Daily Mail - 07.08.2019

(Barré) #1

Daily Mail, Wednesday, August 7, 2019


Domino’s boss


to step down


as franchise


row rages on


by Hannah Uttley

Mastercard


nets Danish


rival in £2bn


blockbuster


PAYMENTS giant Master-
card has made its biggest
ever acquisition, buying
a stake in a Danish rival
for £2.6bn.
The firm said it is snap-
ping up part of payments
firm Nets in a push to offer
faster payments.
The deal will see Master-
card absorb Nets’ clearing,
electronic billing and
instant payment busi-
nesses, which are part of
the Denmark-based com-
pany’s corporate arm.
It comes after the Ameri-
can giant acquired UK-
based Vocalink, formerly
owned by a group of 18
banks, for £700m in 2017.
Michael Miebach, chief
product and innovation
officer at Mastercard, said:
‘This deal strengthens our
unique position as the one-
stop partner for any bank,
merchant or government’s
payment needs.’
Bo Nilsson, group chief
executive of Nets, said:
‘With its resources and
global reach, Mastercard
is uniquely positioned
to unlock the potential
of Nets’ account-to-
account business.’
Mastercard admitted
paying for the deal will hit
profits for up to two years
after it completes.
Nets employs 3,500 staff
across the group.

ONE of Britain’s most senior business-
women has abandoned plans to join
the Bank of England, so she can head
the UK operations of American soft-
ware titan Salesforce instead.
Dame Jayne-Anne Gadhia (pic-
tured), 57, the former boss of Virgin
Money bank, was due to become a
member of the Bank’s Financial Policy
Committee next April.
But she is following in the footsteps
of other Britons who moved to Sili-
con Valley companies including
former MP Sir Nick Clegg who heads
communications at Facebook,

designer Sir Jony Ive who recently
left Apple, Slack’s computer pro-
grammer Cal Henderson and investor
Wendy Tan White, who is at Google.
Gadhia was due to replace former
Barclays boss Martin Taylor when he
stands down next year from the com-
mittee, which monitors the UK’s
financial system and looks for risks.
The Treasury is now seeking an
alternative appointment. The Bank of
England said: ‘We fully understand
her decision and wish her well.’
Salesforce, based in San Francisco,
creates software for businesses.

THE chief executive of Domi-
no’s Pizza in the UK is to step
down amid a row with franchise
owners of its stores.
Shares surged more than 8pc
after David Wild said he is retir-
ing, to later close 1.7pc, or 3.9p,
higher at 237.7p.
Wild will remain until a
replacement is found and is to
stay on for a handover period.
Chairman Stephen Hemsley
will also depart after recruiting
a new chief executive, and once
his own replacement has been
decided on. The overhaul fol-
lows a long-running argument
with franchisees, who have been
demanding a higher share of
profits and are dragging their
heels on store openings.
Wild said talks are continuing
and added: ‘The situation is
complex, and we expect resolu-
tion will take some time, likely
into 2020. We are committed to
working with our franchisees to
agree win-win solutions.’
Analysts have also raised con-
cerns about Wild’s management
style after three finance direc-
tors quit during his tenure.
Wild, 64, denied he was at fault

for the resignations. He has
headed Domino’s UK business
since 2014, pushing sales past
£1bn a year for the first time.
Analysts at Barclays said:
‘While this may sound harsh,
the announcement that the
chief executive will retire is the
more positive news from an
investor perspective.’
The shake-up came as Domi-
no’s posted a 27pc fall in profits
to £30.5m for the first six months
of the year as expansion in
Europe affected performance.
It was also revealed that it has
forked out £7m on stockpiling
ingredients, such as tomato
sauce from Portugal and frozen
chicken from Asia, in prepara-
tion for a No Deal Brexit.
Despite difficulties overseas,
Domino’s posted a 3.9pc rise in
comparable sales in the UK,
compared with a year earlier.
The finale of fantasy television
series Game of Thrones in May
boosted sales as it sold a pizza
every four seconds. UK perform-
ance lifted overall sales, which
increased 3.5pc to £295.6m.

Nick Clegg
Head of
communications

Facebook


Sir Jony Ive
Design
architect

Apple


Michael
Acton Smith
Chief executive

Calm


meditation
app

Cal Henderson
Chief
technology officer

Slack
messaging
service

Britons who have made it big


with Silicon Valley firms


Jayne-Anne
Gadhia
UK and Ireland
chief executive

Salesforce


GADHIA DITCHES BANK


ROLE FOR TECH TITAN


W


HEN Bill Clinton was
up to his neck in
impeachment hearings
over a liaison with
Monica Lewinsky he
ordered an air strike against terror-
ists in a move construed as an effort
to divert attention.
There is a suspicion that President
Donald Trump tried a similar ploy this
week when he decided to ratchet up the
pressure on China by proposing ever
more tariffs and labelling the country as
a currency manipulator, in the face of
criticism over the response to the El
Paso shootings.
His upping of the stakes in the trade dis-
pute was enough to spread panic across
global equity markets. In spite of the rheto-
ric, there has long been a view in global
financial circles that eventually Trump and
his ‘good friend’ President Xi Jinping would
eventually settle their differences.
This is not dissimilar to the belief that the
Commons could not be stupid enough to
reject Theresa May’s Brexit deal and imperil
prosperity. The Federal Reserve was criti-
cised last week for cutting US interest rates
by a quarter of point, citing worsening eco-
nomic conditions when there weren’t any.

