Investors Chronicle

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 587:29:27
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Sinopse

Concerned with QE's effects on equity valuations? Looking for ideas for your Isa? Or just plain confused by the stock market? Each week, the Investors Chronicle picks apart the latest news for companies, markets and funds in our regular magazine podcasts. Subscribe for these, along with CEO interviews, company-specific shows and special in-depth discussions on big market themes.

Episódios

  • Intertek, renewable trusts & shares on a tear: The Companies and Markets Show

    17/04/2026 Duração: 28min

    In this week’s episode we delve into FTSE 100 testing and assurance company Intertek (ITRK), which has had an action-packed few days: board changes, a strategic review, and a rejected bid offer from a private equity investor. Valeria Martinez explains everything you need to know.Then we look to renewable energy investment trusts, which have enjoyed increased interest over the past month amid the US/Iran war and resultant rise in power prices. Holly McKechnie tells us which trusts stand to benefit the most, and we consider whether greater urgency over the energy transition means better times ahead.Finally, we discuss microfinance lender ASA International (ASAI.L), which has been on a tear over the past year. Julian Hofmann reports on what’s been driving the business forward and whether it can continue.Read more here:Intertek rejects EQT takeover approachThe complete guide to buying investment trustsASA International’s microfinance push pays offTimestamps00:00 Intro01:01 Intertek9:45 Renewables trusts19:19 ASAL

  • The ceasefire, Africa and Senior: Companies and Markets Show

    10/04/2026 Duração: 34min

    In this week’s show we discuss the temporary ceasefire in the Middle East – if it is really appropriate to call it that – and consider whether the announcement has done anything to lighten a global economic outlook that has looked increasingly gloomy for the past few weeks. Investors have certainly priced in a fair amount of relief. We discuss if they are right to do so, and what happens next. Julian Hofmann has the details.Our big read this week, meanwhile, is about a continent that could be particularly affected by the energy shock – Africa – albeit, as Chris Akers explains, it’s far from a monolithic bloc and there’s the potential for both winners and losers. Chris tells us about the UK companies that have set up in Africa and why the investment opportunities take in everything from resources to telecoms.To finish, we delve into specialist engineer Senior, which feeds into many of the hot sectors of the moment, but it’s had a topsy turvy time of it in recent months. That has now culminated in a takeov

  • Unilever’s $45bn deal, Berkeley & tech: Companies and Markets Show

    03/04/2026 Duração: 32min

    We begin the show with consumer goods giant Unilever (ULVR) – soon to be somewhat smaller, given the $45bn spin-off of its foods business to US spice and sauce maker McCormick (MKC). The reaction to the news, though, has been distinctly underwhelming. Erin Withey examines what it means for Unilever’s future.Then we turn to Berkeley (BKG), the housebuilder, which, this week, published an unscheduled negative update, less than three weeks after it told investors everything was fine. Hugh Moorhead explores what the company’s retrenchment says about the UK’s wider housebuilding goals.Lastly, we discuss what is perhaps the UK’s very own meme stock – microcomputer maker Raspberry Pi (RPI). Its shares rose almost 50 per cent in one day following its full-year results. Arthur Sants explains how the company ended up part of the AI boom and whether there’s a decent business underneath it all.Read more here:Why the market is turning against Unilever’s $45bn food dealRaspberry Pi ups sales volumes but margins tightenEpis

  • ‘It’s hard to find safe assets’ - Jacob de Tusch-Lec of Artemis Global Income | IC Interviews

