Bloomsbury Publishing (BMY) has been on my watchlist for a while. So I attended the company’s AGM on June 22 as a guest, to try and get a feel whether the £129m market cap company really is an undervalued jewel as the share tipsters on the Investors Chronicle and Daily Telegraph regularly imply. The company, founded in 1986, by Nigel Newton, 59, its long-serving chief executive, made its name and fortune, by discovering JK Rowling’s Harry Potter children’s book series. The story goes that it was Mr Newton’s 8-year-old daughter Alice who gave Ms Rowling the thumbs up. But that was a decade ago, and BMY’s shares, currently trading around £1.75, are a far cry from their 2005 peak of close to £4. Bloomsbury publishes around 2000 books a year,
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