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

Thu, 16th Dec 2010 06:03

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 Clean Water Act as well as facing unlimited costs and damages caused by the spill, which would include damages to natural resources as well as economic repercussions, reports the Times.Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Atlantic has received several enquiries about potential tie-ups with rival carriers, spanning everything from joint marketing agreements to the possible purchase of a stake. The airline, which is valued by analysts at anywhere between £500m and £1bn, is assessing its market position in the wake of British Airways' £5.8bn merger with Iberia and their transatlantic pact with American Airlines - a deal the Virgin founder bitterly opposed, reports the Telegraph.The man who broke the Bank of England during John Major's sterling crisis nearly two decades ago has emerged as a significant shareholder in Flybe. In the first regulatory investor filings after the £66 million fundraising float by the regional airline, it emerged that George Soros's Quantum Partners has spent more than £7.2 million taking a 3.4 per cent stake in the carrier, the Times writes.Britain's richest charity and one of its most successful investors gave warning yesterday that the country is facing its biggest inflationary threat for 20 years and disclosed that it had abandoned bond investment as a consequence. Wellcome Trust, which has amassed a £14.5bn investment fortune, said that it had sold its last bond in April as it positioned itself for a rise in inflation, says the Times.The row over the €40m (£34m) Allied Irish Banks bonuses deepened today after extraordinary claims that executives of the bank had tried to rush the payments through as the bailout loomed.Irish Times columnist Fintan O'Toole says a source at AIB told him the bonuses were "a looting of the bank by management before the government became involved in the institution," the Guardian reports.George Osborne, the Chancellor, said Britain's bilateral emergency loan to Ireland will not add to Britain's deficit, and will earn £440m for the public coffers. Britain has offered Ireland a loan of £3.25bn as part of its £7bn contribution to an international bailout for the struggling eurozone country, the Telegraph reports. Twitter's latest fundraising has valued the company at $3.7bn, up sharply from the $1bn that the microblogging service was worth a year ago and the latest sign of the sky-high prices private investors are prepared to pay for fast-growing internet companies. The deal also adds one of Silicon Valley's most powerful financiers to Twitter's growing army of backers, with John Doerr, the Kleiner Perkins partner who was also an early promoter of Amazon and Google, leading the capital-raising round, the FT reports.Heinz said it was "disappointed" with the decision by nearly 1,200 workers to hold a 24-hour strike from last night. The Unite trade union said staff would stop production at the food giant's plant near Wigan over the "lousy pay deal on offer from the vastly profitable company". It claimed that the walkout would mean two million fewer cans of Heinz baked beans and soups would be produced, according to the Independent. The City of London yesterday sought to put a more positive sheen on its somewhat tarnished reputation, arguing that Britain's financial services industry last year accounted for more than £1 of every £10 raised by the Treasury in tax. The City of London Corporation, which provides the square mile's local government as well as acting as its cheerleader in chief, said financial services had contributed £53.4bn in the 2009-10 financial year - 11.2 per cent of the total tax take, the Independent reports.
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30 Nov 2009 12:09

London midday: Share prices steady down

UK share prices are stabilising at lower levels after hopes of a continued rebound from the Dubai-inspired shake-out on Thursday were quashed by disappointing UK consumer confidence figures. Figures from market research firm Gfk NOP showed consumer sentiment fell to -17 from -13 in October. Middle

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30 Nov 2009 08:36

London open: Footsie wobbles on Dubai slump

News of heavy selling in the Middle East, which began trading for the first time today following the four-day Muslim holiday of Eid, had markets in retreat Monday. Futures prices had indicated an early 30-point gain for London after Asian markets rallied on expectations the potential fallout from t

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30 Nov 2009 07:02

Allied Irish confirms NAMA participation

Irish banking group Allied Irish Banks has confirmed its participation in the Irish government’s asset acquisition programme. Participation in the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) programme will be voted on at an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) on 23 December. NAMA has yet to specify wh

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30 Nov 2009 06:56

London pre-open: Rally to continue

The recovery from Thursday's Dubai drubbing looks set to continue, with dealers predicting the FTSE 100 will open around 30 points higher. Pre-tax profits were ahead of expectations in the year to September 30 at travel operator Thomas Cook, as the increased ticket prices to cope with falling custo

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18 Nov 2009 07:46

Allied Irish may breach NAMA estimate

Allied Irish Banks' bad debt situation has deteriorated further with the bank now suggesting the impairment write-down on its loans being shunted into the Irish toxic asset insurance scheme (NAMA) may top the government's original estimate of 30%. Previously Allied Irish had said that the 30% figur

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20 Oct 2009 12:32

Broker tips: Xstrata, Autonomy, Irish banks

The third quarter production update from Swiss miner Xstrata contained ‘some solid numbers’ but FinnCap thinks investors will be better off switching to one-time Xstrata merger target Anglo American. FinnCap reckons that Anglo American has a higher quality asset portfolio and should be able to outp

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20 Oct 2009 11:01

Broker snap: Nomura warms to Irish banks

Nomura Securities is prepared to take a chance on the battered Irish banking sector on the assumption that the government’s proposals for its bail-out vehicle, the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA), do not undergo significant changes before implementation. The Japanese broker has upgraded Ban

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18 Sep 2009 06:17

Friday newspaper round-up: Lloyds Banking, BSkyB, African Minerals

Lloyds Banking Group has been forced to abandon its plan to withdraw from the Government's toxic debt insurance scheme after failing to raise enough capital to meet the Financial Services Authority's strict requirements. The decision dashes the hopes of Eric Daniels, chief executive, who wanted a w

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14 Aug 2009 16:17

Allied Irish confirms approach

Allied Irish Bank confirmed it has received interest from a third party to take a minority stake in the Irish bank. The group made the comments after the Irish Times reported that Allied Irish had received an approach from a major bank in Canada. "However any discussions with regard to this matte

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5 Aug 2009 09:58

Allied Irish Bank swings into losses

Allied Irish Bank swung into pre-tax losses for the year and said it expects the operating environment to remain "extremely difficult" in 2009. Pre-tax losses came in at €872m from €1.27bn profit last year as net interest decreased 4% to €1.69m due to lower loans. But with other income of €1bn, wh

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