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GB Group PLC announced a significant update regarding its total voting rights in a regulatory notice dated January 31, 2025. As of this date, there are 252,627,119 ordinary shares of 2.5p each in issue, with no shares held in treasury. This total voting rights figure is crucial for shareholders to determine if they need to notify the company regarding any changes to their interests, adhering to the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules set by the Financial Conduct Authority.
This development reflects GBG's compliance with regulatory requirements and indicates stability in its share structure. The clarity provided on voting rights is important for investors, especially in a market characterized by evolving financial conditions. The company has emphasized its commitment to transparency and corporate governance, which bodes well for stakeholder confidence moving forward.
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Pish that's your words pure utter pish |
Revenue fcst of £282m and a mkt cap of £651m. Why would this be attractive to bidder? I am sceptical having previously thought it would be bid for. Times are so different now. Net Debt £107m |
Yes a likely takeover target as is GHT and perhaps SCE |
Retirement of Chief Executive / Appointment of CEO designate |
I imagine this business gets acquired. Look at Sopheon... GB Group is a much better business in my opinion, but simply going through a tough time. |
I talked about GBG here with Justin Waite on Vox Markets earlier today (starts 38:40) |
The Naked Trader |
GBG will come again. The timing of the Acuant acquisition was not the problem except with hindsight perhaps, so much as the ridiculous high price paid, as we know and felt at the time. Let's remain hopeful. I agree the momentum of debt reduction has petered out, but this is still a company making a healthy profit out of providing in-demand tech services in the world's most important market. |
Paul Scott on Stockopedia doesn't like them either, ex-growth, not much cash generation, too much debt. He said he can't get excited about these. |
An interesting holding RNS just popped out. A value fund seeks value? |
Relief at trading on track, nevertheless not much underlying business progress so the share price jump did not stick. Can't work out why there wasn't a chunk off net debt either, timings perhaps. |
I wonder if fairly decent trading statement will bring back last years potential suitor |
The trading statement looks encouraging.Still on course for the expected forecast FY24 profit. |
1H24 results published |
Financial Calendar |
Thanks to the anonymous muppet for a down tick! |
Back in, for the long haul. |
Thanks for posting. |
GB Group, which makes fraud prevention software, promises to "help your business build online customer relationships based on trust". Yet investors in the company, which carries out identity and location checks for online shopping and financial transactions, might be running out of faith.The technology company's stock has been mauled over the past 12 months. GB briefly attracted American bidders last year: private equity group GTCR expressed interest in a possible cash offer in September, before walking away a month later. That helped it trade above 600p last September, having been at 440p before the takeover talk ignited. Now the stock is changing hands at just 218p. Reasons for Aim-listed GB's decline clearly go beyond the withdrawal of the takeover: rises in interest rates and a weaker pound hurt its finances, and growth has been disappointing.GB rode the wave of the boom in interest in both cryptocurrency and online shopping during the pandemic, which led to more demand for its identity checks and fraud prevention software. But when interest waned, GB was hurt, too. It fell to a £118 million loss for the year to April from a £22 million profit a year earlier, mostly due to a huge write-down in the value of two acquisitions in the US. Partly in response to this, investors rejected a board pay deal earlier this year.However, GB, which processes some 210 million transactions each day for customers including Volvo, Barclays, IBM, HSBC and Lego, is in a structural sweetspot. Demand for its services looks set to rise alongside the proliferation of sophisticated fraud.Gross margin has remained a steady 71 per cent over the past two years, and Charles Brennan, analyst at Jefferies, concludes "that the slowdown in growth at GB is more cyclical than structural. For the patient, improving growth should be rewarded with a material re-rating."The stock is trading on a price to earnings ratio of 13, while its larger rival, Experian, changes hands at 23 times price to earnings.GB has transformed since it launched in 1989 as a business that checked customers' names and addresses for catalogue shopping companies, and its relevance now looks unparalleled.There remains a chance of a takeover bid at GB from a different private equity firm or a software giant. "While the costs of financing have increased, PE firms are still active and have equity to deploy. There is nothing in the [GB] share price for this," says Andrew Ripper, analyst at Liberum. Buy. |
No unfortunately I'm not hotfinance - but if you could then that would be great. |
Good find. Can you copy and paste the article as you have to be a member. |
The Times Share tip: "As fraud rates rise, GB Group stands to benefit". |
Waiting in patience here - as patience certainly required! £2 does look like the historic support back as far as 2016, though I don't know how many shares have since come onto the register. I do sense that when the time comes and the story regains credibility it will retrace very smartly upwards. In the meantime it shows willing to pay an albeit tiny dividend. |
The fall is disappointing given the positive trading update. |
@Hotfinance14: my understanding is that shareholder approval on RemCo matters covers a wide area of matters inc. the RemCo plan for the directors for the coming year (quantum and KPIs) and also whether the performance measures for bonuses paid and LTIPs vested in the last year have been applied correctly (i.e. that RemCo discretion hasn't been applied inappropriately to allow payments when actual performance would have meant no payment being made). |
Type | Ordinary Share |
Share ISIN | GB0006870611 |
Sector | Computer Programming Service |
Bid Price | 344.80 |
Offer Price | 345.00 |
Open | 350.00 |
Shares Traded | 224,360 |
Last Trade | 16:35:09 |
Low - High | 340.20 - 350.00 |
Turnover | 277.33M |
Profit | -48.58M |
EPS - Basic | -0.1923 |
PE Ratio | -17.93 |
Market Cap | 866.51M |
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