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Monday newspaper round-up: Barclays, JJB Sports, National Express

Mon, 12th Oct 2009 06:24

Barclays is planning to spin off a £4bn portfolio of complex credit assets as the bank presses ahead with a process to clean up its balance sheet and ease shareholder concerns over its investments.The bank is looking at a deal to shift up to £4bn of the assets off its balance sheet in an echo of a similar transaction it undertook last month with a £12.3bn portfolio, people familiar with the matter said. That deal involved a team of 45 Barclays staff, led by Stephen King, head of principal mortgage trading, leaving the bank, the FT reports.A fire sale of public assets will be announced by Gordon Brown today to help cut the Government's mounting deficit. The Tote, the Dartford crossing, the student loan book, the Channel Tunnel rail link and the Government's stake in Urenco, which enriches uranium for nuclear power stations worldwide, will all be offered to private bidders in the next two years, in an attempt to raise £3bn, the Independent reports.A funding package worth up to £1bn to help Britain to build the world's first "clean coal" power station could be delayed by the Government after E.ON's decision to freeze plans for a new coal plant at Kingsnorth in Kent for up to three years. In an interview with The Times, Paul Golby, the chief executive of E.ON UK, said that the Government had agreed to retain Kingsnorth in a competition for the funding, even though it would now be impossible for the project to meet a key deadline.The embattled retailer JJB Sports last night insisted that its plans for a £100m cash call were "back on track" after a weekend of turmoil thanks to lurid - and false - reports about its chairman's finances that swept through the City. The cash call - suspended on Friday - could be relaunched as soon as today as the company's brokers worked furiously to shore up support, which was shaken by the rumours that began to spread on Thursday night, the Independent reports.General Motors is increasingly concerned about the stalemate in negotiations on Opel and Vauxhall's future and has kept alive plans to keep its European operations or sell them to another party. In a sign that the deal could still collapse, GM has said it wants to see progress on talks with European governments about funding and job cuts by the end of the week, according to sources close to the talks, the Telegraph reports.Spectacular profits and punishing losses will affect sharply the share prices of the big banks on Wall Street when they report their third-quarter figures this week. Lenders with strong share-trading businesses are expected to shine and those burdened by bad consumer and commercial loans will suffer, in what analysts term the "bifurcation" of the banking sector in the United States, the Times reports.The Spanish-led consortium bidding for National Express is likely to ask for more time to perform due diligence before making a formal offer. The deadline for the bid, worth £765m, expires at 5pm on Friday. A Takeover Panel ruling had already extended the "put up or shut up" deadline from September 11, the FT reports.A flagship government anti-smoking scheme that would ban Britain's shops from displaying cigarettes would be "unenforceable", according to one of the country's leading QCs. However, in advice drawn up for the Tobacco Manufacturers' Association (TMA), Lord Pannick, QC, has raised the prospect of a legal challenge, the Times reports.British Sky Broadcasting will this month launch Sky Songs, its long-awaited digital music service designed to compete with music services such as iTunes and Spotify. The broadcaster has agreed deals with the four major music labels, EMI, Sony Music Entertainment, Universal and Warner Music, as well as a number of independent labels to access their back catalogues and new releases, the FT reports. The Financial Services Authority has actively discouraged up to 10 European banks from establishing branches in London over fears about their stability, according to senior sources at the regulator. The FSA, which is not allowed to stop European banks from setting up shop in the City under EU law, has been placed in a difficult position as it attempts to protect British customers from vulnerable institutions, the Telegraph reports.Citigroup is to be fined over derivatives transactions that were partly designed to help foreign clients avoid taxes on dividends in a move that could herald a wider crackdown against Wall Street banks that used similar strategies. The $600,000 fine by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, which oversees broker-dealers, comes after the US authorities hardened their stance on offshore tax operations with a series of actions over the past few months, the FT reports.Blackstone, the world's largest buy-out firm, is planning to list up to eight companies it owns and sell at least five others, marking a reversal of its pessimistic view of the global economy and financial markets. Steve Schwarzman, Blackstone's founder, told investors in a letter sent on Friday: "We see the world changing once again. At least for private equity, the worst is behind the industry," the FT reports.
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8 Feb 2013 14:45

UPDATE 1-Former JJB boss Jones charged over misleading market

* David Jones charged at Leeds Magistrates Court * Case to go to Crown Court * Jones chaired JJB Sports Jan. 2009 to Jan. 2010 * Jones is former boss of clothing retailer Next LONDON, Feb 8 (Reuters) - David Jones, one of Britain's best-known retail bosses, has been charge

