Tuesday's news and tips
- Created:
- 15 July 2008
- Written by:
- Tanya Malick
• Russia-focused oil producer Imperial Energy said it is discussing a possible cash offer of 1,290p per share. (IC COMMENT)
• Northern Petroleum has sold its entire interests in the Waalwijk underground gas storage projects to Star Energy for a consideration of up to £10m. (IC COMMENT)
• Ocean Power Technologies saw full-year revenues increase 89% to $4.8m, although losses increased to $14.7m, compared to a net loss of $9.6m in the prior year. (IC COMMENT)
• Kazakhstan copper miner Kazakhmys today denied press speculation that it is in talks with Russia's Metalloinvest regarding a possible reverse takeover.
• BT is to spend £1.5bn to install a fibre-based, super-fast broadband network to reach up to 10m UK homes by 2012, though the cost means it will suspend its current share buy-back programme.
Continues below...
• Ireland's richest man, Sean Quinn, has said he plans to buy a 15% stake in the Anglo Irish Bank, which has seen its share price drop by more than 70% over the past year.
• Engine maker Rolls Royce and Abu Dhabi investment firm Mubadala Development have announced a new joint venture to serve the rapidly expanding Middle East aviation services markets.
• The declining price of zinc and lead has prompted Teck Cominco and Xstrata to close their joint venture Pillara mine in Western Australia.
• Online gaming group 888 Holdings has signed a deal with a provider of virtual horse and dog racing games.
• Oil and gas firm Venture Production has successfully side-tracked and tested well 47/9c-11x to appraise the Barbarossa gas field located in the southern North Sea.
• Telecoms group Cable and Wireless is trading in-line with expectations and is on course to boost earnings by between 16 and 20% in the year to 31 March 2009, as forecast.
• Luxury goods firm Burberry shrugged off problems in Spain to post forecast-beating quarterly sales growth.
• Hovis bread group Premier Foods is on course to meet full-year profit expectations following a trading profit during the first half in-line with the same period in 2007.
• Plant hire specialist Speedy Hire reports an encouraging start to the new financial year, with strong growth in its two main divisions.
• Sales have continued to slow at struggling photographic retailer Jessops prompting a warning that annual losses will top the £7.5m reported last year.
• Electronic tagging group Dmatek has forecast record sales in the first half of 2008 despite slower than expected growth in its elderly persons business.
• Sales and profits at China-based solar panel provider Jetion in the first half of 2008 were well ahead of last year.
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NEWSPAPER SHARE TIPS (15 JULY)
| Newspaper |
Company |
Stance |
Price |
IC view |
| The Times |
Kingfisher |
Buy for recovery |
94.9p |
High enough, 9 Jul
|
| The Times |
IQE |
Long-term buy |
15p |
Fairly priced, 18 Mar
|
| The Times |
Entertainment Rights |
Buy |
4.8p |
Fairly priced, 23 Apr
|
| The Daily Telegraph |
Low & Bonar |
Hold |
90.75p |
|
| The Independent |
Low & Bonar |
Buy |
90.5p |
| The Daily Telegraph |
St Modwen |
Avoid |
310p |
Long-term good value, 12 Feb
|
| The Independent |
St Modwen |
Sell |
310p |
| The Independent |
SDL |
Buy |
298p |
Good value, 14 Jul
|
Full round-up of newspaper share tips (sourced from Sharecast)
PRESS SUMMARY:
Rival suitors for Alliance & Leicester yesterday ruled themselves out of a bid for Britain's ninth-largest mortgage lender after it recommended a £1.26bn offer from Santander, the Spanish owner of high street bank Abbey, reports the Telegraph.
Sources close to Clive Cowdery, who plans to consolidate the UK's financial services industry, and private equity firm JC Flowers made it clear neither was likely to enter the fray. Lloyds TSB is expected to review its options but bankers said it was almost certain to be precluded on competition grounds.
Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, has turned down a pay rise of around £110,000 because he did not feel it was appropriate in the current economic climate. Mr King rejected the near-40% pay rise to £400,000 when he was reappointed as Bank of England Governor this summer, according to the Bank's annual report, writes the Telegraph.
The owners of investment company Dawnay Day were forced into further asset sales at the end of last week, selling stakes of over £3m in two Aim-listed property companies it manages. Dawnay Day announced yesterday it had closed positions in Dawnay Day Treveria and Dawnay Day Sirius, reports the Telegraph.
Shell has agreed to pay almost C$6bn (£3bn) for a small Canadian gas company heavily involved in the production of difficult-to-exploit gas reserves. The price for Calgary-based Duvernay Oil, founded just seven years ago, surprised the market but Shell is anxious to build up assets of what the industry calls "tight gas" in western Canada, reports the Telegraph.
Alisher Usmanov, the Russian oligarch who owns a stake in Arsenal Football Club, has entered merger talks with Kazakhmys in a deal that could create a $50bn (£25 billion) London-listed mining giant. Kazakhmys, the Kazakhstan-based copper miner, confirmed yesterday that it was in talks with Usmanov's Metalloinvest, but that discussions were at an early stage, reports the Times.
Confidence in some of the largest regional US banks buckled on Monday as the government's rescue plan for mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac failed to allay equity markets' fears over the stability of the broader financial sector. Stocks in banks including Washington Mutual, the seventh-largest US bank by assets, and Cleveland's National City, plunged as investors reacted to Friday's collapse of IndyMac, a smaller lender, reports the FT.
Home sales fell to their lowest level in 30 years last month as the seizure in the mortgage market continued to drag house prices down. Estate agents reported that they sold an average of 15 properties in the three months to the end of June, figures from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors show. That is nearly 40% lower than the same period last year and the lowest figure recorded since RICS began its series in 1978, writes the Times.
Consumer confidence hit a record low in June after like-for-like sales on the high street fell for the third time in four months. According to the British Retail Consortium (BRC), sales from stores open a year or more fell by 0.4% in June, the third monthly fall since March. "Consumer confidence has continued to fall, reaching record lows," the BRC said, reports the Telegraph.
Spiralling food prices have pushed the cost of a family's weekly shop up by nearly £1,100 a year, new figures reveal. The price of staple groceries has risen by more than a fifth since July last year as food producers deal with soaring wheat, rice and energy costs, figures from mysupermarket, the shopping comparison site show, writes the Times.
The Children's Investment Fund, the London hedge fund, lost more than $1bn in its worst month ever in June. TCI, which manages more than $10bn, slumped 12½% in the month, according to investors in the fund, to leave it in the red for the first half of the year, reports the FT
Rents are set to rise by up to 15% over the next two years, reflecting both a shortage of supply and rising demand from buyers struggling to get on to the housing ladder, according to a report commissioned by the letting industry's trade body. The report, carried out by Reading university's Professor Michael Ball for the Association of Residential Letting Agents, says the FT.
Factory gate inflation broke into double digits last month, for the first time since current records began more than two decades ago. Manufacturing output prices rose by a record 10% in the year to the end of June, driven by a rise of more than 30% in the price of raw materials and other input costs, writes the Independent.
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