in different areas of infrastructure, with HICL’s portfolio of government-backed assets looking more solid than TRIG’s renewable energy portfolio, which has struggled recently. 

HICL’s board has now said that “it cannot progress the transaction without a substantial majority of support from its own investors”.

Analysts now expect both boards to consider further M&A options. Winterflood analyst Ashley Thomas said this could be within their respective infrastructure segments, as they look to merge with other portfolios with more similar features.

Stifel analysts said they think “this situation may flush out any bidders who had been running a ruler over either company”. VC


Activist investor puts heat on Greggs bosses 

Greggs (GRG) is facing calls from Singapore-based activist investor Lauro Asset Management to cut costs or otherwise risk a private equity takeover.

David Mercurio, founding partner at Lauro, criticised the bakery chain’s “timid” management for allowing the share price to drop to five-year lows, according to a report by The Sunday Times.

While the chain saw sustained success after the Covid-19 pandemic, when lower rents allowed it to increase its store footprint, this year it has struggled. The company reported a double-digit drop in pre-tax profits at its interim results in July, as sales growth weakened. 

Bosses put this down to a “heat-affected July”, during which an unusually warm summer put people off hot food. To make matters worse, food inflation has been making raw ingredients more expensive, and rising wages continue to increase Greggs’ costs.

“We think management should be more aggressive in right-sizing its cost base post recent high inflation,” Mercurio said.

In its most recent trading update, Greggs flagged a “marginally improved outlook for cost inflation” for the 2025 financial year, although it emphasised that market conditions remain tough.

Mercurio’s comments came shortly after Silchester International Investors took a 5 per cent stake in the business at the end of November, making it the largest single shareholder. Silchester is followed by Royal London Asset Management and Schroders (SDR), with 4.94 and 4.69 per cent stakes, respectively. Lauro sits outside the company’s top 15 investors.

Silchester is a value-driven fund that seeks to earn “an attractive long-term return” on its investments, which implies it will back Greggs over the long haul. The company’s shares climbed 6.4 per cent after Silchester’s stake was disclosed, before tailing off again.

Greggs’ full-year results are due on 8 January. EW


Obituary: Andreas Whittam Smith

The Investors’ Chronicle lost one of its own recently with the death of Sir Andreas Whittam Smith (13 June 1937 – 29 November 2025). As well as being a respected Fleet Street titan, co-founder of The Independent newspaper and a long-serving commissioner for the Church of England, he cut his leadership teeth as editor of this magazine between 1970 and 1978.

It was an eventful time by his own account: “I made some of my biggest mistakes on the Chronicle. It was the first time I’d been in charge of anything,” he recalled in an interview for our 150th anniversary edition in 2010. “I hadn’t understood how to recruit people. I quickly learned that if you didn’t explain yourself clearly, you would never get the best out of them.”

It was a skill he soon mastered as he went on to foster the magazine’s reputation for investigative research. But the ups and downs of the market would always have an impact. For example, he was rocked when the magazine shed large numbers of readers after the 1974 market crash: “Readers didn’t thank us for warning them that the market was over, or too high,” he said.

Despite a career that encompassed the British Board of Film Classification, chairing the Financial Ombudsman Service and always writing, Andreas never forgot his roots: “My mind remains a financial journalist’s mind, putting numbers on things, questioning the number of zeros and constantly asking if this makes sense.”

We offer our sympathies to his family.

Economics

The Fed prepares to cut again – Economic week ahead: 8-12 December

The US Federal Reserve is odds-on to act again next week

Dan Jones
Dan Jones

The odds of another rate cut by the US Federal Reserve have swung back and forth in recent weeks. With inflation and unemployment data still hard to come by following the end of the government shutdown, more weight than usual has been placed on board members’ pre-meeting comments. A speech on 21 November from New York Fed president John Williams (a close ally of chair Jerome Powell) has swung things back in favour of policy easing – markets now predict an 80 per cent chance of a cut next week. Williams said he saw room for another “near-term” reduction.

