* John Dixon resigns to take on CEO role at unnamed firm * Food boss Steve Rowe becomes head of general merchandise * Rowe move may make him favourite to be next group CEO * Andy Adcock named interim head of food (Adds detail, background, analyst comment, shares) By Jame
Read moreLONDON, July 16 (Reuters) - John Dixon, the head of Marks & Spencer's non-food division, is to leave Britain's biggest clothing retailer to become chief executive of another firm, M&S said on Thursday. The company said Dixon would step down from the M&S board with immediate effect and leave
Read moreJuly 16 (Reuters) - British retailer Marks and Spencer Group PLC's clothing and other non-food businesses head, John Dixon, has quit the retailer, the Financial Times reported on Thursday, citing sources. Dixon, who resigned this week, was dissatisfied with the top management at the company
Read more-- Source link: (http://on.ft.com/1V7vLUt) -- Note: Reuters has not verified this story and does not vouch for its accuracy
Read more* Payments service will be available at 250,000 outlets * UK tap-and-go payments have surged in recent years * Apple Pay says Britain could become its biggest market (Adds detail, Apple executive comments, background) By Eric Auchard LONDON, July 14 (Reuters) - Apple int
Read more(ShareCast News) - Deutsche Bank lifted its price targets on Marks & Spencer and Next as it took a look at the UK clothing retailers. DB said the UK fashion market continues to experience multiple structural trends. "We make detailed analysis and projections of five of these: online, store churn, m
Read more(ShareCast News) - ARM Holdings: JP Morgan downgrades to underweight and lowers target to 900p from 950p; Exane reiterates outperform with 1,400p target. AstraZeneca: Goldman Sachs stays at neutral and Jefferies at buy. British American Tobacco: Nomura starts coverage at buy with 3,920p target. Bu
Read moreLONDON, July 8 (Reuters) - British finance minister George Osborne's plan to boost business by relaxing Sunday trading rules has drawn a divided reaction from the country's big four supermarkets. Under current laws, large stores in England and Wales can open for only six hours on a Sunday.<
Read more