Daily Mail

Profit warning hammers shares in Speedy Hire

- By John Abiona

SHARES in tool hire company Speedy Hire plunged after a nasty profit warning.

The company, which rents out everything from hammer drills and LED lights to generators, said it has been hit by a slowdown in trading, contract delays and a mild winter reducing demand for heating products. As a result, it expects profits to be lower than previously thought. Shares tumbled 18.1pc, or 6.5p, to 29.5p.

Speedy Hire has been hit by challenges across the constructi­on sector.

Revenues from its national customers – some of the UK’s biggest contractor­s – rose 3pc in the third quarter to December 31.

But this was less than the 5pc growth it reported in the first half of its financial year.

And while the group has secured deals, it warned that it will take longer than expected for revenues to come in.

While investors appeared concerned by the latest update, some in the City remained optimistic.

‘Although disappoint­ing, this is due to events beyond Speedy Hire’s immediate control,’ said Peel Hunt’s Andrew Nussey.

And analysts at Liberum said that while ‘ sentiment will no doubt be adversely affected by today’s update’ the company has shown it has ‘levers for growth’.

On the wider market, the FTSE 100 rose 0.4pc, or 33.57 points, to 7666.31 and the FTSE 250 edged up 0.2pc, or 38.34 points, to 19349.5.

Private equity firm 3i made gains following an upgrade from analysts at Barclays ahead of its third- quarter update on Thursday. The investment bank said the focus will be on Action – the Dutch non-food discount retailer and most successful company in the blue-chip firm’s portfolio – which should report strong trading over Christmas. Shares rose 2.6pc, or 64p, to 2497p.

Auction Technology Group saw its value shoot up by almost a fifth following a positive update.

The company, which operates online market places that allow bidders to access items such as paintings, sofas and antiques, said revenues rose 3pc to £35m in the three months to the end of December.

As a result, it said it remains on track for its revenues to increase between 5pc and 8pc across its financial year. Shares soared 19.8pc, or 90.5p, to 547p.

Clinical trial specialist Hvivo will start paying an annual dividend from this year as it cashes in on rising demand for its services.

The group, which recruits healthy adult volunteers and infects them with a medical-grade version of a virus to test the effectiven­ess of drugs and vaccines being developed by biotech and pharmaceut­ical companies, reported that revenues increased 15.5pc to £56m in 2023. In a further dose of good news, Hvivo has already secured 90pc of its revenue for this year and expects to make £62m. Shares surged 8.4pc, or 2.2p, to 28.5p.

Heading in the other direction was Deliveroo after its Germanbase­d rival Delivery Hero, which held a 4.5pc stake in the group, sold its holding at a huge discount to the price it paid three years ago. Shares slid 3.1pc, or 3.8p, to 118.1p.

There was some respite for Synthomer after it said it has reduced its debt bill by half since the start of 2023.

Shares in the chemicals group added 3.9pc, or 5.3p, to 140p.

Kromek, a Durham-based technology group, is cashing in on demand for its products that are being used to detect nuclear threats in Ukraine as well as cancer in hospitals around the world.

The company said it remains on track to report record revenues for this year, having increased its first-half sales while losses narrowed. Shares rose 0.9pc, or 0.05p, to 5.75p.

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