This might be the last easing for a while: the bar for a further cut in early 2026 looks somewhat higher, particularly as rate-setters appear unusually split in their stances. That suggests President Trump’s attempts to reshape the governing board in his own image are far from over.

Monday 8 December

Japan: Current account, Q3 GDP


Tuesday 9 December

China: Imports/exports, trade balance

Eurozone: Investor confidence

UK: BRC retail sales


Wednesday 10 December

China: CPI inflation, M2 money supply, PPI inflation

Japan: PPI inflation

US: Fed interest rate decision


Thursday 11 December

UK: Rics house price survey


Friday 12 December

Japan: Capacity utilisation, industrial production

UK: Index of services, industrial and manufacturing production, monthly GDP, trade balance

Companies

What now for Hollywood’s most complicated company?

Warner Bros Discovery promised to be the next great media superpower. Instead, it has become a flea market for bargain hunters

Julian Hofmann
Julian Hofmann

Warner Bros Discovery (US:WBD) has spent the past month in the unusual position of being courted rather than criticised. After announcing a formal sale process in October, we are now at the stage where first-round bids have been submitted to meet a deadline that fell on 1 December.

WBD is sorting through a mixture of full-company offers and more selective attempts to prise away parts of the studio and its streaming assets.

Whatever emerges from the negotiations, the more interesting angle is not who might end up owning WBD, but why so many large media and technology groups feel compelled to take an interest in this ungainly, debt-burdened conglomerate.

Whether long-suffering investors feel the same way about the company is a moot point, but it is difficult to argue with the impact on the share price. Having risen sharply on the company’s original plan to break itself up this summer, shares have now more than doubled since June as interest from other parties becomes clear. The valuation has almost doubled as the market bought into the idea. It is merely a question now of who comes up with the best offer.

The answer to why WBD is now popular is, as ever with Hollywood, the assets. It controls one of the richest pools of intellectual property in global entertainment. This includes HBO’s prestige archive – fans of The Sopranos will remember this nostalgically – and Warner Bros’ century of film production.

Add a global distribution apparatus and a streaming platform with residual brand value, and it becomes clearer why the likes of Comcast (US:CMCSA) and Netflix (US:NFLX) have been taking a good, hard look. Netflix has already been a beneficiary of WBD’s problems after it snapped up the lucrative streaming rights to The Matrix and Ocean’s Eleven franchises when WBD was unable to renew the expiring agreements in 2023.

Fundamentally, the bidding process tells us more about the state of entertainment than it does about WBD. Streaming economics have become brutal, content costs refuse to fall, and even the largest players now realise that a handful of durable franchises may make a big difference to subscriber growth.

It is still worth revisiting the logic that created WBD. The 2022 merger of WarnerMedia and Discovery was the culmination of a decade in which everyone believed that scale was the only reliable defence against the changing economics of show business.

The result was a sprawling hybrid that attempted to splice prestige drama, superhero franchises, cable television and unscripted reality TV programming into a single ‘strategic’ whole. Warner Bros Pictures and HBO have deep libraries, strong creative reputations and intellectual property that reliably attracts the punters.

Discovery, by contrast, specialised in profitable, if formulaic, volume TV – think kitchen revamps and competitive barbecue shows. The combined business ended up trying to be Netflix, old-school Time Warner and a 1990s cable operator simultaneously, all while carrying around $50bn (£38bn) of debt.

By contrast, a break-up now looks like the only sensible option. HBO could thrive under a technology-led parent such as Apple (US:AAPL), Amazon (US:AMZN) or Alphabet (US:GOOGL). Warner Bros Pictures could operate either as a revitalised standalone studio or as part of a larger group. And the Discovery cable networks, for all their obsolescence, still generate the steady cash flows that appeal to private buyers who enjoy running off legacy assets.

Yer corporate history offers ample evidence that break-ups can either liberate businesses or expose their shortcomings. The classic modern success story remains eBay’s (US:EBAY) split from PayPal (US:PYPL) in 2015. Once touted as a model of digital commerce, the separation allowed PayPal’s payments engine to surge ahead, while eBay settled into more modest, predictable growth. Both businesses emerged enhanced from the split.

