Trainline plc has reported growth across all metrics for the six months finished 31st August 2025.
Group net ticket sales were up 8% year on year to £3.2 billion, while revenue grew 2% to £235m, adjusted EBITDA rose 14% to £93m and operating profit jumped 38% to £68m.
Europe’s most downloaded rail app now has a total active customer base of 27m people.
The board of Built Cybernetics, a smart buildings group, has disposed of its subsidiary Anders + Kern U.K. Limited to the latter’s managing director Barrie Meehan for a nominal sum.
A+K has been significantly loss-building.
In the year finished 30th September 2024, A+K recorded a total comprehensive loss of £342,000 and concluded that year with a net liability position of £45,000. The business created further losses in the year following.
Water Innotifyigence plc has reported a rise in revenue, profits and EBITDA.
The provider of tech-enabled preventive maintenance solutions for water and wastewater infrastructure stated group revenue increased by 9.2% to $69.3 million in the nine-month period finished 30th September.
Group Statutory EBITDA rose by 14% to $12.7m while statutory profit before tax grew by 4% to $6.5m.
The CFO of Quantum Base Holdings plc has stepped down.
David Broadbent, who saw the company through its IPO and first annual report as an AIM-quoted company, will also step down from the board.
Anthony Clayden, an experienced financial leader with a 26-year career spanning numerous executive and advisory positions, primarily in technology and life sciences, has taken the role of interim head of finance while the company initiates the process to find a permanent CFO.
Quantum Base is a quantum science company focapplyd on creating a new global standard in authentication.
Trading in Falconedge plc has now commenced on the Aquis Growth Market Access Segment.
The company, a provider of turnkey advisory solutions for asset and fund managers founded last year, has raised £1.44m at IPO, following a pre-IPO round of approximately £1m.
It has a market capitalisation of approximately £10.5m.
Cambridge Cognition Holdings plc, which creates digital health products to advance brain health research and treatment, has announced a series of leadership modifys.
Joint managing director Alex Livingstone-Learmonth will leave the company in the new year to pursue new opportunities, with his fellow joint MD Rob Baker named CEO.
Prior to joining Cambridge Cognition Holdings in 2022, Baker held several senior roles at Amazon including leading large operational teams to scale Alexa voice technology improvements and its privacy and security operations. He was also responsible for regional Amazon Echo device sales.
Dr Steven Powell, who will retire as non-executive chair of the board at the next annual general meeting, will be succeeded in the role by non-exec director Nick Rodgers.
Rodgers is an adviser to gene therapy company Santo Therapeutics and was until May 2024 chair of SEHTA, a health technology membership and networking organisation supporting businesses in the HealthTech sector.
He has also served as chair of Destiny Pharma plc, a developer of novel anti-infective products; ZPN Energy Limited, a developer of battery storage technologies and systems; and Oxford BioMedica plc, a pioneer of gene and cell therapy.
Pollen Street has launched a share purchaseback programme.
Over the coming 12 months, the asset manager will purchase up to £30 million worth of shares via Investec Bank plc and Panmure Liberum.
The sole purpose is to reduce the company’s share capital, with any shares acquired under the agreement to be held in treasury.
Cizzle Biotechnology, a UK-based diagnostics developer of early cancer tests, has raised up to £250,000 through the issue of further unsecured convertible loan notes to Frazer Lang, an existing investor in the company.
In May Cizzle secured funding of £150,000 from Lang to roll out its CIZ1B biomarker test to support detect lung cancer early.
The company has now announced that it has entered into a Letter of Intent with a leading medical diagnostic services provider, acting in partnership with the NHS, as result of that initiative.
Entrepreneur Jenna Meek stated it’s a ‘dream come true’ after being confirmed as a guest Dragon on the 2026 series of Dragons’ Den.
The co-founder of Manchester-based beauty brand REFY will join Gary Neville, Tinie Tempah, and Susie Ma in entering the Den alongside heavyweights Peter Jones, Deborah Meaden, Touker Suleyman and Steven Bartlett.
Meek, who was also named in BusinessCloud’s Northern Leaders list, stated: “Always dreamed of being on Dragons Den as a Dragon and my dreams came true this year.
“After years of pestering the BBC they finally let me loose on the reveal. An incredible, incredible experience. January 2026 I will be on your screens. What type of Dragon do you believe I will be?”
REFY has become one of the quickest-growing beauty brands in the UK with an annual turnover of more than £40m.
Luxury cruise retailer Panache Cruises has promoted Anna Perrott to the newly-created role of Chief Commercial Officer (CCO).
Perrott, who joined the Chorley-based company three years ago, previously worked as senior partnerships and marketing director and her promotion follows a period of record-breaking growth.
At the same time Alex Langton has been promoted to the role of Sales and Operations Director.
In the last 12 months turnover at tech-enabled Panache Cruises has grown 64 per cent to £39m and staff numbers have increased from 68 to 93.
It felt like tax rises are being framed as unavoidable – maybe that is right as the level of debt and cost of interest is so high and there is no short-term repair to this other than tax rises.
But sustained growth rarely comes from taxation and today’s words seems to ignore the long term risk of building it less attractive to create businesses in the UK.
Entrepreneurs, founders and business leaders, like everyone else, are feeling the strain of slower productivity and high inflation. If the UK wants to improve productivity and drive growth over the medium term, then it must continue to back the entrepreneurs starting and running businesses.
