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Tuesday's news and tips

Created:
13 July 2010
Written by:
ShareCast

■ Sales of coats and accessories were behind a better than expected leap in sales at luxury goods giant Burberry during the first quarter.

■ Specialty pharmaceuticals business BTG is enjoying continued momentum across the business with its pipeline of prospects progressing well.

Northern Foods' sales fell in the first quarter as good growth in chilled foods could not offset falls in the bakery and frozen divisions.

■ Hopes are rising BP is near to stemming the flow of oil spilling into the Gulf of Mexico after a new 75-tonne steel cap was lowered over the damaged well late last night.

■ Bacon, pork and sausages specialist Cranswick lifted sales by 19 per cent, to £198m, in the last three months, with organic growth up by 6 per cent and 13 per cent coming from acquisition CCF Norfolk.

■ Mobile phone payments provider Monitise said full year revenues are estimated to be around £6m, up 120 per cent from the year before as it announced plans to raise £32.4m.

Bglobal moved tantalizingly close to profitability in the year to March 31 as the provider of 'smart meters' to the energy market benefited from increased demand for its products (IC COMMENT).

■ Online betting group Webis warned that trading for the full year ended 30 May 2010 will be significantly below the group's previous expectations.

■ Engineering and project management company AMEC has won a five year master services agreement with BP Azerbaijan.

■ Home furnishings retailer Dunelm should beat full-year profit forecasts despite a drop in like-for-like (LFL) during the fourth quarter.

■ Mezzanine finance specialist Intermediate Capital said almost two thirds of its portfolio is performing at or above last year's levels.

■ Global estate agent DTZ cut losses sharply last year through buoyant business in Asia and a first operating profit in the Americas.

■ Infrastructure specialist Balfour Beatty said its Mansell subsidiary has been appointed as one of three contractors working on a house building programme in Hackney, north London.

Kea Petroleum is getting excited as the Tuatara-1 well in which it has a 10 per cent interest is expected to start drilling offshore New Zealand before the end of this month.

■ IT services provider Computacenter said first half profit is expected to increase more than 10 per cent, in line with management expectations.

■ The record seems to be stuck at Luminar, as sales continue to decline with the World Cup partly to blame.

■ Satellite broadcaster British Sky Broadcasting said it has completed the acquisition of a group of Virgin Media's TV channels following regulatory approval in the Republic of Ireland.

Yangtze China Investment, which provides capital to China-based consumer-oriented companies, saw its net asset value slip to $23.8m at the end of March from $24.5m a year earlier as it sat on the sidelines during subdued economic conditions.

■ India-focused energy company Essar Energy said its subsidiary Essar Power has reached agreement for the acquisition of Navabharat Power, a coal-fuelled power plant that is being built in the Indian state of Orissa.

All Leisure saw losses widen in what the cruise operator called a 'challenging' six months.

■ Penny stock Pentagon Protection was in good shape Tuesday after it said it has sold its subsidiary, Pentagon Protection UK (PPUK) to the company's former chief executive officer Graham Bannerman.

■ The battle between British Airways management and its unions moved to the QE2 Conference Centre in Westminster, London, on Tuesday, where the airline held its annual general meeting (AGM).

■ Abu Dhabi's Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan said the emirate is considering making an investment in BP, according to press reports.

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NEWSPAPER SHARE TIPS (13 JULY 2010):

Newspaper Company View Price Last IC View
The Daily Telegraph Domino's Pizza Buy 397p
The Daily Telegraph Kier Group Buy 975p Buy, 12 Jul
The Times Kier Group [...] full-year profits will be towards the upper end of market expectations, which provided the impetus for yesterday's 3.4 per cent price jump. On almost nine times this year's earnings, probably up with events. 975p
The Independent Carnival Hold 2212p Sell, 11 Nov 09
The Independent Morson Group Buy 90p Buy, 24 May
The Independent Hyder Consulting Buy 338.75p Good value, 8 Jun
The Times Thomas Cook The shares have taken a thumping since the spring and are now selling on less than seven times this year's earnings, with a yield approaching 6%. The fall is probably overdone; but concerns over the European travel industry remain. 188.80p Fairly priced, 14 May
The Times Rockhopper Exploration Those with a taste for excitement should retain some exposure to Rockhopper, although it could be a rough ride. 326.75p Fairly priced, 10 May

PRESS HEADLINES:

The Government is considering introducing taxes on banks' pay and profits - on top of the £2bn funding levy announced in the Budget. Mark Hoban, Financial Secretary to the Treasury, revealed the plan at a dinner for the country's most senior bankers at the Mansion House last night.

