Newspaper Briefing, including 'UK growth to fall and jobs to go' - Daily Telegraph

Newspaper Briefing informs you of what is happening in the news before the market opens. We believe our Newspaper Briefing is an invaluable tool to set up your trading day, therefore giving you an edge. Our Newspaper Briefing is just the start of our trading day at Guardian. We work with our clients to provide them with information and guidance to enhance their trading decisions. Guardian will provide you with an individual service together with the most suitable and expert advice at a fair and reasonable cost. Red tape puts stranglehold on sell-off of Royal Mail: Privatisation of Royal Mail will not begin until at least 2013 and might not even be complete before the end of the Government’s present term, well-placed sources have confirmed. The state-owned national postal service faces months of regulatory issues, all but ruling out any sale, partial or otherwise, next year. ‘Super Mario’ takes charge in Italy: A technocrat dubbed “Super Mario” was installed as Prime Minister of Italy to carry out reforms demanded by the European Union, even as Silvio Berlusconi vowed to remain on the political scene. Mario Monti, a tough former EU Competition Commissioner who earned his nickname by breaking Microsoft’s monopoly, was asked to form a unity government to save Italy — and the Euro — from meltdown. Shortage of housing ‘will force half of Britain to rent’: Half of all households in Britain could be living in rented accommodation within 15 years, according to the country’s largest listed residential landlord. Grainger , which owns residential property assets in Britain worth £2 billion, reports in a survey published that changing lifestyles, economic factors and a lack of new homes are driving a fundamental shift in the British housing market. Top tier law firms stage recovery as small rivals suffer: Britain’s leading law firms are leaving their smaller rivals in the dust as the City’s legal market continues to grapple with the slowdown caused by the financial crisis. Buoyed by their growing international operations and a steady stream of work from big Banks , the U.K.’s largest legal practices achieved profit margins close to the pre-crash peak, according to PwC’s annual survey of the legal market. Take a look at Los Angeles... you are going the same way, Britain told: British cities could be lost in a tangle of rust belts and creeping suburban sprawl unless the Government’s new planning framework is rewritten, a leading architect has warned. Lord Rogers of Riverside said that Bristol and Bath could merge in “one urban sprawl” and London could end up looking like Los Angeles unless Ministers thought again. Newspapers must pay for regulator to answer critics, says complaints Chief: A independent press regulator with teeth and willing to be “mean” is needed to raise standards of journalism and punish newspapers guilty of harassment and gratuitous errors, says the new Chairman of the Press Complaints Commission. Writing in The Times, Lord Hunt of Wirral floats the idea that newspapers should be subject to a statutory levy to fund the new body. ‘We must build our own gadgets to keep growing’: India’s bill for imported electronics could exceed the country’s oil import bill and act as a drain on the economy unless a domestic electronics manufacturing industry can be built, according to an entrepreneur who is a leading adviser to the Indian Prime Minister. “We have lost all of the electronics manufacturing base, whatever little we had,” Sam Pitroda said. “Electronic hardware [imports] will be $400 billion [£248 billion], if we’re not careful, in the next ten to fifteen years. It could be more than oil.” Distraints up fourfold in two years as HMRC gets tough: The number of companies whose assets have been seized for late payment of tax has risen fourfold in the last two years. The number of times when Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs used its powers of “distraint” was 7,004 in the 12 months to April 2011, up from 1,675 in the year to April 2009. Family firms demand less red tape for £1.1 trillion sector: Britain’s family-owned businesses will call on the Government to cut red tape and increase support for a sector that generates an estimated £1.1 trillion of revenues. The Institute for Family Business (IFB) argues in a report that the tax system penalises entrepreneurial families and that 20,000 new jobs could be created if employment rules were relaxed for family firms. Insolvencies rise with council cuts: The number of care home businesses going bust has more than doubled over the past year, as they are hit by local council cutbacks and rising debt. The accountant Wilkins Kennedy said 73 care home companies went into administration in the 12 months to the end of September, up from 35 in the previous 12 months. U.S.