9/18/2025
Harwood Capital Demands Spire Healthcare Strategic Review
The Times (London) (09/18/25) Ralph, Alex
A large shareholder in Spire Healthcare Group (SPI), the London-listed hospitals company, is urging the board to launch a strategic review. Harwood Capital Management, which has a stake of about 5% in the FTSE 250 company, wants the board, led by Sir Ian Cheshire, the City veteran, to appoint advisers to consider options for the company, including a possible sale. In a statement to The Times, Harwood said: “We believe Spire’s current share price fails to reflect the company’s value, most notably its unencumbered hospital portfolio worth in excess of £1.4 billion, and its occupational health business, where management has an ambition to deliver £40 million per annum of ebitda [earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation] over the medium term.” Some other large shareholders are understood to be sympathetic to Harwood's view. Harwood could call for a shareholder meeting to be held if it is obstructed, but is understood to be seeking to work with the management and planning to meet at the end of the month. Shares in the company closed Thursday up 4.1% on the London Stock Exchange, valuing the company at £873 million. It comes after a report on Wednesday that Spire was facing calls from investors to put itself up for sale. Spire is one of Britain's largest private healthcare companies. The group runs 38 hospitals and more than 50 clinics, medical centers, and consulting rooms. It also operates a network of private GPs and provides occupational health services to more than 800 corporate clients. It provides services to private as well as NHS patients. Spire's chief executive is Justin Ash and its board includes Dr Ronnie van der Merwe, a representative of Mediclinic Group, another private healthcare company which is Spire's largest shareholder. Mediclinic owns just under 30% of Spire. Spire said at its half-year results at the end of July that it was “pleased with the progress made in implementing strategic and efficiency initiatives and believes that these, together with Spire's freehold property valued at more than £1.4 billion and a well-invested asset base, are not yet reflected by the market in full.” It added at the time: “The board will continue to actively evaluate and implement any appropriate action that drives long-term shareholder value.” Harwood Capital is run by its founder Christopher Mills and has £2 billion of assets under management. The Harwood entities invested in Spire include Achilles, an activist investment trust which is managed by Robert Naylor. There is understood to be frustration among large investors with the valuation of Spire, whose shares are down about 7.5% over the past 12 months. Four years ago, a £1 billion takeover of Spire by Ramsay Health Care (RMYHY), an Australian competitor, was voted down by shareholders. The offer had been recommended by Spire's board, which was also then run by Cheshire, a former Debenhams chairman. However, two of its largest institutional investors, Toscafund and Fidelity, were opposed. The offer was supported by Mediclinic, which itself had a higher takeover approach for Spire rejected in 2017. Mediclinic was taken private in 2023 by a consortium in a £3.7 billion acquisition.
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