He said that banks should reform themselves, but warned that the Government would still explore the costs and benefits of a financial activities tax on profits and remuneration, the Times reports.

A seventy-five tonne containment device lowered over the rogue BP oil well offers the best hope yet of finally capturing all the oil spewing from the well-head into the Gulf of Mexico. For the first time in 84 days, the fountain of black crude that cameras have filmed since soon after the Deepwater Horizon rig blew up appeared briefly to have been stopped altogether last night, the Times reports.

BP is forecast to pay about $10bn (£6.7bn) less tax over the next four years as it meets the costs of its huge oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, hitting the revenues of Britain and the US that receive hundreds of millions of dollars from the company each year. The shortfall, representing a drop of more than a quarter in BP's tax payments, is a particular concern for the British government attempting to cut the country's budget deficit, the FT reports.

China's leading credit rating agency has stripped America, Britain, Germany and France of their AAA ratings, accusing Anglo-Saxon competitors of ideological bias in favour of the West. Dagong Global Credit Rating used its first foray into sovereign debt to paint a revolutionary picture of creditworthiness around the world, giving much greater weight to "wealth creating capacity" and foreign reserves than Fitch, Standard & Poor's, or Moody's. The US falls to AA, while Britain and France slither down to AA-. Belgium, Spain, Italy are ranked at A- along with Malaysia, the Telegraph reports.

Meanwhile, Standard & Poor's reaffirmed the UK's sovereign debt rating as AAA yesterday, prompted in part by what the rating agency described as the Government's "strong framework for fiscal consolidation". But the agency also warned that a "number of large and politically challenging spending decisions" are still to be reached, the Independent reports.

People holding accounts at banks that fail could soon have their savings of up to €100,000 (£84,000) returned to them within a week, under new EU plans. The draft laws from the European Commission, published on Monday, are designed to shore up confidence in the wake of the financial crisis, the Telegraph reports.

GlaxoSmithKline, the UK's biggest drug maker, faces a showdown over its blockbuster diabetes drug Avandia, which could result in the product being pulled from the market in the US and expose the company to billions of dollars in lawsuits. The drug maker will today present a defence of Avandia's safety in front of a make-or-break scientific panel, which is meeting to discuss whether it increases patients' risk of having a heart attack or a stroke, the Independent reports.

Britain's flood defence network could be sold to the private sector in the biggest shake-up of the industry in decades. The Treasury is understood to be exploring ways of making drastic cuts in the £713m annual flood defence bill by attracting more private investment. If the plans were approved, the Thames Barrier and defences on the Ouse and Severn rivers could be sold, the Times reports.

The inflation-adjusted level of house prices in Britain is likely to remain below its pre-recession levels for the next five years, one of the country's leading consultancies said today. A report from PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) showed there was a 70 per cent chance that the real cost of a property in 2015 would be below that in 2007 and a 50 per cent chance that it would take until 2020 for the market to rise above its previous peak, the Guardian reports.

According to the latest Bellwether Report from the Institute of Practitioners in Advertising and accountants BDO, 20 per cent of companies reduced their marketing budgets over the three months to the end of June. Only 15 per cent of UK companies increased their budgets. Of the different categories, main media spend was revised down in the quarter following a modest upgrade in the previous quarter. Spending on the Internet increased slightly, although the rate of growth was the slowest for three quarters, the Times reports.

An estimated six million people with deferred pension promises from previous private sector employers are set to be the biggest casualties of the Government's ruling that benefits should be raised in line with the consumer prices index rather than the retail prices index. So-called "deferreds" in 60 per cent of defined-benefit schemes could be affected immediately by the plan to reduce the minimum inflation-proofing of benefits, according to a KPMG straw poll of 50 funds, the Times reports.

The Financial Services Authority has moved one step closer to imposing tough new rules that will restrict the availability of mortgages. The FSA has called on banks and building societies to implement detailed affordability calculations to ensure that borrowers can afford to take out a mortgage. The proposals could see new applicants asked about their daily spending habits, such as the amount they spend on drinking or going to the cinema, the Times reports.


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