The founder of Revolution Beauty, the London-listed cosmetics group, is in negotiations to repay nearly £3m to settle allegations that he breached his fiduciary duties to the company.
Sky News has learnt that Adam Minto, who stepped down as chief executive just over a year ago, is in advanced talks to hand over the multimillion pound sum.
Sources said a settlement agreement could be announced within weeks, with the talks potentially being confirmed to the London Stock Exchange as early as Monday.
Mr Minto’s co-founder, Tom Allsworth, is also in discussions with Revolution Beauty to amend the timetable for deferred payments owed to him for his stake in Medichem, a haircare and skincare manufacturer, the sources added.
Revolution Beauty hopes the dual settlement will draw a line under a bitter dispute which arose during the year after it listed in London with a valuation of nearly £500m.
A series of governance and operational crises have destroyed much of the company’s value, leaving it with a market capitalisation at Friday’s close of just £81m.
Revolution, which positions itself as a mass market beauty range, is sold through thousands of outlets including Superdrug stores in the UK.
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It built a strong following among younger consumers by forging collaborations with media properties including the ITV dating show Love Island.
Employing just over 400 people, it has overhauled its entire leadership team during the last 12 months.
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Image: The brand has built a strong following among younger consumers Pic: RB
Mr Minto left in November 2022, having stepped back from day-to-day management the previous month.
Revolution Beauty said his exit was as a result of “events since the IPO”.
It was not until June this year that the company disclosed that it had begun legal proceedings against him.
A letter of claim sent to Mr Minto said: “The claim alleges that Mr Minto breached his fiduciary, statutory, contractual and/or tortious duties to the company.
“Certain of the matters alleged contributed to the delay in the audit of the group’s FY22 results, and to the suspension of the company’s shares from trading on AIM.
“The company is looking to recover material sums relating to the exceptional costs the company incurred as a result of the matters alleged.”
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This weekend, it was unclear whether a payment from Mr Minto of close to £3m would represent a substantial proportion of the “material sums” originally referred to by Revolution Beauty.
The accounting and trading problems which arose after its flotation culminated in Boohoo Group, the online fashion group, building a stake in it.
In July, the two companies reached a compromise agreement which involved Revolution Beauty’s chairman and chief executive stepping down.
Boohoo remains a major shareholder in the company.
On Saturday, a spokesman for Revolution Beauty declined to comment, while Mr Minto could not be reached for comment.
At that price, the company’s founder and chief executive, Will Shu, would be in line for a windfall of more than £170m.
Deliveroo further announced, before trading on Monday, that it had suspended its £100m share buyback programme.
The opening share price reaction took the value to 171p per share – still shy of the 180p on the table – and well under the 390p per share flotation price seen in 2021.
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Deliveroo’s shares have weakened nearly 50% since their market debut.
The deal is not expected to face regulatory hurdles as it provides DoorDash access to 10 new markets where it currently has no presence.
But a takeover would likely represent a blow to the City of London given the anticipated loss of a tech-focused player.
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “If the deal is done at that price, the company will fail to shake off the ‘Floperoo’ tag it was saddled with after its disastrous IPO debut in 2021.
“Even though Deliveroo has finally broken through into profitable territory, the prolonged bout of indigestion around its share price has continued.
“The surge in demand for home deliveries during the pandemic waned just as competition heated up. Deliveroo’s foray into grocery deliveries has helped it turn a profit but it’s still facing fierce rivals.”
She added: “The DoorDash Deliveroo deal will be unappetising for the government which has been trying to boost the number of tech companies listed in London.
“If Deliveroo is purchased it would join a stream of companies leaving the London Stock Exchange, with too few IPOs [initial public offerings] in the pipeline to make up the numbers.”
A trade deal with the US is “possible” but not “certain”, a senior minister has said as he struck a cautious tone about negotiations with the White House.
Pat McFadden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, told Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips there was “a serious level of engagement going on at high levels” to secure a UK-US trade deal.
However, Mr McFadden, a key ally of Sir Keir Starmer, struck a more cautious tone than Chancellor Rachel Reeves on the prospect of a US trade deal, saying: “I think an agreement is possible – I don’t think it’s certain, and I don’t want to say it’s certain, but I think it’s possible.”
He went on to say the government wanted an “agreement in the UK’s interests” and not a “hasty deal”, amid fears from critics that Number 10 could acquiesce a deal that lowers food standards, for example, or changes certain taxes in a bid to persuade Donald Trump to lower some of the tariffs that have been placed on British goods.
