London, May 13, 2026, 13:03 BST
- 3i Group shares steadied after Tuesday’s sharp fall, with full-year results due on May 14.
- Investors are focused on Action, the Dutch discount retailer that drives much of 3i’s valuation.
- Higher rates, France trading and Action’s planned U.S. push remain the pressure points.
3i Group shares hovered near £24 on Wednesday after a sharp fall in the previous session, as investors looked ahead to annual results that could reset the market’s view of its key holding, Action.
The London-listed investment company showed its stock down 0.04% at 2,399.07p on its investor site, which also listed results for the year to March 31, 2026, for May 14.
The timing matters. 3i fell 4.61% to £24.00 on Tuesday, underperforming a flat FTSE 100 session, while trading volume topped its 50-day average, MarketWatch data showed. The shares were then about 46% below their October 2025 high.
Thursday’s key number will be net asset value, or NAV — the estimated value of 3i’s portfolio after liabilities. In 3i’s case, the market will read that number through one asset above all: Action, the low-cost non-food retailer that has turned the group into one of the most closely watched names in UK private equity.
At its March Action seminar, 3i said Action’s net sales were €3.7 billion in the first 12 weeks of 2026, up 14.5% from a year earlier. Like-for-like sales, which compare stores open long enough to measure against the same period last year, rose 4.0%. France was weaker, at 0.9%, while sales outside France rose 5.8%.
3i kept Action’s 2026 guidance at 4% to 5% like-for-like sales growth, at least 400 net new stores and an operating EBITDA margin of 14.8%. EBITDA means earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation, a common measure of operating profit.
The U.S. plan is another test. 3i said Action aims to open its first store in the south-east United States by the end of 2027 or early 2028. Simon Borrows, 3i’s chief executive and Action’s chair, told the Financial Times in April that he had “a good level of confidence” in the format’s prospects in the U.S. Financial Times
The peer argument has shifted from private equity to retail. RBC Capital Markets cut 3i to “underperform” in January, saying Action’s valuation still looked “on the full side” at about 28 times calendar-2026 expected earnings, while preferring Zara owner Inditex in European retail. London South East
RBC later named Next, Inditex and Sainsbury’s as outperform picks in Europe retail, while rating 3i, as owner of Action, underperform with a 2,250p target. That puts 3i’s results into a wider consumer-stock debate, not just a private-markets one.
Rates are also back in the frame. UK long-dated gilt yields hit levels last seen in 1998 on Tuesday before easing, while Polymarket traders priced a 65% chance of a Bank of England rate hike in 2026. Higher rates can weigh on private-equity valuations by lifting financing costs and making future cash flows worth less today.
There was a cleaner message from the wider 3i platform this week. 3i Infrastructure, managed by 3i Investments, a wholly owned unit of 3i Group, said on Tuesday it generated an 8.5% return on opening NAV and raised its FY27 dividend target. Chair Richard Laing called it “a solid performance,” while Bernardo Sottomayor, head of European infrastructure at 3i Investments, pointed to returns from exits including TCR. 3i Infrastructure
But the risk case is still concentration. QuotedData senior analyst Matthew Read said in March that Action accounted for “around 70% of 3i’s NAV” and was “around 20 times bigger than the next largest holding,” leaving little cushion if the trade turns against investors. QuotedData
That is what Thursday’s update has to answer. Strong Action trading, steady margins and evidence that France is improving could ease pressure on the shares. Any sign of weaker store sales, heavier U.S. spending or a lower valuation multiple would keep the focus on why a stock once priced for flawless growth is now sitting near £24.