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Friday newspaper round-up: JJB Sports, Euro crisis, John Lewis...

Fri, 24th Dec 2010 06:35

JJB Sports, the beleaguered sports retailer, is poised to announce a £30m fund-raising and the departure of its chairman, to safeguard its future.It is thought that big shareholders, including Harris Associates and the foundation of Bill Gates, are backing the call. John Clare, the chairman, will be replaced by Mike McTighe, formerly of Cable & Wireless, the Independent reports.A powerful end-of-year stock market rally has sent equities to their highest levels since the collapse of Lehman Brothers more than two years ago, with hopes for the US recovery encouraging investors to pull billions of dollars out of bonds. The pre-Christmas rally has propelled leading US and European shares to their biggest December gains in a decade. The FTSE 100 index rose for the fourth straight day, pushing through the 6,000 level on Thursday for the first time since June 2008, though it later fell back to 5,996.07, the FT reports.The cost of default insurance on eurozone bonds has surged to an all-time high on reports that Greece is preparing the way for a sovereign debt restructuring after 2013, with tacit support from the EU authorities. The disputed claim came as Fitch Ratings downgraded both Portugal and Hungary and placed five Greek banks on negative review. Fitch cut Portugal's rating one notch to A+, warning that the economy is caught in a low-growth trap. Plans to cut the structural budget deficit by 4% of GDP next year "will be extremely challenging especially if, as Fitch expects, the economy falls into recession next year", the Telegraph reports.John Lewis reported near-record sales in the last week, apparently untouched by the snow and cold, as rival retailers hope for a last-minute rush today to save their Christmas season. Sales rose 7p% to £120.3m in the week to Saturday, 18 December, only the second time revenue has topped £120m in the department store chain's history. John Lewis shops in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Nottingham and the Sloane Square branch, which is called Peter Jones, all had record weekly sales, the Telegraph reports.Ireland has nationalised its fourth bank after giving up the fight to keep Allied Irish Banks as a shareholder-owned lender.The Dublin Government yesterday secured court approval to inject €3.7 bn (£3.1bn) into the Republic's second-biggest lender by next Friday, taking the taxpayers' stake from 19 to 93%. Anglo Irish Bank, Irish Nationwide Building Society and EBS Building Society have already been nationalised, the Times reports.A bidding war is expected to break out for Australian coal miner Riversdale after Rio Tinto offered A$3.9bn (£2.5bn) for the group in a move that spilt the company's board. Rio offered A$16 a share for Riversdale, which has significant coal assets in Mozambique and South Africa. However, expectations of a rival bidder propelled the shares above the offer price and they closed at A$16.57 in Australian trading. Rio had previously indicated a bid would be at A$15 a share, the Telegraph reports.
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28 Jun 2021 07:44

NatWest sells Irish commercial loan book to AIB for €4.1bn

(Sharecast News) - UK bank NatWest Group said it was selling most of its Irish commercial lending business to Allied Irish Banks as part of its exit from Ireland.

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19 Feb 2021 06:36

NatWest to pull out of Ireland as results beat forecasts

(Sharecast News) - NatWest said it was pulling out of the Republic of Ireland as the bank reported a smaller than expected annual loss and restored its dividend.

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22 Dec 2010 06:02

Wednesday newspaper round-up: Vince Cable, Citigroup, UK banks

Vince Cable was stripped of key roles on the media and telecoms tonight after he told undercover reporters he had "declared war on Rupert Murdoch" and planned to block his efforts to take full control of BSkyB. Dr Cable survived as Business Secretary on the insistence of Nick Clegg. But in a humilia

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16 Dec 2010 06:03

Thursday newspaper round-up: BP, Virgin Atlantic, Flybe

The United States Government filed a civil lawsuit last night against BP and eight other companies implicated in the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion that killed 11 workers and led to America's worst oil spill. The lawsuit would leave the British oil company liable for significant fines under the

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14 Dec 2010 11:39

Allied Irish Banks told to scrap €40m bonus pot

Allied Irish Banks (AIB) has backed down in the row over bonuses it still wanted to pay staff despite being saved by £3bn of Irish taxpayers' money. The lender today confirmed employees will not now share the pot of about €40m (£34m) for work done in 2008 before the financial crisis brought down th

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14 Dec 2010 06:38

Tuesday newspaper round-up: City fees, Stanford, RGI...

Companies should force City investment banks to compete to underwrite their rights issues in an effort to drive down the costs of cash calls, according to a much-awaited report. The report, by the Institutional Investor Council, finds that fees on British capital raisings, which have roughly doubl

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10 Dec 2010 06:33

Friday newspaper round-up: Tote, Sterling, Rolls-Royce...

The former chief executive of Ladbrokes is being tipped as a frontrunner in the race to buy the Tote after saddling up with partners prepared to back a bid of at least £200m. The Times understands that Chris Bell, who left Ladbrokes in January after almost 20 years at the bookmaker, has joined forc

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22 Nov 2010 16:33

Irish banks slide afer bail-out

Worries that the European debt crisis could spread to other countries following Ireland's acceptance of a bail-out sent shares in banks lower Monday. While markets initially moved higher as investors breathed a sigh of relief when the Irish government put an end to lingering uncertainty about accep

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19 Nov 2010 14:56

Allied Irish funding deteriorates

Allied Irish continues to be affected by the problems plaguing Ireland's economy and banking sector, it said in an update today. The bank's funding position has deteriorated as a result of increasingly challenging market conditions in recent months. Debt securities and customer accounts have redu

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18 Nov 2010 16:36

London close: Good day for blue chips

Blue chips had a good day buoyed by the response to General Motor's record breaking US float and hopes for a deal in Ireland. Patrick Honohan, the head of Ireland's central bank, confirmed a loan is likely, with brokers suggesting it could be as much as €85bn, including €20bn to provide support for

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18 Nov 2010 15:28

London afternoon: Stocks extend gains

A positive start by Wall Street has given renewed impetus to Footsie's rise this afternoon. As in Europe, stocks are rising in the US on the hope that a package to take the steam out of the Irish debt crisis is imminent. Patrick Honohan, the head of Ireland's central bank, has confirmed a loan is

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18 Nov 2010 12:05

London midday: Shares buoyant as updates impress

With some kind of resolution to the Irish crisis in sight and many of today's updates impressing the market, shares have moved sharply higher. The Bank of Ireland chief has confirmed a loan is likely with brokers suggesting it could be as much as €85bn, including €20bn to provide support for the co

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12 Nov 2010 17:11

Irish bonds recover on bail out hopes

Having reached around 9.25% on Thursday Irish 10-year bond yields have fallen back as Ireland is in talks with the EU about emergency funding. This was despite earlier denials from the Irish government, which had been saysing an EU rescue would not be needed. Proposals for the rescue package are

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11 Nov 2010 16:53

Irish bond yields rise above 9%

The 10-year Irish bond yield has risen above 9% as Irish bonds fall for the 13th day in a row. Traders continue to offload Irish bonds, concerned over the ability of the country's government to pay its debts. That pushed the difference between the returns investors demand to lend money to the Iris

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