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UPDATED ON 04 DECEMBER 2025
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National Grid and Rio Tinto: Markets live blog

News and updates on your investments
© Investors’ Chronicle
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December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýHugh Moorhead
Ofgem approves ÂŁ28bn energy grid investment package

Energy regulator Ofgem has unveiled a ÂŁ28bn investment programme to improve the UK’s energy networks. 

The majority of the funding will go on maintaining Britain’s gas networks (ÂŁ17.8bn), with the remainder earmarked for strengthening the UK grid’s reliability, capacity and transmission ability. Spending will rise to ÂŁ90bn by 2031, according to the regulator. 

Shares in grid operators National Grid (NG) and SSE (SSE) fell between 1 and 2 per cent in early trading. Both companies have stated that they will review the â€investability’ of the package, with the suggestion being that it may be insufficient for them to achieve their desired profitability levels.

Customer bills are set to increase as a result of the additional investment. Average household bills will rise by ÂŁ108 by 2031, of which ÂŁ48 will be gas and ÂŁ60 for electricity. 

“This is not investment at any price…households and businesses must get value for money, and we will ensure they do,” said Ofgem chief executive Jonathan Brearley.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýErin Withey
SSP restructure continues

Shares in SSP Group (SSPG) leapt 15 per cent this morning, after the Upper Crust owner delivered better than expected results.

The group, which sells food and drinks to travellers in airports and railway stations, increased revenue by almost 8 per cent on a constant currency basis, thanks to resilient travel demand despite a tricky macro backdrop. This helped boost earnings per share (EPS) by a quarter to 11.9p, ahead of its 11.5p guidance set in October.

But while its North America, UK, and Asia Pacific regions remained profitable, the company’s continental Europe division proved a drag, reporting an operating loss of £48mn.

“We acknowledge there is more to do to strengthen our operational performance, most notably in continental Europe, where we have now reset our team, model and balance sheet,” said boss Patrick Coveney.

SSP is in the process of completing an overhead restructuring plan, which should create ÂŁ30mn in annualised savings, of which ÂŁ5mn was delivered this year.

Investors were also cheered by the news that trading in the first 8 weeks of the new financial year is off to a solid start, with total sales up 6 per cent, and guidance reaffirmed. In addition, the company has launched its ÂŁ100mn share buyback programme, which should further support EPS growth.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýValeria Martinez
Future unveils ÂŁ30mn buyback and dividend surprise

Shares in Future (FUTR) jumped 11 per cent this morning after the publisher and price comparison group launched a fresh ÂŁ30mn buyback and unveiled a fivefold increase in its dividend to 17p per share. 

Full-year results came in as expected, with organic revenue down 3 per cent to ÂŁ739mn and adjusted operating profits falling 6 per cent at constant currency to ÂŁ223mn. Even so, the corresponding margin was kept unchanged at 28 per cent thanks to cost cuts. 

The boost to shareholder returns came despite a 20 per cent drop in adjusted free cash flow to ÂŁ177mn, driven by one-off tax payments, with a cash conversion rate of 86 per cent. Net debt rose from ÂŁ257mn a year earlier to ÂŁ276mn, with the leverage ratio rising to 1.3 times Ebitda from 1.1 times.

Future still expects modest organic revenue growth in the 2026 financial year, and forecasts stable adjusted Ebitda margins of 30 per cent. In the medium term, the goal is to achieve sustainable revenue growth of between 2 and 4 per cent.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýMichael Fahy
Rio pledges to increase returns

Miner Rio Tinto (RIO) plans to deliver “a step change in performance and returns”.

The miner said it would streamline around three business lines: copper, iron ore and lithium and aluminium, as it implements a “sharper focus on the portfolio” – potentially halting non-core projects and testing the market’s appetite for other assets.

Upgrades to several key production targets and an expected easing of capex requirements are set to deliver a 40-50 per cent improvement in Ebitda by 2030, based on consensus commodity prices.

The company plans to increase copper equivalent production by 20 per cent also by 2030.