-based Saba Capital to set up London office: Saba Capital, the hedge fund launched in 2009 by Boaz Weinstein, an ex-Deutsche Bank proprietary trader and chess master, is opening an office in London as part of its first expansion abroad. The office is to be run by Prakash Narayanan, Deutsche Bank’s former head of leveraged finance trading. C&W Worldwide plans to cut dividend: Cable & Wireless Worldwide is set to withhold its final dividend amid a strategic review designed to draw a line under its poor performance since demerger. In its half year results on Tuesday, the company is also expected by analysts to reveal a goodwill impairment charge of about £400 million ($643 million) resulting from previous acquisitions such as Thus and Energis. Everything Everywhere to repay parents’ loans: Everything Everywhere, the U.K. mobile operator jointly owned by Deutsche Telekom and France Telecom, is planning to pay back £875 million ($1.4 billion) of loans to its two parent companies in a step towards making itself a wholly independent operation. The group has lined up seven Banks to lend it the money to carry out the move, according to bankers close to the process. If the facility gets final approval, it could be one of the largest new borrowing facilities in the U.K. this year. Market for second-hand buy-out deals grows: Four years into the financial crisis, an investment strategy where debt is being piled on top of debt might seem a risky approach similar to the leveraged world of the pre-2007 bubble years. But in one opaque and not widely known area of the private equity sector, this strategy is still prevalent. More state land identified for housebuilding: David Cameron is poised to announce a sharp rise in the number of brownfield sites owned by Whitehall departments, paving the way for a surge in homebuilding, as the government looks for ways to kick-start the economy. The Prime Minister has previously said sites for 50,000 homes had been identified after departments came forward with unused land but that figure has now risen to 83,500, according to coalition insiders. O2 trial to offer control over personal data: Telefónica will offer users full control over how personal details can be used in activities such as marketing and financial services in a trial to be rolled out in its O2 business in the U.K. The scheme will address mounting concerns about how much information can and should be used for business purposes by internet and other technology service providers, such as mobile companies. Lease sale offers hope for Gulf of Mexico: In the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans next month, the U.S. Department of the Interior will hold one of the most keenly awaited sales of oil and gas leases in the country’s history, for the western Gulf of Mexico. The choice of venue does not look accidental. Made notorious in 2005, when it became a refuge for those fleeing the devastation of hurricane Katrina, the Superdome then became a symbol of the city’s revival when the New Orleans Saints won the American football Super Bowl in 2010. Private equity: return of the Manager: In the pre-crunch era, the big buy-out shops typically had limited involvement in portfolio companies. They would buy the thing with as little equity as possible, leverage it up again to pay themselves and key executives a round of dividends, then start eyeing the exit. In 2007, the median investment holding period was three and a half years, according to Triago, a fund adviser. Now, with PE funds unable or unwilling to sell companies bought at peak multiples of earnings, it has risen to five. If no exit is in view, though, fund managers need to find other ways to pay the rent. Many are squeezing portfolio companies to do so. Preqin reported this month that quarterly “monitoring fees” charged by PE Managers worldwide have steadily climbed since the crisis in every category of deal size, as a percentage of a company’s earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation. At KKR, for example, monitoring fees of $142 million were almost a third of the total fees earned by its PE assets in the first nine months, up from 17% a year earlier. (Even if companies stop paying for monitoring, it will cost them: KKR received a net $40 million of termination payments from three companies during the period.) Repsol: Argentina matters: Repsol is still sending a lot of mixed messages. The Spanish oil and gas group has a big presence in Latin America, the industry’s new frontier, and a strong exploration pipeline. Yet it owns but does not ultimately control arguably its most important asset. And it has two shareholders with an agenda that is not in its interests. Chairman Antonio Brufau’s turn round since taking over in 2005 is taking shape. But Repsol is still not the finished article. Repsol’s shares have outperformed most of the industry in 2011, with a total return of 11%. That compares with less than 3% at Eni, its closest peer. Repsol has also done better over five years, shedding 20% compared with almost 40% at the Italian group. That relative outperformance was helped by