React Group PLC said it has completed the share placing it announced earlier Monday, as the company bolsters its finances ahead of the integration of a new acquisition.
React is a Birmingham, England-based provider of cleaning and soft facilities management services. Its shares were up 2.8% to 83.25 pence near midday in London.
The share placing, run by brokers Singer Capital Markets Securities and Dowgate Capital, was priced at 81p per share and raised £1.1 million, all as planned. React said the placing was ‘heavily oversubscribed’.
React has agreed to buy 24hr Aquaflow Services Ltd for up to £7.4 million. This includes an initial payment of £5.0 million, plus up to £2.4 million more in conditional payments based on business performance. The initial amount will consist of £4.0 million in cash from existing resources and a debt facility from lender HSBC. The facility will have an interest rate of three percentage points over the Bank of England base rate.
A further £480,000 will be paid in June next year, and the sellers of Aquaflow also will be issued 617,283 new React shares.
Aquaflow is a drainage and plumbing services firm operating in London and the south east of England for the past 20 years. In the financial year that ended April 30, Aquaflow recorded adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation of £1.2 million on revenue of £6.1 million.
‘The acquisition is expected to be immediately earnings enhancing and contribute significantly to the future profitability of the group,’ said React Chief Executive Officer Shaun Doak. ‘This is React’s third acquisition and further demonstrates the company’s stated inorganic growth strategy.’
Updating on its own trading, React said it expects to report adjusted Ebitda of £2.4 million in the financial year that ended September 30, up 4.3% from £2.3 million the year before, on revenue of £20.7 million, up 5.6% from £19.6 million.
React’s broker Singer said the company’s guidance means it is raising its own forecasts for financial 2025 and 2026 earnings per share by 22% and 31%, respectively. This will lower React’s price-earnings ratio to as low as 7.2 times, compared to peers at 12 times, Singer analyst Greg Poulton said.
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