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Friday's news and tips

SUMMARY: Forth Ports blames poor results on Nordic recycling division, Topps Tiles severs ties with loss-making Dutch arm. Plus a round-up of business press headlines and share tips
December 18, 2009

■ Port operator Forth Ports said it expects full-year results to be at the lower end of expectations due to weak trading in its Nordic recycling division and in its container services operations at Tilbury port near London.

■ Topps Tiles has effectively shut down its Dutch operation after withdrawing financial support from the loss-making subsidiary.

■ Ground engineering specialist Keller confirmed that it is on track to meet full-year expectations.

■ Jeweller Theo Fennell reported a 20 per cent fall in sales in the six months to 30 September as the global economic downturn curbed demand for luxury goods, but said it had seen a 38 per cent rise in retail sales in the following two months.

■ Hochschild Mining has upped its stake in Gold Resource Corporation to 27 per cent through a $16m private placement.

■ Shares in Brainspark surged after the technology-focused investment company said it had raised £550,000 through a placing to invest in Mediapolis, a company that owns the site of theme park development in northern Italy.

Continues below...

■ The High Court has ruled that a planned strike by British Airways cabin staff over Christmas would be illegal.

■ Shareholders in Carnival were in no mood to party after the cruise operator said its first quarter earnings are likely to be lower than the market had hoped.

■ Regus has promoted Douglas Sutherland to the non-executive chairman's post at the outsourced workplaces provider.

■ Online betting firm Sportingbet said the main trends seen in the first quarter have continued and trading across the business is in-line with expectations.

■ Shares in banks came under pressure for a second day as investors mulled the prospect of lower future profits and dividends after the latest recommendations from the Basel Committee of central bankers.

■ Ryanair said it has no plans to reopen discussions with Boeing or any other aircraft manufacturers after talks between the two groups on new aircraft orders were terminated unsuccessfully.

■ Social housing maintenance specialist Mears has agreed terms for an all paper takeover of home care group Supporta.

■ Temporary power supplier Aggreko says trading has been better than expected during the last three months of the year, leaving 2009 operating profit up by more than a quarter.

■ Online gaming group Partygaming expects underlying earnings this year to be slightly ahead of market forecasts after solid trading since September.

■ Former chief executive of Tate & Lyle, Iain Ferguson, has joined the board of contracting firm Balfour Beatty as a non-executive director.

■ Rio Tinto has awarded a new mining contract in its Pilbara iron ore operations to a joint venture between native title holders the Eastern Guruma and mining services company NRW.

■ Jardine Lloyd Thompson (JLT) has appointed former Norwich Union and Aviva CEO Richard Harvey as a non executive director at the insurance broker with immediate effect.

■ Speciality pharmaceuticals group BTG has licensed exclusive worldwide rights to Allergan to develop products for diseases and conditions of the eye using BTG's ReGel drug delivery system.

FOR A SUMMARY OF LATEST MOVEMENTS IN EQUITY, COMMODITY AND CURRENCY MARKETS, SEE FT.COM'S MARKETS PAGE

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NEWSPAPER SHARE TIPS (18 DEC 2009):

NewspaperCompanyStancePriceIC View
The IndependentSavillsShort-term buy301.2p
The IndependentJohn Wood Group Buy288.1p
The TimesJohn Wood GroupA good point to buy288p
The IndependentMcBrideBuy209.1p
The TimesArriva Pass485p
The TimesChrysalisThere should be better times to buy102p
The Daily TelegraphHargreaves ServicesBuy695p
This is MoneyAfrican Medical InvestmentsWorth buying a few21pNo view
This is MoneyAfrenInvestors who bought at 56p should sell 40 per cent of their holding but keep the rest and watch the group develop87p

Full round-up of newspaper share tips (sourced from Sharecast)

PRESS HEADLINES:

Alexander Lebedev, the owner of London's Evening Standard and a former lieutenant-colonel in the KGB, is in advanced talks to buy The Independent and The Independent on Sunday, according to people familiar with the matter, reports the FT.

Lebedev has held intermittent talks over the past year with publisher Independent News & Media to buy its UK national newspapers. However, plans were put on hold over the summer as INM started wrangling with its lenders about the restructuring of its €1.3bn (£1.2bn, $1.9bn) debt pile

Meanwhile, the parent company of The Guardian newspaper is in talks to sell its regional titles to a rival publisher in a move that would sever its historic links with Manchester. Guardian Media Group (GMG) admitted yesterday that in the past few months, senior management have held "exploratory talks regarding our regional media business". The group is understood to have held talks with Trinity Mirror, which has about 240 regional titles, in a deal that could fetch up to £40m, reports the Independent.