Mr Brufau’s canniest move: last year’s sale of 40% of Repsol Brazil to Sinopec for $7 billion. Luxury goods: no sign of slowing: The important question is whether – or when – chilly economic climate may infect this cushioned elite and cause them, too, to rein in spending. Judging by recent numbers from a couple of top-end manufacturers, it will not be this year. Richemont, the Swiss maker of Cartier jewellery and Baume & Mercier watches, shrugged off the problems posed by a strong Swiss franc and produced a 29% sales increase (or 36% at constant exchange rates) in the six months to September. Italian leather specialist Tod’s strode to 15% in the first nine months of 2011. Of course, both companies can thank the swelling ranks of wealthy Chinese: mainland China led the sales charge. But U.S. revenue growth was also in the strong double-digits, and in Richemont’s case even disaster-struck Japan, the luxury industry’s number two market, clocked up 9%. U.K. growth to fall and jobs to go: Britain faces a miserable week of economic news, with the Bank of England expected to slash its growth forecasts, youth unemployment to breach 1 million for the first time, and inflation to remain at a belt-tightening 5%. On Wednesday, the Bank is expected to cut its August forecast for 2011 growth from 1.5% to around 1% and roughly halve its previous 2.1% prediction for next year – increasing the pressure on George Osborne to respond. Tobacco sector wants freeze on cigarette duty: Academics found the number of smokers in Eastern Europe did not fall when 10 states joined the EU in 2004 – even though the price of cigarettes soared by as much as 100% ahead of wages when they became subject to Brussels rules on minimum tax levels. On average, the affordability of cigarettes, measured by minutes of work needed to buy a pack of 20, fell by 40%. Departing River Island Boss bags £15 million leaving present: The former Chief Executive of retailer River Island was handed a £15 million pay package for just four months’ work last year. Richard Bradbury is understood to have been handed the generous payout, worth almost £1 million-a-week, as a parting gift following 20 years at the company. Cape slump looks overdone: Services group Cape had been one of Questor’s best-performing tips – until last week. The shares plunged by a third on Wednesday after the group’s latest trading update. The company supplies and manages industrial scaffolding and insulation, and undertakes industrial cleaning and painting. Most of its services are essential maintenance work and its business is heavily weighted to the offshore and onshore oil and gas industries. There is margin pressure in the Middle East, which could crimp earnings, and there was a surprise one-off charge for a contract in the North Sea. Revenues in the third quarter grew by 15%, boosted by higher activity levels in the Far East/Pacific Rim and the U.K. Martin May used the falls to top up his holding, spending £205,000 buying 60,000 shares in the company. The shares were first recommended on 22 March 2009 at 65½p, but they have been recommended as high as 550p. They are now trading on a December 2011 earnings multiple of 8 times, falling to just 7.2 next year. Cape at 347.9p. Questor Says “Buy”. Heritage Oil Chief recruits former Tory candidate for access to Libya’s reserves: Tony Buckingham, the British former soldier of fortune who heads Heritage Oil , the exploration firm, appears to have sought assistance from a would-be Conservative MP to get a foothold in Libya, following the role of U.K. forces there in installing the new regime. Britain steps into row over oil contracts in Kurdistan: Britain has waded into a growing row between the Iraqi and Kurdish governments over the award of controversial contracts to ExxonMobil which could undermine Vallares, the new oil venture of ex-BP Boss Tony Hayward. Michael Aron said the two warring parties should end the heightened uncertainty for those signing contracts in the semi-autonomous northern region. London becomes 4G high speed internet hotspot: London will begin to switch on 4G high-speed mobile internet with the launch of the first large-scale public trial in Britain. Initiated by O2 the trial involves more than 25 masts covering 15 square miles in Canary Wharf, Soho, Westminster, South Bank and Kings Cross. It will run for nine months, and the equipment installed will eventually become part of O2’s first commercial 4G network. British Gas shares have increased 12 times in value in the 25 years since privatisation: It was 25-years ago that Margaret Thatcher’s government privatised British Gas urging investors to snap up shares with the advertising slogan ‘if you see Sid tell him’. Around 1.5 million ‘Sids’ took up her offer at a original price of 135p per share with a minimum purchase of 100 shares. Car makers Jaguar Land Rover and McLaren rev up growth plans: Two of Britain’s best-known luxury sports car companies will this week unveil ambitious growth plans