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A US-based investment firm is to inject hundreds of millions of pounds into the AA, the breakdown recovery service, nearly three years after it delisted from the London Stock Exchange.

Sky News has learnt that Stonepeak, which specialises in infrastructure and related deals, is close to agreeing the details of a £450m into the company which for many years branded itself as ‘Britain’s fourth emergency service’.

City sources said this weekend that Stonepeak’s investment, which is expected to involve it taking a stake of about 15% in the AA, could be announced as soon as next week.

A statement is expected to be made to the Irish Stock Exchange, where the AA has publicly traded bonds, the sources said.

The deal, which will imply an enterprise value for the company of approximately £4bn, will underscore the turnaround in its fortunes under chief executive Jakob Pfaudler, who took the helm in 2021.

The AA has an experienced leadership team, including Rick Haythornthwaite, the chairman-designate of NatWest Group, as its chairman.

People close to the company say that under their stewardship, more than £1bn of value has been created, with the company now cash-generative and customer numbers once again growing.

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The AA remains indebted, with net debt of £2.2bn at its last year-end.

Insiders said the new investment from Stonepeak would be used to strengthen the AA’s balance sheet by repaying some existing debt, as well as to invest in growth initiatives.

With 14m members, the AA and the RAC dominate Britain’s roadside recovery market.

Founded in 1905 by a quartet of driving enthusiasts, the AA has had a hectic recent corporate history.

It passed 100,000 members in 1934, before reaching the 1m mark in 1950.

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At various points over the last 20 years, it has been owned by Centrica, shared a parent company with Saga, the over-50s travel and insurance specialist, and been a standalone listed company in London.

In 2021, it was taken private again after a bid from a private equity consortium comprising Towerbrook Capital Partners and Warburg Pincus.

That takeover came after years of challenges grappling with its enormous debt pile, with the deal valuing its equity at less than £250m.

The AA has 2700 patrols attending an average of 9,400 breakdowns every day.

It operates the largest driving school business in the UK under the AA and BSM brands.

By bringing in a third major shareholder, it mirrors a deal struck in 2021 by the RAC, its closest UK rival.

The RAC’s then owners – CVC Capital Partners and the Singaporean state fund GIC – brought the technology-focused private equity firm, Silver Lake, in as another major investor.

The company has explored a sale of its insurance arm, which also has millions of customers, at various points but is not actively doing so now.

Goldman Sachs is advising the AA on the investment from Stonepeak.

A spokeswoman for the AA declined to comment on Saturday.

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‘If we’re not there already we’re coming to a town near you’ Aldi says, vowing lower prices before Christmas

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'If we're not there already we're coming to a town near you' Aldi says, vowing lower prices before Christmas

Aldi is to open 80 new shops over the next two years, as well as opening a new one every week until the end of the year, after sales hit a record high.

On top of the new sites to be launched, the UK arm of the German discount retailer said a further 21 stores will open within the next 13 weeks, in London, Durham, and Scotland.

“If we’re not there already, we are coming to a town near you,” Aldi’s UK and Ireland chief executive Giles Hurley told reporters, which will create thousands of additonal jobs.

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Earlier this year, Aldi also said it was seeking sites in Bromley and Ealing in London, South Shields in Tyne and Wear, and Witney in Oxfordshire.

Opening more shops will mean growing market share as the barrier of distance to an Aldi is eliminated.

“The last 35 years have taught us that when we open a store nearby, customers switch to Aldi,” Mr Hurley said.

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“The main reason people choose not to shop with us regularly is distance, with over a third of shoppers saying they’d switched to Aldi for their main shop if we opened a store closer to them.”

There are currently 1,060 Aldis in the UK, with an ambition to bring the total to 1,500.

Price wars

Aldi is the UK’s fourth most popular supermarket, after Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Asda, according to industry data from Worldpanel.

