Connect with us

Published

on

David Montgomery, the former Mirror newspapers chief, is putting the finishing touches to a line-up of City advisers that he hopes will help him outgun rivals in an auction of The Daily Telegraph.

Sky News has learnt that National World, Mr Montgomery’s London-listed vehicle, is close to appointing Cavendish Capital Markets and Peel Hunt to help raise the financing to buy the broadsheet newspaper and its Sunday sister title.

The two firms will work alongside Rothschild, which is providing corporate finance advice to Mr Montgomery, and Dowgate Securities, its existing broker.

The appointments underline Mr Montgomery’s determination to be a serious contender in an auction which is already generating significant interest from investors in the Middle East and the US.

National World, the latest quoted media vehicle established by the veteran executive, acknowledged last month that it would “consider participating in a sale process for Telegraph Media Group as and when such a process formally commences”.

It is not thought to be interested in acquiring The Spectator magazine, which is also being sold by Lloyds Banking Group, the orchestrator of the auction.

A spokesman for National World declined to comment on the impending appointment of City advisers.

More from Business

Mr Montgomery’s company owns hundreds of regional titles, but not the asset he most covets – a national daily newspaper.

If he succeeds in raising the capital he needs to submit an offer, he will be up against formidable opposition.

Lord Rothermere, the Daily Mail proprietor, is also piecing together a bid, with Gulf-based investors in talks to finance it.

Last week, Sky News revealed that Paul Zwillenberg, a former chief executive of the Daily Mail’s publisher, was being lined up to advise Sir Paul Marshall, the hedge fund tycoon, on a rival takeover proposal.

Ken Griffin, the Citadel hedge fund billionaire, is also expected to aid Sir Paul’s offer, according to The Daily Telegraph.

Sir Paul, who is also a big shareholder in the right-wing television news service GB News, is understood to be serious about his interest in owning the newspapers.

The Telegraph titles and The Spectator have been put up for sale after Lloyds seized control of them from the Barclay family, their long-standing owners.

Sky News revealed last month that the Barclay family was trying to line up hundreds of millions of pounds from Middle Eastern investors in a bid to wrest back control of the newspapers from Lloyds.

The family has lodged a series of proposals to buy back roughly £1bn of debt it owes Lloyds Banking Group.

A formal sale process, run by the Wall Street bank Goldman Sachs, is likely to kick off next month.

Until June, the newspapers were chaired by Aidan Barclay – the nephew of Sir Frederick Barclay, the octogenarian who along with late brother Sir David engineered the takeover of the Telegraph 19 years ago.

A sale for £600m, or anywhere close to it, would trigger a substantial writeback for Lloyds, which wrote down the value of its loans to the Barclays several years ago.

Nevertheless, a deal financed entirely by overseas investors could trigger other concerns relating to media ownership, particularly with the traditionally Conservative-supporting Telegraph titles being sold in the year before a general election.

In July, Telegraph Media Group (TMG) published full-year results showing pre-tax profits had risen by a third to about £39m in 2022.

A successful digital subscriptions strategy and “continued strong cost management” were cited as reasons for the company’s earnings growth.

“Our vision is to reach more paying readers than at any other time in our history, and we are firmly on track to achieve our 1 million subscriptions target in 2023 ahead of our year-end target,” said Nick Hugh, TMG chief executive..

The sale will be overseen by a new crop of directors led by Mike McTighe, the boardroom veteran who chairs Openreach and IG Group, the financial trading firm.

Mr McTighe has been appointed chairman of Press Acquisitions and May Corporation, the respective parent companies of TMG and The Spectator (1828), which publish the media titles.

Continue Reading

Business

Trade war: Trump floats China tariff cut to 80% ahead of talks

Published

on

By

Trade war: Trump floats China tariff cut to 80% ahead of talks

Donald Trump has floated the idea of cutting US trade tariffs against China to 80% – as key peace talks between the sides prepare to get under way.

The weekend meeting, involving top officials from both nations in Switzerland, is seen as an opportunity to ease the most damaging and punitive element of the trade war.

At stake for both sides is not only a deteriorating domestic outlook but a weakening global economy.

Writing on his Truth Social platform, hours after agreeing an interim deal with the UK, the president said: “80% Tariff on China seems right! Up to Scott B [Bessent].”