for 2012. Jaguar Land Rover is set on Tuesday to announce a healthy rise in profits and sales for the second quarter of this year – boosted by a 66% sales boost in China where it is looking to set up a new factory in a joint venture deal. Eurozone recession fears set to hit global markets: Financial markets are braced for more turbulence this week as several Eurozone governments try to raise billions of Euros from the bond markets amid growing fears the region is heading for recession. As investors prepared to give their reaction to a new technocratic government in Italy tasked with reviving the debt-laden country’s financial fortunes, the European Central Bank was on standby to support an auction of up to €3 billion (£2.6 billion) of Italian five-year bonds. Rose invests in Blue Inc: Former Marks & Spencer Boss Sir Stuart Rose is back in the high street fashion stakes after emerging as a backer of fast-growing retailer Blue Inc. Rose, who left M&S in January, follows billionaire investors the Reuben brothers, who put a reported £2 million into the business ahead of a potential flotation next year. Urenco listing is U.K.’s gain: Investors in Urenco are mulling a possible stock market listing of the nuclear power company that could generate a generous payday for the Treasury. The Dutch state, Joint Owners along with the British government and German power giants Eon and RWE, is understood to be lining up investment Banks to advise on the future of its stake in the business, based at Capenhurst near Chester, which makes enriched uranium. Risk of slowdown as Scots growth falters: Economic growth in Scotland is spluttering, as both manufacturing and service sectors struggle to maintain momentum amid signs of a slowdown. However, growth across the whole U.K. has slowed more abruptly, and was comparatively weaker last month than in Scotland overall, according to the latest Bank of Scotland PMI survey out. Growth hits ten-month low as manufacturing struggles: Growth in the Scottish private sector economy fell to its lowest in ten months in October with “a marked fall in the demand for manufactured goods”, according to an influential survey. The Bank of Scotland PMI survey showed the second successive drop in new private sector business with firms reduced to “working through backlogs” of work to sustain even muted output growth. Taxman ‘is threatening future of viable firms’: “Over-zealous” action by the taxman could be driving businesses to the wall as the use of powers to seize corporate assets has quadrupled in two years, a Scottish commercial law firm has claimed. Edinburgh-based McGrigors said Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customers (HMRC) had “massively increased” their use of laws that allow them to take over assets of late-paying businesses to increase their tax take. Leadership woes weigh on Lloyds: Lloyds Banking Group is under mounting pressure to provide an update on the leadership vacuum created by the absence of its Chief Executive. Major institutional shareholders have said that they are concerned at the lack of information provided by the taxpayer-backed bank since Antonio Horta-Osorio left on sick leave two weeks ago. Bail–out fund denies bond deal: The eurozone’s bail-out fund last night denied that it bought back its own bonds last week, after a newspaper reported that it spent more than €100 million (£85.5 million) to cover a shortfall of demand.: A Sunday paper said that the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) had to step in after Banks leading the deal were only able to find about €2.7 billion of outside demand. The ten-year bond sale raised €3 billion last Monday. Hydro firm raises £2 million for 15 new projects: Hydro energy firm Green Highland Renewables has raised £2 million from investors after it secured a deal to develop up to 15 small-scale schemes on land owned by the Forestry Commission Scotland. Iain Wotherspoon, the Chairman of the Perth-based firm, said it will invest around £1.5 million per scheme and the joint venture deal made Green Highland Renewables the “largest developer of small-scale hydro schemes in Scotland”. Contrasting fortunes of venerable high street giants: A quieter results week is in prospect, with the main spotlight likely to fall on two venerable but highly contrasting high street veteran brand names, Burberry and Mothercare . Fashion house Burberry is set to report a leap in profits but analysts will be watching for signs its stellar sales growth is starting to slow amid darkening economic conditions.

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Newspaper Briefing, including 'UK growth to fall and jobs to go' - Daily Telegraph

Urenco listing is UK's gain: Investors in Urenco are mulling a possible stock market listing of the nuclear power company that could generate a generous payday for the Treasury. The Dutch state, Joint Owners along with the British government and German



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