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Wednesday's news and tips

SUMMARY: Compass raises profits despite flat sales, United Utilities to sell off parts of business, Yell's open offer gets 83.9% take-up. Plus a round-up of business press headlines and share tips
November 25, 2009

■ Contract caterer Compass Group saw little growth in revenue but pre-tax profit still showed a healthy rise on the back of a strong improvement in margins and currency gains ().

■ Water company United Utilities is to look at selling off other parts of its non-regulated business after agreeing to sell its holdings in Northern Gas Networks and Manila Water for £130m ().

■ Yellow Pages publisher Yell's £330m open offer got a decent response with a take-up of 83.87 per cent of the shares offered.

■ Design and engineering consultancy group WS Atkins reported a 13 per cent drop in first-half profit but said it is well placed to make good progress in the second half of the year ().

■ Coal bed methane developer Island Gas Resources has announced a £13.75m placing to increase its assets and bring forward production plans ().

■ GW Pharmaceuticals, the developer and manufacturer of a range of new cannabis based medicines, lost money in the second half of its financial year but still ended it in the black for the first time in its history ().

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■ Soft drinks group Britvic said it was winning market share in all key categories as it posted a rise in revenues and profits ().

■ Infinis Energy has been obliged to increase its offer terms for Novera after it bought 5.6m shares in the renewable energy firm at 75p each ().

■ Plant hire firm Speedy Hire swung to a half-year loss and said it expects to broadly break-even at an adjusted profit before tax level for the second half ().

■ The London Stock Exchange's first half pre-tax profit has been hit by increased competition and weaker equity trading ().

■ Weak car production and lower metal prices earlier this year took their toll on platinum refiner Johnson Matthey's first-half, though it expects an improvement over the rest of the year ().

■ Defence technology group QinetiQ posted a slight fall in profits in the six months to September 30 and said some orders were being delayed in the UK and US amid uncertainty over spending ().

■ UK supermarket Tesco has joined the slowly growing list of companies selling the Apple iPhone in the UK this Christmas.

■ Greencore, the Irish convenience food group licensed to make Heinz pickles and Bisto Yorkshire puddings, posted a sharp fall in profits in the year to September 25 as sales declined slightly.

■ Loss making retailer French Connection is still struggling to get underlying revenues moving forward.

■ Textile maintenance business Davis Service has taken 'a key step' in securing long-term financing by issuing £182m of senior guaranteed notes.

■ TR Property Investment Trust saw sharp increases in the net asset value of both classes of its shares as property shares rallied in the April to September period.

■ Investment trust Caledonia Investments is maintaining a cautious investment approach despite the strong recovery in equity markets since March.

■ Kopane Diamond, which mines for the gemstones in Lesotho and South Africa, posted a fall in revenues in the year to June 30 as it suspended production after a sharp fall in prices, but managed to reduce losses.

■ Recruiter Harvey Nash has warned over results for the full year as demand for permanent staff has not picked up as hoped.

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 (25 NOV 2009):

NewspaperCompanyStancePriceIC View
The Daily TelegraphLloyds Banking GroupTake up rights93.81p
The Daily TelegraphSSL InternationalBuy720p
The TimesSSL InternationalTake profits720p
The IndependentSevern TrentSell1004p
The IndependentHomeserveHold1626p
The TimesHomeserveBuy on weakness1626p
The IndependentMedia SquareHold14p
The TimesBSS GroupBuy253.25p

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

PRESS HEADLINES:

Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS were given a secret £61.6bn in bridging loans last year on top of the £500bn of support that the banking sector received from the taxpayer, the Governor of the Bank of England disclosed yesterday.

MPs expressed astonishment when Mervyn King told them about the emergency funding, which indicated that the two banks were in far greater peril than first thought. The Government has since indicated that the whole sector was within hours of collapse, the Times reports.

