Redcentric has proposed returning up to £90 million to shareholders through a tender offer priced at £1.60 per ordinary share, alongside a restructuring intended to simplify its share register and reduce administrative costs.

The UK managed services provider announced the proposals on 19 June 2026 and will seek shareholder approval at a general meeting scheduled for 10.30am on 7 July 2026. The board has unanimously recommended that shareholders vote in favour of the resolutions.

The £1.60 tender price represents a premium of approximately 30.9% to Redcentric’s closing share price on the day before the announcement. Shareholders will receive a basic entitlement allowing them to tender approximately 35.3% of their holdings, although they can choose to submit any or all of their shares.

Redcentric has set the maximum tender at 56,250,000 ordinary shares, equal to approximately 35.3% of its issued ordinary share capital as of 11 June 2026. The final amount returned will depend on the level of shareholder participation, subject to the £90 million ceiling.

The structure gives investors a choice between taking liquidity at a substantial premium and retaining exposure to Redcentric’s managed services strategy. That optionality is central to the proposal because shareholders are not required to participate, while those seeking an exit can tender more than their basic entitlement. Applications above the entitlement may still depend on the number of shares submitted by other investors and the detailed allocation terms in the circular.

Redcentric is also proposing a 20-for-1 share consolidation immediately followed by a 1-for-20 subdivision. Although the overall ratio returns the share capital to the same nominal structure, the sequence is designed to facilitate the exit of minority shareholders holding fewer than 20 ordinary shares.

The board believes removing very small holdings will reduce the cost and administrative work associated with maintaining a fragmented share register. Companies with large numbers of minor shareholders can face disproportionate expenses across communications, dividend administration, voting materials and register maintenance compared with the economic value of those holdings.

Chairman Richard McGuire said the tender offer would allow Redcentric to deliver value to shareholders while leaving the group strongly capitalised to pursue its managed services growth strategy. The board’s recommendation therefore rests on balancing an immediate capital return with sufficient financial capacity to support the remaining business.

The proposal places capital allocation at the centre of Redcentric’s next phase. A return of up to £90 million represents a significant commitment, while the 30.9% premium gives participating shareholders a clear incentive to tender. Remaining investors will want evidence that the reduced capital base still leaves the company able to fund organic growth, acquisitions, infrastructure requirements and working capital without weakening financial resilience.

Tender pricing, shareholder participation, post-transaction liquidity, balance-sheet capacity and the treatment of small holdings all affect whether a proposal creates durable value. Clear communication will also be needed where some investors exit at a premium and others remain exposed to the company’s future performance.

Shareholder approval on 7 July will determine whether Redcentric can proceed with both elements of the plan. The vote will also test support for a board strategy that combines an immediate cash return with a simpler shareholder structure and continued investment in the managed services business.

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