ITV plc’s (LON:ITV) Stock Has Shown A Decent Performance: Have Financials A Role To Play?

Dec 29, 2025
itv-plc’s-(lon:itv)-stock-has-shown-a-decent-performance:-have-financials-a-role-to-play?

ITV’s (LON:ITV) stock is up by 1.9% over the past three months. As most would know, long-term fundamentals have a strong correlation with market price movements, so we decided to look at the company’s key financial indicators today to determine if they have any role to play in the recent price movement. In this article, we decided to focus on ITV’s ROE.

Return on Equity or ROE is a test of how effectively a company is growing its value and managing investors’ money. Simply put, it is used to assess the profitability of a company in relation to its equity capital.

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ROE can be calculated by using the formula:

Return on Equity = Net Profit (from continuing operations) ÷ Shareholders’ Equity

So, based on the above formula, the ROE for ITV is:

11% = UK£193m ÷ UK£1.7b (Based on the trailing twelve months to June 2025).

The ‘return’ is the income the business earned over the last year. That means that for every £1 worth of shareholders’ equity, the company generated £0.11 in profit.

Check out our latest analysis for ITV

We have already established that ROE serves as an efficient profit-generating gauge for a company’s future earnings. Based on how much of its profits the company chooses to reinvest or “retain”, we are then able to evaluate a company’s future ability to generate profits. Assuming all else is equal, companies that have both a higher return on equity and higher profit retention are usually the ones that have a higher growth rate when compared to companies that don’t have the same features.

To start with, ITV’s ROE looks acceptable. And on comparing with the industry, we found that the the average industry ROE is similar at 10%. However, we are curious as to how ITV’s decent returns still resulted in flat growth for ITV in the past five years. Based on this, we feel that there might be other reasons which haven’t been discussed so far in this article that could be hampering the company’s growth. Such as, the company pays out a huge portion of its earnings as dividends, or is faced with competitive pressures.

As a next step, we compared ITV’s net income growth with the industry and discovered that the industry saw an average growth of 40% in the same period.

past-earnings-growth

LSE:ITV Past Earnings Growth December 29th 2025

The basis for attaching value to a company is, to a great extent, tied to its earnings growth. The investor should try to establish if the expected growth or decline in earnings, whichever the case may be, is priced in. Doing so will help them establish if the stock’s future looks promising or ominous. If you’re wondering about ITV’s’s valuation, check out this gauge of its price-to-earnings ratio, as compared to its industry.

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