The Government is sharpening the axe for Britain's £4bn nuclear clean-up budget and drawing up plans for big spending cuts at contaminated sites including Sellafield and Dounreay, The Times has learnt. The Treasury has begun a sweeping review of spending by the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), the quango that over the past four years is understood to have spent about £1bn of taxpayers' money annually on cleaning up at Britain's 20 contaminated nuclear sites.

The BBC has been holding discussions with City advisers about floating part of BBC Worldwide, its commercial arm, in response to pressure from the government and commercial rivals to dilute its media market power. As Sir Michael Lyons, chairman of the BBC Trust, told the Financial Times on Tuesday that he had "an open mind" about the future ownership of Worldwide, people with knowledge of the matter said a partial flotation was one of several possible outcomes, including no change to its status.

China has stepped up efforts to halt the explosive growth in credit, ordering the country's five top banks to raise capital over coming weeks or face lending sanctions. The move amounts to monetary tightening in China's state-run banking system. The news triggered a sell-off on Asian stock markets and raised broader concerns about the strength of the global rally. The Shenzen index fell by 4.5 per cent on Wednesday, the Telegraph reports.

Investors are snapping up newly built flats in northern cities at substantial discounts, clearing out the unsold stock of several leading housebuilders. Many such buyers are accountants, doctors and solicitors who are becoming landlords for the first time, weary of the low rates of interest from deposit accounts and attracted by the returns available from lettings, the Times writes.

Gas will be at the heart of Royal Dutch Shell's production strategy ahead of oil as the world attempts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, according to the energy group's new chief executive, Peter Voser. Delivering an update on Shell's two flagship gas projects in Qatar, which are costing the group $21bn (£12.6bn), Mr Voser admitted that one – a liquefied natural gas (LNG) plant – would overrun by about 10 months, the Telegraph reports.

Tesco is taking a subsidiary of Mike Ashley's Sports Direct to court in a bizarre case involving half a dozen bicycles and almost £1m. Britain's biggest retailer has launched a legal action against Universal Cycles amid claims that a member of the supermarket chain's finance team mistakenly paid £984,000 for six bicycles, the Telegraph reports.

Meanwhile, Keith Hellawell, the former government drugs tsar who resigned over the declassification of cannabis, has been appointed non-executive chairman of Sports Direct, ending the sportswear group's two-and-a-half-year search for a new boss, the Independent reports.

Facebook has followed Google's lead and introduced a dual-class stock structure, the clearest sign yet that the world's most popular social networking site is preparing for an eventual public offering. In doing so, Mark Zuckerberg, the company's 25-year-old chief executive, looks to be solidifying his long-term grip on the site he founded five years ago that has become the fourth most popular destination on the web, the FT reports.

Business investment tumbled for the fifth straight quarter between July and September, official data showed yesterday, raising concerns about the sustainability of the economic recovery. The total money invested by businesses, in items ranging from new machinery to computer systems, was 3 per cent lower in the third quarter than the second and down 21.7 per cent year-on-year, data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) showed, the Times reports.

The future of Saab was thrown into doubt on Tuesday after a consortium led by Sweden's Koenigsegg pulled out of talks to buy General Motors' premium car brand. Koenigsegg blamed the collapse on delays in closing the deal after months of negotiations with the Swedish government over financial support. It said: "Unfortunately, delays in closing this acquisition have resulted in risks and uncertainties that prevent us from successfully implementing the new Saab Automobile business plan", the FT reports.

Tivo is re-entering the UK market through a partnership with Virgin Media, the cable operator, six years after the US group gave up selling its digital video recorders in Britain. The deal, in which Tivo will provide software rather than branded boxes, is a rebuff to Project Canvas, the joint venture led by the BBC, ITV and BT to set the standard for bringing internet video to Britain's television sets, the FT reports.

Edmund Truell's Pension Corp has reached a deal to repair the £450m-plus deficit in the pension scheme of Telent, the rump of the former GEC Marconi business, which the specialist pensions buy-out firm took over in early 2008, the FT reports.