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The Business Matrix: Monday 29 April 2013

 

Sunday 28 April 2013 17:54 EDT
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ENRC braced for fraud office probe

A Serious Fraud Office investigation into corruption at Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation will scrutinise allegations, including “payments to African presidents, $35m of “misappropriated” cash and “document destruction”. The claims, which ENRC denies, were made in a letter sent by law firm Dechert to the miner after it was sacked last month

Sunshine boosts spending in April

The warmer weather that finally arrived last month drove an 8.5 per cent rebound in consumer spending in the second week of April, according to data from Barclaycard. Dave Chan, the chief executive of Barclaycard Consumer Europe, said: “We are seeing signs that shoppers are responding to the warmer weather, which will be welcome news to retailers.”

What the Sunday Papers said

National Grid in pensions furore

Unions have accused National Grid of “North Korean-style sabre-rattling” as the operator of Britain’s biggest electricity and gas transmission networks risks industrial action to tackle a £1bn pensions deficit. National Grid says more than 5,600 workers might see the terms of their lucrative final-salary pension schemes changed.

The Independent on Sunday

Lloyds plans to pay dividend

Antonio Horta-Osorio, the chief executive of Lloyds Banking Group, has opened the door to a return to dividends as he prepares to reveal the bank’s net lending to UK businesses has increased for the first time since the global credit crisis. A dividend would be the first since late 2008.

The Sunday Telegraph

US fund raids Invensys shares

The engineer Invensys is braced for a fresh takeover bid after a raid on its shares by the American hedge fund Value Act Capital. It has built a stake of just over 8 per cent and it is now the second-biggest shareholder. Emerson Electric, a US rival, and France’s Schneider Electric were likely bidders, according to City sources.

The Sunday Times

M&S boss looked at bid for Jaeger

The retail giant Marks & Spencer has considered buying fashion label Jaeger as a way to boost its fashion brands. The chief executive, Marc Bolland, looked at a bid last year when Jaeger ran into difficulty. It was eventually snapped up by private equity group Better Capital for a knock-down £20m.

The Mail on Sunday

The Week Ahead

Greene King’s weather gloom

The pub and brewing group Greene King makes a trading statement today and Douglas Jack at Numis expects brewing profits to be down 14 per cent, which he thinks is a “positive result under the circumstances” of “snow in January and cold weather in February and March”.

Asos to update on global progress

The online fashion retailer Asos’s half-year update tomorrow should reveal details of its expansion into Russia and China as well as progress on projects such as mobile and tablet sales and local language sites. Numis’s retail expert Andrew Wade expects it to report a pre-tax profit of about £27m.

Weir undeterred by oil price fall

The oil services engineer Weir Group is not letting the falling oil price faze it. It has been upping its exposure to the mining and minerals market with agreements totalling £750m. Weir reports on first-quarter trading on Wednesday. Jefferies analysts say “the business is robust and long-term upside remains”.

Struggle goes on at RBS

On Friday, Royal Bank of Scotland updates on the first quarter. Ian Gordon at Investec thinks that “despite five years of heavy losses between 2008-2012” he still expects only “a weak attributable profit of £0.1bn”. He forecasts the core pre-tax profit of £1.8bn but non-core to have lost £0.6bn.

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