Takeover talk continues to grip the stock market – and all eyes will be on serviced office company IWG when trading resumes today.
Reports last night suggested the firm, which owns Regus and is valued at £3billion, is a potential target.
New York based private equity firm CC Capital has held talks with the London-listed group about a possible £4billion bid in the past month, according to Sky News.illio
Takeover rumours: New York based private equity firm CC Capital has reportedly held talks with London-listed serviced office company IWG about a possible £4bn bid
That would value the 28.5 per cent stake held by founder and chief executive Mark Dixon at more than £1billion.
The speculation came after the market closed yesterday, with IWG shares down 2.3 per cent, or 7.2p, at 300.2p. But it could be a different story when trading resumes this morning. IWG is just the latest firm to be targeted with private equity also circling Morrisons (up 0.8 per cent, or 1.8p, to 234.5p).
Ultra Electronics has also been in the spotlight. Its shares rose 7 per cent on Friday after private equity-owned Cobham said it was interested in a deal.
But they slammed into reverse yesterday as investors digested a strongly-worded rebuttal from Ultra that seemingly poured cold water on the approach.
Cobham – bought by Advent International for £4billion last year – had said it could buy Ultra, or even that, effectively, Ultra could buy Cobham.
It indicated the two were already in talks – though it was somewhat vague about the details.
But Ultra had a different narrative. It insisted that it had only been in discussions to buy CAES, a division of Cobham, and that it had decided to walk away from that proposition. Ultra shares fell 3 per cent, or 68p, to 2232p.
The wider FTSE 250 index closed lower, falling 0.5 per cent, or 112.59 points, to 22533.42, while the FTSE 100 slid 0.9 per cent, or 63.1 points, to 7072.97.
Both were weighed down by travel stocks again – as Spain, Malta and Portugal all introduced measures to restrict UK travellers who have not had both jabs. And Hong Kong said it would ban all passenger flights from the UK from Thursday.
The latest blow to summer holidays knocked the shares of travel stocks including British Airways-owner IAG (down 5.9 per cent, or 11.08p, to 176.4p), Easyjet (down 5.8 per cent, or 55.4p, to 899.6p) and Tui (down 5.3 per cent, or 21.5p, to 384.1p).
Closer to home, City Pub Group said it was ‘encouraged’ by bumper sales after it reopened 42 of its sites after the third lockdown. T
he bar owner is trading ‘profitably’ and at around 90 per cent of pre-pandemic levels. Shares rose 1.6 per cent, or 2p, to 129.5p.
A 1pc fall in oil prices to $75.15 a barrel ahead of an Opec+ meeting this week also weighed on London’s big energy firms, with BP (down 3.2 per cent, or 10.35p, to 315.15p), Shell (down 3.6 per cent, or 52p, to 1398p) and Cairn Energy (down 6 per cent, or 9.8p, to 153p) all suffering.
AIM-listed Hurricane Energy, however, shot up 29.3 per cent, or 0.64p, to 2.8p after a court rejected a debt restructuring proposal that would have virtually wiped out its shareholders.
Investors had been in uproar about the plans, which would have handed control of the company to Hurricane’s bondholders in exchange for forgiving debt and extending the repayment date on more. A judge said there was no urgency for Hurricane to restructure the debt now.
Elsewhere in the natural resources world, Anglo American (down 2.2 per cent, or 65p, to 2901.5p) finalised the sale of its one-third stake in an open-pit coal mine in Colombia to fellow Footsie miner Glencore (down 1.8 per cent, or 5.65p, to 309.55p).
BHP (down 0.7 per cent, or 16p, to 2144p) also holds a third of the project – and is intending to sell this to Glencore too.
And speaking of Glencore, mining minnow Ferro-Alloy Resources rose 8.5 per cent, or 2.75p, to 35.25p after chairman Sir Mick Davis – former boss of Xstrata, which merged with Glencore in May 2013 – pumped another £5million into the company earlier than expected.