Weighing up the role boards must play as Morrisons, Meggitt and more make the headlines

Responsible business is all the rage in the City but you wouldn’t necessarily know it: a healthcare company that makes inhalers to treat lung diseases is being sold to big tobacco and Bradford awaits its fate as the homegrown chain Morrisons is circled by US private equity.

To some non-City observers the decisions look wrongheaded and, amid a wave of other takeovers including the sale of the defence contractors Ultra Electronics and Meggitt, suggest that while boards and shareholders talk about their good environmental, social and governance principles, money still talks.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Vue cinemas fined £750,000 over death of customer trapped by chair

Judge condemns chain’s ‘complete lack of risk assessment’ over seating fault that…

Chesapeake Walmart shooting

chesapeake virginia, Chesapeake, chesapeake va, walmart shooting chesapeake

Rwandan opposition leader voices doubts Kigali will stick to UK asylum deal

Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza says her banning shows President Kagame does not adhere…

Judge to consider trans charity’s appeal to strip LGB Alliance of legal status

Mermaids claims gay rights organisation was set up to lobby against rights…