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24 Sep 2012 12:15

London midday: Miners lead the fallers

Today's morning session has started the week off in much the same way as the weather has: gloomily. Investor sentiment has been knocked by renewed concerns over the single currency region following France and Germany's failure to agree a schedule for initiating shared oversight of the region's ban

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24 Sep 2012 09:03

JJB Sports shares suspended

Shares in JJB Sports were suspended this morning as the firm headed towards administration. The retailer had been searching for a buyer after it failed to raise the funds it needed to attempt a turnaround of the business. The firm said it had received offers to acquire certain of or substantially

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18 Sep 2012 16:50

London close: Late rally fizzles

A late rally which briefly looked like it might see Footsie venture into positive territory for the first time all day was nipped in the bud right at the death. Equities had a dull but fretful day, which started with concerns over China becoming involved in a trade war with the US and a military wa

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18 Sep 2012 14:47

Irish eyeing JJB Sports

Ireland's biggests sports shop chain could be looking to expand over the Irish Sea through the acquisition of cash-strapped JJB Sports. Sky News reports that Stafford Group, a family-owned private company which owns the Lifestyle Sports chain in Ireland, is among those companies in the running to b

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18 Sep 2012 12:06

London midday: Stocks pare losses after in-line macro data

Inflation data was in line with forecasts while the Spanish debt auction went as well as could be expected, prompting London equities to claw back some of the losses seen in early trading The Consumer Prices Index (CPI) measure of inflation dropped to 2.5% in August, down from 2.6% in July, helped

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16 Sep 2012 17:21

Sunday newspaper round-up: Regulation, Sun King, BAE

A former chairman of the Federal Reserve has warned that regulation in the UK may have gone too far in its efforts to separate high-street banks from their high-risk investment arms. Paul Volcker claimed the UK's proposals to ringfence retail banks from their speculative trading divisions go even fu

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30 Aug 2012 11:18

Broker tips: Kazakhmys, Antofagasta, Admiral...

Jefferies now prefers Antofagasta over copper peer Kazakhmys and has downgraded its rating for the latter from 'buy' to 'hold'. "Our preference this year for shares of Kazakhmys over shares of Antofagasta has been based entirely on relative valuations (Kaz is much cheaper). However, after reviewing

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30 Aug 2012 09:46

Broker snap: Little value left in JJB, says Charles Stanley

Charles Stanley reckons that troubled sports retailer JJB Sports will likely follow in the path of High Street shop Blacks Leisure which went into administration and was sold earlier this year. The company put itself up for sale on Thursday after having failed to raise the funds needed to attempt a

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30 Aug 2012 09:35

Thursday broker round-up

Admiral: Nomura keeps buy rating and 1,300p target. Antofagasta: Jefferies raises target from 1,050p to 1,200p, hold rating kept. APR Energy: Investec upgrades from hold to buy, target cut from 1,100p to 950p. Cape: Investec maintains buy recommendation and 300p target. Consort Medical: N+1 Brew

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30 Aug 2012 07:47

JJB Sports on the block after funding talks fail

Struggling sportswear chain JJB Sports has put itself up for sale after it failed to raise the funds it needed to attempt a turnaround of the business. It warned investors that debt levels meant any purchase could still mean shares would become worthless. In July the company announced that a deter

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15 Aug 2012 16:28

Dick's Sporting Goods scores own goal with JJB stake

JJB shares lost a fifth of their value on Wednesday after one of its biggest shareholders wrote off its investment in the struggling sports retails with an impairment charge. US-based Dick's Sporting Goods, which only made its £20m investment five months ago, blamed its decision on the company's o

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6 Aug 2012 09:52

Invesco wants to avoid penalties in JJB saga

US fund manager Invesco is tired of waiting for a turnaround at JJB Sports and is preparing a move to protect its investment in the struggling sportswear retailer, the Sunday Times claims. The group has tabled a proposal to buy JJB Sport's outstanding debt from Lloyds Banking Group. The scheme, whi

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5 Aug 2012 15:20

Sunday newspaper round-up: RBS, Tesco, HMV

One of Brazil's biggest banks is plotting a bid for the prized American business of Royal Bank of Scotland. Itau Unibanco is eyeing a move for Citizens, the Rhode Island-based retail bank built up through a series of acquisitions by Fred Goodwin, the former RBS chief executive. Citizens has more tha

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30 Jul 2012 14:28

Lingerie specialist is interim CEO at JJB

JJB Sports, the struggling sportswear retailer which shucked off its Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Keith Jones last Friday, has announced retail veteran Beverley Williams as Jones's interim replacement. Williams, who has spent more than 25 years in senior executive positions in the retail trade, wi

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