BUSINESS LIVE: Wage growth accelerates; Britvic takeover cleared; Capita to cut more staff

UK wages grew by a stronger than expected 5.2 per cent in the three months to October, fresh data from the Office for National Statistics shows.

The data, which surpassed forecasts of 5 per cent growth in average weekly earnings before bonuses, could further weigh on expectations for the pace and scale of Bank of England interest rate cuts.

The FTSE 100 is down 0.8 per cent in afternoon trading. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Britvic, Capita, Chemring and Indivior. Read the Tuesday 17 December Business Live blog below.

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Waspi women will receive NO compensation, says Labour

Waspi women born in the 1950s will receive no compensation from the Labour Government.

The Department of Work and Pensions has rejected the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s recommendation of payments of £1,000 to £2,950 to those affected.

Private stock market Pisces moves forward as consultation launched

(PA) – A new UK stock exchange where people can trade shares in private companies is moving closer, after officials published details on how it could operate.

Regulators are consulting on the new market, called Pisces, for which ministers will legislate next year.

Pisces will allow investors to trade shares in private firms in a style similar to a public exchange like the FTSE 100.

It was introduced by the last Conservative government in a bid to breathe new life into London’s struggling stock market system.

The Financial Conduct Authority said on Tuesday that it will give people more confidence to invest in smaller companies.

In turn, those companies will get more access to funding which will help them expand.

Pisces will be open to professional investors, and select retail traders like high net worth individuals and employees of participating private firms will also be included.

Normal retail investors will not be able to take part at first.

How much would a care home cost you? What you need to know

Later life care is a need some of us may ultimately face and there is little that can be done to avoid being one of the people the expensive bills befall.

For those who do get dealt the hand of needing care, more often than not financial responsibility falls on them, with data from care home review site Carehome.co.uk revealing 66 per cent of care seekers in the UK are self-funding.

Audi to close Brussels EV factory in February as EV demand slows

Audi has announced it will close its factory in Brussels by the end of February, in the latest blow to EV manufacturing.

The German manufacturer, which is part of the Volkswagen Group, has taken the ‘painful’ decision after unsuccessful efforts to find a buyer for the vehicle-making plant.

Tullow Oil shares sink as US rival Kosmos Energy abandons takeover

Tullow Oil shares plunged on Tuesday after Kosmos Energy abandoned the takeover pursuit of its London-listed rival.

The two firms confirmed preliminary talks over an all-share takeover last week in the wake of media speculation, but Kosmos has now said it does not intend to make a formal offer.

Carlsberg’s £3.3bn takeover of Britvic given the green light

Carlsberg’s planned £3.3billion takeover of British soft drinks group Britvic has been cleared by the Competition and Markets Authority.

The watchdog began investigating the tie-up in September amid concerns that it would significantly reduce competition across the UK market.

However, following two invitations to comment from interested parties, it has decided not to pursue a full-scale investigation.

Indivior CFO quits board role as drugmaker settles Oaktree row

The chief financial officer of Indivior will step down from the board amid a broader shake-up, after the drugmaker settled a dispute with a major investor.

Indivior, which switched its primary listing to the US in June but continues to trade on the FTSE 250, told shareholders on Tuesday Ryan Preblick would step down from his board role ‘to align Indivior’s Board composition with US listed company practice’.

Capita plans to slash costs by £250m with help of AI as workers exit

Capita has ramped up cost saving targets after claiming early success from its embrace of artificial intelligence as human workers voluntarily exit the business.

The outsourcing group, which administers the BBC licence fee, told shareholders on Tuesday it wants to slash £250million in costs by the end of next year, well up from its previous target of £160million.

Bitcoin rockets past $107,000 a coin as Trump teases US crypto reserve

Bitcoin hit a new record high on Monday, rising above $107,000 for the first time ever on the back of further pro-crypto comments from US President-elect Donald Trump.

On Monday evening, it reached a new high of $107,244, or £84,494.

Chemring order book exceeds record £1bn on defence spending boom

Chemring Group ended the last financial year with a record order book and bumper profits, thanks to a boom in global defence spending.

The Romsey-based company, whose products include mine detection and aircraft safety sensors, revealed its order book totalled £1.04billion as of 31 October, a 13 per cent increase on the prior year.

Burberry Group shares top FTSE 350 risers

Top 15 rising FTSE 350 firms 17122024

Chemring Group shares top FTSE 350 fallers

Top 15 falling FTSE 350 firms 17122024

We’ll keep cutting rates, says ECB boss Lagarde

Christine Lagarde vowed to keep cutting interest rates in the eurozone amid signs the economy continues to shrink.

Declaring that the ‘darkest days’ of high inflation ‘look to be behind us’, the European Central Bank chief said: ‘The direction of travel is clear and we expected to lower interest rates further.’

