PRESS DIGEST - British business - June 27
The Times
BA BOARD JOIN IN WALSH'S UNPAID MONTH BUT CLING TO FREE FLIGHTS
The board of British Airways (BAY.L) has agreed to work for free during the month of July, following the example set by chief executive Willie Walsh. The move is one of a number of cost-cutting measures at the struggling airline, which has seen around 7,000 of its staff agree to some form of pay cut. BA has, however, defended its decision to continue offering free flights as a perk to members of the board.
ANOTHER BOSS IN GOODWIN'S RBS TEAM LEAVES BANK
Peter Nathanial, a senior member of the team that oversaw Royal Bank of Scotland's (RBS.L) disastrous 2007 takeover of ABN Amro, has left the bank. Nathanial steps down from his position as head of risk -- his departure marking nearly a complete overhaul of the bank's senior management since 2007. RBS led the 49 billion pound consortium bid for ABN Amro but many of the ABN assets that RBS acquired proved to be impaired, leading to tens of billions of pounds in bad debts having to be written off.
HOMEBASE OWNER IS LATEST IN THE LINE OF FIRE
The introduction of a new executive bonus scheme at Home Retail Group (HOME.L) has resulted in the Association of British Insurers issuing a "red top" alert on the Argos and Homebase owner. The alert signals the highest level of concern about governance at the group and is the latest in a number challenges to companies' remuneration policies by City shareholders. Home Retail Group has defended the move, saying: "We consulted extensively with shareholders and we are confident that the policy represents an appropriate set of proposals."
The Daily Telegraph
MG ROVER REPORT READY AFTER 15.9 MILLION POUND INQUIRY
It has emerged that the official report into the collapse of MG Rover has been forwarded to the government. Business minister Ian Lucas told MPs the report was handed to the Department for Business on June 11. Officials and ministers have yet to set a firm date for the publication of the report. Lucas also revealed that the total cost of the inquiry is 15.9 million pounds, including costs and disbursements.
EASYJET LOSES GATWICK JUDICIAL REVIEW
EasyJet (EZJ.L) has lost its judicial review against the Civil Aviation Authority over the 50 percent increase in charges at Gatwick Airport. The airline's claim that the regulator held biased talks with airport operator BAA before sanctioning the increase was dismissed by the High Court on Friday. The judge conceded he found EasyJet's complaint understandable, but added that it was "not unfair" that the High Court should intervene. CAA economic regulator Harry Bush said he was "pleased with the outcome". BAA said on Friday that although net debt would climb to 8.7 billion pounds this year, it would still comply with covenants.
PERMIRA APPROACHES LIFE INSURER JUST RETIREMENT WITH 208 MILLION POUNDS BID
Private equity group Permira has approached Just Retirement (JR.L) with a bid valuing the life insurer at 208 million pounds. The development highlights the increasing amount of buy-out activity in the financial services market, where low asset values offer private equity firms the potential for high returns. The bid values the group, whose shares closed at 70 pence on Friday, at half its original market capitalisation. Langholm Capital, which has a 52.3 percent stake in the life insurer, has committed to accepting an offer of 76 pence or more per share in cash.
The Independent
JOHN LEWIS REPORTS ITS BEST WEEK OF THE YEAR Continued...