The cautionary loosening of borrowing
costs may have been the right thing to do.
China has limited tools with which to hit
back at the US, its biggest export market.
There is simply not enough pork bellies or
soya for the Chinese to retaliate against the
US. This week Beijing adopted a new tactic
by allowing the exchange rate for the Chi-
nese currency – the renminbi – to drop
through the floor of seven to the dollar.
Arguably, Beijing was playing politics
with the currency, as in the past it has inter-
vened to maintain its value. Trump’s retali-
ation has been to describe China as a ‘cur-
rency manipulator’.
The president has taken the Sino-US dis-
pute to a more perilous level. Voters in
America’s Rust Belt may welcome him

teaching China a lesson. They may regret
the repercussions should China’s output
continue to tumble, markets go into parox-
ysm and there is a recession.
Brinkmanship is all very well from the
author of the ‘The Art of the Deal’. But you
cannot bully the People’s Republic without
appalling consequences for the livelihoods
of ordinary people.

Tailwinds
MAKING head or tail of the financial results
of Rolls-Royce is tricky.
This is a result of the mismatch between
the long-term nature of what it does and
the reporting cycle. At first blush, it looks
as if Rolls made a stonking loss.
But there are all sorts of distortions. The
biggest is the hedge of $35bn (£28.8bn)
required to protect its orders against cur-
rency movements.
This resulted in a charge of £861m in the
first half of this year. Strip this out and
underlying profit actually climbed by 32pc,
to £203m, on turnover up 7pc, to £7.35bn.
Exceptional costs, including the problems
with the Trent engine, will cost the engineer
£100m over the next three years.
Rolls has encouraged people to keep an
eye on cash flow as a better measure of per-
formance. That doesn’t look too bright
either, with £391m flowing out in the first

half. But Rolls says this will be reversed in
the current period and is sticking with guid-
ance of £700m-plus for the second half.
What is encouraging is the order book. It
delivered 257 large engines in the first half
of this year and there is a wide-body order
book for 2,136 more units plus the service
income that comes with it.
Power Systems is going great guns and
Rolls has taken a step towards meeting the
climate change challenge by mopping up
Siemens eAircraft enterprise.
Behind all the murk there is a growing
enterprise which is seeking to climb out of
financial turbulence.

Bigger bucks
HAVING collected £8m when CYBG bought
Virgin Money in mid-2018, Dame Jayne-
Anne Gadhia opted for public service when
she agreed to join the Bank of England’s
Financial Policy Committee, which main-
tains stability.
The choice was applauded. It brought
gender diversity and great expertise in con-
sumer banking to the committee.
Now Gadhia has changed her mind and is
to take a top job at the cloud computing
giant Salesforce, which plans to invest
£2bn-plus in Britain.
Public service was a nice thought. But the
allure of executive responsibility and even
bigger bucks won.

Trump’s dangerous game


Alex


Brummer
CITY EDITOR

Page 63

Barneys bankrupt


US luxury department
store Barneys has gone
bust 96 years after it
was founded.
The retailer is up for
sale and has filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy
after struggling to pay
soaring rents. At its
flagship store in New
York, rental bills almost
doubled to £25m.
Barneys will close

shops as it hunts for a
buyer. It has secured a
£61m loan to keep it
afloat during the bank-
ruptcy process, which
in the US does not nec-
essarily mean a busi-
ness will cease trading.
Boss Daniella Vitale
said: ‘Barneys has been
dramatically impacted
by rents that are exces-
sively high.’

IN THE MONEY
Ivan Menezes, 60
£ Chief executive, Diageo

THE boss of
drinks firm
Diageo pock-
eted £11.7m
in the year
to June 2019.
Father-of-two Ivan
Menezes, was paid
£2.7m more than in
the previous year.
He got a £1.2m base
salary, £407,000

towards his pension
and £95,000 in bene-
fits such as medical
insurance and a com-
pany car allowance.
But most of the rise
came from growth in

his bonuses which
depend on Diageo’s
share price growth.
The stock climbed by
25pc in the period
and his total bonuses
came to £9.9m.

Boots language aid


HIGH Street beauty
chain Boots is testing
technology that
will allow staff to
communicate with
customers unable to
speak English.
It will use an app,
Voyce, to connect staff
and patients with trans-
lators in more than 245
languages.
Around 726,000 people

in England and Wales
are not fluent in Eng-
lish, with 138,000 unable
to speak it at all.
The service is being
tested in Belfast, Bir-
mingham, Knights-
bridge, Leicester and
Southampton.
Richard Bradley, at
Boots, said: ‘This is a
great example of how
technology can help.’

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