Scottish Daily Mail

Investors hope to make a packet in Mondi tie-up

- By Francesca Washtell

DS Smith was in high demand as chatter grew that Mondi is mulling a takeover bid for the boxmaking behemoth.

The City rumour mill has been churning out this speculatio­n for a while – and both companies’ swift ‘no comment’ responses to Bloomberg reports did little to dampen investors’ enthusiasm.

Before the pandemic, packaging firms were mostly relegated to the set of companies that could be described as big, but a bit dull.

But, alongside logistics and warehousin­g groups (other ‘big but dull’ peers), the explosion in e-commerce has thrust them into the spotlight.

And companies all along the retail supply chain believe online shopping will stay permanentl­y above pre-pandemic levels.

DS Smith’s shares are 12pc higher than before markets went into free fall last February and it is worth £5.6bn – boosted yesterday by a rise of 5.7pc, or 21.9p, to 405.9p.

A tie-up of this scale could have real merit, especially after Mondi’s 2020 results showed profits slid 30pc to £670m, as e-commerce packaging failed to offset the loss of business in other divisions, such as its office paper arm.

Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said: ‘In a hint at the wider inflationa­ry pressures spooking the market, Mondi is also seeing upward pressure on raw material costs.

‘This has been exacerbate­d by the plethora of used cardboard stuck in people’s homes; with pick up and recycling services unable to keep up, this has driven up the price of recycled containerb­oard which the likes of Mondi and DS Smith use to manufactur­e boxes.’

Mondi was worth £8.7bn at last night’s close after its stock fell 0.1pc, or 1.5p, to 1800.5p. Over on Wall Street, video game seller Gamestop was making headlines again, after its shares soared to new highs. Volatility rocked Gamestop last month when retail investors – who communicat­ed on websites such as Twitter and Reddit’s WallStreet­Bets forum – sent its shares skyrocketi­ng and pulling the rug out from under the feet of huge hedge funds.

Gamestop shares was close to doubling during the first 90 minutes of yesterday’s session – a jump so big that it triggered three temporary halts to trading.

It hit a high of $170 before paring back gains to $109, almost 20pc higher than the previous close.

Back on this side of the pond, investors were kept busy with a results super-Thursday, with the likes of Aston Martin, Evraz, Standard Chartered and Genus putting out numbers.

Losses at Aston quadrupled to an eye-watering £466m last year as the pandemic kept luxury car lovers cooped up at home. It missed out on the periodic boost it receives from each James Bond film, after No Time To Die’s release was repeatedly delayed.

But encouragin­g sales of the DBX, its first SUV, helped shares rise 6.8pc, or 136p, to 2137p.

Russian steel maker Evraz shot to the top of the FTSE 100 leaderboar­d, rising 6pc, or 33.6p, to 598.4p, after foreign exchange movements helped boost profits by 44pc last year. But, at the other end of the scale, lender Standard Chartered was the biggest faller after clocking up a 57pc drop in profits to £1.6bn, bringing the banking reporting season to a close with a whimper. Shares fell 6.2pc, or 31.4p, to 478p.

Overall, the FTSE 100 dropped 0.11pc, or 7.01 points, to 6651.96, while the FTSE 250 lost 0.54pc, or 114.53 points, to 21,198.12.

Animal breeder Genus (down 5.5pc, or 290p, to 4950p) suffered heavy losses on the mid-cap index as disease outbreaks in China disrupted a drive to restock the pig farming industry, which saw millions of pigs culled after an African swine fever epidemic in 2019.

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