The FTSE 100 is down 0.3 percent in early trading. Companies with reports and trading updates today include Ithaca Energy, Travis Perkins, S4 Capital, Revolution Beauty Group, Nanoco and CMC Markets. Read the Business Live blog from Wednesday, March 27 below.
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Donald Trump’s social media activities are surging during their stock market debut
Shares in Donald Trump’s social media businesses soared on their stock market debut in New York yesterday, valuing the former US president’s stake at almost £5 billion.
Trump Media & Technology Group, which is behind its Truth Social platform, rose nearly 60 percent to $79 on the Nasdaq in early trading.
A transatlantic bidding war breaks out for packaging giant DS Smith
A transatlantic bidding war has broken out for London-listed packaging group DS Smith.
The FTSE 100 company said last night that it is in talks with US rival International Paper over a potential takeover bid worth 415p per share or £5.7 billion.
S4 Capital income declines as companies cut back on advertising spend
S4 Capital’s revenue fell last year for the first time since its inception as clients cut back on advertising spend amid greater economic uncertainty.
Sir Martin Sorrell’s company announced that like-for-like net revenue fell 4.5 percent to £873.2 million in 2023, after double-digit growth over the past four years.
The ad agency said corporate clients were taking an increasingly short-term attitude to “larger transformation projects”, leading to longer sales cycles and cutbacks at some smaller clients.
S4 Capital shares were 6.6 percent lower at 41.6 pence in the early hours of Wednesday morning, meaning they have fallen by more than three-quarters in the past twelve months
Travis Perkins boss leaves as chairman flags ‘underperformance’
Travis Perkins chief executive Nick Roberts will step down after five difficult years at the helm of Britain’s largest building materials supplier.
Roberts, 55, has agreed to remain in the position until a successor is identified, the group said in a statement Tuesday.
Blackrock’s boss warns of a global pensions crisis as people live longer
Blackrock’s boss has warned of a global pensions crisis as people live longer but cannot afford to pay for it.
In his annual letter to investors, Larry Fink said, “As a society, we spend an enormous amount of energy helping people live longer.
A transatlantic bidding war is breaking out for London-listed packaging giant DS Smith
A transatlantic bidding war has broken out for London-listed packaging group DS Smith.
The FTSE 100 company said last night that it is in talks with US rival International Paper over a potential takeover bid worth 415p per share or £5.7 billion.
The discussions come just weeks after DS Smith backed a lower offer of 373p per share or £5.1 billion from fellow Footsie group Mondi.
That would have created an £11 billion packaging giant listed in London.
S4 Capital is struggling with a weak advertising market
Sir Martin Sorrell’s S4 Capital reported a 25 percent drop in core profits in a ‘difficult’ 2023, illustrating a downturn in advertising markets that the company is expected to continue next year.
There is reluctance among S4 Capital’s clients to commit to larger projects and new business.
The group expects customers to remain cautious in the short term as it forecasts another decline in comparable net sales in 2024 and profits to be roughly around the same level as 2023’s £93.7m.
“After our first four years of strong net sales growth, we had a difficult 2023 due to challenging global macroeconomic conditions, recession fears and high interest rates.
‘This resulted in reluctance from customers to engage and extended sales cycles, especially for larger projects, a difficult year for new customers, and a reduction in spend at some regional and smaller customer relationships. We saw better relative performance and continued resilience across our top 20 and top 50 customers, with our ten largest customer relationships strong.
“We have taken significant steps over the past year to reduce costs and maintain a disciplined approach to operational efficiency. We aim for 2024 like-for-like net sales to be lower than the previous year, with broadly similar profit levels to 2023.”
Travis Perkins’ boss leaves
Travis Perkins chief executive Nick Roberts will step down from his role after five difficult years at the helm, Britain’s largest building materials supplier announced this morning.
Chairman Jasmine Whitbread said: “On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would like to thank Nick for his dedication and contribution to the company over the past five years.
‘While good progress has been made in modernizing the business, the Board fully recognizes the underperformance of the business over recent reporting periods, in the context of ongoing economic challenges and end market weakness.
‘We remain fully focused on improving profitability and increasing cash flow generation, as well as accelerating changes to our business model to create a simpler, more efficient business, well positioned to emerge stronger when the markets to recover and to grow shareholder value.’
British gas boss Chris O’Shea has increased his pay to £8.2 million as household energy bills soar
The boss of British gas owner Centrica saw his wages almost double last year after high energy bills boosted the company’s share price.
Centrica chief executive Chris O’Shea took home £8.2 million in 2023.
That compared to £4.5 million the year before – a figure he said was impossible to justify.
Ithaca Energy is cutting UK investment after profits are hammered by the windfall tax
North Sea oil group Ithaca Energy plans to scale back investments in Britain after profits came under pressure in 2023 due to the UK Energy Profits Levy.
Ithaca Energy’s full-year profit fell to $215.6 million from $1.03 billion last year as the company produced about 70,239 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boe/d), compared to record production of 71,403 barrels of oil equivalent the year before.
The group paid an EPL rate of 35 percent, meaning it paid $333.4 million in the year. The sector also suffered from large writedowns and the impact of weaker oil prices.
The Energy Profits Levy continues to have a direct impact on investment in the UK North Sea, with projects in both our operated and non-operated projects being postponed or canceled. The extension of the Energy Profits Tax for another year until sunset in March 2029 underlines the ongoing fiscal uncertainty facing our sector.
Interim boss and chief financial officer Iain Lewi said:
‘The Energy Profits Levy continues to have a direct impact on investment in the UK North Sea, with projects in both our operated and non-operated projects being postponed or canceled.
‘The extension of the Energy Profits Tax for another year until a sunset date of March 2029 underlines the ongoing fiscal uncertainty facing our sector.’
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