Another example is Abbott Laboratories (US:ABT) and its 2013 spin-off of AbbVie (US:ABBV). Investors were offered a simple choice: a steady consumer health business, or a higher-risk biopharma arm anchored by arthritis drug Humira. Freed from competing capital demands, both companies flourished. Though still a work-in-progress, even GSK (GSK) deserves plaudits for refusing to settle for mediocre margins by spinning off its consumer health division.

But break-ups can also expose deeper issues. The split of Hewlett-Packard into HP Inc. (US:HPQ) and Hewlett Packard Enterprise (US:HPE) did little to resolve the parent company’s long-standing strategic drift.

WBD sits somewhere between these extremes. It is not a collapsing empire, but nor does it have the clean binary profile of an eBay/PayPal. However, it does embody the broader lesson that the age of indiscriminate scale is over. Consolidation was once seen as a cure-all for the structural ailments across many different industries, but that logic has reversed.

Against an uncertain backdrop, the ‘jack-of-all-trades’ media conglomerate is a strategic relic. If WBD’s sale or break-up proceeds, it will be remembered as a long-overdue correction. The company tried to solve a complex problem with an even more complex corporate structure.

It discovered instead that its most valuable assets deserved better than to be trapped inside a holding company designed for a different era. Investors should welcome the return to clarity. In media, as in most industries, focus usually wins.

Ideas

This Aim star is more valuable than markets realise

The company isn’t merely recovering – the main division is now worth more than the group itself

Valeria Martinez
Valeria Martinez

For most of the past decade, Restore (RST) was a classic mid-cap consolidator. The Aim-traded business services provider was dependable, acquisitive and powered by the cash flows of its high-margin records management division.

Then came 2023, when a string of profit warnings ended in a statutory loss and made clear that the strategy had veered off course.

The company, which manages and stores physical and digital records, recycles IT equipment and handles office moves, went on a dealmaking run that left it with volatile, low-quality growth just as its core records unit slowed. What should have been a steady compounder began to look like an overstretched roll-up, and the shares sold off accordingly.

Restore bull points

  • Core records storage unit drives high-margin, recurring growth

  • That division could be worth more than the entire market cap

  • Margins on track to hit 20 per cent target

  • Turnaround of IT lifecycle services arm is bearing fruit

Under chief executive Charles Skinner, who two years ago returned to the business he first built, Restore is undergoing a turnaround. While revenue dipped slightly last year, reported profits moved back into the black. By the end of June, the adjusted operating margin had risen to 17.7 per cent. That was up from a nadir of 15.5 per cent in the first half of 2023, and on the way to the company’s medium-term target of 20 per cent.

Skinner’s strategy has included trimming head office costs, merging the digital and physical records units into a new division called information management, and consolidating Restore’s property footprint. But beyond the raw numbers, analysts say the foundations now look sturdier and more coherent than before.

That optimism isn’t reflected in the share price. Restore has underperformed the Aim 100 index over the past year, leaving the shares trading on less than 11 times forward earnings and the enterprise value on less than five times earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda). That’s a sharp discount to New York-listed peer Iron Mountain (US:IRM), whose EV/Ebitda multiple sits at 18.

At the current valuation, Canaccord Genuity analyst James Wood sees 70 per cent upside to his target price, backed by the value he ascribes to the information management arm. Stripping out central costs and net debt, Wood argues that the division is worth more than the entire group, which would mean the market now ascribes a negative value to the rest of the business.

Investec’s Tom Callan agrees, pegging the division at 11 times Ebitda and therefore above the group’s current enterprise value.

Within the division is the records management arm, which stores, manages and retrieves millions of physical files for blue-chip and government clients, including the NHS, under long-term contracts.

Around 80 per cent of its revenues are recurring – as boxes of records are stored for years or decades – with inflation-linked price rises and a capital-light model that throws off sticky cash flows. The division can generate operating profit margins above 30 per cent in normal conditions, contributing to around 85 per cent of group profits.

