As global markets suffered another rout, with the FTSE 100 flirting with bear market territory and finishing below 5000 for the first time since July 2010, Tesco was one of a handful of risers ahead of its figures on Wednesday. The supermarket, which recently launched a price cutting campaign, is widely expected to record its worst six monthly performance for twenty years. But analysts at UBS raised their rating on the business in the expectation of better things to come. Analysts Mike Tattersal moved his recommendation from neutral to buy and his price target from 410p to 510, saying: Tesco management has become intensely focused on driving higher levels of capital efficiency across the business, in our view. As early actions become more evident over the coming 12 months, we believe this theme will become central to the investment case. In the near term, Tesco’s UK business remains the key determinant of sentiment towards the shares and we believe there are compelling reasons to believe that the freakishly challenging conditions that have prevailed in 2011 in the UK grocery industry will not be repeated next year. Fierce headwinds (VAT and fuel) will annualise, which, together with self-help initiatives, should deliver much healthier like-for-like sales growth from the core business in 2012. Tesco shares closed 9.6p higher at 380.1p making it the biggest riser in the leading index, one of only five companies in positive territory. As EU officials delayed a much needed bailout to Greece, and worries grew about the impact of the country’s financial woes on bank balance sheets, the FTSE 100 suffered another volatile day before finishing 131.06 points lower at 4944.44, a 2.58% decline which wiped £34bn off the value of Britain’s top companies. It is the fifth consecutive fall for the leading index. At its worst the FTSE 100 had fallen to 4868, putting it perilously close to the 4843 level which would mark bear market territory, a 20% fall from its recent peak at the beginning of July. Meanwhile in the US the S&P 500 did record a 20% drop from its recent high, while Germany’s Dax lost 2.9% and France’s CAC fell 2.6%. The prospect of a bailout at Franco-Belgian Dexia and a profit warning from Deutsche Bank sent the whole banking sector lower, with Barclays down 11.9p at 144.35p and Lloyds Banking Group 1.655p lower at 31.8p. Angus Campbell, head of sales at Capital Spreads, said: All across Europe equities were sold off as fears over the eurozone debt crisis mounted. It was a lack of liquidity causing investor concern, [since this] ultimately led to the nationalisation of Northern Rock in the UK and the destruction of Bear Sterns and Lehman Brothers in the US at the height of the last crisis. This time it is Dexia which is on the verge of being taken onto the government’s books even after having received a bailout back in 2008. Miners continued to fall on demand concerns, with Credit Suisse cutting its target prices across the sector by 5% to 40%. The bank said: Recent pricing in commodity markets has been driven overwhelmingly by macro sentiment, with fears of an economic implosion in Europe and, to a lesser degree the US, weighing heavily. Although the outlook is even more murky than normal, continued solid Chinese demand should provide “base-load” support for many commodities. However, this is unlikely to be enough to support pricing in the short term, with marginal demand and sentiment likely to continue to be driven primarily by events in the North Atlantic. So Rio Tinto dropped 107p to 2712.5p and Xstrata lost 26.9p to 764p. International Consolidated Airlines Group , the merged British Airways and Iberia, fell 5.2p to 149.3p on worries about the financial position of its US partner American Airlines, while Hargreaves Lansdown lost 35.3p to 412.6p on worries about the effect of the current market volatility on its investment business. Home Retail led the mid-caps higher, up 3.1p to 121.7p on continued bid talk, with Wal-Mart one name mentioned. But Nick Bubb at Arden poured cold water on the idea: These stories pop up every so often with Home Retail, to discomfort the shorts, and then soon die away. The fact is that Wal-Mart have put catalogue showroom chains like Argos out of business in the US and there is no way they would allow Asda to buy it, whilst this is the wrong time in the cycle for a structurally challenged operation like Argos to be attractive to private equity. Sell, while the ducks are quacking. But Rentokil Initial closed 4.15p lower at 66.35p after a sell note from RBS. Analyst Justin Jordan said: RBS hosted a salesdesk meeting with Rentokil management. We fear the City Link recovery is behind schedule and, with an uncertain outlook across other divisions, we reduce our 2012 pretax profit forecast by 7% and downgrade to sell [from hold]. On City Link, the parcels delivery business, in particular he said: Although City Link recently secured Marks & Spencer as a customer, we sense that converting prospects into customers is a frustratingly slow process that may slip into the first quarter of 2012. In addition, the business has not as yet reached 75% employed drivers. Visibility is low, with overall profitability highly dependent upon peak December trading. Tesco Barclays Lloyds Banking Group Rio Tinto Xstrata International Consolidated Airlines Group Hargreaves Lansdown Home Retail Rentokil Initial Nick Fletcher guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Full coverage as the Apple chief unveils its latest iPhone – find out what’s new 5.35pm: Welcome: and is your popcorn popping? It’s iPhone 5 launch time. It seems so long since we were last here. We know some details already: there’s going to be an iPhone 5. Given that at WWDC in June, Steve Jobs described the next version of the software powering the iPhone as “iOS 5″, and since every launch of a new number of iOS has seen a new version of the phone (3G, 3GS, 4 – see Wikipedia ), the idea that there won’t be an “iPhone 5″ just doesn’t hold any water. Then there’s the question of whether the crowd has managed to figure this out ahead of time – if you’re reading this before 6pm UK time, then our crowdsourcing experiment is still open (and if you’re reading it later, it’s closed: tick off the results as they come by). We also know that: • the phones will be in the UK from 14 October : reserve your place outside the stores now; • “iTunes in the Cloud” (so you can get your purchased music on any iOS device, without syncing with a PC or Mac) is coming to Europe , and to the UK first. Why no iTunes Match to sync all your music library? Still being negotiated with record labels, we understand. We suspect that the iPod Classic is for the chop, but that’s not certain. Sales of iPods are tailing off at about 5% annually, and iPod Touches (the app-enabled ones) taking