Hargreaves Services Share Buyback: £20 Million Tender Offer Completed After Heavy Investor Demand

April 30, 2026
Hargreaves Services Share Buyback: £20 Million Tender Offer Completed After Heavy Investor Demand

London, April 30, 2026, 20:05 BST

  • Hargreaves Services is set to purchase 2,352,941 ordinary shares at 850 pence apiece, after shareholders put forward offers for over eight times that number.
  • Investors are set to get back roughly £20 million from the deal, while the company will see a reduction in its total voting rights.
  • Back in play after selling off parts of its renewable-energy land portfolio, Hargreaves is sticking to its strategy of unlocking cash tied up in assets.

Hargreaves Services plc announced Thursday plans to return roughly £20 million to shareholders via a tender offer. Investors submitted 18,867,467 shares—equivalent to 57.07% of the company’s issued share capital—for the buyback, which is limited to 2,352,941 shares. In a tender offer, shareholders choose whether to sell their stock back to the company at a set price.

Durham-based Hargreaves, the environmental, infrastructure and property services group, is set to pay 850 pence per share. What’s changed: the tender is no longer just a proposal. The offer wrapped up on April 28, shareholder approval followed on April 29, and now the company’s published the definitive details on scale and voting-rights effect.

Hargreaves is moving ahead with a bigger cash return to investors, following the sale of its renewable-energy land assets. Back in January, the company signaled a payout of up to £15 million, but bumped that figure to £20 million in March as asset sales advanced.

Hargreaves plans to cancel 1,602,941 of the repurchased shares, with another 750,000 going into treasury for future employee share award obligations. That leaves 31,535,815 ordinary shares outstanding post-tender, and total voting rights drop to 30,704,511.

The offer price landed above where shares had been trading. Back in March, Hargreaves pointed to 850 pence as a 16.4% premium over the closing price of 730 pence from March 25, and a 26.9% premium on the 670 pence close from Jan. 27 — the last session before the tender was first announced.

Shareholders whose tenders made the cut should see payment by May 22 at the latest. The company noted that its directors stuck to tendering just their basic entitlements. A separate management dealing notice is still to come.

The big issue here is the scale-back. Shareholders put up way more stock than the terms permitted, so any tenders beyond the base allocation are getting trimmed proportionally. Investors hoping to unload larger blocks won’t be able to sell as much as they planned.

Coming off a robust first half, Hargreaves posted January revenue of £183.1 million for the six months ending Nov. 30, marking a 46.1% jump. Pretax profit landed at £14.3 million—well ahead of the £5.3 million reported a year back. Cash and cash equivalents climbed to £37.3 million.

Back in January, Chair Roger McDowell called the group’s first renewable-energy land sale “a critical milestone” for its realisation plan, and pointed to that deal as the reason to hand cash back to shareholders. Chief Executive Gordon Banham, for his part, said there’s still “substantial opportunities to optimise and realise further value” looking ahead. Investegate

The picture at Hargreaves is far from simple. Its Services arm handles infrastructure, clean energy, and environmental contracts. Over at Hargreaves Land, the focus falls on brownfield sites and renewable-energy land, both developed and sold. Then there’s HRMS—this German joint venture targets niche commodities and recycles steel waste.

Hargreaves isn’t the only one ramping up capital returns. Bigger names in UK infrastructure and construction are also stepping in: Balfour Beatty rolled out a £200 million buyback and bumped its dividend by 12% in March. That same month, Kier unveiled plans for a £25 million buyback after it wrapped up a previous £20 million round.

For Hargreaves, future returns hinge not only on trading momentum but also on when, how, and if asset realisations happen. The Services segment tends to be seasonal—management points out that most of the year’s earnings will probably stack up in the first half due to earthmoving projects peaking then. Meanwhile, HRMS continues to face headwinds in Germany’s tough economic environment.

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