Ubisoft issued a major overnight announcement on this week’s postponement’s last-minute implementation of its half-year earnings report only a few hours before its release. The last-minute delay was supported by the company’s request from Euronext, which is where it is listed, to halt the trading of its shares and bonds as of November 14. Forex trading halts due to delays in financial reports, and this landmark decision has injected inordinate amounts of volatility and speculation, raising questions about the health and eventual restructuring of one of gaming’s biggest corporate entities.
The H1 FY25-26 report meant to cover the first half of the current fiscal year was due for presentation on November 13. Ubisoft’s public announcement confirmed merely that the delay would last until, “the report is finalized in the coming days.” Internally, the company CFO communicated this extra time was needed to give “to finalize” the results. Very importantly, the same CFO justified the trading halt to “limit unnecessary speculation and market volatility”; perhaps ironically, he may have achieved the opposite by increasing investor anxiousness and public curiosity in the entire games industry.
As Ubisoft’s immediate market reaction comes against a weak recent economic history, the French publisher has been unable to disappear from the theatre of the apparent. Only in March, Ubisoft reported a loss of €159 million year to year, driven by huge declines in game sales and subscription revenues. Shareholders, therefore, were already reading the H1 report with considerable trepidation against such a background of not-so-impressive financial performance. This sudden decision to delay and suspend trading, however, only served to amplify those concerns. To compound the situation, Chinese tech and gaming conglomerate Tencent has already piled on a considerable holding, becoming the company’s largest single shareholder in a prior investment move.
The immediate cessation of stock trading is a maneuver often associated with forthcoming corporate structure changes. Accordingly, industry analysts have focused on discussions regarding hypothesized full acquisition or possible privatization efforts to take the company off the public market. Whether this surprise halt is caused by an obscure accounting error, late decision to account for a significant transaction, or indeed a corporate restructuring is still an open question. But until Ubisoft presents the completed financial results and provides a rationale for the trading halt, the gaming world and investors alike will continue with their scrutiny of this silence in pursuit of some definitive signal regarding the publisher’s ultimate fate.