London, Jan 17, 2026, 08:34 GMT — Market closed.
- 3i closed Friday at 3,361p, up 0.6% on the day after a sharp jump a session earlier
- A UBS read on France sales at Action helped drive the move
- Next focus is 3i’s Q3 performance update on Jan. 29
3i Group (III.L) shares ended Friday at 3,361 pence, up 20 pence, or 0.6%, from Thursday’s close after trading between 3,316 and 3,395 pence. With London markets shut for the weekend, traders will test Monday whether the bounce has legs. (Investing)
The spark came on Thursday. UBS data pointed to a pick-up in sales in France at Action, 3i’s largest portfolio company, and the stock jumped about 10% as the FTSE 100 closed at a record after stronger UK growth data. Axel Rudolph, senior financial analyst at IG, called the GDP surprise “a potential catalyst for inflows” into the FTSE indices. (Reuters)
France has been the pressure point for the Action story. In November, 3i warned that softer trading there — around a third of Action sales — could pull the chain’s like-for-like sales growth (which strips out new store openings) below guidance. Winterflood analyst Shavar Halberstadt said “investors should have a firm target price in mind for Action,” given how concentrated the group has become. (QuotedData)
In its last half-year statement, 3i said Action “continued to trade strongly” and that “year to date LFL trading remains good” despite weakening consumer confidence. Borrows added the group would stay cautious on deploying capital into new deals. (3I)
MarketWatch data showed 3i rose 10.08% on Thursday to £33.41, with turnover of 4.3 million shares versus a 50-day average of 2.4 million. Even after the surge, the stock was still about 26% below its 52-week high of £44.97. (MarketWatch)
The broader market cooled on Friday. The FTSE 100 slipped 0.04% to 10,235.29, while still ending the week slightly higher, as miners dragged and defence stocks outperformed. (Reuters)
UBS reiterated a “buy” rating on 3i on Friday and set a 4,000p target price, according to a broker-ratings summary. That target is about 19% above Friday’s close; a target price is simply the broker’s view of fair value over roughly a year, not a promise. (London South East)
Into the new week, investors will be watching for more evidence on European consumer spending — especially France — that could back up or undermine the UBS signal on Action. Rate expectations matter as well; higher yields tend to squeeze valuations on long-duration growth assets and private portfolios.
But the read-through from the UBS data cuts both ways. If French volumes soften again, or if markets start to doubt Action can keep expanding at pace, the shares can give back gains quickly. The burst of volume on Thursday hints there was short-term money involved.
The next hard marker is Jan. 29, when 3i is due to publish its third-quarter performance update. The market will be looking for any fresh colour on Action’s trading, and whether France is stabilising or slipping again. (3I)