The digital business, which focuses on bulk scanning and digitisation for large government mailrooms such as HMRC, has been weak after a major contract ended last year and scanning activity slowed. But folding digital and physical records into one unit has already helped win a major scanning contract with Oxford University Hospitals starting in 2026.

“By having physical and digital together, they can offer more of a hybrid option to customers,” explains Wood. “The NHS has to have physical records but wants to digitise, so having that dual approach and a team incentivised to sell that dual approach is making a difference.”

Restore bear points

  • Office relocations business is still a drag

  • Digital scanning activity remains slow

  • Past mistakes still weigh on investor sentiment

  • Leverage at top end of target range

After pausing M&A to stabilise the group, Restore returned to dealmaking in March, buying UK document management business Synertec for an enterprise value of £33mn. The company, which has been folded into Restore’s information management arm, serves around 75 per cent of NHS trusts, managing critical communications such as appointment notifications and test results. 

The company’s model delivers 20 per cent operating margins when excluding pass-through postage costs. Multiyear contracts also improve customer stickiness, while its competitive moat is built around its proprietary software, which converts customer data into multiple output formats, such as Braille or easy-read letters. 

Synertec’s margins are in line with Restore’s medium-term target, but analysts are most bullish about the potential to drive cross-selling opportunities with other divisions, particularly by providing access to more NHS relationships. “Charles wants to get into the public sector with the records business,” notes Callan. “There’s an obvious strategic fit there.”

The resilience of the information management division, and physical records in particular, has been doubly important amid difficult trading conditions for Restore’s other interests. The IT lifecycle management arm, which handles the deployment, refurbishment and disposal of corporate tech equipment, was a major contributor to those problems.

However, it is this business that has undergone the biggest turnaround over the past two years. In the first six months of 2025, it returned to profitability. Under a new divisional head, the focus has shifted from one-off bulk recycling jobs of old hardware to service-based contracts and partnerships with value-added resellers (VARs), which bring in more predictable volumes.

It could even be a source of growth. Peel Hunt thinks the division is well placed to profit from a “wave of IT disposal and refresh projects” as devices bought during the pandemic approach the end of their useful lives, while Callan noted that Restore could also benefit from data centre fit-outs. As hardware refreshes return and more volume goes through its processing site, margins should snap back quickly.

Restore’s office relocation arm, however, remains the problem child. Harrow Green’s revenues fell by 12 per cent to £35mn last year, with adjusted operating profit slumping by nearly 60 per cent and the margin squeezed by 6 percentage points to 5.4 per cent even though the company cut staff. By the end of the first half, the margin had fallen to 2 per cent.

The division is battling a tough market, thanks to several postponed relocations and pricing pressures from companies continuing to downsize rather than expand their office footprints, especially in London. The jury is still out on whether the pain is temporary or structural.

However, the business sits awkwardly within the group and is viewed as non-core. The prolonged slowdown has fuelled speculation that the unit could be the most obvious candidate for a sale, although perhaps not yet. “[Skinner] is not going to make a decision in a hurry,” reckons Callan.

A sale would certainly be welcome for the debt pile, which has bloated significantly following the Synertec deal and smaller bolt-on acquisitions. Net debt excluding leases rose to £120mn at the half-year mark, up from £94mn a year earlier. That pushed leverage to 1.9 times Ebitda, towards the upper end of what some may consider comfortable given its business model.

With profits typically weighted to the second half, Investec’s Callan expects leverage to fall to 1.6 times by the year-end thanks to the cash Restore throws off, and to 1.2 times by the end of next year assuming no further deals. That would put Restore below its own target range of 1.5 to 2 times Ebitda and reopen the door to more M&A, buybacks or a bigger payout. 

With leverage falling, margins rebuilding, a trusted operator at the helm and a valuation still stuck at distressed levels, Restore is clearly more than just a business on the mend. Yet the market is still treating it as though nothing has changed. That stark disconnect offers a way in.

