London, Feb 9, 2026, 09:24 GMT — Regular session
- Idox finished unchanged at 71.0p on Monday, right where it settled on Friday. Volumes stayed thin.
- Shares have hovered just below the 71.5p-per-share cash bid lodged by Frankel UK Bidco, which is backed by Long Path.
- Investors are eyeing whether acceptances pile up quickly before the mid-March cutoff.
Idox held flat at 71.0 pence on Monday, sitting a tick under the 71.5p cash bid as the takeover clock keeps ticking. Share Prices
The deal’s in the spotlight now because the buyer still lacks a clear majority of Idox’s voting rights—reflected in a notably tight market spread. Frankel UK Bidco’s most recent numbers show valid acceptances for just 19.12% of Idox shares as of Feb. 5. Add in other backing, and it’s at 25.34%, still well short of the over-50% threshold needed to satisfy its acceptance condition. TradingView
The latest Takeover Panel disclosure table, out Monday, still shows Idox under “offer period” status—meaning those extra disclosure requirements are in effect. Frankel UK Bidco is identified as the offeror. TradingView
Frankel, in a statement dated Feb. 6, reported total backing of around 49.26% after tallying Long Path’s current stake alongside both irrevocable undertakings and non-binding letters of intent from other shareholders. The filing indicated that a few early backers trimmed their holdings following share sales, but some stepped up with larger commitments. Investegate
The slim difference between the offer and where shares are trading signals what the market thinks about “deal risk” — odds the bid fizzles, stalls, or morphs — along with the time value of money. That spread hasn’t widened, implying most investors are treating the deal as the likely outcome, despite acceptances not yet crossing the halfway mark.
Still, things could unravel. Should Frankel fail to get the deal through, shares might drop toward pre-offer territory. Liquidity could dry up fast, particularly if the buyer walks away holding a hefty blocking stake.
Frankel has spelled out its next steps if it secures control without clinching every share: the group says it plans to seek delisting of Idox from AIM once it hits 75% voting rights, and could try to compulsorily buy out the rest if it gets to 90%. That scenario would leave any remaining shareholders holding a much less liquid stock. Investegate
According to its company profile, Idox delivers information management software and geospatial data solutions tailored for public-sector clients and those in asset-heavy industries. Reuters
The stock’s moving on takeover dynamics — not new news from the company. It’s all about acceptances, whatever buying happens on-market by connected parties, plus that usual stream of disclosures you get during an offer period.