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Share Price Information for HSBC Holdings (HSBA)

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Share Price: 683.90
Bid: 686.40
Ask: 686.60
Change: -5.40 (-0.78%)
Spread: 0.20 (0.029%)
Open: 696.80
High: 697.90
Low: 683.90
Prev. Close: 689.30
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Sunday newspaper round-up: AstraZeneca, Monarch Airlines, HSBC, Opec deal

Sun, 17th Apr 2016 16:53

(ShareCast News) - AstraZeneca has held talks with US-based rival Medivation that could see it make a $10bn (£7bn) takeover bid, where it will battle France's Sanofi, which had a bid rejected last week, and others. Although oncology drug maker Medivation has been criticised for "price gouging" by American presidential contender Bernie Sanders, the UK company is "looking very closely at an offer", according to a banking source cited by the Sunday Times.Monarch Airlines is eyeing up a number of struggling European rivals as its owners weigh ambitious growth plans for the low-cost carrier, the Sunday Telegraph said. It is understood the airline has shortlisted a handful of potential takeover candidates on the Continent, as part of a wide-ranging strategic review undertaken by Greybull Capital, the family office that saved it from collapse less than two years ago....and Easyjet is one of those rival that is planning a possible swoop as rescuers Greybull Capital continue talks to buy Tata Steel. With other suitors also reported to be lurking, the Sunday Times reported, Monarch has appointed Deutsche Bank to examine its options and handle prospective bidders.HSBC chief executive Stuart Gulliver will stand down in two years, completing a boardroom shake-up at Britain's biggest bank, according to the Sunday Times, after chairman Douglas Flint departs next year. The lender, which appointed the pair in 2011, has already begun compiling a list of internal candidates to fill the role, but will also consider external candidates, according to senior sources.Bosses from some of the biggest property companies have warned of market jitters as the EU referendum looms, the Sunday Telegraph said. Industry chiefs at a British Property Federation event last week said investors and developers are delaying decisions until after June 23 because of political and economic uncertainty.UBS has warned that Britain risks a "sudden stop" in capital inflows and a 30% crash in sterling if the country votes to leave the EU and negotiations turn ugly, the Sunday Telegraph reported. Invoking a traumatic scenario akin to an emerging market crisis, the bank said Britain has embarked on the referendum at an extremely delicate moment when the country has the worst current account deficit in the developed world and is dependent on foreign investors to plug the gap.UK regulators are gearing up for the biggest shakeup of the water market in almost 30 years, with more than 1m businesses free to shop around for the best deals from next April, according to the Observer. The water regulator Ofwat said 1.2m businesses in England stand to benefit from the changes, which will allow them to switch water supplier.The UK's big bookmakers will soon reveal the cost of rank outsiders Leicester City storming to a Premier League title.Ladbrokes, the Sunday Times said, will explain at its trading update on Thursday that it stands to lose £3m if last season's relegation dalliers Leicester, who started the season at odds of 5,000-1, take the title next month, while William Hill are estimating it will take a £2m hit.Companies that fail to stop staff facilitating tax evasion could be hit with unlimited fines under new rules to be unveiled on Sunday, noted the Sunday Times, as the Treasury accelerated plans to introduce the new corporate criminal offence. HM Revenue & Customs have published details of regulations aimed at holding to account corporations that lack safeguards against rogue employees, aiming to punish companies that have "inadequate supervisory mechanisms" for employees as well as the small number of businesses that encourage evasion.Top oil-producing nations are expected to announce a freeze in production on Sunday, but doubts remain over whether a deal will be enough to send the price of crude higher, the Sunday Times said, with Iran and Brazil not joining the pact. With members of the Opec cartel meeting in Doha with a handful of non-Opec producers, notably Russia, to hammer out an agreement, oil prices rallied last week in the expectation the meeting would help curb the over-supply that has caused a dramatic two-year collapse in prices.But petrol prices could soar to 115p a litre if a deal is struck in Doha, suggested the Mail on Sunday. While analysts are divided over whether a deal can be reached at the Doha meeting, the UK's Petrol Retailers Association said