International Newport Fashion
Council
News
round up: M&S, BHP Billiton, Sainsbury's, Japan, Banks, High street, Regus,
Britain's visa system, European banks, easyJet. Marks and Spencer Group Plc
(LON:MKS) reported 3.8 per cent fall in general merchandise sales, which
includes clothing, in the run up to Christmas, prompting a three-year deal with
the British Fashion Council to collaborate on new clothing collections,
The
Telegraph reports.
Marc
Bolland, M&S chief executive under pressure to reverse the decline in
sales, said: "We are proud to collaborate with the British Fashion Council
and look forward to working alongside them on our exciting 'Best of British'
initiative. This is the start of an exciting journey to put more emphasis on
British design and talent."M&S is the biggest purchaser of British
cloth and clothing, spending about £120m a year, despite moving most of its manufacturing
overseas.
BHP
Billiton
BHP
Billiton has named its new chief executive on the same day that it revealed its
worst half-year figures for more than a decade. The Australian global mining
company has appointed Andrew Mackenzie, the head of its base metals division,
to replace Marius Kloppers, who will step down in May. The announcement last
night came as BHP reported a 43 per cent fall in half-year profits after being
hit badly by weak metals prices. Mr Mackenzie, 56, who joined BHP from Rio
Tinto in 2007, will be taking over as the company struggles to protect margins
by reining in costs amid weaker commodity pricing. [The Times]
Sainsbury's
Sainsbury's
hailed a "significant milestone" yesterday as non-food sales reached
£1 billion a year for the first time. The group was helped by its best ever
Christmas, when general merchandise sales grew by a third compared to the
previous year. Sales from its cookware range have grown at 16 per cent in the
last year, and the company shifted 100,000 frying pans in the run up to Pancake
Day. A collaboration with celebrity stylist Gok Wan […] helped the group's
clothing sales, while small electrical items are another growth area. [The
Scotsman]
Japan
A
rebound in Japan's exports in January failed to keep pace with growth in
imports, leaving a record Y1.63tn trade deficit for the month. The provisional
data released on Wednesday shows exports for the world's third-biggest economy
rose 6.4 per cent to Y4.8tn in January from a year earlier, the first
year-on-year increase in eight months, while imports jumped 7.3 per cent to
Y6.4tn. A weakening in Japan's currency over the past few months has helped
boost export shipments by making its products more
price
competitive overseas. But it has also inflated the value of resource-scarce
Japan's imports of crude oil and other commodities, which offset a recovery in
demand for Japanese-made vehicles and machinery. [Financial Times]
Banks
Banks
are continuing to hold assets that are wrongly valued, the new financial
regulator has told The Times, in a warning that the problems that led to the
2008 financial crisis are not yet resolved. Andrew Bailey, who was appointed
chief executive of the Prudential Regulation Authority yesterday, has used his
first interview to mount a robust defence of a decision by banking supervisors
to re-examine the health of the sector. The Cambridge-educated economist, who
first joined the Bank of England in 1985, has his signature on many of
Britain’s banknotes as a former chief cashier in Threadneedle Street. He
delivered a warning that British banks continue to be too big to fail, putting
taxpayers’ money at risk if there is another collapse. He also believes that
the industry faces a small "tail risk" that fines for Libor, mis-sold
interest rate hedging products and other wrongdoing could cause institutions to
"keel over". [The Times]
High
street
The
retail industry has charged the Chancellor to use the Budget to save the
beleaguered high street by calling for business rates to be frozen and
bureaucracy to be cut. More than one in seven shops on high streets in Britain
are empty after a wave of retailers have collapsed into administration in the
last year, including Comet, HMV and Jessops. However, the British Retail
Consortium, the trade body, said that George Osborne can support retailers by
cutting business costs and rebuilding fragile consumer confidence. The costs of
doing business on the high street have risen by 21pc since 2006, the equivalent
of £20bn across the industry, the BRC warns in its submission to the Government
ahead of next month's Budget.
[The
Telegraph]
Regus
Regus,
the global office supplier, has lifted its offer by nearly two-thirds to £65.6m
in the bidding war to acquire troubled rival MWB Business Exchange. This was
marginally above the £65m offered by Pyrrho Investments. Regus, which provides
office space in more than 100 countries, said it would now pay 101p a share for
each of MWB's, a significant premium to its previous offer of 61.6p a share
back in December. [The Independent]
Britain's
visa system
Britain's
restrictive visa system for Chinese visitors could be "solved
tomorrow" and would help put the UK "back on the path to growth",
according to the boss of the world's biggest hotels group. Simplifying the
rules for Chinese nationals who want to visit Britain could be done at "no
cost" to the Treasury and would "easily" allow tourism
businesses to help grow UK GDP, Richard Solomons, chief executive of
InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG), said. The head of IHG, the FTSE giant
behind the Holiday Inn and Crowne Plaza brands, said encouraging more Chinese
tourists to Britain would result in more "export dollars, jobs, wealth and
GDP in the UK". [The Telegraph]
European
banks
European
banks are facing the threat of having to reveal their taxes and profits on a
country-by-country basis in the latest twist to the EU negotiations over rules
to make banks safer. The European parliament is pressing for the tougher
disclosure regime along with a demand for strict curbs on bankers’ bonuses as
part of the law implementing the Basel III international accord. While the
demanding transparency requirements have the full support of the European Commission,
EU member states are
largely
resisting the initiative, introduced into the overhaul of bank capital rules.
Under the proposal, Barclays, for instance, would be required to publish its
profits and taxes in every national jurisdiction – from the UK to Zimbabwe.
[Financial Times]
easyJet
One
month before easyJet launches its new routes from London and Manchester to
Moscow, the airline still does not have a flight permit from the Russian
authorities. The budget carrier started selling tickets for the flights in
January, and although an advertisement on its Facebook page contains the
disclaimer "subject to government approval", the airline's own website
offers no such warning. A spokeswoman for the airline said its lack of a flight
permit would not put its first flight on the route, planned for 18 March, at
risk. [The Independent]
International Newport Fashion
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