The Sunday Times - UK (2021-11-28)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1
Administrators to Arena
Television are suing its
former directors for breach of
fiduciary duty amid
allegations of a huge fraud at
the collapsed broadcaster.
Administrators from Kroll
filed a claim in the High Court
last week against Arena TV’s
former owner and managing

Glaxo Smith Kline is to renew its fight-
back against activist investor Elliott Man-
agement this week by unveiling a series of
plans for revolutionary HIV treatments
that would eliminate the need for regular
doses of tablets and could even point
towards a potential cure.
Glaxo’s HIV business, Viiv Healthcare,
is a crucial part of the company’s strategy
to ensure its drugs business can stand
alone once it splits off its consumer divi-
sion early next year. Led by Dame Emma
Walmsley, the FTSE 100 company is pre-
paring to create two standalone busi-
nesses each worth about £50 billion.
Glaxo has said its pharma business,
dubbed “New GSK”, will reach annual
sales of £33 billion by 2031, compared to
£24 billion for pharma and vaccines com-
bined last year. Key to this will be ensur-
ing that it can replace revenues lost from
a top HIV treatment — dolutegravir —
which made sales of £4.7 billion last year.
Dolutegravir loses its exclusivity in 2028
and 2029, depending on the market.
Glaxo is under attack from Elliott,
which took a multibillion-pound stake
this year. Elliott later published a 17-page
letter outlining its investment case. It tar-
geted the company’s HIV business, say-
ing it was “often met with a shrug” by
investors who were concerned that the
loss of dolutegravir’s exclusivity would
drive the business “off a cliff ”. Viiv is
majority owned by Glaxo, with 12 per
cent held by rival Pfizer and 10 per cent
by Shionogi of Japan.
Elliott has particularly put pressure on
Walmsley, who wants to run the
demerged pharma business. The hedge
fund has suggested that she reapply for
her job. Glaxo chairman Sir Jonathan

was known for its red-coated
staff, launching the careers of
entertainers including Des
O’Connor.
Despite growing to nine
sites at its peak, today Butlin’s
is the smallest of Bourne
Leisure’s businesses. It was
bought by Bourne in 2000.
A source close to
Blackstone said: “We want to
focus our attention — and the
management’s attention — on
Haven and Warner.”
Domestic holiday parks
have had a volatile 18 months,
swinging from spells of
closure to record months of
“staycation” bookings as
overseas travel was
restricted. In its accounts for
2020, Bourne said sales had
more than halved to
£506.8 million, pushing it to a
pre-tax loss of £151.6m.
Blackstone declined to
comment.

Symonds has pushed back against that.
Glaxo’s HIV pipeline includes three
areas: first, work on a long-lasting HIV
treatment that involves an injection of its
cabotegravir drug once every three
months, up from two months now; sec-
ond, a move into HIV prevention, also
using cabotegravir, which could win
approval in America as early as January.
Third, in a presentation to the City
tomorrow, Deborah Waterhouse, chief
executive of Viiv, will provide an update
on the company’s research into a poten-
tial cure for HIV. It plans to begin investi-
gating a cure in clinical trials as early as
next year, and hopes to launch it after


  1. Part of this includes research into
    using a therapeutic vaccine, which would
    entail giving it to someone who already
    has the condition.
    Earlier this month, health chiefs in the
    UK gave the green light to cabotegravir.
    The treatment replaces daily tablets —
    meaning patients do not need to keep
    their treatment at home. About 100,000
    people are living with HIV in Britain. Cur-
    rent treatments involve life-long treat-
    ment regimes taken as tablets every day.
    “Society is not kind to people living
    with HIV,” said Waterhouse. “It’s a highly
    stigmatised disease.” She pointed to uni-
    versity students who may fear flatmates
    discovering their pills. “There’s a huge
    amount of issues for many people living
    with HIV — fear of disclosure, and how
    they live their lives.”
    Kimberly Smith, head of research and
    development at Viiv, said the next chal-
    lenge would be to create a drug that could
    be taken just once every six months. “We
    think it’s possible to get there with cabo-
    tegravir,” she added.
    Shares in Glaxo closed on Friday at
    £15.11, valuing it at £76 billion.


Sabah Meddings

Glaxo fights


back against


US predator


Drugs giant hunts for HIV cure as


embattled boss tries to beat Elliott


BACK INTO THE RED


Investors will be on alert this
week for information on the
spread of the Covid Omicron
variant,writes Jill Treanor.
Stock markets have already
been rattled by the discovery
of the new variant in southern
Africa. Yesterday the first
cases emerged in Britain. On
Friday, the FTSE 100 dropped
3.6 per cent to 7,044, while oil
prices fell 10 per cent amid
fears that any new restrictions
would lead to a slowdown.
Among the biggest fallers
on the FTSE were IAG, owner
of British Airways, which

tumbled 15 per cent, while
Carnival cruises fell 16 per
cent. Some of the risers were
those likely to benefit from
any fresh lockdowns, such as
Ocado, up 5 per cent.
The boss of one of Britain’s
biggest pub chains warned
that the Omicron strain could
be ruinous if the Christmas
season is hit by consumer
anxiety or fresh lockdowns.
Phil Urban of FTSE 250 pub
chain Mitchells & Butlers said:
“If we lost Christmas, I think
that would be the end for
quite a few businesses.”

