Super Group jumps as raised 2026 guidance and bigger dividend plan re-price shares
Super Group (SGHC) shares are rising after investors refocused on its recently reported Q4 and full-year 2025 results, which included higher 2026 revenue/EBITDA guidance and a lifted dividend framework. The company set a minimum 2026 dividend program target of $0.20 per share and declared a $0.05 quarterly dividend paid March 31, 2026.
1. What’s moving the stock
Super Group (SGHC) is trading sharply higher as the market continues to reprice the company’s late-February earnings update that combined stronger financial performance, upbeat 2026 guidance, and a more shareholder-return-friendly dividend framework. In its Q4 and full-year 2025 update, Super Group guided 2026 revenue to at least $2.55 billion and adjusted EBITDA to over $680 million, while also increasing its 2026 annual dividend program target to a minimum of $0.20 per share (paid quarterly, subject to board approval). (sec.gov)
2. Dividend details investors are keying on
Alongside the higher annual dividend program target, the board declared the first 2026 quarterly dividend at $0.05 per share, paid on March 31, 2026, to shareholders of record as of March 16, 2026. That step-up (from the prior $0.04 quarterly target) reinforced management’s message that cash generation and balance-sheet capacity are supporting larger recurring returns of capital. (sec.gov)
3. Why the timing matters
The company previously indicated its full audited annual financial statements were expected in early April 2026, which can act as a catalyst window as investors position for confirmation of preliminary results and updated disclosure. With that milestone in view, traders often become more sensitive to incremental flows, positioning, and re-rating dynamics after a guidance/dividend reset. (tipranks.com)
4. What to watch next
Key swing factors from here are (1) whether the early-April annual financial statements land cleanly versus preliminary figures, (2) any changes to 2026 outlook assumptions (including the U.K. tax increase and Alberta regulation timing referenced in prior commentary), and (3) whether the board continues executing the new quarterly dividend cadence at the targeted annual minimum. (fintool.com)