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Tuesday newspaper round-up: HMV, Goldman, JP Morgan...

Tue, 15th Jan 2013 07:00

HMV, the high-street music and DVD store, is set to collapse into administration today, putting 4,000 jobs at risk. The looming failure of the entertainment chain, which was founded in 1921 and has 235 stores, emerged tonight as directors held a last-ditch meeting after failing to reach a new deal with the company's banks. HMV has been battered by the rise of digital downloads and the flight of physical DVD and CD sales to the internet. [The Times]George Osborne is facing pressure to take action in the Budget on bank bonuses after it emerged that Goldman Sachs is considering delaying big payouts to UK staff until after the 50p top rate of tax is abolished in April. The bank is looking at pushing back the payout date for deferred bonuses awarded in shares in 2009, 2010 and 2011 until after April 6 when the top rate of income tax drops to 45p. This mirrors behaviour at the turn of the the year, when Goldman Sachs organised payments to staff on the US on December 31, amid fears the fiscal cliff negotiations would rise personal taxation rates. [The Times]US regulators on Monday night ordered JP Morgan to improve its control functions after multimillion-dollar losses on trading positions. After the losses, which eventually reached $6bn (£3.7bn), were first announced by the US bank in May, it became known as the "London Whale" incident and was said to have taken place in a trading operation known as the bank's "chief investment office"(CIO).The Financial Services Authority said it had referred the matter to its enforcement division as regulators in the US ordered the Wall Street bank to strengthen its internal systems and controls. The FSA, the City regulator, said: "In addition to its extensive supervisory agenda, the FSA is continuing to conduct a formal enforcement investigation into the trading losses. Conclusions will be reached in the enforcement investigation in due course and any further appropriate action determined at that time". [The Guardian]Up to 1,000 independent forecourts could be "wiped out" by 2017 as they lose custom to new supermarket petrol stations, the Petrol Retailers' Association (PRA) has warned. An average of 40 super-market forecourts were granted planning permission each year since 2009, a study by Christie & Co on behalf of the trade body found. Steve Rodell, head of retail at Christie & Co, said: "If applications continue at the same rate, and there is no reason to believe that will not be the case, there will be another 160 supermarket sites by the end of 2016." [The Telegraph]The European Commission has concluded that China is providing illegal subsidies to its steel manufacturers, paving the way for European companies to seek higher import tariffs on a wide range of Chinese products. The EU executive arm said Beijing was helping makers of organic coated steel - used in construction and to make household appliances - to obtain materials at below market prices, according to a report obtained by the Financial Times.[Financial Times]An influential cross-party committee of MPs accused the Government of environmental hypocrisy for refusing to push for a moratorium on drilling for oil and gas in the Arctic. Two weeks after Shell reignited concerns about the safety of Arctic exploration when its offshore Alaskan rig Kulluk ran aground, the Government rejected a call by the Environmental Audit Committee for a blanket ban on drilling around the North Pole. Joan Walley, who chairs the committee, said: "A few years ago the Prime Minister rode with huskies in the Arctic to demonstrate his commitment on environmental issues, but now he is being asked to protect that pristine wilderness for real he has refused to take a lead on the issue." [The Independent]Abu Dhabi's national oil company has set a North Sea record by delivering first oil from the Cormorant East field to the east of Shetland just 85 days after it was discovered. Taqa Bratani operates the Cormorant East well and the nearby North Cormorant platform, from where the oil will be pumped to the Sullom Voe terminal on Shetland. The discovery was made in October and its name was subsequently changed from the Contender exploration well to the Cormorant East production well. Taqa entered the British sector of the North Sea in 2009 after buying assets from BP, including the Brent system, which delivers oil from 20 fields to Sullom Voe. [The Scotsman]BC
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1 Mar 2011 14:53

London afternoon: Hard going for Footsie

It's proving a struggle in London with not long to go until the close, as Wall Street fails to inject much excitement and miners either see gains trimmed or disappear completely. Aerospace and vehicles engineer GKN has few friends. It bounced back into the black last year as all divisions bar aeros

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1 Mar 2011 12:07

London midday: FTSE 100 gives up gains

The top share index is flat after giving up early gains, while company updates in the FTSE 250 have sparked big moves in both directions. Capita is the best performer in the FTSE 100 after the outsourcing group said it was in talks with Zurich about performing some administrative tasks for the ins

