Picture of man in a hard hat working in a factory
Melrose shares soar on strong results / Image source: Adobe
  • Full-year guidance upgraded
  • £500 million buyback brought forward
  • Founders set to leave in 2024

A key part of industrial turnaround specialist Melrose Industries’ (MRO) mission has been to improve profitability. It is therefore encouraging to both management and shareholders that margin improvements are a driving force behind today’s upgrade to guidance.

This accompanied a strong set of first half results and news that a £500 million buyback programme is being brought forward. Combined, this pushed the shares 7.9% higher to 549.3p.

Melrose’s historic model was straightforward; it bought poorly managed manufacturing businesses which were suffering from a lack of investment, then looked to drive operational improvements and boost cash generation.

Although this approach has been compared to private equity Melrose could justly point to differences. It typically invested fresh capital in the businesses it acquired rather than simply stripping out costs.

When it achieved the targeted improvements, management would choose what it felt was the appropriate time to sell. Often this came three to five years post-acquisition but there was a degree of flexibility.

A CHANGE IN DIRECTION

It went big with the acquisition of GKN in 2018 and demerged the automotive arm of that business as Dowlais (DWL) in April 2023, leaving it with the aerospace assets.

Dowlais shares worth buying after demerger from careful owner Melrose

This has resulted in a shift in its strategic direction to be a long-term aerospace group with Melrose founder and CEO Simon Peckham and long-serving finance director Geoffrey Martin set to hand over the reins to group chief operating officer Peter Dilnot and the current chief financial officer of GKN Aerospace Matthew Gregory respectively in March 2024. Co-founder and executive vice chair Chris Miller will also depart.

Given their track record the market will be watching the next moves of Peckham, Martin and Miller closely.   

Latest Issue

Shares Magazine Latest Issue Cover
  • How leading fund managers identify genuine growth opportunities. Examining the criteria applied by the experts and identifying two stocks which could have real long-term potential.
  • Plus, what does it mean when a company has a wide moat, the latest on Unilever’s big shake-up and Steven Frazer’s updated view on PayPal.
  • Read about Imperial Brands shares being at five-year highs, why Lifetime ISA house price limits are putting the squeeze on first-time buyers and a revamp of popular investment trust Edinburgh Worldwide.
  • Investment ideas include a value-focused fund and a conglomerate with a leading retail brand and there are articles on JD Sports, On The Beach, Salesforce and much, much more.

In the six months to 30 June Melrose posted adjusted pre-tax profit jumped to £134 million from £9 million in the same period in 2022.

Full-year revenue is now expected to be between £3.35 billion and £3.45 billion, while the aerospace adjusted operating profit range increased by more than 8% to between £375 million and £385 million, with a higher engines margin than previously guided.

Aerospace adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation) is now set to be £525 million to £535 million.

LEARN MORE ABOUT MELROSE

 

Find out how to deal online from £1.50 in a SIPP, ISA or Dealing account. AJ Bell logo

Issue Date: 07 Sep 2023