    31/03/2026 Duração: 37min

    At £5.7bn, Artemis Global Income is one of the largest global income funds available to UK investors. It posted enthusiastic returns in 2025, well above what you would normally expect from this kind of strategy. But has this made the portfolio holdings expensive, and where does it go from here?Manager Jacob de Tusch-Lec talks to Val Cipriani about being nervous about what comes next, whether the war in Iran means 2022 all over again for stock markets, and how he feels about AI. Timestamps00:00 Intro01:07 What is Artemis Global Income?02:26 Three buckets04:21 Importance of valuation05:40 Recent performance10:49 Are we going back to 2022?16:20 AI investments19:19 Financial industry24:05 Is there value in the UK?27:26 Recent changes32:50 When to sell34:21 Emerging marketsInvestors' Chronicle has supported private investors in the UK for over 160 years by highlighting rewarding investment opportunities. Investors' Chronicle is a service by the Financial Times. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more

  • Navigating the Strait, Goodwin and annuities: The Companies and Markets Show

    27/03/2026 Duração: 43min

    It’s been another seesaw week as the world weighs up the chances of an end, or at least a cessation, to hostilities in the US-Israeli war with Iran. President Donald Trump is taking a more conciliatory tone, but in this case, a U-turn is not in his gift alone and with Iran talking tough, the optimism of earlier in the week has started to ebb as we record today’s show.The episode starts by looking in more detail at some of the implications of the continued pressure on the Strait of Hormuz, the key global shipping route that has in effect been put out of action by the war. Alex Hamer is here to discuss the implications for everything from energy (and UK energy policy) and fertiliser to helium. The broad conclusion is of course that prices are going up, but we dig into the detail during the show.We move on to look at one early victim of the uncertainty in the shape of UK engineer and private investor favourite Goodwin (GDWN), whose shares halved this week on a disappointing trading update. Alex Newman will consi

  • Student Loans: What every graduate needs to know

    24/03/2026 Duração: 22min

    Val Cipriani and Holly McKechnie are back with a new episode of Women & Wealth, and unpack the UK’s student loan system and growing debt burden facing graduates.The funds editor and personal finance editor for Investors’ Chronicle explore why women often end up paying more, how repayment rules really work, and what the system means for your finances.Student loans have undergone several reinventions over recent years, but the current focus is largely on Plan 2 loans, taken out by undergraduates between 2012 and 2022. These have become particularly onerous following changes made by the Conservative government in 2022.Val and Holly look at the three key repayment terms to be aware of, and the other factors that affect how much you pay back.Maternity, salary gap and employment opportunities in fields studied more by women mean that the student loans issue disproportionately affects them. Val and Holly discuss this, as well as how to minimise your exposure and pay less over the long term.Timestamps:00:00 Intro

  • Industrials, smart investing & real estate: The Companies and Markets Show

    20/03/2026 Duração: 31min

    On this week’s show, we begin with industrials. It was only a month or so ago that the sector was being touted by many as a potential safe haven from AI disruption. Then the US/Israel war with Iran began, and the merits of energy-intensive physical assets were hastily reconsidered.But of course not all industrials are alike. Today we take a look at top-performing Diploma (DPLM) – crucially more of a distributor than a manufacturer – whose shares rose by a fifth after its latest trading update. We’ll also examine Essentra, which has had a far worse time of it for many years but is now starting to see improvements. Valeria Martinez is here to ask whether both companies can maintain their operational progress in the face of a variety of external threats.Our big read this week is all about the price investors pay for buying and selling shares. Most DIY investors will know whether or not they’re charged a trading fee when they buy or sell investments, but what actually happens behind the scenes

  • Meeting Town Centre’s executive chair: Lee and the IC

    17/03/2026 Duração: 45min

    Town Centre Securities (TOWN) is one of the UK market’s oldest names. Founded, managed and largely controlled by the Ziffs of Leeds since its listing in 1960, it is a typical John Lee stock: a cash-generative, dividend-paying, and storied family business with roots in the North.Another factor explains John’s recent decision to start building a stake in the group. At £1.15p, Town Centre’s share price trades well below half of the company’s net asset value.In this latest CEO interview, John and IC associate editor Alex Newman speak with Town Centre’s chief executive and chairman, Edward Ziff, about the business’s past and present, and the prospects for closing that enormous valuation gap.Let us know your thoughts, or if you have any questions or any suggestions for future guests, by emailing alex.newman@ft.com.Listen to more podcasts from Investors’ Chronicle by clicking here or heading to Apple, Spotify and YouTube.Timestamps:00:00 - Introduction00:30 - How developments