Professor Calum Semple,
who sits on the Scientific
Advisory Group for
Emergencies (Sage), told the
BBC that vaccines were “still
likely to protect you from
severe disease”.
Even if the government
does not impose new Covid-
19 measures, there are
concerns that consumers may
become more cautious in the
run-up to Christmas. Urban
feared that the new variant
could keep people at home.

The Omicron tumble, pages 2-3

LV seeks to bolster


board amid turmoil


Besieged mutual insurer LV is
lining up directors to beef up
its board if its £530 million
takeover by private equity
giant Bain Capital is voted
through by policyholders
next month.
One of the three
boardroom members being
sounded out for non-
executive roles is Tim Harris,
a former executive at LV’s
closest rival Royal London,
which lost out to Bain in last
year’s bidding process.
Royal London has since
made a fresh approach to LV,
offering to work with Bain.
Some of LV’s 1.2 million
members have complained
that the £100 payout they
each stand to receive from
the Bain deal is not enough to
compensate them for the loss
of the group’s mutual status.
Natalie Ceeney, the former

Jill Treanor head of the Financial
Ombudsman Service, is also
thought to be among those
being lined up, along with
Suzy Neubert who had a long
career in financial services —
most recently at fund
manager JO Hambro Capital
Management. She is married
to easyJet chairman Stephen
Hester. LV would not
comment on any boardroom
changes as it embarks on a
last-ditch effort to convince
policyholders to vote on the
deal at a webinar tomorrow.
l Santander has plucked the
boss for its UK arm from the
mutual sector to replace
Nathan Bostock, who has
been promoted to a different
role in the Spanish bank.
Mike Regnier, 50, is
expected to join from
Yorkshire Building Society.
Santander would not
comment. Yorkshire could
not be reached.

Blackstone to sell Butlin’s


after staycation takeover


The owner of Butlin’s is lining
up an auction of the holiday
park chain, less than a year
after its parent company was
bought by Blackstone.
Sky News reported that
Bourne Leisure, which also
owns Haven and adult-only
Warner Leisure Hotels, had
appointed Rothschild to find
buyers for Butlin’s. Private
equity firm Blackstone took a
majority stake in the
company in January, in a deal
that valued Bourne Leisure at
an estimated £3 billion.
Butlin’s was established in
1936 by Billy Butlin, who
bought a plot of land in
Skegness. It is one of three
Butlin’s holiday parks that
remain open, along with sites
in Minehead and Bognor
Regis. In its heyday, the chain

Sabah Meddings
and Sam Chambers

RICHARD DREW/AP

Nov 26


7, 0 4 3


Nov 22


7, 2 2 3


FTSE 100


BUSINESS


&MONEY


Fraud allegations fly as Glastonbury broadcaster collapses


director, Richard Yeowart,
and Robert Hopkinson,
another former director. The
company collapsed suddenly
this month.
A source close to the
administration said the
collapse was set in motion
when an auditor, acting for
one of Arena TV’s lenders,
attempted to verify serial
numbers for company-owned

equipment used as security
for loans. When the auditor
called the equipment
suppliers, they were told the
serial numbers did not exist.
“It is potentially the biggest
fraud of this kind the UK has
ever seen,” the source said.
Administrators have been
unable to contact Yeowart,
54, who is believed to be in
France. Attempts by The

Sunday Times to contact
Yeowart were unsuccessful.
Hopkinson, 41, did not reply
to a request for comment.
Arena TV, founded in 1988,
became one of the largest
independent outside
broadcasters in the UK,
serving customers including
the BBC, ITV and Sky Sports.
According to his LinkedIn
profile, Hopkinson joined in

2003, a year after leaving
university.
Arena TV is understood to
have borrowed about
£300 million from asset-based
lenders including HSBC, Close
Brothers and Shawbrook,
according to Sky News. Allied
Irish Bank is also said to have
lent to Arena TV. Recoveries
from administration are likely
to be minimal.

Sam Chambers The company’s equipment
was used to produce ITV’s
coverage of Euro 2020, and
this year’s FA Cup Final was
remotely produced at Arena
TV’s headquarters in Redhill,
Surrey. Its large outside-
broadcast trucks have been
deployed at the Glastonbury
festival and the Olympics.
Arena Aviation, a separate
division, has been providing

aerial filming services since
the mid-1990s and operated
news-gathering helicopters
for big networks when it
collapsed. The outside-
broadcast industry has been
steadily consolidating amid
tough competition, with
many of Arena’s rivals bought
by international firms.
In 2019, the last year for
which accounts are available,

the group reported pre-tax
profits of £3.8 million on sales
of £29.6 million. The
company reported that it had
assets worth £58.6 million.
Its accounts were signed
off by auditors from
McKenzies, a small practice
based in Surrey.
Arena employed about 100
people at the time of its
collapse.

BUSINESS


&MONEY


November 28, 2021 · thesundaytimes.co.uk/business thesundaytimes.co.uk/money


‘I LANDED A


£100K TAX BILL’


STRICTLY’S


ROBIN


WINDSOR


MONEY, PAGE 18


o.uk/money


CONCORDE MARK II


PAGE 10


THE BOTS THAT


STOLE CHRISTMAS


PAGE 9

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