Money latest: £2,000 water bills loom, Ofwat warns

It means the decision will lie with Scott Bessent – the US treasury secretary who will lead the US delegation at the talks in Geneva.

The outcome is eagerly awaited after several rounds of tariff hikes that currently total duties of 125% on US imports to China and 145% on Chinese goods arriving in America.

Both levels amount to an effective trade embargo, given the severity of the numbers. A 80% figure against China would remain hugely restrictive.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump: Tariffs are making US ‘rich’

But the announcement of talks in Switzerland this week has been welcomed broadly – across financial markets too, with the dollar and global stocks rising on Friday in hopeful anticipation of a cooling in the trade hostilities between the world’s two largest economies.

Investors are not only concerned by higher, if not extortionate, prices but also the impact on supply.

The effects are being felt in both economies already.

Fears of a trade war effectively meant that the US economy contracted during the first three months of the year, while the US central bank has held off on interest rate cuts on the grounds that tariffs applied to imports by the Trump administration globally will lift inflation markedly.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

China’s Silicon Valley: ‘It’s our time to battle’

Official data out of China is yet to show any obvious pain, but surveys suggest factory orders are tumbling.

The fact that China is suffering was borne out on Wednesday when the country’s central bank cut interest rates and reduced bank reserve requirements to help free up more funding for lending.

The authorities also agreed wider borrowing facilities to help manufacturers.

Read more:
China moves to ease tariff pain as trade war talks near
US-UK trade pact neither a free-trade agreement or broad trade deal

Follow The World
Follow The World

Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday

Tap to follow

It will be hoped that bolstering activity in the economy will help lift prices generally, as China continues to battle deflation.

Officially, China has signalled that it wants the US to make the first concession.

Its delegation in Geneva is led by vice premier He Lifeng – a figure within China who has gained an international reputation as an effective negotiator.

A commerce ministry spokesperson said of the prospects for a breakthrough when confirming the talks: “The Chinese side carefully evaluated the information from the US side and decided to agree to have contact with the US side after fully considering global expectations, Chinese interests and calls from US businesses and consumers.”

White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett told Sky’s US partner CNBC on Friday: “Everything that’s been going on with the meeting in Switzerland is very promising to us.

“We’re seeing extreme respect, treating both sides with respect. We’re seeing collegiality and also sketches of positive developments.”

Continue Reading

Business

UK-US pact neither a free-trade agreement nor broad trade deal of Brexiteer dreams

Published

on

By

UK-US pact neither a free-trade agreement nor broad trade deal of Brexiteer dreams

Sir Keir Starmer was at home in Downing Street, watching Arsenal lose in the Champions League, when he got a call from Donald Trump that he thought presented the chance to snatch victory from the jaws of trading defeat.

The president’s call was a characteristic last-minute flex intended to squeeze a little more out of the prime minister.

It was enough to persuade Sir Keir and his business secretary Jonathan Reynolds, dining with industry bosses across London at Mansion House, that they had to seize the opportunity.

Money blog: What interest rate cut means for your money
Key details of ‘historic’ trade deal
PM must show public how trade deal benefits them

The result, hurriedly announced via presidential conference call, is not the broad trade deal of Brexiteer dreams, and is certainly not a free-trade agreement.

It’s a narrow agreement that secures immediate relief for a handful of sectors most threatened by Mr Trump’s swingeing tariffs, with a promise of a broader renegotiation of “reciprocal” 10% tariffs to come.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

‘A fantastic, historic day’

Most pressing was the car industry, which Mr Reynolds said was facing imminent announcements of “very difficult news” at Britain’s biggest brands, including Jaguar Land Rover, which sounds like code for redundancies.

In place of the 25% tariffs imposed last month, a 10% tariff will apply to a quota of 100,000 vehicles a year, less than the 111,000 exported to the US in 2024, but close enough for a deal.

It still leaves the car sector far worse off than it was before “liberation day”, but, with one in four exports crossing the Atlantic, ministers reason it’s better than no deal, and crucially offers more favourable terms than any major US trading partner can claim.

For steel and aluminium zero tariffs were secured, along with what sounds like a commitment to work with the US to prevent Chinese dumping. That is a clear win and fundamental for the ailing industries in Britain, though modest in broad terms, with US exports worth only around £400m a year.

