The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksHIBU.L Share News (HIBU)

  • There is currently no data for HIBU

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Sunday newspaper round-up: ENRC, Severn Trent, Enterprise Inns

Sun, 26th May 2013 16:50

The largest investor in ENRC has fallen in behind a 3.3bn pound takeover bid for the beleaguered FTSE 100 miner, all but ensuring its success despite protests from independent directors. Kazakhmys, a rival resources group with operations in Kazakhstan, has signalled privately that it will vote its 26 per cent stake in favour of the controversial offer tabled by ENRC's three oligarch founders and the Kazakh government, even if the terms are not improved, The Sunday Times reports.A consortium of British and international funds is planning a second bid for Severn Trent before the June 11th "put up or shut up" deadline. The precise terms of the original offer have not been disclosed, but it is expected a revised offer is likely to be in the region of between £20 and £21, valuing it just shy of £5bn. The sources, however, cautioned that any new offer would only be a slight increase as the regulated business is about to enter a price review with Ofwat, The Sunday Telegraph writes.Pub companies have threatened to sue the Government in European courts if it presses ahead with plans to reform the industry. They have warned that plans to force them to loosen their control over pub tenants - known as the beer tie - will destroy jobs and lead to more pub closures. Ted Tuppen, Chief Executive of Britain's biggest pub landlord, Enterprise Inns, said the proposals in a consultation document from the Department for Business 'would be subject to legal challenge' unless the Government backed down from its current stance, The Financial Mail on Sunday says.China's Premier has waded into an intensifying trade dispute with Europe, warning that EU investigations into Chinese-made solar panels and telecommunications equipment would backfire by hurting European consumers. "The cases over these two types of products will hurt Chinese industries, business and jobs and also damage the vital interests of European users and consumers," Li Keqiang said en route to Berlin on Sunday, during his first foreign trip since becoming premier. "We express firm opposition," The Financial Times cites him as having said. Wall Street vulture funds are homing in on a dramatic takeover of the struggling owner of Britain's Yellow Pages. They will seize control of the loss-making phonebook publisher, now called Hibu, in a deal that will wipe out shareholders and more than halve its £2bn-plus debt pile. Under the debt-for-equity deal that is expected to be unveiled within weeks, 300 creditors, which include hedge funds, banks and bondholders, will become the new owners of the former FTSE 100 giant, The Sunday Times says. Britains´s water industry is braced for another foreign raid as overseas investors jostle to buy a stake in the company that supplies 4.7m people in Yorkshire. A clutch of international suitors ? including the fund that manages the oil wealth of Abu Dhabi, and Goldman Sachs, the Wall Street banking giant ? are weighing up bids for a chunk of Kelda, the owner of Yorkshire Water. The investors behind Kelda, which include the infrastructure arms of both Citi, the American bank, and M&G, the British fund manager, have put a 30% stake in the company up for sale. It is worth between £1bn and £1.5bn, according to The Sunday Times.A proposed clampdown on tax avoidance by UK-based hedge funds, private equity firms and other investment management partnerships could raise tax bills by as much $20bn a year, industry figures believe. HM Revenue & Customs last week launched a consultation document designed to tackle the disguising of employment relationships through limited liability partnership structures and the manipulation of profit and loss allocations to achieve tax advantages, The Financial Times reports.The co-founder and former Chairman of Betfair has said that the online betting exchange could consider restructuring its balance sheet in the wake of its rejection of a £985m offer from a consortium led by private equity firm CVC. Speaking to The Sunday Telegraph, the former JP Morgan trader said of Betfair: "This business is making a lot of money, has a lot of cash on its balance sheet, and doesn't have any debt. "Potentially, capital structure is, I think, something you might look at" if you were running the business, he continued.BP, Shell and Statoil have been named in a proposed class action lawsuit over alleged oil price rigging, following the launch of a European Commission investigation into the oil giants. Chicago-based commodities trader Prime International Trading named the companies in a suit on Wednesday, accusing them of misreporting trades for the Brent oil benchmark. It is seeking civil damages, arguing that it would have its conducted trades based on the inaccurate prices. The EC is investigating whether the companies colluded to distort the benchmark of oil and other products by reporting distorted prices to agency Platts for more than a decade, according to The Sunday Telegraph.The Co-op Bank is considering using a new type of share issue to boost its capital levels once talks with the regulators are complete. The bank, which was recently downgraded by credit rating agency Moody's amid fears it could not hit the new capital targets, is planning to meet the immediate needs for extra capital by selling its life and general insurance businesses. But it is thought that the mutually owned organisation is also considering issuing a new type of investment called core capital deferred shares, in future. They combine the capital-raising features of ordinary shares, but do not have the same ownership rights, The Financial Mail on Sunday says.Michael O'Leary, the outspoken Ryanair boss who has harboured dreams of owning Aer Lingus, will be told this week to sell around half of the budget airline's stake in Ireland's national flag carrier. Ryanair has long pursued Aer Lingus, and has a 29.8% shareholding, worth about £210m. However, attempts by Mr O'Leary, pictured, have been knocked back three times at European level, most recently in February, while the Competition Commission (CC) is due to issue its initial findings into whether holding such a significant minority stake in a rival distorts the airline market, The Independent on Sunday reports. AB
More News
27 Nov 2013 16:15

Hibu Appoints Deloitte As Administrators In Restructuring

Read more
29 Oct 2013 11:54

Hibu Earnings Decline While Capital Structure Talks Continue

Read more
23 Oct 2013 11:48

Hibu To Call General Meeting On Board Structure, Proposed Financial Restructuring

Read more
17 Oct 2013 10:47

Hibu Chairman, CEO To Step Down Once Debt Restructuring Completes

Read more
10 Jun 2013 06:29

Monday newspaper round-up: Severn Trent, Japanese growth, BAE...

The international consortium bidding for Severn Trent could walk away from the deal following a number of rejections by the utility group over recent weeks, The Times says, citing sources close to the matter. "If the Severn Trent board does not engage, no further proposals will be made," sources tol

Read more
23 May 2013 06:54

Thursday newspaper round-up: Ocado, UK Mail, Hibu...

The Telegraph says that Waitrose head Mark Price is refusing to meet with Ocado chief Tim Steiner after the online grocery group agreed to help rival Morrison develop an online shopping website. According to The Times, British parcel delivery group UK Mail is close to signing a deal with the Depart

Read more
13 Mar 2013 06:47

Wednesday newspaper round-up: RBS, Tesco, hibu...

The Independent says that Royal Bank of Scotland is to raise a further half a billion pound by offloading a further holding in its listed insurance division, Direct Line. The bank announced late last night that it would be selling a 15.3 per cent stake in the insurer, leaving it with a 49.9 per cent

Read more
12 Feb 2013 11:17

Hibu's shares soar on profits rise

Shares in digital services provider Hibu soared above 36 per cent Tuesday after the group posted rise in profits during the last quarter. Profits before tax increased by £2.0m to £19m for the last three months of 2012, driven by a 31% surge in digital services revenues to £345m. The division cont

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.