further rises in prices at the forecourt are inevitable even if there is no decisive agreement at the summit.Royal Bank of Scotland has reduced its global lending to oil and gas companies and doubled its green energy loans in the UK to £1bn a year, according to new figures released to the Observer and Guardian. The move, largely due to the bank's withdrawal from North America and Asia as part of a retrenchment to the UK, may indicate a change of direction for a bank that was until recently one of the world's biggest financiers of fossil fuels and has been repeatedly targeted by climate change campaigners.Although some flotations have been postponed due to worries about the Brexit vote, £1.7bn cinema chain Vue and Arqiva, the £5bn operator of Britain's television and radio transmissions, are among those plotting blockbuster initial public offers next year. More immediate IPOs could come from brick maker Forterra, said by the Sunday Times to be working on £450m a listing, and lung cancer testing play Oncimmune, which is planing to announce plans this week for its £66m float on AIM.Worldpay, the payments company valued at nearly £5bn in the biggest float of last year, has attracted its first large short-seller since joining the stock market, the Sunday Telegraph reported. The US bank Citigroup set up the bet against Worldpay on behalf of an unnamed client, taking a position worth 0.54pc of the company, or about £29m.Swedish furniture store Ikea's UK boss Gillian Drakeford believes there are not enough Ikea stores in Britain, and plans to change that. Having already led the group through a significant recovery in sales, the Mail on Sunday said, Drakeford is now planning a big UK expansion and a major shift in strategy including a possible move to Oxford Street.UK stores let to Marks & Spencer are to be sold for £500m, 15 years after the retailer first sold the units for £348m to raise capital, the Sunday Telegraph reported. Landlord Topland Group has appointed agents at property advisory firm CBRE to find a buyer for the 76 stores, 13 of which are in prime London areas such as Camden, Chiswick, Clapham and Putney.The long-term future of the Co-operative Bank has been thrown into doubt by a warning that it faces a £1bn hole in its finances, the Sunday Times reported. Analysts at research firm Autonomous have questioned whether the troubled mutual will be able to comply with onerous capital requirements set by the Bank of England.The controversial £18bn Hinkley Point nuclear plant will go ahead, French economy minister Emmanuel Macron has insisted, amid mounting doubts over the viability of the project, the Sunday Telegraph said. Macron said he was "actively working" with developer EDF, the French state-owned group, and the UK government to draw up the "final points" of a deal for Hinkley and that it was "very important for France" that the project went ahead.BHS's finance adviser is set to leave just a month after he shepherded the loss-making department store through a controversial restructuring, said the Sunday Times. Michael Hitchcock, former boss of the Beales chain, is due to stand down on Thursday, when a deadline for objections to BHS's company voluntary arrangement (CVA) closes.Luke Johnson, the founder of Pizza Express, plans to use his recent purchase of Brighton Pier as a cornerstone for building a nationwide leisure group he likened to a mini-Merlin, after the Legoland and Madame Tussauds company. Although Johnson has been fielding calls from other pier owners offering to sell all or part of their attractions, Johnson told the Mail on Sunday he has his sights set on other 'experience-led' attractions as a means of tapping into the 'staycation' trend as UK resorts are improving, investing and becoming more commercial.Turnover at the company behind the viewing platform at the top of London's Shard building have dropped for the third year running due to falling ticket sales. Revenue slipped from £20m to £18.2m in 2015, while profits have almost halved to £2.6m since the first year the attraction opened, the Mail on Sunday noted.Food producer 2 Sisters, the billion pound maker of Fox's Biscuits and Marks & Spencer ready meals, is facing industrial action after trade unions claimed that it is trying to claw back the benefit of the government's newly-introduced National Living Wage from its staff. Food firm 2 Sisters, which is part of £3.5bn Boparan Holdings, has told staff it plans to cut Sunday and Bank Holiday pay, overtime and time off in lieu for working unsociable hours.
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31 May 2023 12:02

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks down on US debt vote nerves

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were down at midday Wednesday, ahead of a vote on the US debt ceiling bill.