Job cuts surge as Labour gloom fuels recession fears

Businesses are cutting jobs at the fastest pace in nearly four years as Labour’s ‘downbeat rhetoric and policies’ take their toll.

The closely-watched purchasing managers’ index (PMI) report showed the steepest decline in private sector workforce numbers since January 2021 when Britain was still in the grip of Covid lockdowns.

Private sector powers wage growth

James Smith, developed markets economist, UK, at ING:

‘The latest UK jobs report provides yet more justification, if any were needed, for the Bank of England to keep rates on hold at its meeting this week.

‘Wage growth surged more than expected in the latest data, which covers the three months to October. That’s entirely down to the private sector, which saw regular pay increase by 12% on a one-month annualised basis. This matters for the Bank, because private sector pay trends tend to be more reflective of the wider situation in the jobs market than in the public sector.

‘Admittedly, these numbers can be volatile and it’s hard to pin an obvious reason on the latest surge. But it will heighten suspicion among BoE hawks that wage growth is not going to readily come back down to pre-Covid levels. They can also point to the Bank’s own ‘Decision Maker Panel’ survey of CFOs, which has shown wage growth expectations bottoming out around 4%, despite wider signs that the jobs market is cooling.’

Winners (and losers) from the £3.6bn Royal Mail takeover

The proposed sale of Royal Mail to a foreign billionaire for £3.6billion will lead to a windfall for some investors – but others are set to lose out if the deal goes ahead.

Czech tycoon Daniel Kretinsky has been given the all-clear by ministers to buy the postal service’s parent company International Distribution Services (IDS) for 370p per share.

Early ONS forecasts also show November employment dip

Capita to cut more staff with AI push

Outsourcing giant Capita has raised its cost-saving target from £160million to up to £250million, with the group’s AI push leading to more job losses.

The London-listed company, which hires about 41,000 people around the world, said it was increasing the use of artificial intelligence, which has helped further reduce costs.

Capita said voluntary employee attrition – meaning when staff choose to leave the company – of about 21 per cent will contribute to the savings target and reduce the need for redundancies.

Capita also revealed that it was expecting about a £20million annual hit from the rate of employer national insurance increasing next year.

Boost for the City as £4bn Greek conglomerate Metlen Energy & Metals looks to list in London

A £4billion Greek industrial conglomerate has confirmed plans to seek a primary listing in London in a fresh boost for the City.

Metlen Energy & Metals, which is listed in Athens, said yesterday that it has filed paperwork with the watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA).

It is the first step in a regulatory process that would see the company list in London in 2025, the company said.

High wage growth the final nail in the coffin for December rate cut hopes

Thomas Pugh, economist at RSM UK:

‘The jump in wage growth excluding bonuses to 5.2% puts another nail in the coffin of an interest rate cut on Thursday. What’s more, there was little sign that firms have reduced hiring ahead of the budget. Our base case is that the MPC will cut rates once a quarter next year, but strong wage growth and a second Trump presidency increases the risk of fewer rate cuts.

‘There was little evidence that pre-budget worries caused firms to radically alter their employment plans. Employment rose by 173,000 in the three months to October and the unemployment rate remained at 4.3%. Admittedly, the employment statistics are unreliable at the minute so the jump may have been driven by revisions to the data rather than a genuine increase. It may also be that most of the impact on the labour market will come after the budget. Indeed, the number of employees on payrolls dropped by 35,000 in November, but this metric is extremely volatile, and we don’t put much faith in one month’s numbers so this is one to watch.

‘The pay growth figures are more reliable, though, and will make the MPC nervous. With private sector ex-bonus pay growth rising to 5.4%, the chances are that pay growth will be a little faster in Q4 than the 5.1% the MPC had pencilled in. That gives the MPC a solid reason to keep rates on hold at 4.75% on Thursday and will make it even more cautious in cutting interest rates next year.’

Britvic takeover cleared by competition watchdog

Britain’s competition regulator has cleared Carlsberg’s takeover of soft drinks maker Britvic, saying it would not refer the £3.2billion transaction for an in-depth probe.

Carlsberg struck a deal to acquire the British soft drinks maker in July, aiming to establish a UK beverage ‘powerhouse’.

The deal, which is expected to close on 16 January, will see the Danish brewer taking over Britvic’s bottling agreement with PepsiCo. Carlsberg already bottles PepsiCo drinks in several markets and sees potential to expand into additional geographies in the future.

Carlsberg and Britvic said in a separate joint statement that all regulatory conditions have been satisfied, including clearances from the European Commission and the UK’s Competition and Markets Authority.

Wage growth accelerates to 5.2%

UK wages grew by a stronger than expected 5.2 per cent in the three months to October, fresh data from the Office for National Statistics shows.

The data, which surpassed forecasts of 5 per cent growth in average weekly earnings before bonuses, could further weigh on expectations for the pace and scale of Bank of England interest rate cuts.

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