The Mail on Sunday

Make cash... with the tech wizards who help print it

- Joanne Hart OUR SHARES GURU WITH THE GOLDEN TOUCH

WHEN the Alternativ­e Investment Market was launched on June 19, 1995, there were just ten companies, worth £82 million. Today, 25 years later, more than 800 firms are listed on the junior market, with a collective value of more than £100 billion.

There have been some spectacula­r successes along the way but also some notable failures, which have left investors nursing heavy losses.

Siphoning out potential winners can be even more difficult on AIM than on the main market, as regulation is lighter and companies tend to be less mature. But dividends can be a helpful guide, indicating that firms make money and that management recognise the importance of rewarding their shareholde­rs.

Concurrent Technologi­es is one such business. The group makes high-performanc­e computer hardware, used when durability, security and reliabilit­y are paramount.

The shares are £1.08, dividends have risen consistent­ly over many years and chief executive Jane Annear said last week that trading remains robust and she is confident about the future.

Concurrent derives around 60 per cent of its sales from the defence industry. The firm’s kit can be found in tanks and fighter planes, surveillan­ce and cyber security equipment, drones and radar stations.

Telecoms is another big market for the business, including testing apparatus for 5G, and Concurrent is also involved in other areas of industry, such as precision machines for printing money. Proudly British, t he company designs and manufactur­es most of its kit in Colchester, although customers come from all over the world, particular­ly America.

Concurrent also prides itself on the loyalty and commitment of staff. Annear, 66, was the group’s second employee back in 1985 and became chief executive last year. Many others have been with the business for years, creating a firm with a distinctiv­e culture and a reputation for top quality goods and service.

Annear took the helm following the sad passing of previous incumbent Glen Fawcett, who led Concurrent f or more t han t hree decades. She did not expect the job but she is ideally suited for it, knowing the company inside- out and keen to retain the best from the past while also creating new areas of growth for the future.

She is accompanie­d by a new chairman, Mark Cubitt, who took the reins last week, when outgoing chairman Michael Collins retired after 31 years in the job. Many of Concurrent’s customers are longstandi­ng too. The group’s hardware is embedded into their systems and tends to stay there, with new bits added on or replacemen­ts made over the years.

Cubitt and Annear are focused on retaining those customers but gradually doing more for them, while moving into other areas, such as Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI).

Concurrent aims always to be one step ahead of the pack so innovation is key and the group invests heavily in research and in recruiting talented engineers.

These efforts are paying off. Concurrent’s order book is strong and, even if Covid-19 affects some sales, there are plenty of long-term opportunit­ies for growth. Brokers expect dividends to carry on rising, from 2.5p for 2019 to 2.55p this year.

Traded on: AIM Ticker: CNC Contact: gocct.com or 01206 752626

 ??  ?? IN THE MONEY: Concurrent Technologi­es has thrived as its computer skills are used in machines that print banknotes
IN THE MONEY: Concurrent Technologi­es has thrived as its computer skills are used in machines that print banknotes
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