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Raspberry PI reports drop in profits but upbeat outlook drives shares higher

Raspberry Pi, whose popular minicomputers are sold around the world and which floated on the London stock market last year, has reported a hefty fall in annual profits as it battled inventory issues, but an upbeat outlook drove its shares higher.

In its first annual results since the IPO, the Cambridge-based company reported a 2% dip in annual revenues to $259.5m, and a 57% drop in pretax profits to $16.3m.

However, this was against a strong year-on-year comparison, and it launched 22 new products in 2024. Analysts said it could still become the UK tech success story that many have been hoping for.

The shares jumped by 6.5% to 501.50p in early trading.

The company said:

With channel inventory now normalised, Raspberry Pi anticipates a steady build-up in demand throughout the year, positioning us strongly despite ongoing macroeconomic and geopolitical uncertainties. The projected pace of market recovery, coupled with the timing of embedded design wins, strengthens confidence in solid and sustainable sales growth in full-year 2025.

Raspberry PI was valued at £542m at the IPO in June, the largest UK stock market flotation since July 2023 when CAB Payments listed at £850m. The shares were priced at 280p, at the top end of its range, amid strong demand from financial institutions and individual investors.

Raspberry Pi computer. Photograph: Linda Nylind/The Guardian

John Moore, senior investment manager at RBC Brewin Dolphin, said:

Raspberry Pi’s debut last year seemed a key point of sentiment for the IPO market and London listings, in part because it was a developing story. While on the face of it the comparisons with 2023 don’t make for great reading, there are a few things going on beneath the surface and it is worth seeing these in context.

Among them, inventory issues were an industry-wide challenge for much of the reporting period, but improved during the final quarter and into 2025. In addition, 2023 was an exceptionally strong year for Raspberry Pi and was always going to make for a tough comparator. In terms of development, a strong product release schedule highlighted today offers encouragement for this year and beyond.

Longer term, even though it may not be a familiar name to many people at the moment, Raspberry Pi has the potential to be the UK tech success story many market commentators have been looking for.

Dan Lane, UK lead analyst at the stock trading platform Robinhood, said:

A wall of negative results today is a world away from the upbeat half-year update but the big jump in products released could be the saving grace. With 22 new products launched during 2024, of which Raspberry Pi said it would feel the full benefit in 2025, investors might be willing to look past big drops in profits and earnings per share.

If Raspberry Pi can push its way into the semiconductor market, as rivals feel the pressure from the US government and possibly face subsidies being pulled, the opportunity set could be huge. It will need to steady the ship though and today’s results show it hasn’t been a completely clean start to market life.

Raspberry Pi’s recent IPO was heavily watched and the company has borne the hopes of the UK’s ability to make tech IPOs a success. Whether it enjoys that status or not, the London market will be holding the firm up to hopefully entice a few more businesses to come and do the same.

Whether numbers like today’s are teething issues or not could have a real impact on the firm’s trajectory from here – it will need to get back to growth quickly. That said, with its new product set that could be an exciting prospect.



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