logo
Mitie agrees £366m deal to buy Lord Ashcroft-founded firm Marlowe

Mitie agrees £366m deal to buy Lord Ashcroft-founded firm Marlowe

Under the terms of the cash-and-shares deal, Mitie will pay 466p per Marlowe share.
Mitie said it hopes to cut costs by £30 million a year across the combined group after the takeover.
Marlowe is a provider of fire safety services, which is listed on the London's Aim junior market, and employs around 3,000 workers.
FTSE 250-listed Mitie employs about 72,000 staff in areas from cleaning and security to maintenance.
Phil Bentley, chief executive of Mitie, said: 'Adding Marlowe's circa 3,000 highly respected colleagues to Mitie's capabilities and providing access to Mitie's clients will generate significant revenue growth opportunities as well as immediate cost efficiencies.
'We are excited about the next chapter in Mitie's history to become a leading facilities compliance provider.'
Lord Ashcroft, interim non-executive chairman of Marlowe, added: 'The acquisition represents excellent value for Marlowe shareholders.'
'I have been consistent since taking up the role of interim chairman in June 2024 that my aim was to maximise shareholder returns and the acquisition will be the final piece in that jigsaw,' he said.
Lord Ashcroft – a former deputy chairman of the Conservative Party – co-founded Marlowe with Alex Dacre, its former chief executive.
He became non-executive chairman on an interim basis when Mr Dacre left in June last year.
He is the latest shareholder in Marlowe, with an 18.9% stake.
In Mitie's full year figures also out on Thursday, it reported an 11% rise in underlying operating profits to £234 million for the year to March 31.
But statutory pre-tax profits fell to £145.4 million from £156.3 million the previous year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

U.S. online stores put ‘out of stock' signs as Nintendo Switch 2 sales hit record highs
U.S. online stores put ‘out of stock' signs as Nintendo Switch 2 sales hit record highs

NBC News

time17 hours ago

  • NBC News

U.S. online stores put ‘out of stock' signs as Nintendo Switch 2 sales hit record highs

Nintendo sold more than 3.5 million units of its flagship Switch 2 gaming system in the four days following its launch, with online stores of major U.S. retailers putting up 'out of stock' signs. The record-breaking start for the company's first new console in eight years, puts Nintendo on the path to realizing its aim of selling 15 million units of the Switch 2 console in the fiscal year ending March 2026. However, analysts continue to believe that those expectations are modest, and forecast the strong initial demand to sustain. 'The market expected a record from Nintendo, and as it turns out, Nintendo delivered,' Serkan Toto, CEO and founder of gaming industry consultancy Kantan Games, told CNBC. 'All signals prior to launch pointed to significant demand, and I believe we will see further records broken over the next weeks or months,' he added. Toto has maintains that the Switch 2 will sell over 20 million units in its first 12 months. David Gibson, senior research analyst at MST Financial told CNBC that he expects 20 million sales for the year ending March 2026. The Switch 2, which was released on June 5, has been met with much fanfare, with people lining up for hours ahead of midnight releases at Nintendo stores. 'Fans around the world are showing their enthusiasm for Nintendo Switch 2 as an upgraded way to play at home and on the go,' Nintendo of America President and Chief Operating Officer Doug Bowser said in a statement, adding the company was thankful for the response. Tokyo-listed shares of Nintendo, which have gained nearly 30% so far this year, were down 3.5% on Wednesday, LSEG data showed. The company has seen its shares rise nearly fivefold since the original Switch debuted in early March 2017. It remains to be seen if the Switch 2 can recapture the magic of its predecessor, which had set the bar with 15 million unit sales in its first year. It went on to sell more than 152 million units to become the second-highest selling Nintendo device ever, behind the Nintendo DS. The record initial sales of the Switch are in line with the strong demand analysts had predicted. However, the rush has put into question Nintendo's ability to meet demand. Retailers including Walmart, GameStop, Target and Best Buy were out of stock of the consoles, their online stores showed Wednesday. In April, Nintendo's Bowser told CNBC that the company had been working with 'retail partners to ensure there's ample supply for not only the launch weekend, but well beyond.' However, Nintendo President Shuntaro Furukawa stated the same month that 2.2 million people in Japan had entered the lottery to purchase the Switch 2 on launch day, exceeding expectations and what the company had initially planned to deliver to stores. Kantan Games' Toto said shortages in Japan were expected to persist, but would be less impactful elsewhere. 'Except for Japan where demand for Switch 2 is extraordinarily high, it looks like fans who really want the console and invest time in trying to secure one actually can get one,' he said. 'It might take a while, but as far as can be monitored, supply seems to be more robust than around the launch of the original Switch in 2017.' President Donald Trump's 'reciprocal tariffs' on most countries around the world also present headwinds for the Switch 2. In April, the company announced that it would delay preorders of the Switch 2 in the U.S. while it considers the impact of tariffs. The Switch 2 retails for $449 in the U.S., which makes it Nintendo's priciest console to date. Nintendo's Bowser said in April the company was going to 'monitor where tariffs are going' before making any further decisions on price hikes. MST Financial's Gibson said that a resolution to Trump's tariffs and lower duty rates could see the Switch 2 prices drop in the U.S. The Switch 2 builds on the success of the original Switch, featuring a larger screen and improved performance. The system also introduces the new GameChat2 feature, which allows players to voice or video chat with friends online and share game screens.

PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch
PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch

North Wales Chronicle

time17 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch

The Conservative Party leader accused Sir Keir Starmer of appearing at the despatch box 'all puffed up and self-righteous', and claimed he has 'the wrong Chancellor and the wrong priorities'. Sir Keir listed 'three trade deals, record investment, breakfast clubs, social affordable housing, defence review' and the decision to pump £14.2 billion into building Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk as being among his achievements. At Prime Minister's Questions, Mrs Badenoch told the Commons: 'Last year he said he was taking the winter fuel payment away to balance the books. 'But the books are not balanced, in fact they are worse. 'This year the deficit is forecast to be £10 billion higher since the budget. 'Not since last year's election, since the budget. 'In what way are the books now balanced?' Chancellor Rachel Reeves last year announced that the Government would strip pensioners of the universal winter fuel payment, unless they claimed certain means-tested benefits. But the Government has since said pensioners with a gross taxable income of less than £35,000 will be eligible for payments of up to £300 each winter. Sir Keir replied: 'She's obviously missed the interest rate cuts, the growth figures for earlier this year, the strategic defence review, local transport – £15 billion going in, free school meals, Sizewell, social housing. 'She stands there to lecture us, and I see Liz Truss is obviously back in vogue. 'Advising Reform officially now, haunting the Tories, and I remind her that the shadow home secretary (Chris Philp), I think he was then chief secretary to the Treasury, he gave a Liz Truss budget 9.5 out of 10. 'The Leader of the Opposition said what was wrong with Liz Truss's budget was not necessarily the package, that was alright, it was the way it was sold. 'They've learnt absolutely nothing.' In a follow-up question, Mrs Badenoch said the Prime Minister mentioned Ms Truss because he 'wants to hide from his own economic record'. She added: 'He's a coward. 'Every time he stands up there and talks about Liz Truss it's because he is scared about talking about his record and what is happening to the economy out there. 'Let's bring it back to the U-turn which he's running away from. 'A U-turn on the policy his MPs went out defending time and time again.' Mrs Badenoch continued: 'This is laughable. 'He stands there all puffed up and self-righteous. 'Why can't the Prime Minister just admit that he made a mistake?' In his response, the Prime Minister said: 'Three weeks ago I said that I wanted more pensioners to be eligible for winter fuel. 'I'm really pleased we've set out the threshold for the certainty that is needed. 'She says I don't want to talk about record. 'What about three trade deals, record investment, breakfast clubs, social affordable housing, defence review, Sizewell, we could go on all morning.' He added: 'At the weekend she said that she would be getting better in the role. 'She could start with apologising for the Liz Truss budget, that would be better.' Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle rebuked laughing Labour MPs after Mrs Badenoch said her PMQs performances 'get better every week'. He told them their behaviour was a 'very bad look'. In her question, Mrs Badenoch said Ms Reeves said the winter fuel payment 'U-turn won't be funded through higher borrowing'. She asked: 'So, will the Prime Minister admit that it will be funded by putting everybody's taxes up?' Sir Keir said: 'At the budget, we put record investment in our NHS and our public services – record investment – but she comes every week to carp on about national insurance, but she doesn't stand there with the courage of her convictions and say she'll actually reverse it, and the reason she won't? 'Because she won't stand up and say she's against the investment in the NHS, she won't stand up and say she's against the investment in our public services, and we'll all listen very carefully in just 20 minutes when the Chancellor lays out more record investment as to whether they welcome it, or whether they'll say they wouldn't support it.' In her final question, Mrs Badenoch said Ms Reeves had 'made bad choices – bad choices that mean higher inflation, bad choices that have led to lower growth, bad choices that have meant that jobs have been lost every single month since Labour come into office'. She said 'thousands of families' had 'lost their incomes in Stoke, in Grangemouth, in Luton', before she asked: 'Isn't the truth that we've got the wrong Chancellor and the wrong priorities?' Sir Keir said: 'A wrong choice they made was making her Leader of the Opposition.' Turning to the Government's plan to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, where the UK maintains a military presence on Diego Garcia, Mrs Badenoch had earlier claimed 'Mauritius is scrapping income tax' and asked: 'Why on earth should the British taxpayer pay £30 billion for tax cuts in Mauritius?' The Government risked jeopardising the 'vital intelligence and strategic capability' on Diego Garcia without a deal, the Prime Minister warned. 'Legal uncertainty would compromise it in very short order,' he added.

PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch
PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch

Rhyl Journal

time17 hours ago

  • Rhyl Journal

PM picked ‘wrong Chancellor and wrong priorities', claims Badenoch

The Conservative Party leader accused Sir Keir Starmer of appearing at the despatch box 'all puffed up and self-righteous', and claimed he has 'the wrong Chancellor and the wrong priorities'. Sir Keir listed 'three trade deals, record investment, breakfast clubs, social affordable housing, defence review' and the decision to pump £14.2 billion into building Sizewell C nuclear power station in Suffolk as being among his achievements. At Prime Minister's Questions, Mrs Badenoch told the Commons: 'Last year he said he was taking the winter fuel payment away to balance the books. 'But the books are not balanced, in fact they are worse. 'This year the deficit is forecast to be £10 billion higher since the budget. 'Not since last year's election, since the budget. 'In what way are the books now balanced?' Chancellor Rachel Reeves last year announced that the Government would strip pensioners of the universal winter fuel payment, unless they claimed certain means-tested benefits. But the Government has since said pensioners with a gross taxable income of less than £35,000 will be eligible for payments of up to £300 each winter. Sir Keir replied: 'She's obviously missed the interest rate cuts, the growth figures for earlier this year, the strategic defence review, local transport – £15 billion going in, free school meals, Sizewell, social housing. 'She stands there to lecture us, and I see Liz Truss is obviously back in vogue. 'Advising Reform officially now, haunting the Tories, and I remind her that the shadow home secretary (Chris Philp), I think he was then chief secretary to the Treasury, he gave a Liz Truss budget 9.5 out of 10. 'The Leader of the Opposition said what was wrong with Liz Truss's budget was not necessarily the package, that was alright, it was the way it was sold. 'They've learnt absolutely nothing.' In a follow-up question, Mrs Badenoch said the Prime Minister mentioned Ms Truss because he 'wants to hide from his own economic record'. She added: 'He's a coward. 'Every time he stands up there and talks about Liz Truss it's because he is scared about talking about his record and what is happening to the economy out there. 'Let's bring it back to the U-turn which he's running away from. 'A U-turn on the policy his MPs went out defending time and time again.' Mrs Badenoch continued: 'This is laughable. 'He stands there all puffed up and self-righteous. 'Why can't the Prime Minister just admit that he made a mistake?' In his response, the Prime Minister said: 'Three weeks ago I said that I wanted more pensioners to be eligible for winter fuel. 'I'm really pleased we've set out the threshold for the certainty that is needed. 'She says I don't want to talk about record. 'What about three trade deals, record investment, breakfast clubs, social affordable housing, defence review, Sizewell, we could go on all morning.' He added: 'At the weekend she said that she would be getting better in the role. 'She could start with apologising for the Liz Truss budget, that would be better.' Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle rebuked laughing Labour MPs after Mrs Badenoch said her PMQs performances 'get better every week'. He told them their behaviour was a 'very bad look'. In her question, Mrs Badenoch said Ms Reeves said the winter fuel payment 'U-turn won't be funded through higher borrowing'. She asked: 'So, will the Prime Minister admit that it will be funded by putting everybody's taxes up?' Sir Keir said: 'At the budget, we put record investment in our NHS and our public services – record investment – but she comes every week to carp on about national insurance, but she doesn't stand there with the courage of her convictions and say she'll actually reverse it, and the reason she won't? 'Because she won't stand up and say she's against the investment in the NHS, she won't stand up and say she's against the investment in our public services, and we'll all listen very carefully in just 20 minutes when the Chancellor lays out more record investment as to whether they welcome it, or whether they'll say they wouldn't support it.' In her final question, Mrs Badenoch said Ms Reeves had 'made bad choices – bad choices that mean higher inflation, bad choices that have led to lower growth, bad choices that have meant that jobs have been lost every single month since Labour come into office'. She said 'thousands of families' had 'lost their incomes in Stoke, in Grangemouth, in Luton', before she asked: 'Isn't the truth that we've got the wrong Chancellor and the wrong priorities?' Sir Keir said: 'A wrong choice they made was making her Leader of the Opposition.' Turning to the Government's plan to hand the Chagos Islands to Mauritius, where the UK maintains a military presence on Diego Garcia, Mrs Badenoch had earlier claimed 'Mauritius is scrapping income tax' and asked: 'Why on earth should the British taxpayer pay £30 billion for tax cuts in Mauritius?' The Government risked jeopardising the 'vital intelligence and strategic capability' on Diego Garcia without a deal, the Prime Minister warned. 'Legal uncertainty would compromise it in very short order,' he added.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store