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SMALL CAP MOVERS: H&T becomes latest bargain basement takeover victim

SMALL CAP MOVERS: H&T becomes latest bargain basement takeover victim

Daily Mail​16-05-2025

H&T Group is calling time on its 19-year tenure as a fixture on London's AIM market after agreeing a £297million takeover by United States-listed FirstCash.
The deal marks the latest in a growing list of UK small and mid-cap companies being acquired at bargain-basement valuations.
Shares in the UK's largest pawnbroking chain rose 42 per cent over the week after the 661p-per-share offer was announced on Wednesday.
The proposal includes a 650p cash payment and a final dividend of 11p due in June. The price represents a 44 per cent premium to H&T's close before the deal.
The move underscores a broader trend of overseas buyers targeting undervalued UK assets, particularly outside the FTSE 100, where valuations remain well below historical averages.
Founded in 1897, H&T has become a familiar name on British high streets, offering short-term loans secured against jewellery and watches.
The board said it had received several proposals since December before entering formal talks.
While it expressed confidence in the company's standalone prospects, it cited uncertain gold prices, rising costs and subdued consumer sentiment as ongoing headwinds.
Turning to the wider market, the AIM All-Share added 1.5 per cent this week to reach 733.18, taking it back to levels last seen in December 2024.
It kept pace with the FTSE 100, which also clawed back ground lost in the aftermath of US President Trump's tariff assault on the rest of the world.
Keeping with the positives, Metals One continued its rise after confirming the acquisition of the Swales gold project in Nevada.
There is a term in junior mining called 'nearology', the idea that proximity to a producing mine equates to success. It does not always hold, but Metals One investors will hope favourable geology extends to the Swales property.
Just 13 miles up the road lies the Carlin Complex, a joint venture between Barrick Gold and Newmont and the world's largest gold-producing site.
Investors appeared excited by the prospect, with shares rising 69 per cent. If you had bought a month ago, you would have more than doubled your money.
Belluscura, the portable oxygen tank maker, enjoyed a stellar week with no discernible trigger. It was even forced to issue a statement saying it had no explanation for the sharp rise in the share price.
While it reported record April sales, it also launched a strategic review, which is rarely interpreted as a buy signal by investors.
The review will consider options including strategic investment, partnerships and alternative funding structures.
Belluscura said it was not putting up a for sale sign, but the market seems to have reached a different conclusion. The shares ended the week 52 per cent higher.
Polarean Imaging rose 35 per cent after putting the spotlight on its collaboration with Philips.
The Dutch group is to broaden use of Polarean's Xenon lung MRI technology to include younger children with chronic obstructive lung disease, subject to regulatory clearance.
Its technology was also showcased in more than 30 clinical studies at the American Thoracic Society's annual meeting in San Francisco this month.
There are three words no more loathed by oil and gas investors than plugged and abandoned, often shorthand for failure.
Empyrean Energy fell 75 per cent after calling time on the Wilson River-1 well in Queensland. The reaction tends to be knee-jerk, so expect sentiment to moderate in the coming days.
The news was good for Mirriad Advertising, though the share price, down 35 per cent, told a different story. The group, which places adverts in films and TV shows, raised £1.6million, resolving its immediate funding needs.
The decline was a consequence of raising the money by issuing 16 billion new shares at a discount, heavily diluting existing shareholders.
Finally, Solvonis Therapeutics raised £2million in rapid-fire funding as part of the quiet but effective transformation under Anthony Tennyson.
Formerly an ailing polymers specialist, the group, following its £5million acquisition of Awkn Life Sciences, will become a clinical-stage drug developer focused on post-traumatic stress disorder and alcohol abuse.
Its chief scientific officer is Professor David Nutt, the former government drugs adviser, who now heads the Centre for Psychedelic Research in the Division of Brain Sciences at Imperial College London.