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31 May 2023 09:21

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Numis cuts 3i Group; HSBC likes JD Wetherspoon

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Wednesday morning:

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30 May 2023 12:35

IN BRIEF: accesso Technology agrees new USD40 million banking facility

accesso Technology Group PLC - Berkshire, England-based provider of software for leisure, entertainment and cultural sectors - Agrees new USD40 million revolving credit facility with HSBC Holdings PLC on a four-year term ending May 2027, accompanied by a USD20 million accordion option. Newly agreed facility replaces accesso Technology's previous undrawn GBP18 million arrangement with Investec PLC and Ltd from March 2021, which was due to expire in March 2024. This facility has now been cancelled. Says HSBC facility is accompanied by a USD20 million accordion option, which it may utilise as it "pursues its strategic plan into the mid-term". Says Numis Corp PLC acted as its debt advisor to the transaction.

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30 May 2023 08:49

PRESS: HSBC set to announce rebranding of Silicon Valley Bank UK

(Alliance News) - HSBC Holdings PLC will announce plans to rebrand Silicon Valley Bank UK, after it rescued the bank following the collapse of its US parent earlier this year, Sky News reported on Monday.

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29 May 2023 17:34

HSBC to rename British arm of Silicon Valley Bank next month- Sky News

May 29 (Reuters) - HSBC is set to announce next month that the UK arm of Silicon Valley Bank will be renamed HSBC Innovation Banking, Sky News reported on Monday.

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26 May 2023 18:17

Glencore's shareholder opposition to climate report grows

LONDON, May 26 (Reuters) - Just over 30% of Glencore's investors rejected the company's climate progress report at its annual meeting on Friday, demanding more clarity on how the global miner will meet its commitments to cut emissions.

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26 May 2023 16:16

Glencore's shareholder opposition to climate report grows

LONDON, May 26 (Reuters) - Just over 30% of Glencore's investors rejected the company's climate progress report at its annual meeting on Friday, demanding more clarity on how the global miner will meet its commitments to cut emissions.

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25 May 2023 09:56

UK watchdog proposes requiring banks to help struggling customers

LONDON, May 25 (Reuters) - Banks and building societies would be required to help customers struggling to repay their mortgages and loans as interest rate rise in a cost-of-living crisis, Britain's financial watchdog said in proposals to make COVID-era temporary rules permanent.

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24 May 2023 18:06

Fed's Waller sounds 'hawkish' note on outlook for rates

(Sharecast News) - A top US central bank official said he could support a further 25 basis point interest rate hike at the 13-14 June policy meeting, depending on how the economic data came in between now and then.

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24 May 2023 12:11

Five banks said to have breached competition law in UK bond markets

(Sharecast News) - Five global banks have been provisionally found to have broken UK competition law, it was announced on Wednesday, by allegedly sharing competitively sensitive bond market information.

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24 May 2023 11:05

UK watchdog says five banks may have broken competition law on bonds

(Alliance News) - The UK competition watchdog on Wednesday said it has provisionally found five banks guilty of breaking competition law on UK bonds over a decade ago, and it may issue fines in due course.

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24 May 2023 10:39

Deutsche, Citi admit anti-competitive bond market activity in UK probe

LONDON, May 24 (Reuters) - Deutsche Bank and Citigroup admitted anti-competitive activity by exchanging sensitive information on UK government bonds between 2009 and 2013, Britain's anti-trust watchdog said, as it provisionally found five banks in breach of competition rules.

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22 May 2023 19:32

First Citizens sues HSBC for hiring away Silicon Valley Bank staff

May 22 (Reuters) - First Citizens BancShares Inc , which acquired Silicon Valley Bank following its collapse, sued HSBC Holdings PLC on Monday, accusing it of poaching more than 40 of the failed bank's employees in order to launch its own U.S. venture banking business.

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22 May 2023 18:54

First Citizens sues HSBC for hiring away Silicon Valley Bank staff

May 22 (Reuters) - First Citizens BancShares Inc , which acquired Silicon Valley Bank following its collapse, sued HSBC Holdings PLC on Monday, accusing it of illegally poaching more than 40 of the failed bank's employees.

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22 May 2023 17:58

Banks win dismissal of U.S. silver price-fixing litigation

NEW YORK, May 22 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Monday dismissed long-running litigation by investors who accused HSBC Holdings Plc and Bank of Nova Scotia of conspiring to fix silver prices.

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