
KKR urges UK's Assura board to back its takeover bid over PHP offer
KKR, which is leading the bid with Stonepeak Partners, said in a statement on Friday it had met with the board of Assura in recent days to lobby for its own cash takeover of the company after Assura backed an offer from London-listed PHP in June.
The U.S.-based private equity firm and PHP were locked in a takeover battle for Assura for months before Assura's board backed PHP's higher $2.4 billion bid in June.
KKR said a number of factors had changed since Assura decided to back PHP's offer, including a decline in the share price of both companies which has raised the premium of its own cash offer.
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BBC News
12 minutes ago
- BBC News
First solar farm panels installed on Hockliffe quarry site
The first solar panels have been installed on disused quarry land as part of a development that will eventually provide enough power for 600 are among 4,000 ground-mounted panels that will make up a new solar farm at Checkley Wood Farm, near Hockliffe in are being put in place next to two wind turbines by local renewable energy firm, AW Labour MP for Dunstable and Leighton Buzzard, Alex Mayer, said: "I am really proud that alongside our two wind turbines we have now got another solar array being built to create clean power for local people." Work on the farm is due to be finished in October, creating three megawatts of electricity - enough to power 50,000 electric cars for a year. "We are in the middle of a climate emergency and people have seen energy bills soar, partly because President Putin decided to invade Ukraine," Mayer added."We cannot be at the mercy of dictators for our energy and we have renewable energy in Bedfordshire, so surely we want to harness that for ourselves."When the panels are in place, the site will then be landscaped with wildflower meadows to attract bees and butterflies, while sheep will graze around the said the project had come to fruition quickly thanks to government changes, announced in May, that meant red tape had been slashed for energy projects under five said this now meant people were not "stuck waiting in queues to connect up their solar panels and wind turbines". John Fairlie, managing director of Leighton Buzzard-based AW Energy, confirmed the power generated would be used for homes in called the project unique because it was "integrating the panels with onshore wind power from the large turbines on site"."On days when the wind drops and we have sunshine we will be generating as much power as we can get through our grid connection," he then - in the evenings - "when energy levels drop from the sun we pick that up with the wind", he said his firm had consent for another site to the south of Leighton Buzzard near the A505 which would have direct access for people charging their cars, but also be close to a large housing Fairlie told the BBC his company was working on "clean power communities where we have several hundred new houses powered by on-site wind and solar providing them with all their heat and electric vehicle needs".He said he saw this as "the future for renewable power", adding that they had applications for projects along those lines in Buckinghamshire and Central Bedfordshire. Follow Beds, Herts and Bucks news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Guardian
12 minutes ago
- The Guardian
NGOs urge Nandy to halt sale of Telegraph over China links
A group of nine human rights and freedom of expression organisations have called on the culture secretary to halt RedBird Capital's proposed £500m takeover of the Telegraph and investigate the US private equity company's ties to China. The international non-governmental organisations, which include Index on Censorship, Reporters Without Borders and Article 19, have written to Lisa Nandy arguing that RedBird Capital's links with China 'threaten media pluralism, transparency and information integrity in the UK'. A consortium led by RedBird Capital agreed a deal in May to buy the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph, ending two years of uncertainty over the future of the titles. The organisations said that RedBird Capital's chair, John Thornton, sits on the advisory council of the China Investment Corporation, the country's largest sovereign wealth fund. Thornton, a former chair of Goldman Sachs Asia, has also previously chaired the Silk Road Finance Corporation. 'Both [are] vehicles through which China has pursued financial influence,' the letter said. The signatories, who also include Hong Kong Watch, Human Rights in China and the Hong Kong Democracy Council, said Nandy should follow her predecessor, Lucy Frazer, who issued a public interest intervention notice (PIIN) in January last year. RedBird Capital, which contributed 25% of the funding to the RedBird IMI joint venture that controls the Telegraph, is in the process of buying out its partner, IMI. IMI, which may retain a stake of up to 15% in the Telegraph under RedBird Capital's plan, is controlled by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, vice-president of the United Arab Emirates. The letter to Nandy states: 'We believe that there is reasonable grounds to suspect the Telegraph acquisition by RedBird Capital raises both public interest and potential foreign media influence concerns. We call on you to issue relevant notices to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) and