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A London-listed automotive components supplier has become the latest British-based company to draw overseas takeover interest after receiving a series of offers from a Canadian rival.

Sky News has learnt that TI Fluid Systems has received at least two bid proposals from ABC Technologies Holdings, a Canadian competitor.

City sources said on Friday evening that the second of the offers had valued TI Fluid Systems at 180p-a-share – a significant premium to its closing price on Friday of 145.8p.

Shares in the company rose by more than 7% on Friday amid market rumours about a potential bid.

TI Fluid Systems floated in London in October 2017 at a price of 255p-a-share.

One source said the company’s board, which is chaired by Tim Cobbold, a former boss of banknote printer De La Rue, was unlikely to seriously consider a proposal unless it was pitched at closer to 200p-a-share.

Both parties are likely to come under pressure from the Takeover Panel to confirm the interest from ABC Technologies over the weekend, or at the latest on Monday morning.

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TI Fluid Systems operates from 98 manufacturing locations in 27 countries.

It specialises in the production of fluid handling and thermal management systems.

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The company traces its roots back to 1922, when it began trading as Harry Bundy and Company.

A string of London-listed companies have agreed to takeovers by foreign or private equity bidders this year, the latest of which came this week when Centamin, a gold miner, accepted a £1.9bn offer from AngloGold Ashanti of South Africa.

On Friday, Apollo and TI Fluid Systems both declined to comment.

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UK interest rates an outlier after decision to hold but Bank of England forecasts inflation rise to 2.5%

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UK interest rates an outlier after decision to hold but Bank of England forecasts inflation rise to 2.5%

There has been no change to the UK interest rate despite the US and European central banks all moving to cut in the last week.

The Bank of England has kept the interest rate at 5% as official figures this week showed some measures of price rises grew.

It follows the first cut in more than four years.

The rate set by the Bank impacts how much lenders charge to borrow money, so it affects how expensive mortgages or credit card bills are.

But there was no consensus on the decision. One of the nine rate decision-makers voted for a cut.

There were signals of the Bank’s direction of travel from governor Andrew Bailey.

Where to next?

More on Bank Of England

If the economy continues to progress in line with its expectations “we should be able to reduce rates gradually over time”, he said.

But, he said, “we need to be careful not to cut too fast or by too much”.

Money blog: UK’s cheapest and most expensive cities to rent

Market expectations are currently for a cut at the next meeting in November followed by a further one in December.

The latest forecasts from the Bank are for inflation to rise again, reaching 2.5% by the end of the year.

How did we get here?

Interest rates were brought to a high last seen during the 2008 global financial crash in an effort to bring down spiralling inflation.

More expensive borrowing can choke economic demand and slow price rises.

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Bank of England holds interest rates

The Bank is tasked with bringing inflation down to 2%. It currently stands at 2.2%.

The US central bank, the Federal Reserve, brought interest rates down by 0.5 percentage points to 4.75% to 5% on Wednesday and the European Central Bank (ECB) reduced borrowing costs last week to 3.5%.

Unlike the UK, the US interest rate is a range to guide lenders rather than a single percentage.

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Sterling strengthened, following the news and against a weakened dollar a pound bought $1.33, the highest amount in more than two years.

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Why Bank of England is in no rush to lower interest rates – even though some think decision to wait is dangerous

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Why Bank of England is in no rush to lower interest rates - even though some think decision to wait is dangerous

Slowly does it.

That’s the overarching message to take away from the Bank of England‘s latest monetary policy decision. Unlike the Federal Reserve, the US central bank, which decided yesterday to cut interest rates by half a percentage point – more than many had expected – the Bank wanted to signal today that it’s in no rush.

Money blog: UK’s cheapest and most expensive cities to rent

Alongside the decision to leave borrowing costs on hold at 5%, the Bank’s governor also signalled that he and the rest of the Monetary Policy Committee were in no rush to cut them again. Provided there aren’t any inflation surprises, he said, “we should be able to reduce rates gradually over time”. He added: “But it’s vital that inflation stays low, so we need to be careful not to cut too fast or by too much.”

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The Bank of England has held the base interest rate at 5%

Even so, the Bank is expected to carry on cutting rates in the coming months. Indeed, economists think the Bank will cut rates in November by at least a quarter percentage point, followed by more cuts next year, taking borrowing costs down towards 3% by next summer.

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That’s largely because inflation is now considerably lower than in recent years, and because there is evidence that high interest rates are starting to weigh down economic activity. The longer those rates stay high, the bigger the depressive impact they have on the UK.

But that raises another issue. For some economists, the Bank of England’s gradualist approach is dangerous. They worry that higher rates, which deter companies and individuals from spending and investing, are causing unnecessary damage.

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That helps explain why one of the MPC members, Swati Dhingra, voted to reduce rates at this meeting.

But the rest of the committee was of one mind – no point in rushing.

Whether they are right is something we’ll find out in the coming months.

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UK interest rates an outlier after decision to hold

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UK interest rates an outlier after decision to hold but Bank of England forecasts inflation rise to 2.5%

There has been no change to the UK interest rate despite the US and European central banks all moving to cut in the last week.

The Bank of England has kept the interest rate at 5% as official figures this week showed some measures of price rises grew.

It follows the first cut in more than four years.

The rate set by the Bank impacts how much lenders charge to borrow money, so it affects how expensive mortgages or credit card bills are.

But there was no consensus on the decision. One of the nine rate decision-makers voted for a cut.

Where to next?

There were signals of the Bank’s direction of travel from governor Andrew Bailey.

More on Bank Of England

If the economy continues to progress in line with its expectations “we should be able to reduce rates gradually over time”, he said.

But, he said, “we need to be careful not to cut too fast or by too much”.

Market expectations are currently for a cut at the next meeting in November followed by a further one in December.

How did we get here?

Interest rates were brought to a high last seen during the 2008 global financial crash in an effort to bring down spiralling inflation.

More expensive borrowing can choke economic demand and slow price rises.

The Banks is tasked with bringing inflation down to 2%. It currently stands at 2.2%.

The US central bank, the Federal Reserve, brought interest rates down by 0.5 percentage points to 4.75% to 5% on Wednesday and the European Central Bank (ECB) reduced borrowing costs last week to 3.5%.

Unlike the UK, the US interest rate is a range to guide lenders rather than a single percentage.

Reaction

Sterling strengthened, following the news and against a weakened dollar a pound bought $1.33, the highest amount in more than two years.

Continue Reading

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