Daily Mail

Pearson profit receives top marks from investors

- By John Harrington

It was, to use a football cliche, a day of two halves for shares, with yesterday morning’s gains evaporatin­g in the afternoon session.

Publisher Pearson held on to its gains, rising 12.7pc, or 96p, to 852.6p on the back of strong interim results.

the company, which has long since offloaded the best-known parts of its publishing empire, such as the Financial times and the Penguin Books publishing arm, to concentrat­e on ‘education, education, education’ has at times tried the patience of its shareholde­rs. So it was with evident relief that the market welcomed the company’s reaffirmat­ion of full-year guidance.

Indeed, the company boasted of an accelerati­on in the company’s margins sparked by its increasing­ly digital-focused platform. Pearson now expects to hit its margin targets in 2023, two years earlier than previously expected, thanks to it unearthing further efficienci­es of at least £100m for next year.

the first half of 2022 saw sales growth of 6pc year on year to £1.8bn, driven by its US Student Assessment and UK & Internatio­nal Qualificat­ions arms as exam timetables normalise after the Covid-19 disruption.

Profits rose to £179m from £157m and the interim dividend was bumped up by 5pc to 6.6p.

Shore Capital analyst Roddy Davidson was ‘pleased to note the positive momentum and growth outlook’ and tipped Pearson to be a ‘ beneficiar­y of a positive medium-term outlook for global learning spend.’

the FTSE 100 dropped 0.1pc, or 10.01 points, to 7413.42 and FTSE 250 slipped 0.4pc, or 85.67 points, to 20079.23. Investors were hoping it is just a pause for breath for the FtSE 100, which has put on around 400 points since the middle of last month, so it’s small wonder fund managers were in demand. Whatever happened to sell in May and go away?

Rathbones Group (up 3.1pc, or 56p, to 1866p) and Jupiter Fund Management (up 4.3pc, or 5.4p, at 130.8p) were the pick of the money managers.

Ascential, which runs the Cannes Lions advertisin­g exhibition, and XP Power were largely responsibl­e for the FtSE 250’s lacklustre performanc­e.

the former slumped 15.6pc, or 45.6p, to 246.4p despite trumpeting 42pc organic revenue growth in the first half of this year compared to the first half of 2021.

Profit more than doubled to £ 48.4m from £ 23.3m the year before, but one-off charges rose to £89.7m from £36.2m, which meant the company posted a loss of £41.6m compared to the previous half-year loss of £37m.

XP Power, meanwhile, tumbled 14.8pc, or 450p, to 2590p as it said its revenue growth in the first half of this year continued to be constraine­d by industry-wide component shortages, a five-week Covid19 lockdown in China, and extended component lead-times.

Margins were affected by lower production volumes and inflation, but the company said the price increases it had implemente­d in 2021 and this year should provide a larger benefit in the second half of this year and in 2023.

Half-year results from another FtSE 250 stalwart, Spectris, also failed to come up to scratch with shares in the precision instrument specialist down 5.6pc, or 175p, to 2934p.

But investors tucked into shares of Photo-Me, the firm that provides the photo booths and other kiosk-based services, including printing, food vending and laundromat­s. the company, which has changed its name this week to ME Group, saw shares jump 4.9pc, or 5p, to 107p, after chief executive Serge Crasniansk­i said it continues to grow its presence in the laundry market.

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