East London pie shop Square Pie offers investment opportunity

Ever been so frustrated that you can’t find a decent pie that you decided to start selling your own? That’s what Martin Dewey did, the creator of East London-based Square Pie, and it seems to have paid off. His business started from a small stall in Spitalfields Market, which opened in November 2001 and sold a grand total of seven pies on their first day of trading. Now, Square Pie has six London outlets, with a seventh opening in Birmingham later this year, has won several food awards, and supplies to Twickenham Stadium, Glastonbury and Ocado. Dewey is now hoping to raise £750,000 for Square Pie on crowdfunding platform Crowdcube in order to open further restaurants, and invest in PR and marketing to grow awareness of the brand. The Square Pie Bond offers an 8% interest rate for an initial investment of £500 or more, over the course of four years. The original investment will be returned when the bond matures. The company is still run by Dewey and his wife, Lucy. The husband and wife team is backed up by Chief Executive Nabil Subuh, who joined in January 2015 after 25 years in hospitality, and Finance Director Robert Scott, who was formerly CFO at Thomson’s Online. In 2014, Square Pie’s turnover was £2.6 million, with company sales up 34% this financial year. Whilst profits have been impacted recently due to the initial costs of opening several venues, the financial projections look solid. If this opportunity is something that interests you, head over to Crowdcube.com for further information on how to get involved.

Metlife muscles in on crowdfunding trend

Metlife UK, the insurance and investment giant, has announced that it is working with non-profit crowdfunding platform Kiva. Their new initiative, which is open to employees across Europe, Middle East and Africa, allows Metlife staff to direct a loan as small as £16 to a range of projects including businesses and entrepreneurs, and people funding education. It has been pioneered by Metlife’s charity, the Metlife Foundation, which is committed to building financial inclusion. Kiva is a microfinance crowdfunding platform that aims to tackle poverty and create opportunities for those in countries where the necessary loans are hard to come by. Kiva arranges loans for those in need, which are then distributed through microfinance institutions in the borrower’s country with a repayment rate of 98 per cent.

Premal Shah, Kiva’s president and co-founder said: “Metlife was founded on a simple and powerful insight, that everyone needs access to the right financial tools to pursue more from life.

“We are proud to be a part of Metlife’s efforts toward that vision. Through this partnership, they are backing the dreams of thousands of entrepreneurs around the world, expanding financial access and empowering their employees to take part directly in that mission.”

Many financial institutions have similar charitable schemes, such as Deutsche Bank’s Small Grants Fund, however Metlife is the first to undertake one through crowdfunding.  

Small breweries turn to crowdfunding

When Hertfordshire based Red Squirrel Brewery decided to look for further investment in its craft beer brewing company, there was one clear way to go; like many other small businesses, crowdfunding was the most viable option. They are forecasted to grow by over 111% this financial year, hitting revenues of around £1 million. With a bit of investment from the public, they are hoping to further expand their Brewery Shop & Tasting Bar concept targeting in the main provincial towns in the South East as well opening its first Microbrew Bar in Europe. However, Red Squirrel are not the first brewing company to see crowdfunding as a viable alternative form of finance. They are following in the footsteps of successful crowdfunders BrewDog, who launched Britain’s biggest crowdfunding project ever in April, hoping to raise £25m. James Watt, BrewDog’s co-founder, said: “We are not the Rockefellers. We are Guy Fawkes. This is about changing small business finance for ever. “By making profit king, the financial institutions of the City gave rise to the bastardisation and commoditisation of beer. We are burning the established system down to the ground and forging a new future for business from the flames.” However interestingly, instead of using a traditional crowdfunding platform such as Crowdcube, they chose to launch their own site, “Equity for Punks”. Similarly, the UK’s fastest growing craft beer club, Beer52, has raised £100k from the crowd to grow their online community to 10,000 members in 2014. Beer52 is an early stage startup, launched just three months ago, and is already the UK’s largest and fastest growing craft beer club with more than 2,500 paying subscribers – for £24 a month they send you a mixed case of eight craft beers. According to the Campaign for Real Ale, the number of breweries in Britain in 2014 hit a 70-year high of 1,147 as growth in micro-breweries continues apace. Living in London, it’s increasingly clear that independent breweries are on the rise; in South London, I live opposite two small breweries who have opened in the last few years. It appears that, instead of loans from banks, crowdfunding from their existing customer base, who like their product and would like a part in seeing them thrive, is the best form of finance. If investing in independent breweries is something that interests you, Scottish brewery Innis & Gunn have launched a beer bond that is available to invest in until the 16th July. They offer 1.5% interest pa. in cash, or 9% interest in store credit to spend on their beer. Over in the US, crowdfunding playform CrowdBrewed has been created purely for small breweries to ascertain funding; it’s surely only a matter of time before the same happens here.  

