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Tate & Lyle and British Gas: Markets live

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May 15
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Tate & Lyle surges on 拢2.7bn takeover offer

One of the London market鈥檚 longest standing members could be on the brink of exit. Tate & Lyle鈥檚 (TATE) shares soared almost 50 per cent on Thursday after it said it received a takeover bid worth 拢2.7bn from US rival Ingredion (US:INGR).

The FTSE 250 ingredients supplier was in talks with the Illinois-based company, which makes sweeteners and starches, about a possible all-cash offer that valued Tate & Lyle at 595p per share, plus allowance for two more ordinary dividends: a final payout of up to 13p, and an interim dividend of up to 7p.

The total 615p bid implies a price to earnings multiple of around 15 times, bringing Tate & Lyle much closer to its peer group after a difficult run. 鈥淲e think this would be a fair price for a good asset with a strategic fit for Ingredion,鈥 said Damian McNeela, an analyst at Deutsche Bank.

The proposed offer marks a 64 per cent premium to Tate & Lyle鈥檚 Wednesday closing price of 376p. Ingredion has until 11 June to make a firm bid or walk away.

May 15
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Fermi still awaits customers (and revenues)

Shares in Fermi (FRMI) jumped as much as 23 per cent on Thursday after the data centre developer reported a $190mn (拢143mn) net loss in the first quarter but said that engagement with prospective tenants was improving.

The company, which is developing a huge data centre site in Texas, recently deposed chief executive Toby Neugebauer, who remains its largest shareholder with a 15 per cent holding.

It is also yet to secure any tenants.

New chairman Marius Haas said that the company was at a 鈥渕eaningful inflection point鈥, and tenant engagement has been improving in recent weeks, according to analysts at Panmure Liberum.

The shares have now lost three quarters of their value since the company went public in October 2025.

May 15
产测听

Unite is filling beds, albeit slowly

After a flurry of disappointing market updates, Unite Group鈥檚 (UTG) trading statement today offered some reassurance.

The student landlord has filled 79 per cent of its student beds for the 2026/27 academic year, with occupancy fractionally below where it was at the same stage for the 2025/26 cycle.

The company said it had been using 鈥渢argeted pricing initiatives鈥 to fill the beds it lets directly to students. As a result, occupancy for these properties has improved year on year, while occupancy for beds let through university partnership agreements has declined.

Filling occupancy in its recently acquired Empiric student portfolio has proven trickier, with a 47 per cent reservation rate well below last year鈥檚 55 per cent.

The company reiterated its 2026 guidance for 2026 adjusted earnings per share of 41.5p to 43.0p. Analysts鈥 estimates are fractionally below the lower end of this. Shares fell 1 per cent in early trading.

May 15
产测听

Grafton鈥檚 Europe strength offsets weak UK

Builders鈥 merchant Grafton (GFTU) said it had experienced 鈥渘o material disruption to date鈥 and that it was on track to achieve market expectations for 2026 profit before tax of between 拢190mn and 拢200mn.

It has, however, been experiencing increases in materials costs and is maintaining high levels of inventory for sale to customers.

The company鈥檚 like-for-like revenues in the four months to April were flat versus the prior year, excluding currency impacts. Strong growth in Iberia, where revenues rose 5 per cent, helped offset weakness in Great Britain, where they fell by the same amount. There was more modest growth in each of Ireland and northern Europe.

The company has been expanding its presence outside of the UK, with the recent acquisitions of Spanish air conditioning distributor Mercaluz, and Irish timber supplier Cygnum. The additional earnings from these acquisitions will offset weaker UK performance, the company noted.

Chief executive Eric Born said that Grafton had demonstrated its 鈥渞esilience and strategic focus鈥. Shares fell 3 per cent in early trading.

May 15
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Centrica settles prepayment meters case

British Gas owner Centrica (CNA) will pay 拢20mn into a voluntary redress scheme and write off 拢70mn of debts to settle a probe by regulator Ofgem into historic cases where the company forcefully installed prepayment meters into homes of vulnerable customers.

The installations were carried out by contractors British Gas had used to collect debts. British Gas had previously agreed an earlier support package of 拢22.4mn to vulnerable customers and had stopped forcefully installing meters when the issue was first brought to light following an investigation by The Times.

鈥淲hat happened should never have happened,鈥 said Centrica chief executive Chris O鈥橲hea. Centrica has changed 鈥渉ow we engage with customers in debt, particularly those in vulnerable situations鈥, he added.

The company鈥檚 shares fell by 4 per cent, although it said it does not expect any change to its full-year guidance following the settlement.

May 15
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TT Electronics blames one-offs for continued slide

TT Electronics (TTG) said revenue for the first four months of the year was 4.8 per cent lower year-on-year, which it blamed on softer demand and ongoing efforts to restructure the business.

The components maker said the weakness in demand in Electronic Manufacturing Services (EMS) highlighted in its annual results had continued, and that it had suffered from an unwinding of stock building that a customer had undertaken in the prior year ahead of the relocation of its operations in China to Malaysia.

Excluding this, and the effect of the closure of its lossmaking plant in Texas, group sales were 2.9 per cent higher, management said.

The weak EMS market is offset by 鈥渂uoyant鈥 demand in aerospace and defence, though, so full-year guidance was left unchanged.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Mark Fielding said the long-term potential at TT Electronics was evident in the recent rejected bids for the company by both Swiss competitor Cicor and Volex, but there remained 鈥渃ontinued uncertainty鈥 about trading this year and the shape of improvement at the company.