And asked about the timing of the deal – following recent reports an agreement was imminent – Mr McFadden said: “We’ll keep working with the United States and keep trying to get to an agreement in the coming weeks.”
As well as talks with the US, the UK has also ramped up its efforts with the EU, with suggestions it could include a new EU youth mobility scheme that would allow under-30s from the bloc to live, work and study in the UK and vice versa.
Mr McFadden said he believed the government could “improve upon” the Brexit deal struck by Boris Johnson, saying it had caused “an awful lot of bureaucracy and costs here in the UK”.
He said “first and foremost” on the government’s agenda was securing a food and agriculture and a veterinary agreement, saying it was “such an important area for the UK and an area where we’ve had so much extra cost and bureaucracy because of Brexit”.
He added: “But again, as with the United States, there’s no point in calling the game before it’s done. We’ve still got work to do, and we’re doing that work with our partners in the EU.”
The Cabinet Office minister also rejected suggestions the UK would have to choose between pursuing a trade deal with the US and one with the EU – the latter of which has banned chlorinated chicken in its markets – as has the UK – but which the US has historically wanted.
On the issue of chlorinated chicken, Mr McFadden said the government had “made clear we will not water down animal welfare standards with either party”.
“But I don’t agree that it’s some fundamental choice beyond where we have to pick one trading partner rather than another. I think that’s to misunderstand the nature of the UK economy, and I don’t think would be in our interests to put all our eggs in one basket.”
Also speaking to Trevor Phillips was Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, who said the government should be close to closing the deal with the US “because we got very close last time President Trump was in office”.
She also insisted food standards should not be watered down in order to get a deal, saying she did not reach an agreement with Canada when she was in government for that reason.
“What Labour needs to do now is show that they can get a deal that isn’t making concessions, so we can have what we had last month before the trade tariffs, and we need serious people doing this,” she said.
UK economic growth could be “postponed” for two years amid a toxic cocktail of headwinds for confidence, according to a respected forecast which says further interest rate cuts may help lift the mood.
EY ITEM Club, which uses the Treasury’s economic modelling, downgraded expectations for output in both 2025 and 2026 in its latest report.
It warns of a direct hit from Donald Trump‘s trade war and from persistent high inflation in the UK economy.
But the forecast says the biggest impact would come from weaker sentiment among both households and businesses, given the surge in uncertainty and hits to global growth caused by the imposition of tariffs.
A “baseline” 10% tariff on imports from most countries around the world is in place while UK-produced steel, aluminium and cars are subject to duties of 25%.
Around 16% of all goods shipped abroad head for the United States typically but the study said that weaker demand for exports would likely hit that number.
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It forecast UK growth of 0.8% this year – down from the 1% it expected three months ago – and a figure of 0.9% for 2026.
That last figure represented a downgrade of 0.6 percentage points.
These are not the numbers the Treasury will want to see, coming in even lower than the International Monetary Fund’s downgrades last week, as it leads work on the government’s stated priority of securing economic growth.
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1:10
What IMF said about the economy
It has been accused of an own goal through the chancellor’s tax increases on business, which came into effect at the beginning of this month.
At the same time, households are grappling a surge in bills, including those for energy, water and council tax, which are threatening to depress spending power further.
Data on Friday showed a renewed slump in consumer confidence and sharp increases in the number of firms in “critical” financial distress and going to the wall.
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19:33
US trade deal ‘possible, not certain’
EY said the weaker global economic backdrop and spiralling levels of uncertainty would weigh on both families and businesses.
It warned the consumer mood remained “cautious” amid the continuing pressures on household budgets, further limiting demand for major purchases.
Anna Anthony, regional managing partner for EY UK & Ireland, said: “There had been signs that the economy was exceeding expectations in the opening months of 2025, but a combination of global trade disruption, uncertainty, and persistent inflation look likely to postpone the UK’s return to more moderate levels of growth.
“Businesses thrive on certainty, so it’s unsurprising that an unpredictable global market is translating into lower levels of business investment over the short term.
“While conditions remain challenging, there are still some grounds for optimism.
“The services-led UK economy is projected to see continued growth this year and gradual interest rate cuts should slowly bolster business and household spending.
“Over time, the unpredictable global landscape may offer opportunities for the UK to position itself as a stable, attractive destination for investment.”