Changes to climate change levy hits renewable investment funds

George Osborne’s recent decision to force renewable energy generators to pay the climate change levy has been a strong blow to wind and solar power investment funds. Last week shares in Drax Group, who operate Britain’s largest power station are are leading the way in using sustainable biomass as a form of renewable power, fell 25% after the announcement. Previously, renewable energy generators had levy exemption certificates, meaning they did not have to pay the climate change levy. Introduced in 2001, the tax on energy delivered to non-domestic users was an incentive to increase energy efficiency and reduce carbon emissions. Renewables have never had to pay this tax; however, after last week’s Budget, they are no longer exempt. It is calculated this will raise around £450 million for the government. Unsurprisingly, funds investing in renewable energy have also been hit by this change. The £353 million Renewables Infrastructure Group, which invests in both wind and solar plants, is the worst affected, revealing its net asset value per share would fall 4p to 97.9p. Similarly, the £287m Foresight Solar Fund, revealed a 3% reduction in NAV but maintained its dividend target of 6.08p per share for this year, which supports a 5.9% yield. However, the £662m GCP Infrastructure Investments fund, which invests in the subordinated bonds of renewable operators rather than their equity, reassured investors that its projects’ were ‘wholly unaffected’ by the government’s move. The abolition of the exemption shows the risks associated with investing in a relatively new and turbulent sector; however, the industry is supported by the fact that the UK still has a long way to go in tackling climate change before it meets its 2020 climate change targets.  

Greece: details of the deal

Details of the deal negotiated with Greece have just been released in a full statement by the EU. The key parts are as follows:
  • €50bn asset fund will be formed; Greece will have to transfer assets that will then be privatised under European supervision. It will be managed by Greeks.
  • The VAT system will be streamlines and the tax base widened, to increase revenue
  • Upfront measures will be brought in to improve long-term sustainability of the pension system, as part of a comprehensive pension reform programme.
  • Alexis Tsipras also managed to get debt restructuring into the deal, a key point that he aimed to see into the agreement.
  • Greece will have to bring in Sunday trading hours, as part of reforms designed to boost the economy.
Esentially, the deal reached is a “drastic austerity program”, perhaps worse than that offered before the Greek referendum. The country that has already seen years of tough austerity measures, and its population voted against them just last weekend. Unsurprisingly, the Greek people are unhappy with the deal, arguing that Tsipras circumvented democracy by agreeing to a proposal the people wholeheartedly disagreed with. Syriza’s UK spokesperson, London based academic Marina Prentoulis has given this reaction to the deal: “We have ten thousand people committing suicide for economic problems; we have 60% of the young people unemployed, 27% of the overall population unemployed, the debt growing and the Greek economy being reduced by one fourth. “Now, with these measures, I’m really worried what will happen. It has been clear that for political reasons they have been pressured into a very difficult deal and across Europe, what everybody says is that we’re talking about a coup.” However, the deal is not set in stone yet; all key parts of the deal must still be passed through the Greek parliament before they can be put into effect.  