Company Details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
Restore  (RST) £325mn 237p 280p / 207p
Size/Debt NAV per share* Net Cash / Debt(-) Net Debt / Ebitda Op Cash/ Ebitda
172p -£270mn 2.8 x 49%
Valuation Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths) P/Sales
10 3.10% 9.40% 1.2
Quality/ Growth Ebit Margin ROCE 5yr Sales CAGR 5yr EPS CAGR
12.80% 7.70% 5.00% -7.70%
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd EPS grth NTM Fwd EPS grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd EPS change%
13% 10% -9.40% 1.60%
Year End 31 Dec Sales (£mn) Profit before tax (£mn) EPS (p) DPS (p)
2022 279 41.0 24.1 7.41
2023 277 30 16.9 5.20
2024 275 35 18.7 5.77
f’cst 2025 344 41 21.9 6.60
f’cst 2026 374 46 24.7 7.32
chg (%) +9 +12 +13 +11
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now) *includes intangibles of £274mn or 202p per share
Ideas

Time to shut the door on the FTSE 100 Reit

There are plenty of execution risks in its grand transformation plan

Hugh Moorhead
Hugh Moorhead

Real estate is not a fast-moving sector. Repositioning a portfolio requires timing, skill, a little luck and plenty of patience. For shareholders, the latter quality has been a prerequisite in recent years. Land Securities (LAND) – better known as Landsec – appears to seek saintlike quantities of the stuff from its investors.

The FTSE 100 landlord will spend the next half decade, and possibly longer, reorienting its £11bn office-led portfolio towards a more balanced split between offices, shopping centres and residential premises. Plentiful execution risks lie in wait along the way.

Landsec has made its initial goal clear. “For the next 12 to 18 months, our priority is further investment into major retail destinations, given the high income returns and attractive income growth on offer,” chief executive Mark Allan told analysts last month.

This means shopping centres. The rationale appears sound, with the asset class on the comeback trail after a volatile couple of decades. “They aren’t viewed as the big problem child they once were,” says Adam Shapton, analyst at real estate research firm Green Street. Indeed, like-for-like income from Landsec’s existing £3bn retail portfolio – 75 per cent of which is shopping centres and the rest smaller retail parks – grew by 5 per cent in the six months to 30 September 2025. That helped increase valuations by 2 per cent.

A deterioration in UK consumer confidence or willingness to spend could slow this growth, however.

Landsec bear points

  • Risky plan to sell offices and buy shopping centres

  • Prone to changing strategy

  • Meagre earnings growth trajectory

Allan has publicly stated the company plans to target only the top 30 shopping centre assets in the UK. As a known buyer with a finite time horizon, Landsec risks overpaying or being outbid, as other institutional interest follows.

This includes retail giant Frasers (FRAS), which has now been buying retail assets for a decade and, unlike Landsec, was recently among the names linked with the acquisition of Merry Hill, a top-tier shopping centre in the West Midlands valued at £270mn.

“Will [Landsec] be far enough through [its] capital recycling programme to take advantage of opportunities when they come up?” wonders UBS analyst Zachary Gauge.

Complicating the task, the company has little choice but to fund acquisitions through disposals. It is already amply leveraged, with a portfolio loan to value of 39 per cent and a net debt to Ebitda (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) ratio of 8.6, both above their target levels of 35 per cent and 7, respectively. This leaves limited room to draw down or finance further borrowing.

That said, the debt pile does have a lengthy average maturity of nine years and a low average coupon of 3.6 per cent. Barring a dramatic rise in government bond yields, this does not appear to be a significant concern. On the flip side, management has offered no indication that it plans to raise equity capital from shareholders – although with the company’s shares trading almost a third below book value, this is unsurprising.

The path ahead is therefore clear: disposals will fund acquisitions. This means selling £1.1bn-worth of retail parks and office developments in the next 12-18 months, and £2bn of lower-quality office assets over the next five years (Landsec plans to retain its prime office assets).

This strategy is sensitive to the evolution of the London office market. The difficulty here is that, for all chief executives’ talk of limited new supply, growing tenant demand and promising rental growth, the London office market remains subdued. There were only £4.5bn-worth of transactions in the first nine months of 2025, a rise on 2024 but still well below the long-run average. There have been few large deals, and valuations have flatlined.

