Bischoff joins City talkshop July 14, 2008 Chancellor Alistair Darling is to chair a working group looking at competitiveness in Britain which will include Citigroup chairman Sir Win Bischoff. The group will meet once a month and will analyse matters affecting the London financial services industry such as the effects of the subprime mortgage meltdown in America which triggered the credit crunch, [...]
Signet moves share listing to New York July 11, 2008 Jewellery giant Signet Group yesterday announced it would move its primary listing to the New York Stock Exchange, as part of a raft of changes to focus its business on the American market. The jeweller, which owns the H Samuel and Ernest Jones chains in the UK, said it hoped to complete the move – [...]
Money can still be made during bear market slump July 9, 2008 Even as the market yesterday dipped its toe into official bear territory, there’s still money to be made. Equities may be falling out of favour but currencies, commodities and good old-fashioned cash are still in demand as investments likely to weather the current financial storm. “Depending on your time scale, banking stocks look cheap if [...]
Apprentice boss Sugar to quit Amstrad July 3, 2008 Sir Alan Sugar, the entrepreneur and star of the BBC reality TV show The Apprentice, has stepped down as chairman of Amstrad, the electronics firm he founded at the tender age of 21. Though Sir Alan, now 61, said the move had been “planned for a while”, the self-made multi-millionaire is adamant he is not [...]
Goldenport plans £220m LSE float November 3, 2005 Greek shipping line Goldenport said it plans to raise £80m through an initial public offering on the London Stock Exchange to buy more ships and pay off debt. Analysts put its market value at around £220m. A spokesman for Goldenport said that it plans to issue its prospectus and float on the LSE’s main market [...]
LSE bidders given the green light November 2, 2005 The Competition Commission cleared the way for European bourse operators Euronext and Deutsche Börse to launch independent bids for the London Stock Exchange yesterday. After a seven-month inquiry, the Commission said both Germany’s Deutsche Börse and Paris-listed Euronext could bid, but only if they complied with strict conditions. Those conditions relate to the watering down [...]
Killing the cure October 28, 2005 Some say British drugs companies should be able to profit in order to reinvest in newer drugs for the greater good. Some say their profits come on the back of scientific fraud. It is perhaps one of the great puzzles of British business. As a nation we spend less on medicines than our European neighbours, [...]
Giant laid to its rest October 26, 2005 With the rump of Marconi set to be rebranded as telent, Laurie Laird looks at what the future might hold in store for a once-great telecoms company brought to its knees in recent years From the mighty GEC, to Marconi, to Ericsson, to telent. It’s an ignominious end for a once-glorious company. After months of [...]
Airport deal off October 26, 2005 A group controlled by Australia’s Macquarie Bank has walked away from a deal to buy Exeter Airport complaining about the length of the process after the deal was referred to the Competition Commission. The deal collapsed after Macquarie, which formed half of the South West Airports consortium, said that a Commission investigation into the purchase [...]
Marconi boss in £9m windfall October 26, 2005 Marconi CEO Mike Parton is £8.8m richer after Ericsson bought his company for £1.2bn. Ericsson is buying the bulk of Marconi, the former GEC, once the country’s biggest private employer. The remainder of the business — the British services operation — will be spun off into a new company, telent, which will be listed on [...]