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How Palace are fighting to keep European dream alive
How Palace are fighting to keep European dream alive

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How Palace are fighting to keep European dream alive

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At the heart of Palace's argument is that their historic FA Cup win and consequential European qualification was an achievement accomplished entirely on their own are insisting they are an entity that operates entirely independently, and not within the structures of a multi-club with knowledge of the situation have told BBC Sport that Textor's personal share in the Selhurst Park side does not meet the 30% threshold - which is key in Uefa determining decisive influence - and that he has just 25% of the voting rules state that "no individual or legal entity" can hold a majority of shareholder voting rights at two clubs in the same European it is understood Palace have made clear they had no assistance in winning the FA Cup, in that they have not collaborated with Lyon since Textor's original investment into the club in August 2021 and will have no connection with the French side during next year's Europa Premier League side are believed to have pointed out that there have been no transfers between the clubs since Jake O'Brien, now at Everton, left Palace for Lyon in August also say there has been no employee, backroom staff or coach sharing, no dialogue, no collaborative strategy, no combined partnerships, sponsorships or commercial deals and no collective scouting, analysis or software is accepted, and been widely reported, that chairman Steve Parish and his leadership team make all final decisions in relation to the management and operations at working structure has existed for a decade and is supported by fellow shareholders Josh Harris and David Textor, who only has one vote, has publicly spoken about his lack of influence at Selhurst Park."As proud as we are to have been a part of the resurgence of Crystal Palace, it remains true that Crystal Palace is an independent club, run by a man with a steady hand, who has achieved a level of sustainability that is incredibly uncommon in today's Premier League," said Textor in May 2024."An integrated sporting model, such as ours at Eagle, is simply not a perfect fit for Crystal Palace."It has been pointed out to Uefa that Textor is an individual and minority shareholder and, when he first invested into Crystal Palace in 2021, he owned no other clubs and his investment into other teams followed takeover over Lyon was confirmed in 2022, 16 months after he secured a stake in Palace. Textor could resign as Palace director Under Article 5 of Uefa's rulebook, which relates to the integrity of the "competition/multi-club ownership", a club is required from March 1 2025 to have complied with the requirements necessary to prove they are not "simultaneously involved in any capacity whatsoever in the management, administration, and/or sporting performance of more than one club participating in a Uefa club competition".In the past clubs have sought to divest the stakes of key shareholders with a view to complying with Uefa's example, the City Group, Ineos, Red Bull group and most recently Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis have adapted their shareholdings in clubs accordingly to ensure their teams can compete in the same European year Ineos, which owns Manchester United, put its shares in French club Nice into a blind trust to ensure both clubs could compete in the Europa League last made a similar move earlier this season by placing its ownership of Swiss club Lausanne-Sport into a blind trust, before a potential conflict in the 2025-26 rules regarding the March 1 deadline are clear - and clubs have sought to comply with the regulations and cut-offs. A template for Palace to follow is in Palace are understood to have made clear that Textor's position means he cannot be enforced by the club to place his shares into a blind trust, owing to a lack of legal authority, unlike previous precedents where a single entity owns multiple as has been well documented, effectively holds the deciding vote at Palace with the backing of Harris and Blitzer, so existing shareholder agreements would need to be altered to enforce a blind trust scenario - which is not within the club's power and infringes on Textor's property is also a sense that the chain of events that have left Palace's position in European football in jeopardy were unforeseen and is a factor towards why they failed to meet the deadline for ownership faced Millwall in the FA Cup fifth round on March 1. Since then they beat Champions League clubs Aston Villa and Manchester City en route to winning the side Strasbourg conceded a 90th-minute goal on the final day of the season to hand Lyon the final Europa Conference League spot, before Paris St-Germain later won the French Cup to elevate Lyon into the Europa Uefa rules that Lyon and Palace cannot both compete in the Europa League, regulations state that the French side will play in the competition because of their higher league that scenario Palace could play in the Europa Conference League, but even then there is the added complication that Danish club Brondby, who have qualified for the Conference League, are owned by Harris and missed the deadline, Palace have expressed to Uefa that they are prepared to take immediate steps to comply with their with knowledge of the situation have told BBC Sport that one of those measures includes the resignation of Textor as a director of Palace, which would mean he will have no influence in any capacity. 'Europa League ban is disproportionate' It is understood Palace are arguing that banning them from the Europa League would result in a disproportionate sanction and unfairly punish the club, players, staff, fans and local thoughts are that preventing the club from competing in the Europa League next season would result in an injustice, particularly given their breach is technical and that no competitive harm has is believed Palace also feel that refusing them a place would contradict the promotion of football's development that ensure that "sporting values always prevail", as per Article 2 of Uefa's sources are indicating that Palace believe a fine or temporary oversight measures - for example the monitoring of transfers - would appropriately punish a breach, without harming stakeholders who have no involvement in the ownership is expected to confirm its decision in the coming weeks.

Major fashion retailer with more than 350 UK stores to shut city centre shop for good TODAY
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Rachel Reeves's public finance plan ‘like that of Steve Jobs at Apple'
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