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UPDATED ON 18 DECEMBER 2025
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BP & Currys: Markets live blog

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December 18 2025
BP announces surprise CEO change

New BP chair Albert Manifold has acted far more swiftly than anticipated in replacing chief executive Murray Auchincloss. The new boss is Meg O’Neill, currently the CEO of Australian gas company Woodside Energy (AU:WDS).

Read the full story here

December 18 2025
Activist investor buys into Whitbread

Shares in Premier Inn owner Whitbread (WTB) climbed 6 per cent on Thursday morning after activist investor Corvex Management bought in and called for a strategic review.

New York-based hedge fund Corvex, which has taken a 5 per cent stake, said a strategic review should assess whether its five-year investment plan of around £3.5bn is the best use of capital.

“The current share price appears to ascribe no value to several meaningful components of the company’s business, including its UK-operated leasehold portfolio, its German hotel assets, and its development properties currently under construction and not yet trading,” the firm said.

Corvex also said the recent sell-off meant Whitbread was trading at a “discount to the value of the company’s fully owned and operated UK freehold hotel portfolio alone”. 

Whitbread’s market value is £4.1bn, down from £7bn at the start of 2024. The company, which also owns Toby’s Carvery, was hit after the Budget given the higher costs it will bring. Management has forecast a £40mn-£50mn hit from higher business rates from FY2027.

Corvex said it would also ask for a seat on Whitbread’s board.

December 18 2025
Time Out slumps on £8mn raise plans

Shares in Time Out Group (TMO) fell 24 per cent after the Aim-listed media and hospitality company set out plans to raise around £8mn through a heavily discounted share placing and retail offer, alongside a £4.9mn debt-for-equity conversion.

The deal, priced at 8p a share, a 30 per cent discount to Wednesday’s closing price, implies heavy dilution for shareholders. New shares amount to roughly 46 per cent of the existing equity once the debt conversion is included.

The raise is split into a £2.9mn firm placing, taken entirely by controlling shareholder Oakley Capital, alongside a conditional placing and retail offer, subject to shareholder approval, that could raise another £5mn.

Time Out’s market value has slumped this year, falling from £180mn at the start of 2025 to just £40mn due to widening losses, a profit warning in August and debt concerns.

The company said the raise and debt conversion would shore up its balance sheet and fund near-term working capital, restructuring costs and growth investment. The group warned it would need to secure alternative funding in the near term if the resolutions do not pass, with no guarantee it would be able to do so “on a timely basis, or at all”.

The company also reported final results to 30 June, showing revenues of £73mn, down from £103mn the year before though only slightly below the £79mn comparative using the group’s current accounting policy. Adjusted Ebitda fell to £7.1mn from £12.4mn a year earlier.

December 18 2025
Christopher Akers
Currys shares jump on half-year results beat

Currys (CURY) shares rose 10 per cent in early trading after the FTSE 250 electronics retailer’s half-year results came in ahead of market consensus, thanks to an ongoing recovery in the Nordics and momentum in the UK and Ireland despite cost pressures. 

For the six months to 1 November, adjusted operating profit was up almost a third to £54mn and free cash flow surged 68 per cent to £84mn. This was driven by improved underlying trading, as like-for-like sales rose 4 per cent in both the group’s geographies. 

Management maintained guidance for profits and free cash flow growth over the full year, but it now expects a lower total interest expense and capex, and a higher exceptional cash outflow.