US and UK announced trade deal
Image:
US and UK announced trade deal

In exchange, the UK has had to open up access to food and agricultural products, starting with beef and ethanol, used for fuel and food production.

In place of tariff quotas on beef that applied on either side (12% in the UK and 20% in America) 13,000 tonnes of beef can flow tariff-free in either direction, around 1.5% of the UK market.

The biggest wins

Crucially, sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) production standards that apply to food and animal products, and prevent the sale of hormone-treated meat, will remain. Mr Trump even suggested the US was moving towards “no chemical” European standards.

This may be among the biggest wins, as it leaves open the prospect of an easing of SPS checks on trade with the European Union, a valuable reduction in red tape that is the UK’s priority in reset negotiations with Brussels.

Farmers also believe the US offers an opportunity for their high-quality, grass-fed beef, though there is concern that the near-doubling of ethanol quotas is a threat to domestic production.

Technology deals to come?

There were broad commitments to do deals on technology, AI and an “economic security blanket”, and much hope rests on the US’s promise of “preferential terms” when it comes to pharmaceuticals and other sectors.

There was no mention of proposed film tariffs, still unclear even in the Oval Office.

Taken together, officials describe these moves as “banking sectoral wins” while they continue to try and negotiate down the remaining tariffs.

Follow The World
Follow The World

Listen to The World with Richard Engel and Yalda Hakim every Wednesday

Tap to follow

The challenge from here is that Mr Trump’s “reciprocal” tariff is not reciprocal at all. As commerce secretary Howard Lutnick proudly pointed out in the Oval Office, tariffs on US trade have fallen to less than 2%, while the UK’s have risen to 10%.

As a consequence, UK exporters remain in a materially worse position than they were at the start of April, though better than it was before the president’s call, and for now, several British industries have secured concessions that no other country can claim.

From a protectionist, capricious president, this might well be the best deal on offer.

Quite what incentive Mr Trump will have to renegotiate the blanket tariff, and what the UK has left to give up by way of compromise, remains to be seen. Sir Keir will hope that, unlike the vanquished Arsenal, he can turn it round in the second leg.

Continue Reading

Business

Energy customers secure compensation for overcharging error

Published

on

By

Energy customers secure compensation for overcharging error

Tens of thousands of household energy customers have secured payouts after a compliance review found they had been overcharged.

The industry regulator said that 10 suppliers had handed over compensation and goodwill payments to just over 34,000 customers. The total came to around £7m.

Ofgem said those affected, between January 2019 and September last year, had more than one electricity meter point at their property recording energy usage.

Money latest: Which gender wastes most on fad hobbies?

It explained that while suppliers were allowed to apply multiple standing charges for homes with multiple electricity meters, it meant that some were “erroneously charged more than is allowed under the price cap when combined with unit rates”.

The companies affected were revealed as E.ON Next, Ecotricity, EDF Energy, Octopus Energy, Outfox The Market,
OVO Energy, Rebel Energy [no longer trading], So Energy, Tru Energy and Utility Warehouse.

Of those, Octopus Energy accounted for the majority of the customers hit.

More on Energy

Ofgem said that the near-21,000 customers impacted had received compensation of £2.6m and goodwill payments of almost £550,000.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Govt commits £300m to wind farms

The redress was revealed at a time when energy bills remain elevated and debts at record levels in the wake of the 2022 price shock caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Higher wholesale natural gas prices over the winter months meant that the price cap actually rose in April when a decline would normally be seen.

Read more from Sky News:
The key details in ‘historic’ US-UK trade deal
Pope Leo to lead first mass in Sistine Chapel

The latest forecasts suggest, however, that bills should start to decline for the foreseeable future.

Charlotte Friel, director of retail pricing and systems at Ofgem, said of its compliance operation: “Our duty is to protect energy consumers, and we set the price cap for that very reason so customers don’t pay a higher amount for their energy than they should.

“We expect all suppliers to have robust processes in place so they can bill their customers accurately. While it’s clear that on this occasion errors were made, thankfully, the issues were promptly resolved, and customers are being refunded.”

The watchdog added that all ten suppliers had updated their systems and processes to prevent the error occurring in future.

Continue Reading

Trending