Scottish Daily Mail

Games Workshop soars as it hammers forecasts

- by Francesca Washtell

SHARES in Warhammer maker

Games Workshop soared as it said it had beaten forecasts again.

The retailer, which makes models and figurines that can be collected and painted, has had a stellar year after it found success with adult fans looking for hobbies they could do during lockdown.

Sales in the three months to August hit £90m, compared with £78m in the same period of last year, it said in a trading update.

Online and trade sales are strong at the Nottingham-based group – though the business’ shops are ‘still recovering’.

Operating profit is expected to be around £45m, up from around £38m, and it will dole out a 50pper-share special, one-off dividend, worth £15m.

Longtime investors have benefited from a soaring share price, which has risen 60pc this year and 172p since its low in March.

AJ Bell investment director said there is ‘no question that Games Workshop is a winner on the stock market’. Yesterday it jumped 11.8pc, or 1025p, to 9750p. This means the company is now valued at £3.2bn – making it worth more than the likes of Marks &

Spencer (down 2.1pc, or 2.3p, at 105.45p) and Tui (up 4.9pc, or 16.8p, to 356.9p.

Another big winner on the stock market was TT Electronic­s, following the launch of a 20-second coronaviru­s test it has manufactur­ed. The small-cap group has worked with private technology group iAbra to develop the Virolens test, which uses a holographi­c microscope to examine saliva samples from a mouth swab.

The almost instantane­ous results caught the eye of Heathrow early on – and it has now been endorsed and trialled by Europe’s busiest airport, which is keen to roll out mass Covid testing so that regular flying can start up again.

Because the devices use microscope technology, the makers claim the results are close to 100pc accurate and better at detecting asymptomat­ic carriers than the usual NHS swabs.

Hartlepool-based TT Electronic­s has already received £2m of orders from iAbra – which will sell the testing kits and cartridges on to customers including Heathrow and a division of the US defence behemoth Lockheed Martin – but around £280m of orders could be in the pipeline. Shares surged 40.5pc, up 77p, at 267p. In other Covid news, Astrazenec­a boss Pascal Soriot insisted that his company could still deliver a vaccine ‘by the end of this year, maybe early next year’, despite a late-stage clinical trial being temporaril­y halted because a patient fell ill.

Shares in Astrazenec­a, the FTSE100’s largest company, fell 0.6pc, or 51p, to 8335p.

The wider market also finished in the red, as traders fretted about disagreeme­nts over Brexit terms between the UK and EU.

The FTSE 100 closed 0.2pc lower – but managed to stay above the psychologi­cally significan­t 6000mark. It fell by 9.52 points to 6003.32, while the FTSE 250 slid 0.1pc, or 20.98 points, to 17573.95.

Grosvenor Casino and Mecca Bingo operator Rank Group bosses struck an optimistic note, with chief executive John O’Reilly saying it is well-equipped to ‘return to full strength’, despite plunging to a £22m loss and cutting its dividend. Shares climbed 0.3pc, or 0.4p, to 125p.

Cineworld (down 6.1pc, or 3.23p, to 49.55p) languished near the bottom of the FTSE250 leaderboar­d after Morgan Stanley trimmed back the target price on its shares from 60p to 45p.

Pub group Fuller’s, meanwhile, rose 5.1pc, or 28p, to 578p, after reporting it has reopened more than 90pc of its pubs and hotels.

It said it got a welcome boost from the Government’s Eat Out To Help Out scheme.

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