This lack of activity doesn’t augur well for demand. The market knows Landsec will sell, and, to quote Allan, “be reasonably pragmatic about value” when it does. It may have to dispose of assets at a loss to book value, which could increase gearing and send a negative signal about the valuations of its neighbouring properties.

Landsec bull points

  • Dividend yield of 7 per cent

  • Valuation undemanding at 12 times 2027 earnings

The company has already sold £644mn-worth of offices and retail parks at a discount since March, booking a £67mn loss in the process. UBS’s Gauge expects a further £167mn of losses on disposal through to March 2027, equal to 1.5 per cent of Landsec’s current portfolio value.

This may not matter, of course, if Landsec can redeploy the proceeds into assets with the potential for income and capital growth. But the execution risk is undoubtedly there.

In the latter stages of its transformation, Landsec intends to establish a £3bn residential platform through three large developments, two in London and one in Manchester. Both the inflation-linked income and supply-and-demand fundamentals of build-to-rent platforms are attractive at face value, but the numbers still need to add up. 

So far, investors are doubtful. Landsec’s initial guidance was for these developments to yield an annual operating profit equivalent to just 5 per cent of their total cost, and then only from 2030. Investors were underwhelmed. “The yield felt low at the time, and that has been reinforced with market feedback,” argues Gauge.

The company appears to have taken the response on board and used its half-year report to reassure investors that future spending on pre-development assets will be “minimal pending visibility on the potential for public sector support to improve the return prospects for our residential schemes”. In other words, it is pausing development.

“It was a bit perplexing that in February they said a 5 per cent yield on cost was adequate but by November it wasn’t,” says Shapton. Shareholders are unlikely to welcome the incremental uncertainty.

Some might argue at this point that Landsec should just buy Grainger (GRI), a build-to-rent landlord with both a quality operating platform and sufficient scale (11,000 properties and counting), and a market cap of just £1.4bn. Alas, the price of Grainger’s shares – a third richer than Landsec’s on 16 times analysts’ 2027 estimates, all before a take-out premium – would be likely to complicate the larger group’s ability to find an earnings-accretive deal structure.

Nor does it help that Landsec has already changed strategy since Allan took the chief executive post in March 2020. Not only has its desired portfolio mix shifted from offices towards apartments, but its focus has moved to prioritising income over capital appreciation.

“We are a total return business . . . income is a very important part of total return, but should not be the key driver,” Allan proclaimed at the company’s October 2020 capital markets day, when interest rates were on the floor. By February 2025, the line was “that over longer periods, it is income growth which drives value growth”.

While shareholders should welcome the recent prioritisation of earnings growth – given how net asset values no longer provide much of an anchor to real estate investment trust share prices – such mixed messaging risks undermining the credibility of the company’s strategy. 

Landsec’s valuation, at 12 times analysts’ earnings estimates, is not too meaty. The shares’ 7 per cent dividend yield is enticing. And if borrowing costs fall faster than expected, the shares may rise along with the rest of the sector.

But the company’s guided earnings per share trajectory, which implies 4.5 per cent annual growth over the next five years, with limited near-term growth, does not adequately compensate investors for the strategic risks and uncertainties. For real estate investors seeking a similar income profile but with lower risks and clearer business plans, Sirius Real Estate (SRE) and LondonMetric (LMP) look like better options.

Company Details Name Mkt Cap Price 52-Wk Hi/Lo
Land Securities  (LAND) £4.56bn 605p 653p / 490p
Size/Debt Equity per share* Net Cash / Debt(-) Gearing 5yr NAVps CAGR
880p -£4.54bn 71% -5.80%
Valuation Disc/Prem Fwd NAV (+12mths) Fwd PE (+12mths) Fwd DY (+12mths) FCF yld (+12mths)
-35% 12 6.90% 7.80%
Forecasts/ Momentum Fwd NAV grth NTM Fwd NAV grth STM 3-mth Mom 3-mth Fwd NAV change%
4% 5% 5.90% -3.20%
Year end 31 Mar NAV per share (p) Profit before tax (£mn) EPS (p) DPS (p)
2023                      941 368 53.1 38.5
2024                      864 369 50.1 39.5
2025                      889 374 50.3 40.3
f’cst 2026                      903 382 51.3 41.2
f’cst 2027                      946 390 52 42.1
chg (%) +5 +2 +1 +2
Source: FactSet, adjusted PTP and EPS figures. NTM = Next Twelve Months. STM = Second Twelve Months (ie one year from now)
The Editor