City analysts have warned that British Airways still faces a financial hit from the battle with its 13,500 cabin crew even though the threat of a 12-day Christmas strike has been averted. BA on Thursday won a court ruling forcing union Unite to hold another ballot before deciding whether to press ahead with a strike – a move that prevents any industrial action before the end of January, the Telegraph reports.

Investment banks upset over the Government's attacks on City bonuses are holding up a £1bn fund for small business. Some high street banks are also stalling over claims that the fund is being created to boost Labour's chances at the next election. The tension between the banks and the Government over the Treasury's windfall tax on bonuses came to a head in the run-up to the Pre-Budget Report last week, the Times reports.

Modest restraint by the banks during the boom years over bumper bonuses and dividends would have spared taxpayers the cost of recapitalising them during the financial crisis, the Bank of England says. It also highlights the fact that more than £1trn of funding will have to be found by lenders to finance their activities over the next few years, with no evidence that the Bank is enthusiastic about extending its current unprecedented support, reports the Independent.

Meanwhile, a senior Bank of England official said that if some banks migrated overseas in response to tougher UK regulation "it might be a price worth paying" to protect the reform of the financial system in the wake of last year's crisis. The comments, made by Andy Haldane, the Bank's head of financial stability, in a BBC World Service interview to be broadcast on Friday, are certain to exacerbate tensions between the authorities and the financial sector, the Telegraph reports.

A group of former Lehman Brothers employees working to wind-up the remnants of the collapsed investment bank are in line to share in a $50m (£31m) Christmas bonus pot. Approximately 230 bankers working to settle Lehman's $10bn-plus derivatives portfolio will share in the pay-out, after it was approved by a US bankruptcy judge, the Telegraph reports.

Some of the City's most influential shareholders are demanding a competition inquiry into the fees charged by investment banks on takeover deals, The Times has learnt. Investors are preparing an assault on the "exorbitant" fees of advisers on both sides of company takeovers. Three leading institutional investors told The Times yesterday that they want Neelie Kroes, the European Competition Commissioner, to open an inquiry into fees charged by investment banks, particularly on M&A deals.

EADS, Europe's aerospace and defence giant, won a significant victory last night when it was cleared — along with 17 of its current and former executives — of insider dealing charges by France's stock market watchdog. In a decision which came as a surprise to most French observers, the Autorité des Marchés Financiers (AMF) brushed aside the recommendations of its examiner, who had demanded fines of €12.3m for insider trading, the Times reports.

Branches of Clydesdale Bank and Yorkshire Bank could be merged with assets of Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group in an attempt to create a new retail banking competitor in Britain. National Australia Bank (NAB), which owns Clydesdale and Yorkshire, said that it had been approached by industry players over potential consolidation involving both of the banks, the Times reports.

The first of an expected series of top-level departures from ITV, Britain's largest broadcaster, began yesterday when Sir George Russell, its deputy chairman, stepped down. Archie Norman, the former Tory MP and Asda chief executive, arrives in the new year to take up the post of ITV chairman, replacing Michael Grade. He is being urged by investors to make changes to the board. However, it is understood that Sir George, aged 74, informed ITV of his decision to leave the £165,000-a-year post before Mr Norman’s appointment was announced last month, the Times reports.

Shareholders in Mitchells & Butlers (M&B) have been urged not to lend their holdings in the pub operator before a showdown vote on the election of four directors put forward by rebel investors. In what is thought to be an unprecedented joint statement, two leading shareholder bodies also called on their members to reclaim any M&B stock out on loan to hedge funds and other traders as soon as is practically possible, the Times reports.

Citigroup tried to take control of EMI before Terra Firma, the music company's private equity owner, launched its legal attack against the bank, according to three people familiar with the negotiations. The stand-off began with a letter from Citigroup in September proposing a debt-for-equity swap that would have given the bank a majority of EMI's equity and given Terra Firma a share in the upside from restructuring the company, according to two of the people. The third person said the proposal offered Terra Firma a management fee, the FT reports.

Mouchel's defence against a £380m ($613m) takeover approach from VT Group was bolstered on Thursday when its largest shareholder came out in support of the target's board. After holding a meeting with Mouchel's management, M&G Investment Management – which has an 11.4 per cent stake – told the Financial Times that the maintenance group "enjoys our complete support".

Clapham House, the restaurant operator, admitted yesterday that its Real Greek brand would eventually be sold as it moved to focus exclusively on its expanding Gourmet Burger Kitchen (GBK) chain. The news comes after the sale last year of Bombay Bicycle Club, the group's chain of Indian eateries and takeaways, and its decision three months ago to put its loss-making Tootsies and Dexters business into administration after its failure to find a buyer, the Times reports.