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1 Mar 2011 08:50

London open: Miners lift Footsie

Overnight gains on Wall Street and an improvement in Asia this morning have propelled London higher first thing Tuesday. Copper miners Antofagasta and Kazakhmys are the best performers so far. CD and computer games retailer HMV has issued another profits warning and begun talks with its banks abou

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1 Mar 2011 07:36

London pre-open: Footsie to retake 6,000

Overnight gains on Wall Street and an improvement in Asia this morning look set to propel London higher first thing Tuesday. News that billionaire investor Warren Buffett is on the lookout for major acquisitions helped push the Dow Jones up 95 points yesterday. The FTSE 100 is expected to react

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1 Mar 2011 07:05

Chairman goes as HMV warns again

Robert Swannell has stepped down as chairman of HMV after the CD and computer games retailer issued another profits warning and admitted it will probably breach some of its loan covenants. The former investment banker, who took the chairman's seat at Marks & Spencer just two months ago, is finding

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20 Jan 2011 06:15

Thursday newspaper round-up: BP, oil price, HMV

Some of Russia's richest oligarchs have warned of possible legal action against BP over its £10 billion share swap with Rosneft. Stan Polovets, chief executive of the Alfa-Access-Renova consortium that is BP's 50-50 joint venture partner in TNK-BP, told The Times that his company had asked BP to han

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19 Jan 2011 16:40

London close: FTSE 100 dives in late trading

What started as a sluggish day turned into a bit of a bloodbath with the top share index plummeting ahead of the close. Stocks fell in the US after bank Goldman Sachs' net earnings slumped 38% in 2010 due to a substantial fall in profit in the final quarter Here, publishing giant Pearson was the t

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19 Jan 2011 14:05

London afternoon: Losses trimmed

Share prices picked up a tad over the lunch time period, but fallers still outnumber risers by more than two to one among FTSE 100 constituents. Publishing giant Pearson is the top blue-chip performer after the FT owner said 2010 earnings will be ahead of previous guidance, as all of its major busi

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19 Jan 2011 12:01

London midday: FTSE 100 falls back despite cheery updates

The top share index is still in the red despite well-received company updates, with downbeat news from the retail sector weighing on sentiment. Publishing giant Pearson leads the pack after the FT owner said 2010 earnings will be ahead of previous guidance, as all of its major businesses sustained

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19 Jan 2011 09:26

HMV shares fall after credit insurance blow

Further question marks over the viability of HMV's business have been raised after suppliers to the CD and DVD retailer had their credit insurance, which would protect them in the event of HMV going bankrupt, withdrawn. The news sent shares in HMV sharply lower and prompted HMV to claim that it sti

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19 Jan 2011 06:34

Wednesday newspaper round-up: Banks, Inflation, Tesco...

Sir John Vickers will use a speech on Saturday to make clear that big banks are mistaken if they believe his government-appointed Commission on Banking will leave them intact. In a sign that he is determined to tackle the "too big to fail" agenda, Sir John is expected to outline a range of ways in

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5 Jan 2011 16:44

London close: Strong start to 2011 continues

An afternoon rally helped the FTSE 100 build on yesterday's strong start to the year and stay at levels not seen since the first half of 2008, well in advance of the global economic crash. The turnaround in fortunes was inspired by some strong US jobs data, with payroll processor ADP reporting a re

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5 Jan 2011 14:04

London afternoon: Footsie back above 6,000

Footsie has scrambled back above 6,000 over the lunch time session though the blue-chip index remains slightly lower on the day. Miners remain a drag on the index, with the likes of Antofagasta, Anglo American, BHP Billiton and Kazakhmys falling back in line with softer metals prices. Retailers

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5 Jan 2011 12:07

London midday: Shares give back some gains

The FTSE 100 is firmly in the red after yesterday's strong gains amid weakness in the mining and retail sectors. With metals prices falling back following a strong run recently, miners such as Antofagasta, BHP Billiton and Kazakhmys are weak. Retailers are in focus, with Next one of the top riser

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5 Jan 2011 08:56

London open: Blue chips open lower

London has opened weaker, continuing the softer trend seen towards the end of yesterday's session with retailers and food groups under pressure. The snow lost Next an estimated £22m of full price sales in the run-up to Christmas - about 2.2% of the season's total sales - although the high street fa

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