Daily Mail

Glaxo pockets £800m from Haleon stake sale

- By Calum Muirhead

GSK landed a windfall of over £800m as it began selling down its stake in Sensodyne toothpaste maker Haleon.

The FTSE 100 pharma giant offloaded around 240m shares in the consumer health group, equivalent to a 2.6pc stake in the business. GSK sold the shares at 335p each, a 2.3pc discount to Haleon’s previous closing price, for a total haul of £804m.

Haleon, which also makes Panadol painkiller­s and Centrum vitamins, was spun out of GSK in July last year in the biggest European stock market listing for more than a decade.

After initially listing at 330p, the shares have since risen around 4.5pc. GSK retained a 12.9pc stake after the demerger and following the recent share sale still controls 10.4pc of the company.

As the sale had been expected, Haleon shares were little moved during the session, inching up 0.04pc, or 0.15p, to 343p.

GSK’s move to offload part of its stake followed reports earlier this month that US rival Pfizer, which owns nearly 26pc of Haleon, would start doing the same. Pfizer’s finance chief David Denton previously said the company would begin selling its stake in a ‘slow and methodical’ manner. Following the GSK sale, both firms have pledged not to dispose of any more stock for at least 60 days.

‘They both said they would sell down their positions in time, but the ease at which GSK has placed 240m shares in Haleon would suggest it won’t have a problem selling the remaining 10.3pc stake in the business,’ said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

GSK also benefited after a Canadian court threw out a proposed class action lawsuit connected to its heartburn drug Zantac. The British Columbia Supreme Court ruled there was little evidence the drug led to an increased risk of cancer. GSK shares rose 1.8pc, or 25.4p, to 1470.2p.

The FTSE 100 climbed 0.3pc, or 24.04 points, to 7754.62 but the FTSE 250 slid 0.4pc, or 77.93 points, to 19188.37.

It came as data showed the UK had managed to avoid recession in the first quarter of this year despite being held back by strikes and the cost-of-living squeeze.

The figures showed Britain’s economy grew 0.1pc in the three months to the end of March, showing more resilience than economists had expected.

Ruth Gregory, deputy chief UK economist at Capital Economics, said: ‘ There’s still no recession, but with the full drag from higher interest rates yet to be felt it is too soon to sound the all-clear.’

The Bank of England on Thursday ditched recession forecasts and upgraded its outlook over the next three years though still predicted that growth would be weak.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt said: ‘It’s good news that the economy is growing but to reach the Government’s growth priority we need to stay focused on competitiv­e taxes, labour supply and productivi­ty.’

Beazley rose 3pc, or 17.5p, to 604p after reporting a sharp jump in quarterly net premiums. The Lloyd’s of London insurer’s gross written premiums rose 12pc to £1.1bn in the first three months of the year.

But Johnnie Walker and Guinness maker Diageo fell 2.4pc, or 85p, to 3534.5p after broker Jefferies turned bearish on the stock.

Rolls-Royce shares recovered some of the previous session’s losses, rising 1.6pc, or 2.4p, to 148.3p having fallen nearly 7pc on Thursday. The sell-off came even as boss Tufan Erginbilgi­c said the recovery is now ‘moving at pace’.

There seemed to be disappoint­ment, however, that this was not accompanie­d by an upgrade to forecasts. But in keeping with its status as one of the best performing blue-chip stocks of the year, the shares were on the rise yesterday.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom