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Harry Potter publisher's profits fall by fifth despite rise in sales

Bloomsbury Publishing - which is also known for the fantasy romance hits by Sarah J. Maas - saw its pre-tax profit fall by almost a fifth to £32.5 million in the year to February 28

Bloomsbury defies expectations again with £361m sales, boosted by academic acquisition and dividend hike(Image: Jonathan Brady/PA Wire)

Profit at the illustrious Bloomsbury Publishing, widely recognised for their Harry Potter series, faced a downturn of almost a fifth during its latest fiscal year even though revenues were on an upswing.

The London-listed firm released figures showing a pre-tax profit of £32.5m for the year up to 28 February 2025, marking a dip from the £41.5m secured in the prior year, as reported by .

Yet, this was still an improvement on the £25.4m reported two years ago.

New data submitted to the London Stock Exchange indicates that Bloomsbury's turnover climbed from £342.7m to £361m over the year, thus outperforming market predictions.

In response to the performance, Bloomsbury's board, which publishes titles from Sarah J. Maas and others, is proposing a final dividend of 11.54p, making the total yearly dividend 15.43p per share, a 5% hike from the previous year.

Nigel Newton, founder and CEO, credits the impressive results to the robustness of the firm’s diverse "portfolio of portfolios" approach and signalled major advances in the Bloomsbury 2030 strategy.

"We are making meaningful strides across all pillars – growth, portfolio and people," shared Newton with investors earlier on Thursday.

These outcomes have been bolstered by the strategic $63m acquisition of American academic publisher Rowman & Littlefield last year, which contributed an additional £19.8m in revenue and fuelled a 12% boost in non-consumer division revenues to £105m.