Results round-up

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Sharecast News | 11 May, 2017

Aldermore sounded a confident note on its outlook despite the now higher regulatory hurdles it faces in parts of its mortgage business, as it reported a positive start to 2017 thanks to strong new lending to small and medium-sized firms as well as for mortgages.

The challenger bank reported a 6% rise in net loans for the first three months of the year to £7.9bn versus the year-end 2016 level, with organic new lending rising by roughly £1.0bn.

Analysts at Barclays had forecast loan book growth of 1% in the quarter to £7.5bn, driven by total new originations falling from the buy-to-let boosted £814m last year to around £693m.

Phillip Monks, the lender's CEO said: "Aldermore has made an excellent start to the year, with continued strong progress on our strategic priorities and financial performance ahead of our expectations."

Monks also indicated Aldermore was on track to deliver on its financial guidance as outlined in March.

Net interest margins for the quarter were stable at 3.5%.

Asset Finance growth was "strong" with a "particularly significant" rise in Buy-to-Let observed during the period, boosted by conversion of the large pipeline of applicants with which it ended 2016, the company said in a statement.

New mortgage lending was up 19% at £646m, alongside an 11% rise in loans to business finance customers to £303m.

Management also claimed its capital generation was in-line with its targets, with its common equity Tier 1 capital ratio steady at 11.5% and tangible book value per share 5% higher at 160.3p.

Despite regulatory changes to affordability tests for buy-to-let mortgages, which will negatively impact on its second quarter growth, Aldermore said it remained on track to deliver loan growth within its guidance range for between 10% to 15% for the full year.

Boosted significantly by the weak pound, SuperGroup grew its annual revenues 27% and said its full year profits were likely to be in line with expectations.

A short trading update from the company for period up to its 29 April year end confirmed the Superdry-owning youth fashion company maintained strong momentum through the fourth quarter to lift retail like-for-like sales 9.4%.

This will take group full year LFL growth to 12.7%, which was helped by a 35% mushrooming of online sales and almost 43% from wholesale.

There were 26 new Superdry shops opened in the year, of which

With gross margin showing no year on year improvement across the second half but offset by adverse foreign exchange and the margin-dilutive effect of faster wholesale growth, full year profit will be £86-87m, up 19% on the previous year, less than some analysts had hoped.

Chief executive Euan Sutherland said the focus would stay on the global multi-channel strategy he outlined after taking over two years ago.

He said the sales and profit growth was down to "improving our product ranges and introducing new categories to excite, inspire and maintain the brand's relevance while, in parallel, investing in our development markets and improving our infrastructure.

"With a clear strategy and a number of long term opportunities to establish Superdry as a global lifestyle brand we remain confident in the continued delivery of sustainable revenue and profit growth."

He said the North America and China operations continued to perform in line with their respective plans, with the USA breaking even thanks to continued strong e-commerce growth, improving store LFL performances and encouraging performances from new store.

Despite the strong performance, shares in the company dropped almost 7% after the first hour of trading on Thursday.

Analysts at Liberum applauded the "commendable achievement" of maintaining overall momentum but downgraded the shares to 'hold' due to the lack of upgrades.

"We believe the market should be disappointed with the lack of upgrades despite a strong top line performance, suggesting low profit conversion, a change in underlying channel mix and much greater FX impact than anticipated," they said in a note to clients.

Investec analyst Kate Calvert kept her 'buy', lauding the strong finish to the year against tough comparatives last year and a tricky market backdrop "which shows the brand’s robustness".

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