Oil prices drop after rumours of deal with Iran

Oil prices dropped this morning after news that Iran is reportedly on the brink of reaching a deal with six world powers that would end sanctions on the Islamic Republic, and allow more Iranian oil into the world markets. Six world powers have been in talks with Tehran for months, in order to reach a nuclear deal and lift sanctions against the country. The sanctions have seriously affected the Iranian economy, which can recover only with greatly increased oil and gas exports. A senior Iranian negotiator said a nuclear deal would be completed but cautioned that there was work to be done and he could not promise the talks would finish on Monday or Tuesday. “I cannot promise whether the remaining issues can be resolved tonight or tomorrow night,” Iran’s Tasnim news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi as saying. Brent crude for August fell $1.89 to a low of $56.84 a barrel before rallying back to around $57.30 by 4.40 a.m. EDT. U.S. light crude, also known as West Texas Intermediate (WTI), was down $1.15 at $51.59 a barrel. A positive outcome from the Greek talks helped temper the early losses. Brent Crude is currently trading at $58.73, and WTI Crude at $52.74. .    

Bank of England survey shows demand for mortgages will continue to rise

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Last quarter’s increased demand for mortgages is expected to remain solid, according to a survey by the Bank of England released this morning. Stricter controls decreased mortgage lending over the past year, however banks reported the strongest demand for mortgages since 2013 in the second quarter. The central bank’s quarterly Credit Conditions Survey also showed demand for loans from small and big businesses increased and was expected to continue to rise. The survey also showed that corporate lending has changed little over the past three months, whereas demand for lending for small businesses has hit its highest level for a year.

Invista European Real Estate Trust down 37.5%

Invista European Real Estate Trust (LSE:IERE) is one of the biggest movers this morning, falling 37.5% after releasing a trading update and results of a strategic review. It was disclosed that the company’s investment portfolio has dropped 2.54% on its last quarter, with a valuation of 226.15 million euros. The company cites a tenant default as well as an absence of new tenants being contracted as reasons for the fall, and say that this will continue to have material adverse effect on rental income in the future. The company’s Board has concluded that a rapid realisation of the Company’s assets is necessary to maintain the support of the Company’s lenders. A number of potential buyers have been identified by the strategic review.  

The Greeks had to be humiliated

There could be no other outcome. The measures offered to Greece had to belittle their government in such as a way that other radical European parties would be deterred from embarking on such horse play Tsipras and Syriza had subjected the Troika to over the last six months. The terms of the latest deal will mean years of harsh austerity in Greece in an agreement that many commentators said were designed to cause a voluntary Grexit. After snubbing previous proposals from its creditors, the ‘last stand’ talks last night had to be incredibly harsh to prevent other Eurozone nations adopting a path that could again question the authority of the Germans and cast a shadow of doubt over their ability to keep the rest of Europe in line. Spanish Prime Minister Rajoy is likely to lose elections later this year and could be replaced by a radical government that shares the same ideology as Syriza. Greece’s share of Eurozone is miniscule compared to that of Spain and a similar debacle in the Iberian Peninsula would rock not only the Eurozone, but the global economy. This would have been at the heart of the decision making process of last night’s talks and it was imperative that Merkel showed that there would be zero tolerance on radial leftist parties trying their luck with major European institutions. Although they have remained in the Euro for now, it will be of little comfort to the Greek people have years of austerity to look forward to.

Greek deal reached after marathon talks

Talks over Greece have ended with an announcement from German Chancellor Merkel that a deal has been struck after Sunday’s talks went late into the night. The deal has sparked furious protests in Athens as the terms of the deal are seen as complete compitulation by Tsipras who had been campaigning for a no vote against austerity. The votes of 61% of the Greek people have been totally disregarded as Tsipras agreed to harsh austerity measures being implemented by this Wednesday. European equities rallied in the wake of the announcement building on strong gains last week. The terms will have to be formally accepted by all parties, but Tsipras says the deal has averted a meltdown of the Greek banking system. The terms of the deal include the establishment of a EUR 50 billion fund to hold Greek assets that will be used to repay creditors. EUR 25 billion will be given to Greece to recapitalise it’s banks who have suffered months of capital outflows. There will another Eurogroup meeting this afternoon to discuss bridge financing.