Down 78% with a P/E of 6.5, is this a rare chance to buy a cheap UK share?

When looking for cheap UK shares, some of the best bargains can often be found at the bottom of the performance league tables. Indeed, only six FTSE 250 stocks have performed worse than Close Brothers Group (LSE:CBG) over the past five years. Since March 2021, its shares have crashed 78%.
But a recovery is only possible if investors can be convinced that past problems have been resolved. Otherwise, there could be more bad news to come for shareholders. With this in mind, letâs see why this UK merchant banking group has fallen out of favour and examine whether its incredibly low earnings multiple means its stock could bounce back soon.
Under the spotlight
All of the groupâs problems are connected with the industry-wide investigation by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) into the alleged misselling of car loans. Whenever thereâs significant news (good or bad) to report on the issue, the groupâs share price reacts accordingly.
For example, on 10 January 2024, the FCA publicly announced its review. Over the following five weeks, the groupâs shares crashed 61%.
On 1 August 2025, the Supreme Court upheld the groupâs appeal overturning previous judgements made in three cases brought by borrowers. In the words of the company: â[this] determined that motor dealers (acting as a credit broker) do not owe fiduciary duties to their customers.â Over the next seven days, its share price soared 30%.
At the moment, the FCA is consulting on an industry-wide redress scheme. However, Close Brothers says it âdoes not believe the current redress methodology proposed⦠appropriately reflects actual customer loss or achieves a proportionate outcomeâ.
Déjà vu
On Monday (16 March), the groupâs shares tanked 13.9%.
This followed the publication of a report by Viceroy, an âindependent investigative research groupâ, suggesting that Close Brothers is under-estimating the true cost of compensation. It claims the groupâs âexhaustedâ its efforts to sustain its capital base, is selling off subsidiaries, and is suspending its dividend, giving it little financial firepower should the outcome be worse than expected.
Viceroy says the group will have to âat leastâ double its existing provision of £300m. Its research suggests a potential range of outcomes of £572m-£1.232bn. In extreme circumstances, this could lead to a breach of regulatory reserve requirements. Its base case (£999m) âindicates that equity-holders will be substantially wiped out in a restructureâ.
This is serious stuff. But itâs only one opinion. The company responded by saying it âdisagreesâ and explained that its âprovisioning approachâ — which “follows a robust governance process” — is in accordance with international accounting standards.
Latest results
Yesterday (17 March), the group released its results for the six months ended 31 January.
Based on adjusted earnings over the past year, the stockâs trading on a multiple of just 6.5. Remarkably, the groupâs market cap is approximately £1bn lower than its book (accounting) value. At the end of January, its tangible net asset value per share was 870p, compared to a share price at the time of 505p.
On paper at least, it looks like a bargain.
However, given all this uncertainty, it would be too risky for me to take a position. I shall revisit the investment case when things become a little clearer. In the meantime, Iâm going to look at some other interesting opportunities.
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James Beard has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.
