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Uber eyes IPO price at midpoint or lower amid tumultuous week

It would have been bad enough for Uber if the company’s long-awaited IPO occurred during the same week that US-China trade tensions roiled the stock markets. Or if the offering came just a few days after rival Lyft posted eyebrow-raising losses in its first quarter as a public company. Or if Uber’s drivers planned a strike in the lead-up to the listing in protest of Uber’s pay practices.

Instead, all three things happened. And now, Uber is planning to price its IPO at or below its midpoint price of $47 per share, per reports, which would give the company a fully diluted valuation of $86 billion or less. That’s likely up from the $76 billion valuation Uber reportedly attained with its last round of private funding, but several billion shy of figures that have been thrown around in recent months.

It’s been a little less than two weeks since Uber announced an IPO price range of $44 to $50 per share, equating to a valuation range of about $80.5 billion to $91.5 billion. Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported that the listing was at least three times oversubscribed, enough to price at the upper end of its range if so desired—healthy demand, to be sure, but quite different from a Lyft IPO in late March that was reportedly 20 times oversubscribed.

The fate of Lyft in the intervening weeks is surely one reason Uber’s offering isn’t looking quite so gargantuan as once expected—although it will still be one of the largest VC-backed listings of all time. Since stock in Lyft closed its first day of trading at more than $78 per share March 29, the price of those shares has fallen more than 30%, dipping below $53 Wednesday to reach a new all-time low. The company now has a market cap of $15.1 billion, the same as the valuation that came with its final round of private VC funding last summer.

A single-day drop Wednesday of nearly 11% came a day after Lyft reported its financial results for the first time as a public company, including a net loss for 1Q of more than $1.1 billion. While the company chalked up some of those losses to IPO-related expenses, it’s also a reminder to investors that profitability is still very far away. Lyft lost $911 million for the whole of 2018, compared with a $1.8 billion loss for Uber.

Those losses are, of course, at odds with Lyft and Uber’s sky-high valuations and revenue figures, a quasi-contradiction that could be interpreted a number of ways. As an example, one can look to the ridehailing companies’ ongoing labor dispute with their drivers, which on Wednesday took the form of a boycott by Uber and Lyft drivers in cities across the US, the UK and Australia. Those drivers—who are, of course, regarded as contractors, not employees—see all that money flowing in and wonder why they, the people who actually allow Uber and Lyft’s apps to function, can’t get a little bit more of it. The companies, meanwhile, can point to the losses as a reason thriftiness is required.

That argument perhaps crumbles a bit when Uber’s two top executives reportedly took in more than $90 million in compensation last year. There’s certainly enough money to make sure some people become immensely wealthy. Labor just isn’t on that list.

And depending on the IPO price Uber ultimately settles on, by the end of the week, there might be a little bit less wealth to go around than everyone expected a few months ago.

 

Read More – www.pitchbook.com

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Brewery openings stall as multinationals move in

A boom in new brewery sites has slowed down dramatically in the last 12 months as multinational firms muscle in on the growing demand for craft beer.

Growing competition from large businesses has hindered smaller brewers from setting up new outlets, causing the growth in openings to hit a five-year low.

The total number of breweries increased by just eight in 2018, marking a sharp slowdown from 390 openings in the previous year.

According to accountancy firm UHY Hacker Young, which produced the data, the craft beer market has become difficult for new entrants as “multinational brewers continue to buy and invest the more successful craft breweries.”

Among the high profile mergers and acquisitions involving multinational businesses in the craft beer sector is the Fullers deal for Dark Star, a craft beer business in West Sussex, and Heineken’s acquisition of stakes in Beavertown Brewery, Lagunitas and Brixton Brewery.”We’re not saying that the market is shrinking just the number of players is consolidating and sales growth is going to be harder to come buy,” said James Simmonds, partner at UHY Hacker Young.

He added: “Craft breweries need to ensure their business model is s sustainable and profitable at an earlier stage and not just rely on the idea they’ll constantly be able to grow their way out of trouble.”

The total number of UK breweries reached 2,274 at the end of 2018, rising from 1,352 five years ago.

Read More – www.cityam.com

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Debenhams on the brink as it rejects £150m Mike Ashley rescue deal

Debenhams is on the brink of falling into the hands of its lenders in a move that will wipe out shareholders after the company and its financial backers rejected a £150m cash injection from Mike Ashley’s Sports Direct.

A pre-pack administration deal is expected to be announced on Tuesday morning that would affect Debenhams’ holding company only, meaning its 165 stores would continue to trade. However, shareholders’ stakes will be rendered worthless, including Sports Direct’s near 30% stake, which cost about £150m to build up.

The retailer’s banks and bondholders also want Debenhams to close about 50 stores via an insolvency process known as a company voluntary arrangement, which is likely to follow within weeks. Landlords will hold a vote on whether to approve the deal, expected to involve stores closing after Christmas and putting thousands of jobs at risk.

