Ffal Cineworld launches the UK rsquo first 4DX cinema this weekend: Here rsquo what to expect
Monday 30 June 2014 8:53 pm|Updated:Thursday 06 June 2019 11:37 pmBanks on SSP flotation hope the price
stanley mug will come in highBy: David HellierShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleBANKERS on the pound;1bn plus flotation of the food concessions group SSP said last night they were confident of getting the issue away at a healthy price. Books were covered on the full deal size late on Friday, the day it launched bookbuilding. The business is targeting pound;490mndash;pound;570m, with books closing around July 9. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are joint global co-ordinators and joint bookrunners with Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Jefferies. Shore Capital and Nomura are lead managers. At the lowest end of the range SSP, headed up by the former WH Smith boss Kate Swann, wi
owala ll raise pound;470m but bankers reckoned the deal might price more strongly than this. SSP is being sold by private equity at a time when the industry is being criticised for pricing new issues too greedily. A number of private equity-led flotations
brumate cooler , such as Saga, AA, Card Factory, and eDreams, have had disappointing share trading debuts.Sources close to the issue said the deal was in good shape and that investors were ignoring much of the noise about recent poor performers. Many recent issues have been strengthened by strong overseas interest which has overridden cynicism on the part of many Tjts Cool Britannia lives on
Sunday 11 July 2010 11:55 pmHigh electricity prices to hurt growthBy: KCS-contentShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on L
stanley deutschland inkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleHERE is another reason why the recovery will be muted. Gas and electricity costs will rise substantially in the years ahead and are set to hammer not only consumers but also manufacturers, further eroding their competitiveness and that of Britain as a place to do business. It is not market forces that will push up the cost
stanley thermobecher of energy, but government policies, especially environmental rules, as a report from the Civitas think-tank explains today. Labourrsquo aim of reducing carbon emissions and increasing the proportion of energy generated from renewable sources ndash; a policy shared wholeheartedly by the coalition government ndash; significantly increased costs for energy consumers, with much more pain to come. The official figures confirm this ndash; and because Britain is going further and faster than most other countries, this is putting its economy at a special disadvantage. What makes this even trickier is that electricity prices in the UK a
polene cyme re already relatively high. The Department of Business, Innovations and Skills estimated in 2008 that the ldquo urcharge on electricity prices attributable to climate-change policies amounted to an extra 14 per cent for domestic users and 21 per cent for business. It said these policies wou