Labour is penalising productivity rather than fixing it

Reeves’ ‘fiscal-crisis’ tax rises threaten growth

Rosie Carr

The dust always takes a few days to settle after Budget announcements as the devils in the details are surfaced and the true hit job on taxpayers is worked out. 

This time, however, instead of the standard cries of protest as new information is uncovered, a whole storm has been kicked up as chancellor Rachel Reeves stands accused of deliberately misleading the public to push through unpopular and arguably ill-spent tax rises. Rather than revealing that she had been informed by the Office for Budget Responsibility that the fiscal black hole had shrunk to a manageable level, Reeves persisted in depicting a bleaker financial scenario in which further heavy-duty tax rises of £26bn were necessary. 

That the public finances are in a better state of health than had previously been supposed does not mean they are in rude health. Far from it. It would therefore not be unreasonable for any chancellor in this situation to remain on the path of prudence and rebuild their fiscal headroom. But the criticism levelled at the chancellor over her presentation of the facts is that she used the golden opportunity – of taxpayers already primed for bad news and resigned to paying higher taxes – to help fund a spending spree that does next to nothing to boost growth.

It’s the juxtaposition of ordinary workers facing higher tax bills – and, in the private sector, having their pension security dismantled – and an increase in welfare spending (with plans for reform jettisoned) that is problematic. 

Politically, the gamble may pay off for Reeves, but locking in funding for a rising welfare bill and above-inflation pay awards for the public sector has helped to push the tax burden towards its highest ever level while the shelving of the plan to end the freeze on income tax bands in 2028, and instead extend the era of frozen bands out to 2031, is predicted to drag millions into the basic-rate tax net and millions more into the higher-rate band.  

The extension will be particularly damaging for taxpayers on the cusp of tax bracket cliff edges. These are so-named because crossing the threshold from one rate to another doesn’t only mean a higher rate of tax, it triggers the loss of valuable support such as tax-free childcare or the availability of the tax-free personal allowance. In some cases, the negative impact is such that it leads people to turn down promotions or make a decision to work fewer hours in order to avoid a disaster for their family finances. The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has previously calculated that crossing the £100,000 threshold could cut the disposable income of a parent with two children by £14,500 and that, until their pay climbed to £134,000, they would be worse off than a parent earning £99,000.

It may suit this government (and the previous one) to allow these ‘accidental tax traps’ and tax rates in excess of 60 per cent to exist, but it is as illogical and as harmful to growth in productivity as increasing benefits to the point where there is no incentive or requirement to seek work.  

The chancellor also decided to target valuable pension relief in the form of salary sacrifice, now to be capped at £2,000 per employee, a change IC personal finance editor Holly McKechnie explores here. But the chancellor was utterly wrong – for two reasons – to single out support given to private sector workers’ pensions as “not sustainable for the public finances” and “putting pressure on the tax everyone else pays”.

Wrong because she is making it more difficult for private sector workers to do the right thing and save for their retirement. A 2024 report by the IFS found that up to 40 per cent of private sector employees saving in defined-contribution pension schemes are on course to end up with retirement incomes below standard adequacy benchmarks. And wrong again because if anything is unsustainable, it’s the soaring cost of luxury defined-benefit schemes in the public sector – the bill for which taxpayers help to foot.

Besides shredding the credibility of Labour’s mantra “pay your fair share”, Reeves’ added new tax burden has led the OECD to warn this week that UK economic growth will be held back for several more years as households and businesses curb their spending. It predicts growth of 1.2 per cent in 2026, down from 1.4 per cent this year, rising to 1.3 per cent the following year. 

