Daily Mail

More bad news in post for Royal Mail investors

- by Calum Muirhead

Investors in Royal Mail face further reductions in their dividends, German bank Berenberg has warned.

Analysts said the Ftse 250 firm’s turnaround plans, which are aiming to move it away from letters and toward more profitable parcel deliveries, were becoming ‘increasing­ly difficult’ and cuts to earnings alongside higher spending would leave very little cash flow to cover the payments, meaning it would probably have to borrow money instead.

As a result, the bank said, further delays to the transforma­tion efforts meant the risk of a dividend cut will re- emerge unless royal Mail improves earnings in its 2024 financial year. It downgraded stock to ‘sell’ from ‘hold’.

the assessment may spook some shareholde­rs, who have already seen the dividend cut 40pc to 15p per share for the current year.

However, if the situation worsens they could see the payout fall further or disappear entirely. shares fell 0.5pc, or 1p, to 193p as the the FTSE 100 ended the session 113.51 points higher, at 7439.82, while the mid- cap

FTSE 250 index flew up 279.08 points to 21,439.93.

Mulberry climbed 5.1pc, or 13p, to 267.5p after Mike Ashley took a 12.5pc stake in the luxury goods firm through Frasers Group, the new name for his sports Direct empire. Private hospital operator

NMC Health continued to take a hammering, tumbling 3.3pc, or 34.5p, to 1001.5p, although it said it knew of no specific reason for the latest plunge.

Budget airline Wizz Air edged up 0.9pc, or 39p, to 4199p after a private equity firm, Indigo Partners, bagged £500m by selling all but 4pc of its 20.6pc stake in the carrier. Diagnostic­s firm Genedrive was sickly, plunging 66.7pc, or 14p, to 7p after shipping delays and slow sales for its hepatitis C detection kit caused pre- tax losses for its first half to widen to £3.3m from £1.7m alongside a revenue fall to £600,000 from £1.5m. turkey- focused gas player

Valeura Energy was deflated, sinking 27.1pc, or 8p, to 21.5p after saying its joint venture partner equinor will discontinu­e its participat­ion in a deep gas project.

A profit warning hit security and surveillan­ce group Petards, which tanked 22pc, or 2.75p, to 9.75p after saying a delayed order for its eyetrain system and lower profitabil­ity from two rail schemes would, mean a pre-tax loss for the full-year and revenues that were below market expectatio­ns.

Origo Partners also crashed 30.6pc, or 0.06p, to 0.12p, when the sale of its portfolio company, Celadon Mining, was abandoned after an arbitratio­n request spooked a potential buyer. In the risers, biotech group Tissue Regenix surged 17.5pc, or 0.17p, to 1.18p, following restoratio­n of its critical It systems after a cybersecur­ity breach last week.

oil minnow Andalas Energy gushed 44pc, or 0.06p, to 0.18p after unveiling new chief executive, Leslie Peterkin, and nonexecuti­ve chairman Mark rollins had subscribed for £500,000 worth of shares. Miner BlueJay flew 4pc, or 0.32p, higher to 8.13p after what it said were highly encouragin­g results from geochemica­l testing at a project in Greenland. And fellow digger Greatland

Gold was a bright spot, jumping 12.7pc, or 0.43p, to 3.83p, saying it had hit high-grade gold mineralisa­tion in tasmania, Australia.

DX Group shares climbed 4.1pc, or 0.5p, to 12.62p after the logistics specialist delivered an upbeat trading update that described ‘encouragin­g’ trading in the first half of its current year.

there was also some sparkle from Gem Diamonds, which was lifted 5.7pc, or 3.6p, to 66p after it said it had it unearthed a 183-carat diamond at a mine in Lesotho.

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