  • The Middle East, shipping & energy prices: The Companies & Markets Show

    13/03/2026 Duração: 23min

    In a busy week where events in Iran continue to dominate the news cycle, companies editor Mark Robinson stands in for Dan Jones to discuss the impact of the conflict on maritime activities, focusing on supply chain disruption, rerouting and cost implications, along with the challenge faced by global shipping lines such as Maersk & MSC. He is joined by Michael Fahy and Julian Hofmann.Mark is also joined by Valeria Martinez to focus on full-year figures from shipping broker Clarkson (CKN). Read more on Investors' Chronicle around this week's podcast:Clarkson order book builds despite ship slowdownShares keep falling on oil volatilityEnergy shocks force investors to rethink rate cutsTimestamps00:00 How the Iran conflct has affected markets this week03:41 A closer look at Clarkson results10:57 Shipping companies & supply chain disruption17:39 Energy prices18:23 The danger from an equities perspective19:43: What retail investors should do when a black swan event happ

  • War in Iran, healthcare resurgence & Isa changes: The Companies and Markets Show

    06/03/2026 Duração: 40min

    It’s another day chock-full of company results, albeit market attention is understandably still focused elsewhere given the events in the Middle East over the past week. So today, we too will be discussing the implications of the US/Israel war with Iran. Mike Fahy is here to talk about energy, defence, and the implications for the UK and European economies. After that, we turn to our big read of the week. The healthcare sector has typically been seen as a port in a storm during troubled times, and after a tough few years there had been signs of a revival even prior to the latest nerves. Julian Hofmann will dive into the detail and ask whether this momentum can continue.Finally, next week marks the publication of our annual Isa special. With big reforms on the way for these popular savings accounts, personal finance editor Holly McKechnie joins us to discuss what’s happening, as well as outlining some practical steps listeners can take to meet their savings goals.Timestamps:00:00: Intro01:06: War in

  • ‘Buy and hold doesn’t work any more’: Sean Peche of Ranmore

    03/03/2026 Duração: 40min

    Ranmore Global Equity (IE00B61ZVB30) is a value fund that has grown very quickly over the past 18 months. In June 2024, it had a $300mn portfolio, but by January 2026 this had hit $1.5bn.The fund’s manager, Sean Peche, talks to Val Cipriani about how he finds underappreciated and undervalued stocks, why he doesn’t meet company CEOs, and why buying and holding ‘forever’, a strategy favoured by star managers Terry Smith and Nick Train, no longer works in today’s rapidly changing world.Timestamps00:00: Intro03:17: Three ways to get returns in markets and from companies07:05: Value investing08:31: Why I don’t meet CEOs10:57: ‘Buy and hold forever’ doesn’t work in a rapidy changing world15:22: A ‘fresh sheet approach’ and Qualcomm17:40: The Magnificent Seven19:21: Investors are starting to turn away from the US23:09: Alternatives to the US24:35: Terry Smith and passives26:15: Greggs29:01: Diageo31:31: EasyJetInvestors' Chronicle has supported private investors in the UK for over 160 years by highlighting

  • Next-gen AI stocks, FTSE 100 banks & LSEG: The Companies and Markets Show

    27/02/2026 Duração: 45min

    Company results season is under way. We have a mass of companies reporting over the next couple of weeks, and we will dig in to one of the highest profile businesses on the FTSE 100 later in the show.To start, though, we are looking at a lesser-known stock, albeit one whose shares have been surging higher for several years now: Lion Finance (BGEO), itself not far from FTSE 100 promotion, and which reported another set of well-received figures of its own earlier this week. Alex Newman asks whether the run can last.Then, our big read this week is all about the existential question of the day: is AI working? With investors hopes and indeed fears now seemingly pinned on the technology, Valeria Martinez is here to discuss how companies outside the tech sector are applying AI in practice, and how effectively or otherwise they are being.In our third segment we’ll look at a noted AI loser of recent months, albeit one that nonetheless put out a fairly superlative set of results this morning: L

