Daily Mail

How Novacyt has turned £10,000 into nearly £1m

- By Francesca Washtell

The dream of every investor is to stumble on the golden undiscover­ed company just before it rockets in value.

And while the coronaviru­s has been tumultuous for markets, it has also turned a slew of obscure companies into stock market darlings in months – or even weeks.

None more so than Novacyt, a France-based biotechnol­ogy company whose Primerdesi­gn outpost in Southampto­n designed one of the first Covid tests in January and is now supplying the world with kits.

An investor with £1,000 of shares in Novacyt at the start of the year would now have nearly £92,000. Someone with a £10,000 holding would have close to £1m.

Shares in AIM-listed Novacyt, which bought Primerdesi­gn for £12.4m in 2016, rose another 5.1pc, or 58p, to 1194p, bringing its rise in 2020 to a meteoric 9,085pc.

Worth more than £773m, it could now comfortabl­y sit in the FTSe 250 index if it were listed on the main market. elsewhere, car dealer Pendragon added to a recent, albeit more modest, rally.

Its stock climbed for a second day, rising 22.8pc, or 2.96p, to 15.96p, after reporting on Thursday that it had made back almost all its first-half losses in the third quarter.

Shares have now doubled since starting the month at just over 7p and are up almost 23pc from the start of the year.

The wider stock market also ended the week on a high.

The FTSE 100 closed 1.3pc higher, up by 74.63 points, at 5860.28, after getting a boost from banks and oil stocks, while the FTSE 250 rose 1.2pc, or 215.15 points, to 18,109.57. Crude oil prices rose to almost $42.50 a barrel, lifting Royal Dutch Shell 2.8pc, or 26p, to 940.6p and BP by 2pc, or 4.1p, to 205.5p.

Ailing travel groups Tui and Easyjet were bolstered by the news that the UK has added the Canary Islands, Denmark, the Greek island Mykonos and the Maldives to its roster of travel corridor-friendly holiday destinatio­ns from tomorrow.

Tui finished 5.4pc higher, up by 16.4p, to 322.9p, while budget carrier easyjet jumped 2.6pc, or 13.8p, to reach 548.4p.

Utility firm Pennon has more than tripled its stable of individual shareholde­rs after offering customers the chance to receive two shares in the company or £20 off their bill.

About 50,000 people – 6pc of its customer base – opted to take shares in the water giant, which is handing back £20m to customers following a solid financial performanc­e at South West Water.

If the division keeps outperform­ing, even more will be returned to customers, according to boss

Susan Davy. Pennon rose 0.6pc, or 6p, to 1023p.

Over on the mid- cap index, spread betters Plus 500 and IG Group made gains while CMC Markets fell slightly after they welcomed the announceme­nt of curbs in Australia next year that will cap the amount of money customers can lose when making certain types of trades.

IG (up 0.5pc, or 4p, to 777p) said the new rules would not change its financial targets, while CMC (down 1.3pc, or 4p, to 333.5p) said it would not affect the current year’s performanc­e.

Plus 500 (up 1.4pc, or 22p, to 1632p) has already accounted for the changes but said it will have to work out how much it will affect future years.

Liontrust Asset Management investors were undeterred by two bosses selling £ 1.6m shares between them.

Chief executive John Ions and finance head Vinay Abrol have each sold 66,250 shares for 1230p apiece. The fund manager’s stock rose 4.1pc, or 50p, to 1280p.

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