Capex, which has risen from $9.5bn in 2024 to $11bn this year, should remain elevated for the next two years as work on the underground copper mine at Oyu Tolgoi, the Simandou iron ore mine in Guinea and the Rincon lithium project in Argentina completes, but is expected to fall back below $10bn from 2028 onwards.

Rio Tinto’s shares were flat in early trading.

Earlier this week, Capital Economics’ commodities economist Hamad Hussain warned that the ramp-up of production at Simandou, which is expected to provide 7 per cent of the world’s iron ore once it hits capacity, is taking place at a time when global demand is weak. It is forecasting prices could fall to $85 per tonne, from just below $105 currently.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýJulian Hofmann
Baltic Classifieds hammered after margin warning

Baltic Classifieds (BCG) shares fell 18 per cent after half-year results revealed a much sharper slowdown in its core auto business than the market had bargained for. The company had already issued a profit warning in September based on problems in Estonia, but investors were still caught off guard.

While the reported figures showed profits up 22 per cent to €26.4mn (£22mn) and revenues up 7 per cent to €44.8mn, this growth was driven largely by price increases rather than underlying activity.

Indeed, operational trends were markedly weaker. Auto revenues were flat year-on-year, with C2C listings down 29 per cent and Estonian car transactions halving following tax changes. Real estate and generalist platforms also reported double-digit declines in paid inventory, signalling a thinner pipeline for future revenue.

In its outlook, management warned of Ebitda margin pressure as revenue growth slows and investment in AI rises. It also struck a cautious tone on inventory trends across its portfolio.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýValeria Martinez
Trustpilot plunges after short seller attack

Trustpilot (TRST) shares sank almost 20 per cent this morning after activist short seller Grizzly Research published a scathing report accusing the online reviews platform of using “mafia-style” extortion tactics against businesses that don’t pay premium subscriptions.

The New York-based firm claimed the FTSE 250 group creates unsolicited review profiles for all sorts of businesses, attracting waves of negative feedback that then push companies to pay subscription deals to “more actively” manage the reviews that appear on their page.

According to the report, companies that sign up suddenly see their scores “magically” jump from below to stars to more than four, while negative posts are “spuriously” challenged or removed for companies that pay Trustpilot. It also said there was a “concerning pattern” of apparently falsified reviews on the platform.

The short seller argued the company has “traded the integrity of reviews for revenues”, which it believes will erode Trustpilot’s brand and value proposition. It also suggested that if Google (US:GOOG) decides the platform’s content reflects badly on its own search results, the tech giant could penalise it and “effectively destroy [its] entire business model”.

Trustpilot said the report presents “a series of claims that are selective, misleading and framed to support a pre-determined narrative”.

“It omits key context and publicly available facts, creating a false impression and exhibits a lack of understanding of how Trustpilot works. Trust is our guiding principle and is central to everything we do,” the company added.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýJulian Hofmann
AJ Bell investment plan unsettles the market

Shares in investment platform AJ Bell (AJB) fell 6 per cent on results day after it delivered full-year figures that, while slightly ahead of expectations, pointed to lower profitability next year because of higher levels of investment. Not even a newly announced share buyback of ÂŁ50mn was enough to lift the mood.

Management plans to increase investment across the board in 2026, which implies around ÂŁ15mn of additional expenditure. The company stressed that heavier investment is intended to accelerate long-term organic growth in both its advised and direct-to-consumer channels. As a result, the group guided to a pre-tax profit margin of 39 to 40 per cent for the coming year.

December 4 2025
˛ú˛âĚýMichael Fahy
DiscoverIE adds to defence offer

DiscoverIE (DSCV) has agreed to buy Trival Antene, a Slovenian manufacturer of antennae and masts, for an initial €45.5mn (£39.9mn).

The company will also pay a deferred sum of €1.65mn after 12 months, and a potential earnout of up to €5.5mn dependent on the business hitting future performance targets.

Trival makes antennae and masts used by the defence industry for handheld, mobile and fixed radio devices. Last year, it generated revenue of €12.7mn and earned an adjusted operating margin “well above” DiscoverIE’s medium-term target rate of 17 per cent.

Management said the deal would be “immediately” earnings accretive on completion, but it will push leverage slightly higher – from the 1.3 times reported earlier this week, to 1.7 times.