  • Copper mining, Compass Group & Magnum Ice Cream: The Companies and Markets Show

    20/02/2026 Duração: 32min

    We start with copper miner Antofagasta (ANTO), whose shares have soared over the past year on the back of big gains for the red metal. It released full-year figures earlier this week, and Alex Hamer discusses its prospects, as well as Rio Tinto and Glencore now the mega-merger is off. Alex also explains some of the equity raises that have taken place lower down the cap scale in recent weeks.Erin Withey then joins us to discuss caterer Compass (CPG), which has been struggling of late. That’s led to calls for a slight rethink of its strategic priorities. Lastly, we look at one of the UK’s newest listings, albeit in the form of a business that sits outside the FTSE 350. The Magnum Ice Cream Company (MICC) spun off from Unilever in December and has just reported its 2025 results. Mark Robinson examines the outlook for frozen sweet treats.Read more:Antofagasta doubles dividend as profits hit new recordCheaper Compass shares put buybacks on the menuMagnum Ice Cream fails to i

  • Meeting Christie Group's CEO: Lee and the IC

    17/02/2026 Duração: 41min

    Christie Group has a lot going for it. Growing in several countries and an employer to around 650 people, the brokerage business is a well-respected name in multiple niche sectors. Last year sales exceeded £70mn, and management reckons operating profits of £10mn are possible. The kicker, following the disposal of several subsidiaries, is that its balance sheet is full of cash.Lord Lee of Trafford clearly agrees. In more than 80 transactions since 2002, he has amassed a 6 per cent holding across both his personal investment account and the charitable trusts he oversees.So why is the business valued at just £35mn? We put this question and many more to chief executive Dan Prickett, who has been at the company for 17 years - including the last two and a half in the top role.Listen to more podcasts from Investors’ Chronicle on Apple, Spotify and YouTubeTimestamps00:00 Intro00:30 Recap of last episode01:44 Introducing Dan Prickett02:21 What is Christie's05:10 John's history with the business09:3

  • Schroders takeover, privatisation & McDonald's: The Companies and Markets Show

    13/02/2026 Duração: 29min

    After a week in which we in London were blessed with a rare day in which the sun dared to poke its head out, today we will try to shed some light of our own on the big goings on in companies and markets at the moment. We kick off with a look at the breaking news of the day, the £10bn takeover of Schroders by US asset manager Nuveen. Chris Akers is here to discuss the deal, and the possible implications for the rest of the asset and wealth management sector, where there’s been another big deal in recent days: unlisted wealth manager Evelyn Partners bought by NatWest. We’ll also take a brief look at emerging market specialist Ashmore, which had interims out today and has rallied particularly hard of late.After that, we turn to our big read of the week, looking at the strain on public services and the consequences thereof. Mark Robinson will discuss why the private sector is playing a growing role in the provision of said services – in certain areas – and where they might be expected to take

  • Software sell-off, corporate bonds, GSK: The Companies and Markets Show

    06/02/2026 Duração: 32min

    This week, after a software sell-off that has rattled some of the UK’s most popular ‘quality’ stocks, we look at the fallout for the likes of Relx, Sage, Experian and others. Valeria Martinez is here to discuss whether the launch of Anthropic’s new AI tools represents an existential threat to these businesses.After that, we turn to the hopefully calmer world of corporate bonds and the reforms that have the potential to open up the market more widely to DIY investors. Erin Withey talks through the changes, their likely impact on the market, and what corporate debt in general can offer investors.To wrap up, we look at one of the many companies to have updated the market this week, in the form of pharma giant GSK. After many years out of favour, the business has started to win investors over of late. Julian Hofmann will look at how it’s done it, whether its progress can continue, and what a new chief executive might bring to the business.Read more:AI-hit software stocks bounce backGSK starts to show real profit