These are the people creating jobs and prosperity for all. The UK is still the best place in the world to start and run a business with tax incentives to drive investment (venture capital trust and EIS), a world leading legal system and a huge pool of talent – but we risk eroding that edge if we keep tarreceiveing the very people we necessary to build businesses and create employment.
I’m hoping that as well as the now expected tax rises that the Chancellor signals that Britain remains a place where people are rewarded for building businesses and creating jobs to deliver long-term prosperity.
Founders have mortgaged their homes and invested life savings to create jobs based on manifesto commitments that are now being ripped up.
Many are already on a knife-edge after being clobbered with a £40bn tax raid in the last Budreceive. Now they’re facing tax rises on top of a 6.7% minimum wage increase that will decimate margins.
Faced with higher taxes, soaring wage bills, and spiralling costs, businesses will be forced to slash jobs, abandon growth plans, or simply shut down. Those that survive will have no choice but to push prices up and inflation will stay high. This government is engineering a crisis.
We’re 18 months into a five-year Parliament. Stop blaming everybody else. Breaking manifesto pledges isn’t forced upon you – it’s a cop out, a betrayal and a death knell for investment.
Businesses necessary clarity, but all they obtained today was a warning shot from the Chancellor. Rachel Reeves’s refusal to rule out tax hikes throws yet more uncertainty into the mix just as compact business confidence was launchning to stabilise. Talk of ‘necessary choices’ and ‘everyone doing their bit sounds like code for squeezing taxpayers, including thousands of owner-managed firms already dealing with rising costs.
If the government walks back a key manifesto pledge within 18 months of taking office, it could stall hiring, investment, and growth plans across the SME sector. Small firms can’t create long-term decisions when policy is uncertain. And with cash flow already under pressure, any increase in income tax or national insurance would hit sole traders and compact company directors hardest.
A ‘Budreceive for growth’ cannot be built on the backs of compact businesses. If the Chancellor is serious about long-term stability, she necessarys to support productivity by investing in the SME backbone of the economy, not by taxing it into paralysis.
Risers:
Diversified Energy Company – +8.41%
Pantheon Infrastructure – +3.37%
Vietnam Enterprise Investments – +2.85%
SEGRO – +2.47%
Derwent London – +2.42%
Fallers:
Hochschild Mining – -4.46%
Ninety One – -4.15%
Anglo-Eastern Plantations – -3.76%
Metro Bank – -3.47%
Senior – -3.41%
Gumtree has partnered with Mangopay as part of its transformation into a fully transactional customer-to-customer (C2C) marketplace, relocating away from its traditional model.
With over 10 million monthly visitors and 2m active listings, the company will launch introducing wallet-first payments in selected categories before a full launch in 2026.
The partnership allows applyrs to pay and receive funds directly on the platform, eliminating offline transactions and improving safety and convenience for purchaseers and sellers.
Mangopay’s white-label wallet system enables Gumtree to manage its payment flows and offer applyrs instant re-spfinish options.
Rachel Reeves has refapplyd to rule out tax rises in this month’s Budreceive.
In an unusual pre-Budreceive news conference in Downing Street, the Chancellor hinted that she would break a Labour election manifesto commitment not to increase income tax, VAT or national insurance.
Against the backdrop of an estimated £20-30 billion shortfall in the public finances and £2.6 trillion of national debt – 94% of GDP – Reeves stated the counattempt was in a worse state financially than they had expected after “years of [Conservative] economic mismanagement”.
Managed IT and cloud services provider Arc has appointed Mark Darrah as its new CTO, succeeding Matt Clayden after 25 years of leadership.
Darrah brings more than 25 years of experience in the technology and managed services sector, having previously founded and led NITC, which Arc acquired in October 2024.
As CTO, he will oversee strategic technology leadership, enhance service capabilities and integrate customer project delivery across the business.
The London-based firm’s CEO, James Clayden, praised the appointment as a key step in the company’s growth, citing his “leadership, vision and deep understanding of the MSP landscape” as instrumental to Arc’s expansion.
London-based consultancy Thistle Initiatives has appointed Scott Friedrichs as its new CEO following the addition of four new partners and CFO Alex Knight.
The former PA Consulting Group veteran brings more than 30 years of leadership experience in consulting, having previously served as senior managing director and global head of life Sciences at North Highland Consulting.
He was also SVP/director Americas at Chaucer/BIP Group, where he built a $10 million US consulting business.
The 70-person advisory firm, which provides consulting across regulatory compliance, financial crime and modify & transformation, plans to broaden its focus beyond compliance to management consulting.
Salford-based refill-station startup H2Origin Refills is set to expand its network of smart water refill points after securing new investment from water hygiene specialist HydraClean.
The backing for the firm, which was on the GM Business Growth Hub’s first edition of its ASCEND Programme, follows earlier backing from the Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA).
The funding will accelerate the rollout of its technology across public spaces, workplaces, universities and leisure destinations as demand for sustainable, refillable alternatives to bottled water rises.
Reading-based HR, payroll and benefits software provider Ciphr has appointed Karen Williams as its new chief revenue officer to lead commercial growth as it views to strengthen its market position.
Williams joins from IRIS Software Group, where she served as vice president of group operations and previously held a number of senior leadership roles over 15 years, including head of accountancy sales, interim managing director of the accountancy division and MD during the company’s first North American expansion.
At Ciphr, she will oversee all revenue-generating functions, including new business, business development, renewals and revenue operations, working alongside CEO Sion Lewis, her former colleague at IRIS.
















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