Sports Direct said Debenhams had turned down its offer of a £150m rescue package, in the form of a fully underwritten rights issue, in a deal it hoped would keep the company in the hands of shareholders. In a stock market announcement on Monday afternoon after that deal was rejected, Ashley’s retail group said it was still considering making a fully funded takeover bid instead, but no offer had emerged by a 5pm deadline.

With the deadline missed, the most likely outcome for the chain, which has 165 stores and employs 25,000 people, is that lenders will take control of Debenhams. They have lined up administrators to organise a pre-arranged deal under which Debenhams’ listed holding company will go into administration. The group’s operating companies, which run its stores, will then be sold to a new entity controlled by the lenders in return for reducing the group’s £640m debt pile.

 

Read More – www.theguardian.com

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Sushi chain Wasabi fishes for new funding

The Japanese food chain Wasabi is in talks to sell a stake for the first time in its 16-year history.

New funding will act as a vital growth engine for the sushi and bento seller’s parent company, which manages the outlets along with a handful of Kimchee outlets and an Asian-inspired bakery in Cambridge.

The investment comes amid questions over Wasabi’s finances. Companies House recently issued a notice to strike the company off the register after it missed last year’s deadline to file its accounts.

Read more – www.telegraph.co.uk

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UK digital advertising spend to grow to £15bn in 2019

Spending on digital advertising in the UK is set to grow to more than £15bn this year amid a boom in new digital marketing technology, a new report has revealed.

Digital ad spend will enjoy double-digit growth in 2019 as the industry moves away from traditional media forms, according to the latest forecasts by Barclays Corporate Banking.

The optimistic figures come amid an ongoing shift to digital in the sector, with out-of-home (OHH) advertising earmarked as a key area for transformation after digital OOH surpassed traditional outdoor for the first time last year.

Agencies have been grappling with disruption in the industry, with ad giant WPP undergoing a radical transformation plan in a bid to simplify its complex structure.

Despite concerns about sweeping changes across the industry, the report stated optimism remains high, while appetite for mergers and acquisitions remains buoyant.

Sean Duffy, head of TMT at Barclays Corporate Banking, said: “It feels like adtech is slightly pushed to the sidelines, which is a mistake as it is transforming advertising and can be another real growth engine for the UK economy.

“Adtech is already helping UK businesses compete on the global stage and will continue to allow brands to market themselves more effectively as further technology advances are harnessed.”

 

Read More – http://www.cityam.com

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Advent eyes $1B fund as PE continues its push into tech

Advent International has launched its first tech-focused vehicle with a target of $1 billion, according to Buyouts, becoming the latest major private equity firm to indicate an increasing appetite for tech deals.

The news comes about seven weeks after Bryan Taylor joined Advent as a managing partner and leader of the firm’s tech investment team. Taylor’s hiring coincided with the opening of a new office in the Bay Area, part of what an Advent press release at the time described as the firm “deepening its commitment to the technology sector.” Most recently, Taylor was the co-head of the tech group at TPG Capital, where he helped lead a team of 20; Advent’s tech group currently has more than a dozen employees across North America and Europe.

Reports of the debut tech vehicle also come as Advent is in the midst of another major fundraising effort. Public LP documents from earlier this month showed the firm has begun gathering commitments for its ninth flagship buyout fund, which reports from last autumn indicated could target at least $13 billion. That would equal the sum Advent raised for its prior flagship fund, which hit a $13 billion hard cap in 2016.

Earlier this week, another private equity investor formed a new fund focused on the tech space, albeit a very specific slice of it: Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec unveiled its CDPQ-AI Fund, a $250 million pool that will be put to use backing companies from Québec with “a proven track record in artificial intelligence.”

Across the entire private equity landscape, firms are raising more cash for tech investments. At the end of January, buyout giant The Carlyle Group closed its latest European tech fund—which will also be deployed in the US—on €1.35 billion (about $1.5 billion), a serious increase from a 2015 predecessor that brought in €656.5 million. Carlyle’s close came a mere two days after Thoma Bravo, a longtime specialist in the tech space, wrapped up a $12.6 billion mega-fund, one of the largest vehicles ever that will mainly target tech companies.

In each of the past four years, there has been an increase in the percentage of overall PE investments in the US and Europe taking place in the IT space. During 2019, though, the numbers are full-on booming. More than 22% of completed deals so far this year have been in IT, per the PitchBook Platform, a major jump from last year’s 18% rate and a whole different universe from the 13% clip logged as recently as 2015. For years, the B2C space ranked second only to B2B in drawing the most PE deals; now, it seems IT has clearly overtaken B2C as the No. 2 choice.