  • Hargreaves’ fee shake-up, stress-free investing & Cranswick: The Companies & Markets Show

    30/01/2026 Duração: 36min

    The UK’s largest investment platform, Hargreaves Lansdown, has announced its first fee overhaul in over a decade. But as ever the devil is in the detail, and despite its headline price cut there has been a bit of an outcry in some quarters. Val Cipriani is here to discuss which users will benefit, and which will lose out.After that we discuss our big read of the week, looking at – dare we say it – happier, more relaxed methods of building wealth. Alex Newman will explore how the more risk averse – of whom there are many nowadays given the general state of, well, everything – can have a better chance of meeting their savings goals.Lastly we return to our regular company reporting beat with a look at the latest well-received trading update from pig and poultry producer Cranswick (CWK). Does the company’s valuation still warrant interest? Mark Robinson will tell us more.Read more hereWinners and losers of Hargreaves’ fee overhaulThree easy steps to becoming a stress-free investorCranswick boosts sales as co

  • Space exploration, AI memory chips & Beazley: The Companies and Markets Show

    23/01/2026 Duração: 30min

    It’s been a dramatic week in a year already full of drama, with Donald Trump’s sabre rattling over Greenland, and subsequent threat to impose further tariffs, causing alarm before being walked back on the basis of an apparent compromise.But with that saga now seemingly in the rear-view mirror – for how long, we don’t know – we kick things off today with space exploration, which does have specific application to the current geopolitical debates as we shall discuss shortly. Mike Fahy is on hand to examine how the soaring space sector is faring ahead of a possible SpaceX IPO later this year.Then it’s on to the latest part of the tech sector to attract widespread investor interest as a result of the AI craze: memory chip stocks in the US and further afield have been booming as people cotton on to the vital role they play in data centres. Arthur Sants, recently returned from a trip to the factories of South Korea, will discuss shares, shortages and smartphone prices, among other things.And to finish up we will be

  • Meeting Workspace's (now former) CEO: Lee and the IC

    20/01/2026 Duração: 52min

    For their latest company interview, Lord Lee and Alex Newman sit down with Lawrence Hutchings, who joined Workspace as CEO in November 2024.That conversation, which was taped on 9 January, was to be one of Hutchings' last in the role. Ten days after the recording, and amid mounting activist pressure from shareholder Saba Capital, Workspace abruptly announced Hutchings would be replaced as CEO by Charlie Green, co-founder of the Office Group.Despite this, we are publishing the conversation below, together with some of John's initial thoughts. Commenting on his own appointment, Green said "the strategy in place is clear and provides the right platform to rebuild occupancy and drive income growth over time." Presumably that means a degree of continuity.Let us know your thoughts on the move, or if you have any questions or any suggestions for future guests, by emailing alex.newman@ft.comListen to more podcasts from Investors’ Chronicle on Apple, Spotify and YouTubeTimestamps0:09 Intro5:52 Back

  • Pubs' winter rally, buy-to-let & Oxford Nanopore: The Companies and Markets Show

    16/01/2026 Duração: 35min

    It may be dry January for some, but this week we are settling down with the pub companies amid a raft of news for the sector in recent days. Mark Robinson is here to discuss the bumper Christmas periods that many in the sector enjoyed, the imminent U-turn on business rate hikes likely to be announced by the government in the days ahead, the US activist putting the pressure on Marston’s (MARS) and more.After that we turn our attention to one government reform that’s not being reversed – the Renters’ Rights Act is due to come into force this year, and that puts pressure on landlords to comply. Holly McKechnie will explain what that means for the rental market, and also talk us through the other changes coming in that could have an even bigger impact on buy-to-let properties.Lastly, we look at gene sequencing device maker Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT), one of the 2021 UK IPOs that have done especially badly, but which has shown some signs of life in recent months. Julian Hofmann will examine

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