Skip to content
Home / News |

Ocado Shares Slump Despite Headline Growth as Underlying Weakness Exposed

Shares in Ocado Group (LON: OCDO) plunged as much as 16% on Thursday, falling from a previous close of 177.7p to around 149p, wiping out hundreds of millions of pounds in market value, after the warehouse robotics group’s half-year results revealed the headline numbers masked deteriorating core performance.

At first glance, the results looked strong: group revenue jumped 54% to £1,037m and adjusted EBITDA surged to £432m from £92m a year earlier.

However, these figures were flattered almost entirely by one-off termination payments from Kroger and Sobeys following the closure of four North American warehouses in January — including a £260m Kroger settlement fee.

X testing X
WELCOME BONUS - Free Share Bundle When You Invest £50! Get up to £500 cashback for investing with IG.
Invest in 15,000+ shares and ETFs. Open an account now, invest at least £50, and you’ll get a free share bundle worth between £40 and £200. T&Cs apply.
5.0
Open Account Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 68% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Stripping out these closure impacts, the underlying picture was far less encouraging. Like-for-like revenue rose just 1% to £684m, while Technology Solutions’ core recurring fees fell 3%, or 5% excluding the lost CFC contracts.

Underlying EBITDA in Technology Solutions dropped 18% to £60m, and group underlying cash outflow widened to £147m from £108m a year ago.

Investors appear to have focused on this erosion of the core business rather than the one-off cash boost. Concerns were compounded by ongoing uncertainty over CEO succession — with reports Ocado has been engaging candidates to replace long-serving boss Tim Steiner — and the string of North American contract losses that have battered sentiment over the past year.

While management reiterated unchanged FY26 guidance, pointed to new wins including Asda and highlighted a £150m cost-cutting programme, investors seemingly judged that the path back to sustainable growth and full-year cash generation in FY27 remains far from secure. The stock has now fallen over 90% from its 2020 pandemic-era peak near £29.

Searching for the Perfect Broker?

Discover our top-recommended brokers for trading or investing in financial markets. Dive in and test their capabilities with complimentary demo accounts today!

YOUR CAPITAL IS AT RISK. 76% OF RETAIL CFD ACCOUNTS LOSE MONEY

Asktraders News Team
Team Member

The AskTraders Analyst Team features experts in technical and fundamental analysis, as well as traders specializing in stocks, forex, and cryptocurrency.