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Sunday newspaper round-up: RBS, Tesco, HMV

Sun, 05th Aug 2012 15:20

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 than 1,500 branches spread across 12 states. A clutch of potential bidders for the business is circling amid increased expectations that RBS will sell it for an estimated 10bn pounds. Itau has become one of the world's most powerful financial institutions on the back of rapid growth in the Brazilian economy. It has a market value of about 45bn pounds. It is keen to buy a deposit-taking bank in America to diversify its funding base and grow its reputation internationally. Citizens is said to be one of three big American lenders on Itau's hit list, along with Sovereign Bancorp, owned by Spain's Santander, and Bank West, owned by Société Générale, according to The Sunday Times.Invesco, an American fund manager with a big presence in Britain, has tabled a proposal to buy JJB Sport's outstanding debt from Lloyds Banking Group. The scheme, discussed at a company board meeting last week, would place Invesco in a powerful position in the battle over the future of JJB, which has been fighting for survival after a slump in sales and a string of profit warnings. The company, which has 180 stores and 4,000 staff, is currently controlled by a small group of shareholders, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which owns 5%. Invesco owns half the shares, but has become frustrated by the slow progress in turning the company round. It thinks owning JJB's loans will allow it to force through a dramatic restructuring, The Sunday Times reports.Bankers at a number of London institutions are looking at Marks & Spencer as a potential £6bn bid target as the retailer's shares have slipped almost 50% since their highs. Bankers at a number of London institutions are looking at Marks & Spencer as a potential £6bn bid target as the retailer's shares have slipped almost 50% since highs in late 2007. The Sunday Telegraph understands that bankers at institutions thought to include Bank of America Merrill Lynch have in recent weeks assessed the possibility of providing debt finance for a speculative bid. Although it is understood neither bank has been mandated to pursue a specific course of action, the fact that they are looking at the retailer indicates the company's predicament. Marc Bolland, M&S's chief executive, has been criticised amid falling sales, particularly in women's wear, and problems in the company's supply chain.Investors in InterContinental Hotels, which is reeling from a price-fixing investigation, hope for better news this week with City analysts betting they may be on track for a $1.5bn (£960m) bonus. That is the amount they could get via extra dividend payments and share buybacks, a move that might also keep activist investor Nelson Peltz happy. The US fund manager recently took a 4.27% stake in IHG. One source of cash is the sale of the flagship New York Barclay hotel, progess on which is expected at the group's half-year results on Tuesday. Last week, the Office of Fair Trading found Holiday Inn-owner IHG had colluded with Booking.com and Expedia to limit discounts. The firms said they did nothing wrong and will challenge the findings, The Independent on Sunday writes.Benny Higgins, chief executive of Tesco Bank, has revealed that he plans to use data from the supermarket's Clubcard loyalty scheme to rate its customers. More than 15m British households are signed up to the Clubcard scheme, making it the most comprehensive database on the country's spending habits.Tesco Bank, which revealed this weekend that it will start selling mortgages tomorrow, is planning to use data culled from grocery bills to judge whether or not to grant a loan. Higgins believes that by tapping into the Clubcard customer base, Tesco Bank could grow to be bigger than HSBC's British business. "One of the things that lies at the heart of what we are as a business is about applying the Tesco DNA to banking," said Higgins. "It's about simplicity, about transparency, about rewarding loyalty. The Clubcard relationship lies at the heart of that, The Sunday Times says.A key shareholder in Xstrata will demand that commodity trader Glencore raises its offer for the FTSE 100 miner despite the company reporting its interim profits have halved this week. The City expects Xstrata to report a slump in earnings over the first six months of the year on Tuesday, as commodity prices have tumbled in the weakening global economic environment. Xstrata will report that profits for the half dropped 50% to $1.4bn (£900m), according to the City's consensus estimates. In contrast Glencore, whose trading activities mean it can profit from commodity price swings, is expected to report later in the month that its own earnings suffered a less steep fall of 37%, to $1.5bn, according to analysts at Liberum Capital. Nonetheless Qatar Holding, Xstrata's second-biggest shareholder after Glencore, will remain firm in its insistence that Glencore must raise its offer from the 2.8 shares on the table for each Xstrata share, handing the miner's investors more of the combined company.The Bank of England will this week join the ranks of forecasters who have cut their outlook for the British economy, with many analysts expecting the Bank to predict zero growth for 2012. The shock 0.7% collapse of gross domestic product in the second quarter, coming after a 0.3% decline in the first quarter and mounting fears about performance in the current quarter, seem sure to force the Bank to abandon its existing forecasts, published in May. The Bank then was looking for 0.5% growth this year and 2.1% next year. Now it is thought that the 2012 forecast will be close to no growth, with the 2013 estimate cut back to about 1.6%. 'The May figures did not always appear so over-optimistic,' said Ross Walker, economist at Royal Bank of Scotland. 'But the Bank seems to have had a tendency over time to assume official growth numbers will always be revised up, and this has not been the case recently.' The new growth figures will come in the Bank's quarterly inflation report, to be published on Wednesday, writes The Financial Mail on Sunday. Tesco Bank chief Benny Higgins has said he will launch the supermarket's long-awaited current account product next year once the Government has followed through its reforms to the banking sector. Higgins said the trigger for launching the accounts would be the introduction of new regulations to make it easier for customers to switch bank accounts. The easier switching plans were recommended by the Independent Commission on Banking and are expected to be implemented in 12 months. 'The market for current accounts is not truly competitive,' he said. 'Only three per cent of bank customers switch every year. The figure is not low because customers do not want to switch, but because the process is too messy and stressful.' A new current account 'redirection service' will be launched in September next year with the aim of providing customers with a seamless switching service and compensation for customers if banks fail to meet the new rules, says The Financial Mail on Sunday.The finance director of HMV is poised to leave the troubled entertainment retailer just days after its chief executive Simon Fox quit. Ahead of the group posting an annual loss, David Wolffe, who joined HMV from ITV Studios in January 2011, is heading for the exit. The executive search firm Russell Reynolds is understood to have been hunting for Mr Wolffe's replacement and an announcement is expected shortly, according to several City sources. The troubled retailer said last Thursday that Mr Fox was departing after a rollercoaster six years that saw the share price collapse from 160p to 3.4p, giving HMV a market capitalisation of just £14.3m. Trevor Moore, the former chief executive of the camera chain Jessops, will lead the retailer from next month, The Independent on Sunday reports.AB
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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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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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