9 October 2025
UK Equities: Rethinking large cap

Ahead of the UK budget Edison has published it's Q3 2025 market review of UK equities.
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Rethinking UK large caps In a year marked by tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty, UK equities have delivered returns of c 15% year-to-date, matching the S&P 500 (14.2%). Both the UK100 and Euro Stoxx 50 posted local currency gains of 14.9%. Yet UK equities remain 'the most unloved assets right now' according to Bank of America's September 2025 poll, with a 20% net underweight position. This extreme pessimism, combined with a 35% valuation discount to global peers and 5-6% total shareholder yields, creates a compelling contrarian opportunity.
Key themes
- UK market trades at 35% discount to MSCI World despite 80% of UK100 revenues from overseas
- Total shareholder yield of 5-6% combining 3.3% dividend yield plus £49.9bn in buyback programmes
- Bank of America survey shows 20% net underweight - most extreme positioning since 2004
- 41 takeover bids announced year-to-date with 11% of mid-cap index acquired in 2024
- Private equity's shift to quality leaves turnaround opportunities for public market investors
- Rachel Reeves' 26 November budget expected to provide clarity and potential relief rally
Core insights
- UK All Share yields 3.3% with projected £83.9bn dividends in 2025 (7% growth year-on-year)
- Approximately 46 companies running active buyback programmes adding c 2% to yields
- Germany's €500bn+ rearmament programme benefits UK defence and financial sectors
- Rising electricity standing charges (up 94% for SMEs from April) pressure consumer-facing sectors
- ONS household savings revisions make reliable equity income streams more valuable
- UK250 notably lagged UK100 year-to-date, creating opportunity as dollar weakness expected
Companies highlighted:
Large-cap defensives: flight to quality
- Imperial Brands (50%+ returns in 2024): substantial yield with defensive characteristics
- British American Tobacco (up 30% YTD): 6.27% dividend yield
- Diageo, Unilever, Tesco: reliable consumer staples income streams
- National Grid (£9bn Great Grid Upgrade): regulated utility returns
- Centrica, Severn Trent: essential service exposure
- GSK, AstraZeneca: healthcare with 3.5-4.0% yields
- Compass Group: recession-resistant global catering
Financials: yield curve plus capital returns
- Barclays (8% total shareholder yield): 2.5% dividend plus buybacks
- HSBC: quality exposure approaching target prices
- Lloyds (3.0-3.5% yield): pure UK retail banking with buybacks
- Standard Chartered: emerging markets focus, 50% upside to consensus targets
- Metro Bank: 100%+ consensus EPS growth FY26 vs FY25
Early cyclicals: UK consumer recovery
- Forterra, Ibstock: building materials, potential to double on normalised housing volumes
- Wickes, DFS, Dunelm: home improvement retail exposure
- Topps Tiles: high operational gearing, improving momentum
- Currys (45p to 140p, targets above 200p): turnaround momentum
- Galliford Try, Kier, Morgan Sindall: construction contractors with infrastructure exposure
Defence: structural growth
- BAE Systems (mcap £47bn): £77.8bn backlog up 25% over 12 months, 75% defence revenues
- Rolls-Royce: defence engines and nuclear applications
- Melrose Industries/GKN: fighter jet components, additive manufacturing
- Concurrent Technologies: 85-87% defence revenue, £4m UK defence contract
Conclusions
- UK large caps offer compelling combination: 5-6% total yield, 35% discount to global equities, quality franchises
- Timing compelling with extreme pessimism (contrarian signal) and budget uncertainty likely to clear
- Four investment themes present distinct opportunities:
- large-cap defensives offering 3-5% yields with balance sheet strength;
- financials trading 40-50% below consensus targets at 6-9x P/E with capital returns;
- early cyclicals at 4-7x earnings versus normalised 10-12x multiples; and
- defence with government-backed multi-year revenue visibility
- Private equity's focus on quality due to higher funding costs leaves turnaround opportunities for public markets
- Catalysts building: 26 November budget, Q4 inflation data, German fiscal stimulus, accelerating corporate activity
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