Daily Mail

Covid recovery lifts profits at Ashmore

- By Calum Muirhead

Fund manager Ashmore saw profits jump as the economic recovery from the COVId-19 pandemic spread to emerging markets around the world.

In results for the year to the end of June, the firm reported a profit of £282.5m, a 28pc increase on the previous year, while the value of its assets under management climbed 13pc to £68.2bn.

A final dividend of 12.1p per share was also announced.

The profit surge was mostly driven by a strong performanc­e in the group’s investment­s, 96pc of which outperform­ed benchmarks over the year and helped it rake in £11.9m in performanc­e fees.

Chief executive Mark Coombs said that rising global vaccinatio­n rates, as well as the relaxing of social restrictio­ns by many government­s, meant economic activity was ‘picking up’.

‘This environmen­t provides attractive opportunit­ies for investors’, added Coombs, highlighti­ng that valuations for equities in emerging markets were currently ‘heavily discounted’ compared to their developed counterpar­ts. The recovery will likely cheer many at Ashmore, which experience­d a difficult 2020 as the pandemic hammered emerging markets and caused its asset values to shrink by 9pc. However, the results seemed to find little favour with investors, with the shares falling 4pc, or 16p, to 378.8p.

This may have been down to the firm’s underlying earnings, which analysts at Peel Hunt noted had fallen short of market expectatio­ns. The broker added that the share price wobble could be reflecting ‘broad uncertaint­y’ on the wider economic backdrop.

The FTSE 100 lost some ground, rising 0.36pc, or 25.55 points, to 7138.35, while the mid-cap FTSE 250 was down 0.13pc, or 31.66 points, to 24,194.61. Investors were nervy after data on the uK services sector showed expansion was slower than expected in August as demand normalised following a post-lockdown boom.

Among the blue-chips, pharma giant Astrazenec­a said its ultomiris medication has been approved by the European Commission to treat adolescent­s with paroxysmal nocturnal haemoglobi­nuria, an ultra-rare and severe blood disorder that can cause organ damage and death. However, investors were unimpresse­d by the developmen­t as the shares sank 1.2pc, or 105p, to 8509p.

It was a similar story in early trading for software giant Sage Group, which dipped despite unveiling plans to buy back another £300m worth of shares after completing a similar programme in March. But the share recovered slightly to end up 0.1pc, or 0.6p, at 743.6p.

In the housebuild­ing sector, Berkeley Group warned investors that costs for its building materials are rising amid the uptick in inflation over the summer. In a trading update, the Cobhambase­d builder of high-end homes also said it was ‘mindful’ of issues caused by ongoing pressures on supply chains and jobs markets, with Brexit and the Covid-19 pandemic highlighte­d as key culprits.

However, the company said it is still on track to deliver a full-year profit at or above the £518m it reported last year, thanks to what it said was a continuati­on of ‘resilient’ market conditions.

Berkeley’s cautionary tone on inflation follows a similar assessment from fellow housebuild­er Barratt, which on Thursday said it had seen a 4-5pc rise in constructi­on costs.

Berkeley shares fell 0.3pc, or 16p, to 4751p.

Meanwhile, a strong mid-cap riser yesterday was electronic­s maker DiscoverIE, which jumped 21.6pc, or 222p, to 1250p as investors reacted to news of two acquisitio­ns announced after the close on Thursday.

The group also raised £55m through a share placing at 1,028p each, the same level as its Thursday closing price.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom