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Sunday newspaper round-up: Virgin Atlantic, Tesco, RBS

Sun, 02nd Dec 2012 17:44

America´s largest airline is plotting to take control of Virgin Atlantic after making a secret approach to the British carrier's big Asian shareholder. Delta Air Lines is understood to have offered to buy Singapore Airlines' 49 per cent holding in Virgin. If it succeeds, Delta's European partner, Air France-KLM, may then buy part of Sir Richard Branson's 51 per cent stake, which would see him relinquish control of the airline for the first time. Air France-KLM's involvement is dictated by aviation rules, which say European airlines must be controlled by European nationals. Branson may retain a stake, and would, together with the Franco-Dutch group, hold more than 50 per cent. However, the sources cautioned that the talks were at an early stage, and it was not certain a deal would be reached. Singapore paid 600m pounds for its stake in 1999, The Sunday Times reports. Tesco will warn this week that sales in the UK have slipped into decline again, provoking new question marks about chief executive Philip Clarke's £1bn turnaround plan and the strength of the UK economy. In the first half of the year, Tesco reported its first fall in profits since 1994 as the decline in UK sales was coupled with pressure on the retailer's international businesses. In the third-quarter results on Wednesday, Deutsche Bank is forecasting that Tesco will say like-for-like sales in Asia fell 1.9% as it battles legislation in South Korea that is forcing supermarkets to close at the weekend. In the US, Tesco's Fresh & Easy business is set to report a 4% growth in like-for-like sales, but this will be a slowdown on the 6.9% in the second quarter and spark new doubts about the future of the division, The Sunday Telegraph says. Royal Bank of Scotland is expected to shrink its investment bank even further after refusing to cave in to pressure to sell its American business. Sir Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England, launched another blistering attack on banks last week, accusing the sector of hiding up to £60bn of bad debts. He is demanding that all banks raise more capital reserves. City regulators have been pressing RBS to consider a sale of Citizens, its American retail banking business, which could be worth up to £10bn. RBS, however, has said it cannot find a buyer quickly enough to meet the timetable of the new capital demands. As an alternative, the bank is believed to be examining ways to trim capital-intensive areas of its investment bank, writes The Sunday Times. Centrica is weighing a return of up to £500m cash to its shareholders early next year, The Sunday Telegraph has learnt. The plan, most likely to take the form of a share buyback, is understood to be one of a number of options that could follow withdrawal from a project to build new nuclear plants in the UK. The British Gas owner will announce its full-year results at the end of February, which would be the most likely point for it to review its shareholder returns. By then, it is due to have taken a decision on whether to utilise its 20% option in the EDF-led consortium to build reactors at Hinkley Point in Somerset. Centrica is widely expected to withdraw amid concerns over spiraling costs, with the plant estimated to cost £14bn, and doubts about the attractiveness of returns on the investment. While it has a portfolio of investment options, including further expansion in US markets, investment in UK power generation appears uncertain, The Sunday Telegraph says. George Osborne has admitted that tackling Britain's debt mountain will take longer than hoped, but warned that changing course would be a "complete disaster". The Chancellor's admission, combined with lower growth forecasts expected from the Government's official forecaster next week, means Mr Osborne could be forced to borrow up to £81bn more in the years ahead, and raises the prospect of a further fiscal squeeze. Speaking on the Andrew Marr Show, Mr Osborne said: "It's clearly taking longer to deal with Britain's debt, it's clearly taking longer to recover from the financial crisis than anyone would have hoped, but we've made real progress [...] to go back to the borrowing and the debt and the spending [that Shadow Chancellor] Ed Balls represents would be a complete disaster," according to The Sunday Telegraph. David Ross, the colourful multimillionaire founder of Carphone Warehouse, is at the centre of a row over his 141-year-old family business, the marine supply company Cosalt. Minority shareholders, acting together through various online investor chatrooms, have accused him of attempting to take over the London listed business on the cheap. They have written, as individuals, to the Takeover Panel and the Financial Services Authority, accusing Mr Ross of "abusing his position with a view to personally taking the company private at a ridiculously low price". Mr Ross responded this weekend. He said: "I have spent a year of my life trying to sort out a situation which I always said I would make no money out of," The Independent on Sunday says. A leading buy-to-let mortgage lender that flirted with disaster during the credit crunch is close to becoming Britain's newest bank. Paragon Group is understood to be in exclusive talks to buy Hampshire Trust, a tiny private bank that specialises in lending to solicitors and property developers. If the acquisition goes ahead, Paragon will gain a banking licence for the first time. That would allow the FTSE 250 company to start offering savings accounts to its customers. In 2007 the business came under attack from hedge funds which sold its shares over fears that it could collapse like Northern Rock. Paragon had been at the heart of Britain's buy-to-let boom ? it loaned about one in 10 mortgages that were issued to landlords, The Sunday Times explains. The Bank of England is poised to deliver the first verdict on its flagship scheme to boost lending in the economy tomorrow, amid growing fears of an early flop. Threadneedle Street launched the Funding for Lending Scheme (FLS), which allows financial institutions to access cheap funds in return for maintaining or increasing lending, in August. Some 30 lenders, including all the UK's biggest banks and mutuals except HSBC, signed up. The Bank, which took stock of the banks' lending levels at the end of June, will publish figures on how much participants have increased credit in first three months of the FLS. Despite initial hopes that the scheme would help the financial system to grow net lending by as much as £80bn or 5%, analysts are more pessimistic. Jens Larsen, the chief European economist at RBC Capital Markets, said: "Given that we are just two or three months into the scheme, it is likely to be something more in the order of £10bn," according to The Independent on Sunday. Amazon will tomorrow mark the busiest day of the year for internet retailers with the launch of a new business aimed at the luxury goods market. The strategy will see it go head to head with rivals such as Selfridges and Net-a-Porter with its Premium Store. It will begin selling womenswear brands, including 7 For All Mankind, Pringle, Hudson and Black Orchid.The launch is the culmination of two years' planning and is likely to include menswear ranges at a later date. The store will be found via the Amazon site but developers say it is expected to have a more 'glossy magazine' feel, The Financial Mail on Sunday reports.The luxury handbag brand Mulberry has scrapped plans for new outlet shops to focus on opening full-price only stores as it moves even further upmarket. The Somerset-based group will also develop its clothing line, worn by the Duchess of Cambridge this week, and produce new fashion products to expand its market reach. The brand, which issued a profit warning in October - its second this year - that sent its shares tumbling by more than a fifth, will step up its global store expansion. It is eyeing up new stores in France and Germany and across the US, as well as new Asian stores, The Independent on Sunday says.AB
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2 Sep 2011 06:48

Friday tips round-up: Restaurant Group, Hargreaves Lansdown, Hays

Restaurant Group operates the Frankie & Benny's, Chiquito and Garfunkel's brands. It showed good form in the half year to early July, growing adjusted pre-tax profits by 7.7 per cent to £24.6m. The group also grew its sales on outlets open at least a year by 3%, adding it had continued this momentum

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1 Sep 2011 07:47

Cosalt announces new management

Cosalt appointed a new management team as half year losses nearly tripled and challenging trading continues. The group, which provides lifting services in the UK and Norwegian sectors of the North Sea, named Trevor Sands as chief executive officer and Dolores Douglas as chief financial officer. T

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20 Jan 2011 17:36

Small caps round-up: 1Spatial, Cosalt, Telit Communications

Shares in location-based software company 1Spatial rose as revenue is expected to be ahead of expectations. The group says that the government's spending review resulted in a delay in the awarding of contracts but normal business has resumed and the "pipeline is looking strong." Interim figures will

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1 Nov 2010 16:42

London close: US breathes life back into Footsie

A good early performance from Wall Street helped Footsie snap out of a weak spell to close in positive territory. US shares were boosted by a bigger than expected rise in factory output in October. The Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing index rose to 56.9 last month. Analysts thought

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1 Nov 2010 15:14

London afternoon: Banks and miners lead advance

Footsie pulled out of its late morning slump over the lunch time session to move firmly back into positive territory, though investors are still reluctant to commit too heavily ahead of tomorrow's mid-term US elections, and the quantitative easing decisions expected this week from the Bank of Englan

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1 Nov 2010 13:50

Sector movers: Cosalt hoists general industrials higher

Cosalt leads the general industrials sector higher after the struggling provider of safety equipment to the oil industry confirmed this morning it has received an approach for its marine business. Elsewhere in the sector, Smiths Group is going well on hopes the latest Al Qaeda bomb threat will incr

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1 Nov 2010 12:02

London midday: Footsie subdued after buoyant start

Footsie has failed to rediscover its early-morning buoyancy and sits in the blue by a few points. Among the laggards is Serco. The company, which carries out work for the government such as operating prisons and London's Docklands Light Railway, has taken a knock after it was forced to make a grove

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1 Nov 2010 08:32

London open: Footsie charges higher

High demand for banks and miners got the week off to a good start, offsetting weakness in the outsourcing sector. Banks are going well as trading updates loom. Lloyds Banking Group is getting ready for tomorrow's statement with a 2% jump, while Royal Bank of Scotland and HSBC are also making up gr

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1 Nov 2010 07:31

Cosalt in talks to sell marine business

Cosalt, the struggling provider of safety equipment to the oil industry, confirmed this morning it has received an approach for its marine business. "These discussions are not sufficiently advanced for there to be any certainty that a transaction would be concluded or as to the price and other term

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21 Oct 2010 06:07

Thursday newspaper round-up: Green taxes, Banking taxes, BA

Businesses have condemned an "appalling" £1bn a year green stealth tax that will add 11% to the energy bills of British companies. About 5,000 large and medium-sized companies with bills of more than £500,000 per year will be hit by the new tax. George Osborne, the Chancellor, did not mention the le

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17 Sep 2010 08:19

Cosalt offshore inquiry continues

Oil support and fire services specialist Cosalt expects to complete an inquiry into the problems at its offshore division by mid-October. Mark Lejman, group chief executive, has taken over the running of the offshore division following the suspension of Calum Melville, its previous head. "We are c

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6 Sep 2010 16:28

Cosalt suspends offshore chief

Cosalt, a provider of safety equipment to the oil industry, has lost a quarter of its value after the head of its Offshore division was suspended from day to day duties. The company, which makes things like lifejackets, First Aid gear and fire extinguishers, said Calum Melville had also resigned as

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27 Jul 2010 16:00

UK SMALLCAP ROUNDUP: Scancell To Seek Buyer If Trial A Hit

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27 Jul 2010 14:27

INTERVIEW: Cosalt CEO Sees GBP1.5M Revenue From New JV In 2011

By Iain Packham Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES LONDON (Dow Jones)--Cosalt PLC (CSLT.LN) said Tuesday it expects its new joint venture company--Cosalt wind Energy Ltd--to generate GBP1.5 million of new revenue in 2011, generating a deferred payment of GBP430,000 to APRO. In an interview with Dow

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27 Jul 2010 12:30

UK SMALLCAP ROUNDUP: Argos Resources To Raise GBP22 Mln

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