More families were choosing it as the place to do their weekly shop and were also going more frequently for top-up shopping, the company said, which helped Aldi’s UK and Ireland annual revenue reach a new record of £18.1bn in 2024.

Prices are to be brought down in the coming weeks and months as Christmas approaches, Mr Hurley said, as 900 products became cheaper with £300m spent on bringing down the cost of goods.

“I’m really confident that in the coming days, weeks and months, we’ll continue to see prices in our stores drop”, Mr Hurley added.

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Inflation up: the bad and ‘good’ news

Market trends

Despite promised price falls, the outlook for overall inflation is “stubborn”, he said, “more stubborn than other developed countries”.

This is seen in changing buyer behaviour. More shoppers are treating themselves at home rather than going out and are increasingly buying Aldi’s own-label premium goods, Mr Hurley said.

Looking to the budget on 26 November, he said there’s “no doubt” it “does create a bit of uncertainty”.

Grocery prices could rise, and consumer confidence could be affected if business costs grow, he added.

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Blackstone to pledge £100bn UK investment during Trump visit

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Blackstone to pledge £100bn UK investment during Trump visit

Blackstone, the private equity giant which owns stakes in Legoland and swathes of British real estate, will this week pledge to invest £100bn in UK assets over the next decade during President Trump’s state visit.

Sky News has learnt that the investment group will unveil the commitment as part of a government-orchestrated announcement aimed at shifting attention back to the economic ties between Britain and the US.

President Trump’s arrival in the UK this week will come against a febrile political backdrop, following Lord Mandelson’s sacking as US ambassador over his ties to the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

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Ministers have already begun announcing billions of pounds worth of partnerships in sectors such as financial services and nuclear power, with further deals to follow in areas including artificial intelligence.

Blackstone’s £100bn commitment to UK investments over the next decade forms part of a $500bn European splurge announced by the buyout firm in June, according to a person familiar with its plans.

The figure will encompass private equity buyouts as well as other forms of investment, they added.

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A source close to the firm said it had agreed to invest the sum following talks with Downing Street officials led by Varun Chandra, Sir Keir Starmer’s business adviser.

Blackstone has for decades been one of the most prolific investors in British companies, and only last week triumphed in a £490m takeover battle for Warehouse REIT, a London-listed logistics company.

Last week, it emerged that Southern Water had banned water tanker deliveries to a country estate owned by Stephen Schwarzman, Blackstone’s billionaire chief executive.

Sky News revealed last week that Mr Schwarzman would be among the corporate chiefs accompanying President Trump on his state visit.

Blackstone, which manages assets worth about $1.2trn, declined to comment.

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New shops to open as Aldi revenues reach record high

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'If we're not there already we're coming to a town near you' Aldi says, vowing lower prices before Christmas

Aldi is to open 80 new shops over the next two years after sales hit a record high.

On top of the new sites to be launched, the UK arm of the German discount retailer said a further 21 stores will open within the next 13 weeks, in London, Durham, and Scotland.

Earlier this year, Aldi also said it was seeking sites in Bromley and Ealing in London, South Shields in Tyne and Wear, and Witney in Oxfordshire.

Money blog: ‘I’m a celeb photographer’

It comes as Aldi’s UK and Ireland annual revenue reached a new record of £18.1bn in 2024.

The retailer’s market share continued to rise as Aldi said more families were choosing it as the place to do their weekly shop and were also going more frequently for top-up shops.

Aldi has overtaken Asda to become the UK’s third most popular supermarket.

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Following the record revenue, the retailer announced another record figure, an investment of £1.6bn over the next two years to open the new shops.

There are currently 1,060 Aldis in the UK, with an ambition to bring the total to 1,500.

But despite the fact revenue has never been higher, profit fell more than £100m – dropping to £435.5m, down from £552.9m a year earlier.

This came due to pay increases for staff, cutting prices for customers and investment, Aldi said.

Store assistant pay rose this month to a minimum of £13.02 an hour nationally, and £14.35 within the M25.

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