The Accounts · daily brief
23 May 2026
Wage contraction and rising board pay
The takeaways
- Two holding companies filed today with flat revenue but divergent approaches to board pay
- ITV's boardroom remuneration pot remained static while the total wage bill contracted
- Capgemini proved that top-line growth doesn't guarantee a wider operating margin
Itv Plc [1]
Margin squeeze
| Line | FY24 | FY23 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit & loss | ||
| Turnover | £3.8bn ▼ −11% | £4.3bn |
| Gross profit | £585m ▼ −14% | £681m |
| Admin expenses | £363m ▲ −0% | £363m |
| Operating profit | £222m ▼ −30% | £318m |
| Finance costs | £5m ▼ −29% | £7m |
| Profit before tax | £217m ▼ −30% | £311m |
| Net profit | £211m ▼ −0% | £212m |
| People & pay | ||
| Avg. headcount | 7,398 ▼ −0% | 7,400 |
| Staff cost | £515m ▼ −16% | £615m |
| Director pay | £7.5m ▲ −0% | £7.5m |
Turnover fell 11% while operating profit contracted 30% at the broadcaster. The reduction was reflected in the staff cost line, which shed £100m despite average headcount remaining entirely flat year-on-year. While total staff costs contracted, the £7.5m directors' remuneration pot remained static.
Capgemini Uk Plc [2]
Profitless growth
| Line | FY25 | FY24 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit & loss | ||
| Turnover | £2.6bn ▲ +7% | £2.4bn |
| Gross profit | £556.6m ▼ −2% | £569.7m |
| Operating profit | £241.9m ▼ −6% | £257.9m |
| Profit before tax | £268.7m ▼ −5% | £282.7m |
| Net profit | £202.5m ▼ −4% | £210.5m |
The British arm of the IT consultancy added £171m to the top line, but the expansion did not translate to the bottom. Operating profit slipped 6% as gross margins tightened, demonstrating that revenue growth does not guarantee a wider operating margin.
Performing Right Society Limited [3]
Related-party royalties
| Line | FY25 | FY24 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit & loss | ||
| Turnover | £1.2bn ▲ +8% | £1.2bn |
| Admin expenses | £135.9m ▼ −6% | £145m |
| Operating profit | £1.1bn ▲ +10% | £1.0bn |
| Finance costs | £612k ▲ +54% | £398k |
| Profit before tax | £11.8m ▼ −8% | £12.9m |
| Net profit | £1.2m ▼ −67% | £3.8m |
| People & pay | ||
| Avg. headcount | 546 ▼ −1% | 553 |
| Staff cost | £50.4m ▲ +7% | £47.2m |
| Director pay | £1.8m ▼ −14% | £2.1m |
| Highest-paid director | £876k ▼ −25% | £1.2m |
Operating profit pushed past the £1.1bn mark on an 8% increase in turnover at the music collective. While the highest-paid director saw a 25% reduction to their remuneration, the larger figures remain in the catalogue: related-party royalty payouts to publisher and writer directors expanded to nearly £148m.
Dick Lovett Companies Limited [4]
Board pay rise
| Line | FY25 | FY24 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit & loss | ||
| Turnover | £801.2m ▼ −1% | £810.5m |
| Gross profit | £65.5m ▲ +1% | £64.6m |
| Admin expenses | £29.4m ▲ +1% | £29.1m |
| Operating profit | £12.7m ▼ −1% | £12.8m |
| Finance costs | £3m ▼ −18% | £3.7m |
| Profit before tax | £10.6m ▼ −0% | £10.6m |
| Net profit | £7.3m ▼ −6% | £7.8m |
| People & pay | ||
| Avg. headcount | 998 ▼ −0% | 1,000 |
| Staff cost | £47.9m ▲ +7% | £44.6m |
| Director pay | £2.3m ▲ +235% | £696k |
| Highest-paid director | £1.6m ▲ +232% | £497k |
The ultimate holding company for the automotive group saw turnover remain broadly flat, dipping a fraction year-on-year. That plateau did not prevent a substantial increase at the top, with total directors' remuneration more than tripling and the highest-paid director receiving £1.65m.
Dick Lovett Automobile Limited [5]
Related-party rent
| Line | FY25 | FY24 |
|---|---|---|
| Profit & loss | ||
| Turnover | £801.1m ▼ −1% | £810.4m |
| Gross profit | £65.3m ▲ +1% | £64.5m |
| Admin expenses | £30.2m ▼ −1% | £30.3m |
| Operating profit | £13.5m ▲ +5% | £12.8m |
| Finance costs | £3m ▼ −18% | £3.7m |
| Profit before tax | £10.9m ▲ +12% | £9.7m |
| Net profit | £8.4m ▲ +17% | £7.2m |
| People & pay | ||
| Avg. headcount | 998 ▼ −0% | 1,000 |
| Staff cost | £47.9m ▲ +7% | £44.6m |
Sitting just underneath the group parent, the dealership arm posted identically flat turnover but managed a modest uptick in operating profit. The accounts outline a related-party property arrangement, with nearly £1m in rent paid to the ultimate controlling party's self-administered pension scheme.
Proof once again that whether a business sells cars, code, or copyright, related-party arrangements and board remuneration often operate independently of top-line growth.
Sources
- Itv Plc — Companies House filing history
- Capgemini Uk Plc — Companies House filing history
- Performing Right Society Limited — Companies House filing history
- Dick Lovett Companies Limited — Companies House filing history
- Dick Lovett Automobile Limited — Companies House filing history