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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 Oct 2010 15:05

Allied Irish appoints HSBC veteran

Trouble Irish bank Allied Irish , has appointed ex-HSBC director David Hodgkinson as its new interim executive chairman. Hodgkinson will head the group until the appointment of a Group Chief Executive. Previously, he had been Group Chief Operating Officer for and Member of the Group Management Boar

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6 Oct 2010 07:53

Allied Irish goes ahead with M&T sale

Allied Irish Banks (AIB) has started the process to sell its 22.4% interest in America's M&T Bank by way of a public offering, putting paid to Santander's plan to buy the stake. Institutional investors will be given the chance to snap up 26.7m contingent mandatory exchangeable notes, which can be c

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30 Sep 2010 08:16

Irish bank bailout bill grows

Bailing out the ailing bank Anglo Irish could cost as much as €34bn (£29bn) Ireland's central bank has said. While the figure is how much the central bank envisages the government having to pay to keep the nationalised lender afloat in a worst case, or 'stress' scenario, it would still cost €29.3bn

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29 Sep 2010 15:20

Sector movers: Ireland worries hit banks again

Banks are under pressure as worries over the European debt situation continue to plague the markets. Ireland is in the spotlight again amid speculation that that the cost of bailing out the nationalised bank Anglo Irish could rise to as much as €30bn (£25m). Unsurprisingly, Irish banks listed here

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23 Sep 2010 16:40

London close: Late rally trims losses

London staged a last hour rally but didn't rise by enough to eliminate losses sparked by a weak start on Wall Street. News that Brazilian oil company Petrobas will launch a world record $78bn rights issue helped other oil companies. BP, Shell and Cairn all picked up near the close. Expectation t

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23 Sep 2010 12:58

Sector movers: Irish banks under the cosh

Irish banks are sharply lower today as economic worries continue to plague the former Celtic tiger. New figures today show the debt-stricken country's economy shrank by between 1% and 2% between April and June. Allied Irish Banks is down 8% and Bank of Ireland is 6% lower. British banks are also u

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13 May 2010 13:04

Ireland still a challenge for Allied Irish

Trading conditions have remained challenging this year, particularly in Ireland, the bank Allied Irish said in an update, but conditions have improved in Britain. In the Republic of Ireland division, bad debt charges in the first quarter were at a similar level to those of the same period the previ

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31 Mar 2010 07:49

Bank of Ireland agrees to €2.7bn capital raise

Bank of Ireland says the additional €2.7bn of capital the government has told it to raise will see it through the current recessionary crisis in Ireland as it revealed huge losses for the last nine months of 2009. "The bank believes raising this level of capital would result in its Equity Tier 1 an

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29 Mar 2010 14:30

Allied Irish confirms talks with regulator over capital

Shares in Allied Irish Banks dropped more than 17% after the Irish banking group confirmed it is in discussions with the financial regulator in order to agree its capital requirements. The group said it will update the market with a further announcement once these discussions have been completed.

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2 Mar 2010 17:07

London close: Insurers left behind

A firm start on Wall Street gave fresh heart to UK equities, with financial stocks to the fore, with the notable exception of insurers. Ahead of results tomorrow Standard Chartered was wanted in a buoyant banking sector while elsewhere in the financial sector property groups such as SEGRO and Hamme

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2 Mar 2010 14:13

London afternoon: Footsie consolidates gains

Leading shares consolidated gains over the lunchtime session though it remains a bad day to be invested in the insurance sector. Insurer Prudential is under the cosh again as investors bale out ahead of an expected monster cash call to finance the group's acquisition of AIG's Asian assets. RSA In

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2 Mar 2010 12:08

London midday: Banks bounce back

Although base metal miners have reversed course and are now heading south the FTSE 100 index has added to early gains, helped by a surge in interest in banking shares. Ahead of results tomorrow Standard Chartered is leading the banking sector higher. Part-nationalised lenders Royal Bank of Scotland

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2 Mar 2010 07:07

Allied Irish posts huge loss

Allied Irish Banks slumped to a loss €2.66bn last year as bad debt and loan impairment provisions hit €5.4bn in very tough conditions that it says show no signs of abating. "The outlook and environment remain extremely challenging. There are very significant matters and initiatives including NAMA,

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30 Nov 2009 16:32

London close: Shares drop again in late trading

London's blue chips recovered most of their losses in late afternoon trading and looked like they could be set for a positive finish before turning down again just before the close. Banks such as Lloyds Banking, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered remained nervous about the debt situation

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30 Nov 2009 14:36

London afternoon: Banks pare losses

Leading share prices are still holding steady at lower levels as investors await further developments from Dubai. Banks such as Lloyds Banking, Royal Bank of Scotland and Standard Chartered remain nervous about the debt situation in emirate, though the morning's losses have been pared. HSBC defie

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