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Broker tips: Games Workshop, Hiscox, Hilton Food

Wed 12 November 2025 14:08 | A A A

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(Sharecast News) - Miniature wargames manufacturer Games Workshop surged on Wednesday after Jefferies hiked its price target on the stock to 18,300p from 11,850p and reiterated its 'buy' rating as it highlighted a "major opportunity".

"Although the success of Space Marine 2 (SM2) means GAW is set to report a year of profit decline in FY26, we think the consistent underlying growth trajectory in the Core (10yr/5yr CAGR +17%/+16%) underpins a reacceleration to double-digit profit growth in FY27," the bank said.

Further out, Jefferies sees SM2 as an indicator of Warhammer's "significant" mass-market potential and said it remains bullish about the opportunity presented by the Amazon TV series.

In a separate note, Jefferies double downgraded Hiscox to 'underperform'.

The bank said Hiscox Retail is pitched as an attractive earnings diversifier against Specialty insurance, "but this is not clear to us when studying the weaker return on equity to peers".

Jefferies said the retail and cost plan announced in May improves returns, but the gap to peers closes only in 2028.

"So, with past and prospective book value growth lagging peers, the cost of equity needs to better reflect this reality," the bank said.

Elsewhere, RBC Capital Markets slashed its price target on Hilton Food to 540p from 750p as the bank revised its mid-term estimates following the company's third-quarter trading update and profit warning a day earlier.

Shares in Hilton Food tumbled on Tuesday as it downgraded its full-year profit guidance and struck a downbeat tone on the outlook for trading in 2026, citing operational disruption and subdued demand.

The company said it now expects adjusted pre-tax profit for the financial year ending 28 December of between 72m and 75m. This is below company-compiled consensus of 76.8m to 81m in September.

Following the "downbeat" Q3 statement, RBC said it was reducing its top-line growth estimates for the company to reflect its salmon production in Greece being delayed.

"Our lower growth forecasts also take into account a softer consumer backdrop in Europe, which we observe across other consumer staples companies and sub-sectors," it said. "Additionally, with seafood prices remaining elevated, we do not expect a rapid volume recovery and more limited support from premiumisation."

The bank said it does not expect volume growth to turn positive until FY27.

"Given these, we forecast group revenue growth of +7.6%/+1.0%/+2.0% on a constant currency basis over FY25/FY26/FY27.

"We also bring down our EBIT margin estimates over the next three years, reflecting incremental costs of managing the European seafood business and a less positive mix."

RBC said its FY25 adjusted pre-tax profit estimate falls slightly to 72m, the bottom-end of the lowered guided range.

"We now expect no meaningful PBT growth in FY26, in line with guidance."

The bank maintained its 'sector perform' rating on the stock.

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