more and more share – now up to 50% of iPod sales. There’s a huge amount at stake today. Apple is presently the world’s largest mobile phone company (by revenue; Samsung is expected to be the biggest in terms of shipments). It’s possible that Samsung will have overtaken it in smartphone shipments in the third quarter (July-September) just ended; it will be interesting to see if Cook announces any iPhone shipment numbers for the quarter, because this should be the “quiet period” ahead of the financials. Possibly he’ll announce “iOS shipments”, which would be iPod Touch, iPhone and iPad. Being biggest is no guarantee you’ll continue, though: just look at Nokia, which just one year ago could claim the title. Now it’s plunged into loss and we’re still waiting for its first Windows Phone device. Everyone knows that with Steve Jobs having stepped down as chief executive, Cook needs to keep the executive team and the staff weaving the magic that has made Apple the biggest company by value in the world. That’s no small order. Everyone will be looking for the slightest flaw. And now, on with the show… iPhone Apple Smartphones Charles Arthur Josh Halliday guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Turns out super homemaker mom wasn’t. Martha Stewart was a bit of a shrew in the maternal department—a gut-churning, demanding perfectionist when it came to her house, and decidedly not kid friendly. That’s the verdict from her grown daughter, Alexis, who has penned a kind of “Mommie Drearest” tell-all…
Continue reading …“Amanda Knox looked stunned this evening after she dramatically lost her appeal against her murder conviction,” the Daily Mail reported last night—after her conviction was overturned . The article, which included phony quotes from the prosecution team, stayed up on the British paper’s website for nearly half an hour as…
Continue reading …Andrew Hamilton, Oxford University’s vice chancellor warns that the UK could lose top academics and students overseas unless the government ramps up research funding Cuts to government funding of universities mean the UK is now “treading water” and risks losing top academics and students to its international competitors, the vice chancellor of Oxford University has warned. Professor Andrew Hamilton said that while public expenditure on higher education was growing in China and the US, the share of GDP spent on UK universities dropped from 1.3% to 1.2% in the last year. Other governments are “ramping up investment in higher education, particularly for research”, he told academics at his annual oration on Tuesday. Harvard receives 80% of its research income from the state, while Oxford receives just over 40%. China is investing billions of pounds in creating 100 top universities this century. Hamilton said it often took many years for research to reap rewards and accused ministers of impatience. Funding postgraduate research “doesn’t always sit easily with short-term political imperatives”, he said. But without postgraduates, “many of the roots of our research would soon wither or die”. He also attacked what he saw as over-zealous rules on overseas postgraduates and academics entering the UK. The new restrictions pose “serious risks, both scholarly and academic”, he said. Hamilton said the UK was particularly poor at funding postgraduate students, whohe described as “the engine of ground-breaking experimentation”. A growing number of universities abroad provide “five-star packages” for almost all their doctoral students, he said. But at Oxford, fewer than one in every three postgraduate in a social science or humanities field receives a full scholarship. On average, just half of all the university’s postgraduates do. He said this was forcing many of the finest students to turn down offers for postgraduate work at his institution. “Sadly there are too many examples of Oxford losing bright graduate students to overseas universities because of the funding gap,” he said. In particular, bright doctoral students from low or average income homes could be deprived of the chance to further their research, he warned. This is particularly unfair because in some fields, having a master’s or PhD is now a necessity, he said. “Postgraduate funding is hardly equitable or likely to promote social mobility” at the moment, he said. “It is time for a fresh look at it. “It is striking … that there is nothing in the UK that can compare with the US government’s federal loans scheme, to enable graduate students to finance their study. “It is hard to escape the logic … if this competitive disadvantage in funding is not addressed, the UK higher education sector will increasingly lose out to its international competitors on the recruitment of the best students and academics.” Hamilton was a chemistry professor and provost of Yale University in the US before returning to the UK in 2009. He said he would not yet talk about next autumn’s fees of £9,000 for undergraduates because it was a year away. “There would be time and place aplenty as we get a better handle on the likely consequences, intended and unintended,” he said. University funding Research Higher education University of Oxford Postgraduates Students Tuition fees Jessica Shepherd guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Fed chair Ben Bernanke is seeking to lower expectations about the Federal Reserve’s recently announced effort to spur borrowing and jump-start the faltering economy. The program, known as Operation Twist will provide “meaningful but not an enormous support to the economy,”Bernanke told lawmakers during testimony before a joint congressional committee. “It should help somewhat on
Continue reading …A Jewish “hate letter” written by Adolph Hilter will go on public display for the first time ever in a Los Angeles museum. The four-page typed letter, written years before Hitler came to power and believed to be his first significant writing about Jews, expresses his disdain for Jews and…
Continue reading …Michael Jackson was dead when he arrived at an LA hospital but Dr. Conrad Murray insisted that physicians try to revive him, two emergency doctors testified yesterday. An aortic balloon pump was placed in Jackson’s heart, a move that doctors knew was futile but was done “to prepare Dr. Murray…
Continue reading …Spock may live long and prosper, but he’s had it with Star Trek conventions. Leonard Nimoy is ditching the Vulcan mind meld with devoted fans at the Trekkie fests now that he’s 80 (in human years). The cosmic get-together over the weekend in suburban Chicago celebrating the 45th anniversary of…
Continue reading …Pauline Pearce, nicknamed ‘the Hackney Heroine’ after speaking out against rioters in east London, gets a taste of mainstream politics Richard Sprenger Michael White
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