Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksBKIR.L Share News (BKIR)

  • There is currently no data for BKIR

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

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

Fri, 18th Sep 2009 06:17

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 wholesale exit from the asset protection scheme to prevent the taxpayer's stake in the bank rising above 43% and limit the scale of state-aid remedies threatened by European regulators, the Telegraph reports.Shares in Ireland's battered banks sparked into life yesterday as investors digested the terms of the Irish Government's scheme to take billions of euros of bad loans off their books. Bank of Ireland finished the day ahead by 18 per cent at €3.38 (£3) but that looked pedestrian compared to Allied Irish Banks which gained a spectacular 31% to €3.39, the Independent reports.BSkyB will today launch a bitter attack on Ofcom, accusing the regulator of exceeding its legal powers and using flawed analysis to insist that it cuts the price for selling Sky Sports and Sky Movies to rivals. The satellite broadcaster, 39.1% owned by News Corporation, parent of The Times, was last night preparing to file a critical response to Ofcom's consultation on the subject today. The regulator proposed in June that Sky drop the cost of buying Sky Sports 1 or Sky Sports 2 from £13.48 to between £9.41 and £11.24, the Times reports.Britain is in danger of suffering a bout of post-election blues next year, the chairman of the John Lewis Partnership said yesterday. Charlie Mayfield said that while he did not expect a "double dip" ? where the economy escapes recession only to slip back into it again ? there was a danger that consumer spending would suffer after the general election, after which taxes are expected to rise, the Times reports.Lord Levene of Portsoken, the chairman of the Lloyd's of London insurance market, has launched a fierce attack on Lord Turner of Ecchinswell, his counterpart at the Financial Services Authority (FSA), for branding banks "socially useless" and saying that the Square Mile needs cutting down to size. Lord Levene, one of the City's most respected commentators and a former Lord Mayor of London, also criticised the chairman of the regulator for arguing that preserving the competitiveness of the UK's financial sector need not be a main priority, the Times reports. Barack Obama's decision to scrap Bush-era plans for a missile defence shield on Thursday triggered dismay in central Europe and among Republicans on Capitol Hill, amid claims that it amounted to a major security concession to Russia. Unveiling one of the biggest reversals on national security since coming to office, the US president said that he would abandon predecessor George W. Bush's plans for ground-based interceptors in Poland and a related radar site in the Czech Republic, deploying instead a new system that could hit shorter-range Iranian missiles, the FT reports.Lord Mandelson called on Brussels on Thursday night to ensure that Germany's offer of multibillion-euro subsidies to smooth the sale of General Motors' European arm does not begin a "subsidy war", with governments using state aid to protect jobs. The UK business secretary's intervention in the escalating political row over the takeover of Opel and Vauxhall by Magna, the Canadian car parts manufacturer, reflects London's fears that jobs at GM's Vauxhall car plants in Ellesmere Port and Luton will be sacrificed to keep Opel's four German plants going, the FT reports.Colourful City character Frank Timis is at the centre of another controversy after confusing statements about a potential takeover of African Minerals, the company of which he is executive chairman. In a regulatory statement yesterday, African Minerals said it was in "advanced" talks with Eurasian Natural Resources (ENRC) and "several large industrial corporations in Asia" over a potential takeover of the group or an iron-ore partnership. However, ENRC issued a statement just two hours later which appeared to pour cold water on Mr Timis's announcement, the Telegraph reports.British Land is to complete the sale of half of the £2.2bn Broadgate office complex to Blackstone, the private equity group, as it prepares for a fresh push into the UK property market. The UK's second-largest real estate company was last night finalising the cash-and-debt deal, which will see the creation of a joint venture with Blackstone to hold the 32-acre City of London estate, the FT reports.Guy Hands, founder of private equity firm Terra Firma, on Thursday admitted that if the May 2007 auction for music group EMI had happened two weeks later, he would never have bought the company, by far his biggest investment. His comments, at a conference in New York, are the closest Mr Hands has ever come to admitting, albeit implicitly, that he regrets doing the £4bn deal that has attracted worldwide media attention and tied up a third of the capital in his two most recent funds, the FT writes. Google, battling controversy over its plan to put all the world's books online, is now planning to put a little back into the physical world, by letting people create new paperbacks from some of the oldest out-of-print titles. It announced yesterday that two million out-of-copyright titles will be made available for printing at libraries and bookstores that use the "Espresso Book Machine", a special on-site printer that can create a 300-page paperback in five minutes, the Independent reports.
More News
17 Sep 2010 15:12

Sector movers: Balfour and Kier construct gains

On a mostly dull day for stocks, Balfour Beatty is giving the construction and materials sector a lift after a consortium including the contractor was named the preferred bidder for a £250m road scheme in Ireland. The road runs Gort and Tuam in the west of the Republic. Elsewhere in the sector, ho

Read more
11 Aug 2010 08:05

Life no easier for Bank of Ireland

Bank of Ireland posted sharply higher underlying losses as bad debts continue to hurt the embattled Irish bank. Underlying losses in the half year to June rose to €1.25bn, up from €668m. Operating profits fell to €553m from €811m as UK-derived profits almost halved to €122m. Total income was 17%

Read more
9 Jun 2010 07:32

Bank of Ireland get 94% take-up

Bank of Ireland has received a take-up of 94.6% for the rights issue required by the Irish government to boost its capital base. The bank received valid acceptances in respect of 2.97bn shares out of a total 3.14bn on offer, although the €1.72bn cash call is fully underwritten. It also has the bac

Read more
17 May 2010 07:43

Bank of Ireland prices rights at €0.55

Bank of Ireland has set the price of the rights issue to repair its balance sheet at €0.55 with the Irish taxpayer likely to end up with a 36% stake once it completes. Terms of the issue are 3 new shares for every 2, with the price a 64% discount to the last closing price. It will raise €1.72bn. Th

Read more
26 Apr 2010 07:26

Bank of Ireland to raise €3.4bn

Bank of Ireland could see the stake owned by the Irish State rise slightly to 36% after it unveiled a well-flagged €3.4bn capital raising. The proposals include an institutional placing to raise €0.5bn, a placing to the Irish government worth €1.04bn and a rights issue of up to €1.89bn. The fund

Read more
22 Apr 2010 15:41

Bank of Ireland starts capital raising talks

Bank of Ireland has started discussions with a number of potential institutional investors with a view to assessing interest in a capital raise. "Any such transaction may be effected through a combination of a rights issue, a firm placing to institutional investors, a conversion of part of the St

Read more
7 Apr 2010 17:14

Bank of Ireland pension proposals

Bank of Ireland says that it has come up with proposals to reduce the deficit on its defined benefits pension schemes. The bank says that the proposals have the support of its trade unions. Changes relating to future pension increases and how future salary increases qualify for pension will halve

Read more
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

Read more
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

Read more
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

Read more
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

Read more
30 Nov 2009 08:32

Bank of Ireland to join NAMA scheme

Bank of Ireland is to join the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) asset acquisition programme. The bank’s announcement follows hot on the heels of a similar announcement on Monday by its fellow Irish bank, Allied Irish Banks (AIB). As with AIB, the size of Bank of Ireland’s participation in t

Read more
4 Nov 2009 08:18

Update: Bad debts haunt Bank of Ireland

A surge in bad debts sent Bank of Ireland deeper into the red in the first half of its current financial year. The bank, which is in the process of negotiation a deal to shunt €16bn of toxic loans into NAMA, the Irish government insurance scheme, posted losses of €979m in the six months to Septembe

Read more
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

Read more
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

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.