AO World agrees £10m takeover of phone reseller musicMagpie (after £200m listing)
One share price that has surged on Wednesday is that of musicMagpie. The second-hand smartphone seller is up 48% after retailer AO World agreed a takeover.
But it is hardly a happy ending for musicMagpie, which started out as a reseller of CDs and DVDs. It listed shares in 2021 with a heady £200m+ valuation (netting chief executive and co-founder Steve Oliver £12m in the process). But the 9.07p-per-share takeover values the company at only £10m three years later.
As any buyer of second-hand electronics knows, you have to be careful what you pay for. Investors in musicMagpie bought in during the coronavirus pandemic boom in tech sales. Shortages of computer chips meant that electronic devices were hard to come by, which helped resellers.
However, that boom had petered out by early 2022, and musicMagpie’s share price slumped as it turned lossmaking.
It has had some interest since, notably with BT Group last year considered a bid to complement its EE mobile network business, which also sells electronics. But its share price was at 5.75p on Tuesday before the takeover was announced – 97% down from the heights above £2 in April 2021.
The directors of musicMagpie unanimously backed the takeover.
John Roberts, AO’s chief executive, said:
To achieve our strategic ambition of becoming the destination for electricals, it is crucial for AO to enhance its consumer tech offering. A top-tier trade-in service will be essential, and musicMagpie represents a significant enabler in unlocking value through our reverse supply chain.
JD Sports struggles with Red Sea disruption and wet weather
Sarah Butler
The biggest share price drop on the FTSE 100 this morning is trainer and clothing retailer JD Sports. It is down by 3.6% on Wednesday morning.
UK business has been hit by falling sales after disruption in the Red Sea stalled deliveries and the cold wet spring reduced demand for camping kit and clothing.
The retail group, which owns Millets and Blacks in the UK, said sales at the outdoor kit chain were down 5.3% in the six months to 3 August as “key product lines” had been delayed by Houthi attacks off Yemen delaying or rerouting shipping and the early date of Easter fell outside the camping season for the first time since 2018.
It said poor weather compounded the issue, reducing demand for seasonal outdoor living product such as tents and camping equipment.
The chilly wet weather also hit the group’s main JD sportswear chain in the UK where sales at established stores were down 4.6% in what the group described as a “challenging and often volatile UK market”.
JD said discounting in the market had surged after “unfavourable spring and early summer weather conditions, dampened footfall and full price demand for seasonal [clothing]”.
Oil company share prices rise on Middle East conflict
Oil prices have bumped up further as European traders switch on – both Brent and West Texas Intermediate are up by more than 2% now.
That has helped oil companies. BP and Shell are among the top gainers on London’s FTSE 100 index, thanks to higher oil prices. They rose by 2% and 1.9% respectively.
TotalEnergies, France’s oil supermajor, rose by 2.1%, while Italy’s Eni gained 1.3%.
European stock markets have gained ground on Wednesday morning – suggesting that the selloff in response to the Middle Eastern conflicts is so far limited to oil prices.
Here are the opening stock market index snaps from Reuters:
EUROPE’S STOXX 600 UP 0.2%
BRITAIN’S FTSE 100 UP 0.3%
GERMANY’S DAX FLAT
FRANCE’S CAC 40 UP 0.3%
SPAIN’S IBEX DOWN 0.3%
Oil prices rise as investors await Israeli response to Iran missile attacks
Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets.
Oil prices rose on Wednesday morning as investors around the world weighed the risk of threats to energy supplies after Iran’s missile attack on Israel threatened to escalate the Middle East conflict.
The price of Brent crude oil futures, the North Sea benchmark, rose by 1.6% to $74.75, while the price of futures for its North American counterpart, West Texas Intermediate, rose by 1.7% to $70.98.
Brent crude prices rose by 3.8%, after the largest intra-day move since April 2023, according to analysts led by Jim Reid at Deutsche Bank. They wrote:
There were some indications that escalation risks might be higher this time around. The Pentagon said that this attack used around twice as many ballistic missiles as the one in April, while Iranian commentary was more ambiguous on whether the attack would be one-off.
Most Asian stock markets outside China slumped on Wednesday morning, following the lead of US indices the night before. Japan’s Nikkei slumped by 2.2%, South Korea’s Kospi fell by 0.6%, and Australia’s ASX 200 index fell by 0.1%.
However, Hong Kong’s stock market soared by 6% amid Beijing’s stimulus, which has pushed up Chinese stocks. The mainland Chinese stock markets were closed for the Golden Week holiday.
Investors are now considering whether Israel will respond directly to Iran, while Israeli forces continued to strike Beirut, Lebanon’s capital. Israel has also been fighting in Gaza, to its west, for almost a year after the attacks by Hamas on 7 October.
Mohit Kumar, chief economist for Europe at Jefferies, an investment bank, said:
Risk off dominated the markets on escalation in the Middle East. Oil moved higher on geopolitical risks. Markets did stabilise after the initial risk off and investors now wait for the response from Israel.
Economic and financial challenges (43%), cyber threats (39%) and people-related risks (38%) are the top three concerns facing UK businesses over the ne
The number of international students applying for visas to study in the UK has fallen ahead of the start of the new academic year.Home Office figures showed 16%
About Stephen Gunnion
Stephen Gunnion is a senior financial journalist and broadcaster at Proactive Investors. He has more than 25 years of experience in