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Ocado shares surge 15% as supermarket aims to turn cash flow positive

Shares of Ocado have surged by about 15% after the online-only British supermarket said its “core priority” was turn cash flow positive during the next financial year.

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In its half yearly update to investors, the company said its topline grew 13% year-on-year to £674 million ($903 million). The company deconsolidated its Ocado Retail business in its results, invalidating most analyst consensus figures.

“Our focus remains on turning cash flow positive during FY26, supported by continued growth with our partners and cost discipline across the business,” said Tim Steiner, CEO of Ocado Group.

Despite the jump, the stock is down 11% year to date and is also among the most shorted on the London Stock Exchange.

— Ganesh Rao

French strikes and fuel costs bite into EasyJet profits, sending shares lower

Shares of EasyJet opened 7% lower after the company said strike action by French air traffic controllers and higher fuel prices dented quarterly performance.

The low-cost airline said French ATC industrial action cost the company £15 million ($20.1 million), while fuel accounted for a £10 million hit in the fiscal third quarter ending in June.

“We are extremely unhappy with the strike action by the French ATC in early July, which as well as presenting unacceptable challenges for customers and crew also created unexpected and significant costs for all airlines,” said easyJet CEO Kenton Jarvis in a trading update to investors.

Earlier this month, air traffic controllers in France walked out in protest against staff shortages and ageing equipment, forcing many airlines — even those not flying to or from France — to cancel hundreds of flights.

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EasyJet also delivered a headline net profit of £286 million, 21% higher year-on-year, but in line with market expectations.

Analysts suggested investors should look ahead beyond the third-quarter results.

“We see easyJet as well positioned to exceed expectations in [2026 estimate], given continued fuel tailwinds and scope for an increased contribution from easyJet’s own measures to increase profitability (reducing winter losses, upgauging, Holidays growth),” said RBC Capital Markets analyst Ruairi Cullinane.

— Ganesh Rao

Private equity firm EQT triples deal exits to 13 billion euros in 2025

Europe’s largest private equity EQT said it had divested 13 billion euros’ ($15.05 billion) worth of investments in the first half of the year — three times as much as in the same period of last year.

The Sweden listed fund said it sold down stakes in Swiss dermatological products maker Galderma and exited a position through the IPO of mortgage provider Enity on the Stockholm exchange.

Headwinds from geopolitical tension, volatility in public markets and uncertain macroeconomic indicators had led to a steep drop in exits for PE firms worldwide in 2024 and the early part of this year.

Pitchbook data for the first three months of 2025 showed exit values in Europe dropped 19% quarter-on-quarter, as exit count fell 25.2%.

“Following a difficult start to the year, global markets have regained strength – yet the outlook remains uncertain. Against this backdrop, EQT continues to deliver across all fronts: performance, exits and fundraising,” said EQT’s CEO Per Franzen. “Year-to-date, we announced realizations of €13 billion – more than triple the volume from a year earlier.”

The PE firm also said management fees rose by 10% with carried interest and investment rising more than threefold for the first half of this year to 191 million euros, compared to the 41 million euros recorded for the same period last year.

Earnings per share are up 23% to 0.293​‌ euros. The stock is up 11% year-to-date.

— Ganesh Rao

Novartis beats profit expectations and announces $10 billion share buyback

Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis beat profit expectations for the second quarter and announced the start of a $10 billion share buyback programme.

The company’s net income grew 26%, excluding changes in currency fluctuations, to $4.02 billion for the second quarter of 2025. Analysts had expected $3.72 billion, according to FactSet.

Novartis also raised its full-year core operating income from the previously guided “low double-digit” to “low teens.”

The company announced plans to return $10 billion to investors through a share buyback programme that is expected to be completed by 2027.

“Our robust balance sheet and confidence in our mid and long-term growth enable us to initiate an up-to USD 10 billion share buyback as part of our commitment to balanced capital allocation,” said Vas Narasimhan, CEO of Novartis.

The stock is up 7.2% year-to-date.

— Ganesh Rao

Johnson Matthey names new chair…



Read More: Stoxx 600, DAX, CAC, FTSE

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