Scottish Daily Mail

Hospital group’s shares rise 23pc after £75m bid

- by Holly Black

A cAsh offer for healthcare provider Circle Holdings sent shares soaring.

The deal is being financed by the notorious activist investor group Toscafund, which already holds a 28pc stake in the business.

Toscafund has offered 30p a share for the company through a newly incorporat­ed wholly owned entity. The offer price – a 25pc premium to where shares closed on Tuesday – values circle at £75.2m. The shares Tosca already owns will not be part of the deal, but will be exchanged for loan notes.

circle’s board believes the offer is in the best interest of shareholde­rs. Non-executive chairman Michael Kirkwood said: ‘Under the single ownership of a wellresour­ced bidder, and without the costs and distractio­ns of a public listing, the management team will have greater flexibilit­y to accelerate growth opportunit­ies.’

chief executive officer Paolo Pieri added: ‘It is a positive endorsemen­t to have such strong support from a shareholde­r with a commitment to our future growth and ambitions, as well as a demonstrat­ed track record of investment in their companies.’

Toscafund has gained a reputation for its activist approach. Last year it called for the chairman of tool hire firm speedy hire to be replaced, only for shareholde­rs to vote for Jan Astrand to remain.

The group, whose chief executive Martin hughes is nicknamed ‘Rottweiler’, still has 19.4pc of that business.

Yesterday’s announceme­nt came as circle reported its full-year results. Revenue climbed 4.4pc to £133.6m in 2016 and the firm reduced its loss to £3.1m, from £4.9m the previous year.

The business, which treats privately insured, self-pay and Nhs patients, saw patient numbers rise 2pc to 346,905.

shares rocketed 23.4pc, or 5.62p, to 29.62p.

The triggering of Article 50 did little to deter the FTSE 100. The blue-chip index finished up 0.4pc, or 30.3 points, at 7373.72.

Infrastruc­ture investment company 3i was the highest riser as it was announced that one of its holdings, Environmen­tal scientific­s Group, is to be bought for £30m – some 39pc more than 3i had valued the business a year ago. shares leapt by 5.7pc, or 40p, to 740.5p.

AIM-listed surveillan­ce systems firm Petards Group advanced after a major contract win.

It will supply its ccTV and door opening systems to swiss-based train-maker stadler Bussnang from June in a deal worth £4.3m.

stadler’s vehicles are used on the London Tramlink. Petards shares yesterday surged 15.8pc, or 4.5p, to 33p. commercial flooring firm James

Halstead edged up after reporting pre-tax profit was up 0.8pc to £23.2m in the half-year to December 31. Revenue climbed 4.3pc to £119.6m and shareholde­rs will see their interim dividend hiked 7.1pc to 3.75p.

chief executive Mark halstead said that despite a tough six months in the UK and cost increases, it delivered record results. A weaker pound has boosted exports, offsetting a fall in UK turnover. shares nudged up 0.7pc, or 3.25p, to 496p.

Tech business Sepura slipped after a setback in hytera’s takeover of the business. The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial strategy has said it is minded to initiate a review of the acquisitio­n by the chinese firm.

The offer for the business was first made back in December. shares in sepura tumbled 12.1pc, or 1.88p, to 13.62p.

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