RWS Holdings (LON:RWS) jumps, AI revenue shift now valued below 0.45x sales

RWS Holdings (LON:RWS) jumps, AI revenue shift now valued below 0.45x sales

July 1, 2026

LONDON, July 1, 2026, 22:05 BST

  • RWS jumped 7.5% to 76.70p. The FTSE AIM 100 added 0.69%.
  • The most recent RNS from the company was a total voting rights update out July 1, stating 371,163,323 shares outstanding.
  • Consensus as of June 30 shows FY26 revenue at £708.2 million, average target price at 164p, according to .
  • AI-linked revenue rose roughly 29% in H1 by one calculation, but the rest dropped around 4%.

RWS Holdings plc (LON:RWS) jumped 7.5% to 76.70 pence on Wednesday, outpacing the FTSE AIM 100 by 6.8 percentage points. The move came after London markets closed. Shares climbed 5.35p, putting about £19.9 million more on the company’s market cap, going by the latest voting rights tally.

RWS reported 371,163,323 ordinary shares on June 30, each with one vote and no treasury shares. At 76.70p per share, the equity value is about £284.7 million, matching the market cap.

RWS’s latest consensus, as of June 30, is for FY26 revenue at £708.2 million, adjusted pretax profit at £65.5 million, adjusted EPS of 13.2p and a dividend of 7.3p per share. All four analysts rate the stock a buy, with the average target at 164p.

MeasureCurrent / derived figureInvestor read-through
Last price76.70pStock gained 7.5% today
Equity value£284.7 mlnFigure uses July 1 voting rights
Consensus target price164pTarget is 114% above latest close
Implied equity value at target£608.7 mlnImplied gain of roughly £324 mln
Market cap / FY26 revenue consensus0.40xCheap sales ratio for a software/AI play
EV / FY26 revenue consensus0.45xBased on first-half net debt of £32.5 mln
EV / FY26 adjusted PBT consensus4.8xMultiple uses FY26 adjusted PBT estimate

RWS isn’t just a translation-services company anymore, and the valuation discount is in focus. In the first half, AI-related revenue made up 32% of the group, up from 26% the year before, the company said. Total revenue for the period was £360.3 million, up 5%. That means AI-related products and services brought in about £115.3 million, up from £89.5 million. Revenue from the rest of the business slipped to about £245.0 million from £254.8 million.

H1 revenue bucketH1 2025 estimateH1 2026 estimateChange
AI-related products and services£89.5 mln£115.3 mln+29%
Revenue from other areas£254.8 mln£245.0 mln-4%
Total group revenue£344.3 mln£360.3 mln+5%

That’s the question for investors: AI is already making a dent in group revenue, but non-AI business keeps slipping on this split. RWS said Generate posted solid double-digit organic constant currency growth, Transform fell, and Protect was up. The company maintained its targets for mid-single-digit organic constant currency revenue growth this year, higher profitability, and strong free cash flow.

CEO Ben Faes said RWS picked up “new clients across our three segments” and added that “momentum continues to build.” The company still sees full-year results in line with guidance. London South East

The profit story is messier. RWS said FX rates, after hedging, should lower full-year pretax profit by around £2 million. The Obviously deal is seen hurting this year’s profit by £1 million before turning positive in FY27. That all totals 4.6% of consensus for FY26 adjusted pretax profit.

Shares are still down 32% from AJ Bell’s high of 113.583p for the year, despite Wednesday’s gain. They’re 13% above the 68p low.

Mateusz Ługowik

Mateusz Ługowik is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Gdańsk, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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