Scottish Daily Mail

Babcock shares sink after £1.6billion loss

- By Francesca Washtell

BABCOCK Internatio­nal was rocked by a brutal sell-off after it posted a £1.6bn annual loss.

The UK’s second-largest defence firm said it would need to write off £2bn from the value of the business as part of a drastic overhaul.

This was far more than the £1.7bn it had indicated in April.

Chief executive David Lockwood immediatel­y rolled up his sleeves and got to work on a restructur­ing when he joined the company last year. This included carrying out an extensive review of how profitable contracts and recent acquisitio­ns were.

Babcock is a key contractor for the Ministry of Defence and is tasked with maintainin­g the UK’s fleet of nuclear submarines, operating the Devonport naval dock at Plymouth and training Royal Air Force pilots. Lockwood has already laid out plans to save £40m and cut 1,000 jobs, many of which will be from a bloated layer of middle management.

Yesterday, in delayed results for the year to March, Babcock said it would aim to raise £400m by selling off different parts of the business. Lockwood also insisted that the company can be revived without needing to go cap in hand to shareholde­rs – saying it can ‘do this without the need for equity’.

Some brokers were encouraged, with Shore Capital analysts saying they expect Babcock to ‘emerge in a year’s time on an ‘even keel’. They added: ‘Management are tackling the group’s structural issues head-on and we welcome business sales alongside restructur­ing to focus on the growth potential of the core.’

However, some may also be wondering if the company could become a takeover target if Lockwood turns it around – after his last two success stories Laird and Cobham were bought by Advent

Internatio­nal. Shareholde­rs, however, did not share the company’s optimistic tone. Babcock’s stock nosedived 16pc, or 48.8p, to 255.9p, making it not just the biggest faller on the FTSE 250 but also on the entire FTSE All-Share index.

Babcock dragged on the FTSE 250, which closed down 0.4pc, or 101.63 points, at 22948.83, while the FTSE 100 also ended in the red, falling 0.7pc, or 46.12 points, to 7032.3.

Intertek, one of the Footsie’s lesser-known companies, suffered on the back of a trading update, even though it reported a 23pc rise in profits to £186m.

The company provides tests, and inspects and certifies goods in industries including chemicals, food, transport and constructi­on.

Shares tumbled 8pc, or 448p, to 5156p, as traders speculated that the City’s expectatio­ns for its progress had been too high.

Also having a difficult end to the week, London-based asset manager Jupiter sank 6.6pc, or 19.2p, to 270.4p as clients withdrew their cash at such a rate that it posted net outflows of £2.3bn in the six months to June 30. And an upbeat statement from Glencore that it is set to announce another year of bumper profits from its trade business was met by little enthusiasm from investors, as it also lowered expectatio­ns for how much material it would produce from its mines. Shares fell 1.8pc, or 5.9p, to 323.55p.

At the other end of the scale, property site Rightmove said estate agents had spent record fees advertisin­g homes on its portal, rising 63pc to an average of £1,163 in the first six months of the year compared with the same period of 2020 and still higher than the £1,077 it hit in 2019 before the pandemic. Profits soared 86pc to £115m and revenues by 58pc to £150m as Britons rushed to complete on houses before the end of the stamp duty holiday. Shares rose 3.2pc, or 22p, to 702.2p.

Deliveroo climbed after pulling out of Spain, where the competitio­n for takeaway deliveries has grown fierce and the government has said workers in the gig economy must be considered employees. It finished up 1.5pc, or 5p, at 330p.

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