Connect with us

Published

on

The private equity backer of the technology company previously known as UKFast is exploring a sale that it hopes will fetch a £400m price tag.

Sky News has learnt that Inflexion, the buyout firm, has hired investment bankers to orchestrate a sale of ANS, which provides cloud hosting services to corporate customers.

UKFast was rebranded as ANS in the wake of revelations in the Financial Times in 2019 about the conduct of UKFast’s founder, Lawrence Jones.

Mr Jones was convicted of rape and sexual assault in 2023, and was sentenced to 15 years in prison.

In December, he was stripped of his MBE, which had been awarded for services to the digital economy in 2015.

Arma Partners is understood to have been hired to advise on the sale of ANS, which was acquired by Inflexion in 2021.

More from Sky News:
Rail fares rise in England and Wales
Banks defend digital banking investment

More from Money

ANS was founded by Scott Fletcher, a former child actor who appeared in television shows such as Casualty and Jossy’s Giants.

The combined group, which is based in Manchester, is expected to be worth between £300m and £400m, according to banking sources.

Prospective bidders are expected to include other private equity firms.

Inflexion declined to comment.

Continue Reading

Business

Burberry to cut 1,700 jobs after multi-million pound loss

Published

on

By

Burberry to cut 1,700 jobs after multi-million pound loss

Burberry, the UK’s only global luxury brand, is to cut around 1,700 jobs worldwide over the next two years after reporting a steep financial loss.

The company lost £66m in pre-tax profit in the year ended in March as luxury goods sales fell across the world and the company weathered an “uncertain” environment and a “difficult macroeconomic backdrop”.

A year earlier, it recorded £383m in profit.

Money blog: £30 broadband rule explained

It’s suffered in recent years with the share price falling to such an extent the business was removed from the FTSE 100, the index of most valuable companies listed on the London Stock Exchange.

Despite the financial performance, the company was upbeat, with chief executive Joshua Schulman saying “I am more optimistic than ever that Burberry’s best days are ahead and that we will deliver sustainable profitable growth over time”.

What cuts are being made?

More on Retail

The retailer did not specify any shop closures – in the past year, it closed 26 and also opened 26 stores – but did highlight shift cuts and consolidations.

“We don’t have a store closing programme, per see,” Mr Schulman told investors

The night shift at Burberry’s Castleford factory will be cut, it proposed, saying the shift has resulted in overproduction.

“Significant” investment in the facility will be made, however, as the ambition is to scale up British production “over time”, Mr Schulman said.

Changes to the retail network across the world will be made with shop staff being scheduled around “peak traffic”.

Burberry will be “realigning” shop staff, he said, “so that we can offer the best service” at the busiest times.

Follow The World
Follow The World

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

Tap to follow

There will also be a “simplification” of Burberry’s regional structure and a “rebalancing” of central and regional responsibilities to reduce duplication and “accelerate decision making” through the retail network.

But the majority of changes will be made to “office space teams” around the world, the CEO said.

Commercial and creative teams have already been consolidated, Burberry’s annual results said.

What’s gone wrong?

Aside from the global slowdown in luxury goods sales over recession fears, additional headwinds have come in the form of President Trump’s tariffs.

“Clearly, the external environment has become more challenging since mid-February”, Mr Schulman told investors.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Trump’s tariffs: What you need to know

Tariff risks were higher than first planned, the annual results said.

It led the US market to be described by Mr Schulman as “choppy” since February when Mr Trump began announcing tariffs on Mexico, Canada and China, as well as on goods such as steel and cars.

Sales also fell in the Asia Pacific region by 16%, the results showed.

Criticism was levelled at the 2021 British government decision to withdraw VAT refunds for overseas visitors, “which has made the UK the least competitive destination in Europe for tourist shopping”, the results read.

“Business in our UK home market continues to be seriously impacted” by the move.

