Join our community of smart investors

Wednesday's news and tips

SUMMARY: Balfour Beatty wins QinetiQ contract, Rio Tinto accepts Alcan Packaging offer, bid could still be on the cards for Supporta. Plus a round-up of business press headlines and share tips
December 23, 2009

■ Support services contracting firm Balfour Beatty has won a facilities management contract from defence technology outfit QinetiQ.

■ Mining giant Rio Tinto has accepted a $2.025bn offer for its Alcan Packaging pharmaceutical, tobacco and food divisions from the packaging group Amcor as it continues its programme of asset sales to ease its debt pile.

■ A bid battle could still be on the cards for care home group Supporta after its main shareholder suggested it should consider a possible cash offer from a third party.

■ Minera Penmont, the joint venture 56 per cent owned by silver miner Fresnillo, has made a bid to snatch Canadian mining company Canplats Resources from bullion producer Goldcorp.

■ Power solutions provider Chloride has bought the entire issued share capital of Automatismes Energie Electroniques Systemes SAS, a French secure power company.

■ Ideal Shopping is to the buy plants and garden equipment group Lead The Good Life Limited (LTGL) from its founders for an initial £5m, rising by a possible further £2.2m.

■ RAM Investment said it has bought Estates Media Partners, a supplier of digital media and advertising contracted to UK shopping malls, for £325,000.

Continues below...

■ CD and DVD retailer HMV is to buy the live music group MAMA as it seeks to maintain its appeal to customers amid seismic changes in the music business.

■ British Gas owner Centrica has agreed to sell a 50 per cent equity stake in its 270 megawatt (MW) Lincs offshore wind farm for £50m in cash.

■ Scottish and Southern Energy (SSE) is buying a 25.1 per cent interest in the Walney offshore wind farm in the Irish Sea for up to £39m.

■ Public relations and marketing firm Freshwater UK warned on Wednesday that its first quarter revenues have been hit by unanticipated delays in certain projects for clients.

■ Tullow Oil has confirmed its view on the potential of the West Cape Three Points block, offshore Ghana, after it latest test drill.

■ Media rights company ContentFilm reported a decline in half-year gross profit and turnover but expects a better second half and solid full-year results.

■ The performance of FTSE 250 investment trust Scottish Investment trailed both of its benchmark indices in the year to end-October as it found itself overly focused on defensive stocks as the market turned.

■ Premier Oil has plugged and abandoned the Cá Rồng Vang well on Block 07/03, offshore Vietnam.

■ Africa-focused diamond producer Pangea DiamondFields has completed an upgrade of processing facilities at its Cassanguidi project in Angola but lowered its production targets.

■ Telecoms and internet services company Vyke Communications, which has seen its shares virtually halve in 2009, is ringing the changes at the top.

■ The sale of its remaining production assets is taking digital terrestrial television technology company Motive Television longer than expected, and now won't be completed until the New Year.

■ Investment firm Dhir India said for the six months ended 30 September adjusted NAV fell to 131p from 144p on 31 March and said it was cautiously optimistic about future trading.

■ Aussie alternative energy technology firm Ceramic Fuel Cells received a pre-Christmas boost in the form of an installation of its technology at Australia's first six-star energy-efficient community development.

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

■ Why not become a IC registered user - it's free, secure, takes just a few minutes - and gives you access to comprehensive company financial data, stock broker forecasts, our portfolio tool, share price and article alerts, and the stock screening tool. Register now!

■ Or access all areas with IC Advantage, our premium subscription product. Take a free, no-obligation trial to IC Advantage today.

NEWSPAPER SHARE TIPS (23 DEC 2009):

NewspaperCompanyStancePriceIC View
The Times888 HoldingsHold110.75p
The TimesGem DiamondsHold on210.75p
The TimesAvocet MiningBuy93.25p

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

PRESS HEADLINES:

The French Government has bought its first piece of military equipment from Britain in decades and, in the process, overlooked the claims of a French company.

In an unprecedented display of European co-operation, the French have ordered 129 armoured vehicles from BAE Systems in a £220m deal. It is believed to be the first big equipment order that the French Armed Forces have placed with a British company in many years. It is certainly BAE's first significant win in the country, the Times reports.

The Campaign for Real Ale (Camra) vowed yesterday to launch a legal challenge to the decision by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) to reject its so-called super-complaint over anti-competitive practices by the big tenanted pub companies. The organisation said that the OFT's decision was detrimental to the interests of pub-goers and the future of Britain's pubs and it called on consumers to help to fund an appeal "to ensure this vital legal challenge can stand the best chance of success", the Times reports.

The contraction of bank lending and the M3 money supply in the US and Europe over recent months has become a serious concern and raises the risk of a slide back into recession, according to one of Britain's most celebrated economists. Professor Charles Goodhart, a former top official at the Bank of England now at the London School of Economics, said policymakers have neglected the flashing danger signal of the monetary data, the Telegraph reports.

Fitch Ratings has given its bluntest warning to date that Britain and France risk losing their AAA status unless they map out a clear path to budget discipline over the next year. Highlighting the "unpleasant fiscal arithmetic" facing states across the Old World, Fitch said that none of the "arguably" benchmark AAA states can safely rely on their top rating for much longer, the Telegraph reports.

More than 120 MPs plan to quit the Commons at the next general election and pocket pay-offs of up to £64,800 each in what threatens to be the biggest exodus of members for 60 years. Almost a fifth of all sitting MPs have decided to leave parliament without contesting their seats in the poll expected in May, according to UK Polling Report, the website which is monitoring the growing list of departures, the FT reports.

Investment trusts have been hit hard in recent weeks following the departure of a leading institution from the sector, forcing many companies to buy back shares. Shares in investment trust companies are now trading at their widest discounts all year, following mass selling by Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), which manages the Norwegian government pension fund, the world's second-largest sovereign wealth fund. Alliance Trust bought back shares for the first time on October 14 after NBIM requested a redemption while others, including Foreign & Colonial and Witan, have also been forced to resort to buy-backs, the FT reports.

Microsoft on Tuesday lost an appeal against a $290m patent infringement case in its biggest legal setback in an intellectual property case this year. In spite of the upholding of an injunction barring it from using the infringing code in its widely used Word program, Microsoft said it did not expect the decision to disrupt sales of its Office suite of applications, of which Word is part. in favour of i4i, a Canadian software company that had claimed Microsoft's Word 2007 infringed a software patent it was awarded more than 10 years ago, the FT reports.

Beatrix Potter's much-loved cast of children's characters, including Peter Rabbit, Jemima Puddle-Duck and Mrs Tiggywinkle, are to make a comeback on British television screens after two decades, thanks to a deal unveiled yesterday by the entertainment company Chorion and the publisher Penguin, the Independent reports.