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UPDATED ON 18 MAY 2026
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Ryanair, Whitbread & Vistry: Markets live

News and updates on your investments
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May 18
˛ú˛âĚýMichael Fahy
Ryanair expects summer fares to be flat

Ryanair (IE:RYA) reported a 36 per cent increase in pre-tax profit to €2.4bn (£2.1bn) on the back of a double-digit increase in revenue to €15.5bn for the year just closed. Passenger numbers grew by 4 per cent to 208mn, while average fares rose by 10 per cent to €51 per passenger.

The company expects further passenger growth of 4 per cent this year and chief executive Michael O’Leary said demand remains “robust”, although bookings are being made closer to departure times. The airline also has 80 per cent of its fuel requirements hedged at an average price of $67 per barrel, which is much lower than the current average of about $163 per barrel it will have to pay for the remaining 20 per cent.

With uncertainty remaining about the length of disruption to supply from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, Ryanair hasn’t provided any guidance for the current financial year. However, O’Leary said suppliers (mainly from West Africa, Norway and the US) have confirmed that they “expect no supply disruption right out to the middle of July and the situation continues to improve”.

Despite this, his prediction that fares are likely to remain flat over the busy summer period meant the shares fell by 3 per cent.

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýValeria Martinez
Capita shares rise as contact centre sales advance

Shares in Capita (CPI) rose nearly 6 per cent this morning after the outsourcer said revenues for the first four months of the year were in line with expectations and that the sale of its struggling contact centre business was progressing well.

Adjusted group revenue rose 2.9 per cent year on year, benefiting from the phasing of some contracts. Public Service, the company’s largest division, grew 5.8 per cent, helped by higher central government volumes and an uplift from a Northern Ireland contract.

The smaller pensions solutions segment reported revenue growth of 23.4 per cent, driven by the full-year impact of its Civil Service Pension Scheme contract, although the implementation of this has not gone to plan and the group faces potential penalties for its mishandling of the pension scheme. 

The group held its 2026 guidance, including expectations for positive free cash flow before the impact of business exits. First-half results are due on 4 August.

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýMark Robinson
Anglo American sells off its last metallurgical coal assets in Australia 

Anglo American (AAL) has agreed to sell its remaining steelmaking coal mines in Australia’s Bowen Basin to Dhilmar, a UK-registered resource group, for up to $3.88bn (£2.9bn), including an upfront payment of $2.3bn.

The remainder is dependent and variable on whether steelmaking coal prices reach pre-set levels – a common arrangement in mining deals of this magnitude. Anglo said it plans to use the proceeds to reduce net debt, which stood at 38 per cent of shareholders’ funds at the end of last year.

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýHugh Moorhead
Glenstone considers offer for Alternative Income 

There is some potential small-cap M&A activity this morning, after Alternative Income Reit (AIRE) said it was considering a possible offer from larger peer and 26 per cent shareholder Glenstone Reit (GG:GPRO).

Alternative Income had previously rejected a 66.5p per share cash offer from Glenstone in November 2025 that valued the company at a 20 per cent discount to its stated net asset value, and an 11 per cent discount to the previous day’s closing price.

Larger peer AEW UK Reit (AEW) withdrew its offer to buy Alternative Income on 21 April due to issues in the due diligence process. AEW’s offer was at a 3 per cent discount to Alternative Income’s net asset value.

Shares in Alternative Income fell 3 per cent in early trading.

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýHugh Moorhead
House prices rise in May in a two-paced market

Average asking prices for UK property rose 1.2 per cent in May, according to property portal Rightmove. The average price increased by ÂŁ4,000 to ÂŁ378,000.

However, asking prices are still 0.3 per cent lower than at the same time last year. There are also considerable regional variances: prices rose 3 per cent versus the prior year in the more affordable north east and north west of England, but fell 2 per cent in each of London and the south east.

Activity has been fairly resilient, with agreed sales down 4 per cent versus the same period in 2025, and up 2 per cent in 2024.

The number of homes for sale is at its highest level for May since 2015, suggesting a buyers’ market.

Rightmove’s mortgage tracker also reported a slight fall in the average two-year fixed rate to 5.18 per cent from 5.42 per cent last month.

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýHugh Moorhead
Vistry shares fall after it asks workers to down tools

Shares in Vistry Group (VTY) fell 6 per cent in early trading, outpacing losses in fellow housebuilders by 3 percentage points, after the housebuilder wrote to subcontractors asking them to pause construction on certain sites, in an attempt to preserve cash. 

Specifically, Vistry’s North West Midlands business asked subcontractors to pause construction of all private market homes unless they had planned legal completion dates on or before 30 June 2026.

In the letter, whose contents were first reported by the Sunday Times and which Investors’ Chronicle has also seen, Vistry says that “it has become necessary for our business to implement WIP [work in progress] control measures to manage expenditure”. The implication is that the housebuilder does not want to burn cash on building homes for which it will not be able to recognise accounting revenues and profits for the half-year ended June.

Vistry told the Sunday Times: “We published our AGM trading statement last Wednesday, which clearly presented the actions we are taking to improve cash generation and reduce debt levels. These include reducing inventory, delaying or slowing the building of some sites, adopting higher hurdles for land buying and pausing the share buyback programme.” 

Shares have now fallen nearly 60 per cent in 2026.

Read more: Should investors worry about Vistry’s liquidity levels?

May 18
˛ú˛âĚýErin Withey
Activist investor pushes for Whitbread sale

Premier Inn owner Whitbread (WTB) was back in the spotlight this morning, after US activist investor Corvex Management called for the group to put itself up for sale.

The New York-based fund, which holds a 7 per cent stake in the hospitality group, said in a fresh letter to the board that after years of “chronic share price underperformance”, a sale of the company is now the “only credible path to unlocking shareholder value”.

The move follows a previous statement from Corvex in December that called into question the FTSE 100 group’s capital allocation priorities and overall strategic direction.

Whitbread released its new five-year plan last month, and doubled down on its controversial aim to fund the addition of 14,000 new hotel rooms through a sale-and-leaseback financing model, which risks piling on debt.

Corvez is opposed to this, and criticised the decision as monetising the company’s most valuable freehold assets to bankroll “highly uncertain growth investments”.

The fund demanded that Whitbread suspend all sale-and-leaseback actions, and said it would put forward its own directors as board nominees should the group fail to publicly commit to a sale process.

Whitbread’s share price is down 16 per cent over the past 12 months.