Continue Reading

Business

Former Greene King chief swoops on former estate with £90m pubs deal

Published

on

By

Former Greene King chief swoops on former estate with £90m pubs deal

A pub group founded by the ex-boss of Greene King is in advanced talks to buy a swathe of sites from his former employer in a £90m deal.

Sky News has learnt that RedCat Pub Group, which was established by Rooney Anand during the Covid pandemic, is close to finalising the purchase of 39 pub-hotels from Greene King.

Sources said a deal could be struck within days.

RedCat, which is backed by the US investor Oaktree Capital Management, has had a mixed track record since it was founded in 2021.

The company trades from roughly 100 sites, about a third of which operate under a subsidiary called The Coaching Inn Group.

The unit has about 1,400 bedrooms, making it the fourth-largest pubs-with-rooms operator in the UK.

One source said the deal with Greene King would double the size of that division by number of sites.

More from Money

A small part of RedCat’s operations fell into administration last year, since when a refinancing backed by Barclays has given the company significant financial breathing space.

Mr Anand stepped down as Greene King’s chief executive in 2019.

His latest deal comes amid dire warnings from hospitality chiefs about the prospects for the sector, amid swingeing tax hikes and jittery consumer confidence.

Greene King declined to comment, while RedCat has been contacted for comment.

Continue Reading

Business

Thames Water apologises to customers but defends bonuses

Published

on

By

Thames Water apologises to customers but defends bonuses

The chairman of the UK’s biggest water company has apologised to customers but defended staff bonus payments.

Sir Adrian Montague, of Thames Water, told MPs on the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs select committee that the utility firm, which supplies 16 million customers in London and parts of south England, was sorry.

He said: “We know the supply interruptions cause inconvenience and sometimes real hardship, and so I think the right thing to do is to start the discussion of the [company’s] turnaround plan by acknowledging we haven’t always served our customers as well as we should, and through the committee, apologising to them.”

Money blog: How to make money off your old (and empty) beauty containers

Thames Water's chairman Sir Adrian Montague appears before the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee. Pic: House of Commons/UK Parliament
Image:
Thames Water’s chairman Sir Adrian Montague appears before the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs select committee. Pic: PA/House of Commons/UK Parliament

Customers faced significant service disruption in recent years, including a boil water notice in Bramley, near Guildford, last summer and a 40% rise in sewage spills in 2024.

It’s also struggled to raise investment, repay its debt pile, which now stands at £19bn after an emergency loan prevented it from running out of money and entering state control.

Despite the massive debt pile, Sir Adrian defended paying bonuses, saying the company was in “a competitive marketplace” and “we have to keep staff”.

More on Thames Water

“It’s true that this business, like many businesses, needs to reward its staff effectively”, he told committee members. “We do need to reward [staff] competitively.”

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

Thames Water boss can ‘save’ company

If bonuses were not paid, “people will come knocking, they’ll try to pick out of us the best staff we’ve got”, Sir Adrian added.

“But the amounts of bonuses paid to staff is very small compared with the capital cost of the works that we were considering,” he said.

Read more from Sky News:
Future of Nissan’s Sunderland plant in doubt
Job vacancies fall – as employers hit with higher costs

Thames Water's chief executive Chris Weston appears before the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee. Pic: PA/House of Commons/UK Parliament
Image:
Thames Water’s chief executive Chris Weston appears before the select committee. Pic: PA/House of Commons/UK Parliament

In the first three months of his tenure, which began in January 2024, Thames Water’s chief executive Chris Weston accepted a bonus of £195,000 as part of his £2.3m pay package.

His bonus can be up to 156% of his salary as a bonus, while frontline workers can only earn between 3% and 6%, he said.

When approached by Sky News on Tuesday, Mr Weston said he was sorry for the service that the customers received and “it’s not where we would like it to be, everyone is very committed in terms of trying and sorting it out”.

Customer bills are to rise 35% to about £588 annually per household by 2030, a figure which Thames Water is seeking to increase.

Continue Reading

Trending