London, June 12, 2026, 16:29 BST
- Compass Group jumped over 4% late Friday, beating the FTSE 100. The move came as delayed data pointed to strength in the shares near the close.
- Compass shares now trade in U.S. dollars on the London Stock Exchange, after the company switched its trading currency from GBp on April 1.
- The stock goes ex-dividend on June 18. Investors are looking to the next catalyst, Compass Group’s third-quarter trading update due July 21.
Compass Group PLC jumped in London Friday, topping the FTSE 100 as investors moved back into the food-service giant. Hargreaves Lansdown’s delayed quote showed Compass at $34.10 to sell and $34.12 to buy, up $1.43, or 4.38%. Davy’s last showed $34.15, up 4.53%, after trading between $32.39 and $34.19. The FTSE 100 gained around 1.5% to 10,458.15, so Compass led the index.
UK stocks pushed higher as a drop in oil prices and hopes for Middle East peace lifted risk appetite. Reuters said the FTSE 100 gained 1.1% by late morning. Shares often climb when investors see stronger future earnings, less risk, or a higher valuation multiple, and drop when those bets fade. The broad market move matters for Compass, which tends to do better when energy costs look less threatening and companies feel steadier. “European markets are enjoying the decline in oil prices,” Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior market analyst at Swissquote Bank, told Reuters. Reuters
Compass’s London shares now trade in U.S. dollars instead of sterling pence, which matters for readers looking at past charts. Compass said it switched the trading currency on April 1 to match its reporting currency and cut foreign-exchange swings in the share price. The London Stock Exchange restated older share-price data to USD using the March 31 GBp/USD rate.
The stock is still getting its main backing from Compass’s May half-year numbers. For the six months to March 31, Compass posted $25.0 billion in revenue and underlying operating profit of $1.839 billion. Organic revenue grew 7.2%. Organic revenue strips out acquisitions, disposals and FX swings; operating margin is operating profit over revenue. Compass lifted its 2026 underlying operating profit growth target from about 10% to above 11%. CEO Dominic Blakemore said there was “great momentum across the business.” Compass Group Corporate Website
Guidance upgrades can push up the share price by raising earnings forecasts. Compass reported first-half client retention at 96%, $4.1 billion in new business wins, and a 20 basis point increase in underlying operating margin to 7.4%. (One basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point.) Reuters reported last month about half of Compass’s $4.1 billion in new business came from first-time clients. That points to more companies, hospitals, and universities choosing to outsource catering.
Compass is seen by bulls as a solid compounder, with steady outsourcing demand, better margins and more room to expand with fresh contracts and takeovers. Investors Chronicle listed 4 “buy,” 10 “outperform” and 6 “hold” calls as of June 11. No sells or strong-sells in the tally. The median 12-month target price was $40.40. That target is about 18% above Friday’s last trade of $34.15. Investors Chronicle
Bearish arguments aren’t hard to find. In February, Reuters reported Compass shares dropped to a three-year low even after a revenue beat. Investors reacted to worries that AI could shrink office jobs; tech, professional and financial clients make up about 20% of revenue, Reuters noted. There’s also talk on how weight-loss drugs might hurt long-term food demand. CEO Blakemore said in February there has been no sign of that yet. Next up is Compass’s July 21 third-quarter trading update. Ex-dividend lands June 18, payout July 30. Based on what’s known, Compass is not especially cheap, just somewhat appealing—good earnings and analyst targets help, but after the big one-day rally, weak organic growth, smaller margins or soft workplace sales in July could all sting.