Feature

Quality shares for uncertain times

Dan Jones explains what an American quality share should look like in an era when AI dominates the S&P 500

Dan Jones

Quality companies should have the ability to persist through thick and thin. But markets like to test assumptions, and never more so than when they believe a transformative shift is on the cards.

Artificial intelligence (AI) may or may not bring about an economic sea change. While we wait to find out, investors are fearful of both missing out and being trapped by past preconceptions. So the year in US markets has been characterised not just by runaway performance for certain shares, but by stumbles for many former favourites, including names which were only recently lauded for their software and data strengths.

Our 2024 picks proved a microcosm of this market. They speak to the unusual combination of AI fervency, displacement worries and economic uncertainty seen over the past 12 months.

After all, while only two of the Magnificent Seven – Nvidia (US:NVDA) and 2025 IC idea of the year Alphabet (US:GOOGL) – have produced returns above that of the S&P 500’s year-to-date rise, there are plenty of others still gaining from the AI race. One of last year’s quality share selections, semiconductor equipment manufacturer KLA Corporation (US:KLAC), is a prime example: its 85 per cent total return for 2025 so far ranks it as the 12th best performer in the S&P 500.

We described KLA last year as a relatively defensive play within its subsector, and while rival Lam Research (US:LRCX) is among the few to outstrip it, with a 116 per cent rise this year, it’s clear that the outsized returns accruing to these businesses are due to investors’ belief in a paradigm shift.

That works both ways: another of last year’s picks, Adobe (US:ADBE), has shed almost 30 per cent for similar reasons to those applying to many peers: investors think that AI will ultimately eat much of its lunch.

The remaining pair, two ‘real economy’ shares in the form of Illinois Tool Works (ITW) and railroad Union Pacific (UNP), are flat. For ITW, tariffs have raised input costs, but the overriding issue for both companies has been shaky end markets.

The upshot of all this is that our selections have lost more ground on the index, as the chart shows. In the screen’s defence, chopping and changing our selections each year is in many ways the antithesis of quality investing. Not giving compounders the time to compound may not be wise, but it is necessary in the name of idea generation. And at a time when markets remain in flux, refreshing one’s thinking may prove to be just what’s needed.

The screen, based on our UK High Quality Large Caps screen, insists on a few notable characteristics: positive free cash flow, forecast earnings growth, a history of margin expansion, improving returns on equity and manageable interest payments.

Even so, the aim of this process – to identify companies whose qualities persist over long periods – inevitably means it produces similar names each year.

As time goes on (this is our fifth year of selecting businesses using this method), the number of new ideas is also limited by those we have covered before. Of the 12 companies produced by the screen’s conventional metrics this year, for instance, half have been featured in previous editions. Several others are very similar to past inclusions, such as Lam Research (see above), which also featured in our separate Ideas section in April 2023.

The metrics we use to find companies are listed below. They include a tweak to the UK screen: companies can qualify if they can show either return on equity (RoE) growth that starts from a high base, or operating profit and margin progression – rather than both.

If we exclude that adjustment, the screen produces just five names, and as it happens three of these companies are distinct enough for inclusion this year. Our fourth stock derives from a further notable change to the methodology: we have dropped the requirement for companies to trade on a price/earnings ratio between the 40th and 90th percentiles. That allows the inclusion of Corpay (US:CPAY), whose changing business arguably means it is a quality stock trading at a value multiple, as Valeria Martinez discusses later in the feature.

There’s no certainty that this will prove to be the case, but nor is it true that quality shares trading on high valuations aren’t worth the price. In the pages that follow, we attempt to shed some light on the investment cases for four quality companies.

The tests are as follows:

  • RoE in the top third of all stocks screened in each of the past three years

  • Operating margin in the top third of all stocks screened in each of the past three years

  • RoE above 25 per cent or operating margin growth over the past three years and operating profit growth over the past three years

  • Earnings growth forecast for each of the next two years

  • Interest cover of four times or more

  • Positive free cash flow

  • RoE growth over the past three years