And while Advent may be among those contributing to that change, tech deals are far from the Boston-based firm’s only focus. In March alone, Advent has been linked to a dizzying array of potential billion-dollar deals. The firm agreed to buy German chemicals company Evonik for €3 billion, while a potential €1.8 billion buyout of Italian debt provider Cerved fell apart after news of ongoing negotiations leaked to the press. Advent has also been among a host of firms named as possible buyers in a handful of very expensive auctions, including ongoing sale processes for Bayer‘s animal health unit, the skin health unit of Nestlé, and Kantar, a data analysis business owned by WPP.

 

Read more – www.pitchbook.com

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Vodafone to receive EU warning over $22 billion Liberty deal

Vodafone will receive a warning from EU regulators about possible anti-competitive effects from its $22 billion deal to buy Liberty Global’s German and eastern European assets, two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

The warning, via a statement of objections setting out the European Commission’s concerns, is expected to be conveyed to the companies shortly, the sources said, ahead of a June 3 deadline for the EU executive’s regulatory approval.

The world’s second-largest mobile operator and U.S. cable pioneer John Malone’s Liberty announced the deal in May last year in a move that would help Vodafone to compete with rival Deutsche Telekom in its home market.

The EU antitrust enforcer opened a full-scale investigation in December last year, saying that the deal could hurt competition in Germany and the Czech Republic.

Vodafone is expected to offer concessions to address EU concerns about the deal.

Read more – https://uk.reuters.com

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Doorstep lender Provident Financial receives £1.3bn takeover bid

Provident Financial, the doorstep lender that charges interest rates of 535%, has received a surprise £1.3bn takeover bid from a smaller rival led by its former chief executive.

The unsolicited bid for the “Provvy” from Non-Standard Finance (NSF), run by John van Kuffeler, has the backing of the key shareholder Neil Woodford and others who own more than 50% of the company’s shares.

Provident Financial has 800,000 doorstep borrowers – with loan payments collected weekly from their homes – and another 1.7 million holders of its Vanquis credit card that charges up to 69.9% interest.

Despite the high APRs, Provident Financial is yet to recover from a botched attempt to overhaul its 130-year-old business model by cutting staff numbers and ramping up its use of technology. Its shares plunged by two-thirds on one day in 2017 and last year it reported a £123m loss.

Van Kuffeler said Provident had “lost its way” and revealed it had rejected an approach in 2018. “[We] approached the Provident board with a proposal in January last year. That approach was rebuffed and since then Provident has further lost its way.”

Provident’s only official response so far has been to say it “notes the unsolicited offer for Provident Financial announced this morning … The board’s considered response to the offer will be announced in due course. In the meantime, shareholders are strongly advised to take no action in respect of the NSF offer.”

NSF said if successful it would keep Provident’s doorstep-lending business but sell off “non-core” Satsuma Loans and Moneybarn divisions.

Read More – www.theguardian.com

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Sainsbury’s shares dive after Asda merger put in doubt

Sainsbury’s shares have dived 15% after the UK’s competition watchdog cast doubt on its plan to buy Asda.

Customers could see higher prices and less choice if the two grocers combined, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said.

It said it could block the deal or force the sale of a large number of stores or even one of the brand names.

However, it also said it was “likely to be difficult” for the chains to “address the concerns”.

Sainsbury’s boss said the findings were “outrageous”.

In its provisional report on the proposed merger, the CMA also said the merger could lead to a “poorer shopping experience”.

Stuart McIntosh, chair of the CMA’s independent inquiry group, said it had found “very significant competition concerns in a number of areas – they are to do with grocery shopping in supermarkets, grocery shopping online and the companies’ petrol stations”.

“However, if one recognises that the competition concerns are quite broadly based… putting together a package of measures which addresses those concerns is likely to be complex and quite challenging,” he said.

But Sainsbury’s chief executive Mike Coupe described the CMA’s analysis as “fundamentally flawed” and said the firm would be making “very strong representations” to it about its “inaccuracy and lack of objectivity”.

“They have fundamentally moved the goalposts, changed the shape of the ball and chosen a different playing field,” he told the BBC.

“This is totally outrageous.”

 

Read More – www.bbc.co.uk

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Cathedral City maker Dairy Crest to be bought by Saputo

Dairy Crest, whose brands include Cathedral City cheddar and Country Life butter, has agreed to be bought by a Canadian company in a near-£1bn deal.

Saputo, one of the biggest dairy processors in the world, will pay 620p a share, valuing Dairy Crest at £975m.

The deal is Saputo’s first in Europe and it said Dairy Crest was an “attractive platform” for UK growth.

Dairy Crest said “virtually” all its 1,100 UK jobs are safe, including 150 at its head office in Surrey.

However, the Unite union said it would be “seeking an urgent meeting” with Saputo about assurances over job security.

Dairy Crest’s share price, which has risen steadily this week, had jumped almost 12% in late morning trading on Friday.

Read More – www.bbc.co.uk