Safiya Bashir on 29/03/2016
EU Referendum: Is the Brexit campaign on course to win?
Japan’s NTT Data to buy Dell’s IT services for over $3 billion
29/03/2016
Landmark Apple-FBI case ends after government hacks phone alone
Miranda Wadham on 29/03/2016
Morning Round-Up: Shares up after Easter, Yahoo open for bids, Tata decision expected
29/03/2016
Yahoo shareholder Starboard Value calls for total board replacement
The activist hedge fund Starboard Value, Yahoo’s largest shareholder, has called for the replacement of the company’s entire board.
In a letter to Yahoo, Starboard gave notice of their intention to seek the election of nine highly qualified director nominees at the 2016 Annual Meeting, citing Yahoo’s “dismal financial performance” as a reason for the overhaul. It continued:
“We have been extremely disappointed with Yahoo’s dismal financial performance, poor management execution, egregious compensation and hiring practices.”
In response, Yahoo agreed to “review Starboard’s proposed director nominees and respond in due course.”
The company, led by CEO Marissa Mayer, has gone through some troubled time of late, recently announcing their intention to cut 15% of its workforce as it pursued an “aggressive strategic plan” to return to profitability.
Shares in Yahoo (NASDAQ:YHOO) are down 0.37 percent on the news, at 34.67 (1530GMT).24/03/2016
Morning Round-Up: Retail sales strong, Next down 10%, oil slides
24/03/2016
Crowd2Fund takes leading crowdfunding platform global
Crowd2Fund, one of the UK’s leading debt and equity crowdfunding platforms, has expanded into the global arena and opened up its platform to investors from 163 countries.
Demand for crowdfunding-style investment opportunities is growing in China from the large, high-net worth community based there, who are looking to the market-leading British crowdfunding market; extending its operations worldwide is testament to the scale Crowd2Fund has achieved and the growing source of investor demand on a global level.
Crowd2Fund is one of the few FCA regulated crowdfunding platforms – and will now be the only directly regulated site offering its debt and equity investment opportunities globally. All investments open to its global member base are secure, carefully vetted and compliant with UK financial regulation.
Grace Huang, Director of Crowd2Fund Asia Pacific commented:
“There is overwhelming demand from Chinese investors to take part in this new and exciting type of investment. Chinese investors like the relative safety of the UK market and in particular the more historic and innovative projects that Crowd2Fund attract.
“Opening their technology infrastructure in a legal and compliant way has been a huge challenge. We’re now seeing the first few investments to come out from the Chinese market which is a phenomenal step forward in the global investment space.”
Crowd2Fund’s CEO Chris Hancock recently established Crowd2Fund’s partnership with the China through the government’s UK Trade and Investment body, designed to assist British businesses expanding into international markets. He explains the complexities involved:
“Its more complex than just on-boarding investors from other markets – we need to
consider security and compliance as key hurdles to navigate effectively. Due to our scalable technology, Crowd2Fund has the capability to conduct business critical regulatory requirements such as anti money laundering and fraud protection procedures to mitigate risk for the investors on our platform. The global launch marks a very exciting step not only for the development of our platform, but also for those innovative British businesses looking to access vital growth capital and build a team of loyal, committed, international investors.”
In opening access for peer-to-business investment on a global scale, Crowd2Fund is leading the charge in taking a significant step to catering to the growth in demand from overseas investors. For more information, visit crowd2fund.com.
Miranda Wadham on 23/03/2016
William Hill down 13% on revised profits
23/03/2016
Morning Round-Up: Lloyd’s profits drop 30%, pound sees volatility, jobs gone at Credit Suisse
Swiss bank Credit Suisse has announced another 2,000 strong job cut in its global markets business, adding to the 4,000 cuts announced last month.
The bank are currently in the throes of a plan to reduce annual costs by 800m Swiss francs a year, but are struggling with their “high and inflexible cost base” and “volatile market conditions”. Recently appointed chief executive Tidjane Thiam said the performance of global markets in general was “disappointing”, adding that “in this context, we have taken immediate action to reduce outsized positions in activities not consistent with our new strategy and systematically reduced our exposures”23/03/2016
Media group Johnston Press up 17 percent on profits and i acquisiton
22/03/2016