Ofcom.' The signatories also said the culture department should ensure that the investigations carried out by the CMA and Ofcom, the communications regulator, involve independent consultation with 'experts in Chinese foreign information manipulation and influence operations, as well as experts in media pluralism, transparency, and freedom of expression'. Separately, the former Conservative leader Iain Duncan Smith and the independent peer David Alton have written to Nandy asking her to investigate reports of a £5.3m editorial budget cut. The politicians claim that the cuts, revealed by the former Telegraph journalist Fraser Nelson, represent a change to the paper's structure that is not allowed during a takeover process. They argued that the government's 2024 public interest merger reference pending approval of a takeover prohibits changes to the editorial structure and staff of the Telegraph. A spokesperson for the newspaper group, said: 'Ongoing management and oversight of Telegraph Media Group and its operations require the board and chief executive to liaise with all relevant stakeholders, including RedBird Capital, in line with agreed governance protocols. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion 'The board and chief executive will continue to fulfil their fiduciary duties and facilitate an anticipated transaction, consistent with the requirements of relevant government legislation.' In June, a cross-party group of MPs and peers, including Duncan Smith and Lord Alton, called on ministers to investigate how RedBird Capital is funding its £500m takeover. A spokesperson for RedBird said: 'There is no Chinese involvement or influence in RedBird Capital's proposed acquisition of the Telegraph.' They added that the company had 'been clear on its position regarding press independence, which is a fundamental tenet of its investment thesis in owning and growing news businesses – whether it's CBS News in the US or the Telegraph in the UK'. The spokesperson said that, after more than two years in 'regulatory limbo', it was now time for the takeover to be completed and to 'finally position the Telegraph for growth'. 'The partnership with RedBird will enable the Telegraph's world-class group of editors and reporters to thrive in this transformative moment for news organisations globally.' Last month, the sale of the Telegraph came a step closer after government legislation to allow foreign states to own up to 15% in British newspapers survived a potentially fatal vote in the House of Lords. RedBird Capital – which is also potentially aiming to bring in investors including the parent company of the Daily Mail and Len Blavatnik, the owner of Warner Music – has also said it can fully fund a deal in its own right. The government declined to comment.


The Guardian
12 minutes ago
- The Guardian
The Swiss lived in splendid isolation for years. Trump's tariffs have shattered that complacency
Growing up in Zurich often felt like being removed from the world. It shouldn't be that way: after all, Switzerland is at the heart of Europe. Riding on the cosy Zurich trams, one hears all the world's languages; and the airport offers more direct intercontinental flights than Berlin. And yet, coming of age in Switzerland is like sitting in an aquarium looking at the world through a thick bulletproof window. That glass was shattered last week when Donald Trump announced 39% tariffs on Swiss exports. The US is the most important destination for Swiss products: 18.6% of all its exports go there. If Trump maintains the tariffs, sales to the US 'will be effectively annihilated', said Switzerland's industry lobbying group. The rightwing Swiss business minister, Guy Parmelin, announced a furlough programme to shield the economy from 'mass layoffs'. The tabloid newspaper Blick captured the mood with a stark black front page, pronouncing it a 'black day' for Switzerland. Trump's tariff shock has provoked a major identity crisis in a country that has grown rich on exports, and done so in splendid isolation from world politics. To understand Switzerland, imagine it as a giant country club. First, you don't get in there easily: immigration laws are tight, although being rich helps. Second, it's a tidy place: every inch of land is curated, and every lawn mowed. Third, there are ample leisure activities on offer: after work, the Swiss go biking, or show off their toned bodies on the shores of immaculate lakes. Most importantly, the Swiss club has traditionally offered its members tranquillity. History doesn't happen here. The last war Switzerland was involved in was the Sonderbund war of 1847 (it lasted 26 days, and about 100 people died). The country has been run by a majority rightwing government since 1848. The Swiss economy has contracted in only six of the last 60 years. As a teenager in the 2000s, looking out through the bulletproof window at the rest of Europe, I saw Islamist terrorism and mass youth unemployment. We had none of it. Crime is low and social conflict barely exists, though Islamophobia did raise its ugly head in the 2009 vote to ban minarets. The Swiss have Europe's lowest proportion of working days lost to strikes. Disputes are resolved through compromise, and frustrations vented through direct democracy, or drowned in a sea of passive-aggression. And yes, 93.2% of trains do run on time. This all-pervasive sense of calm and predictability is perhaps the main reason why so many wealthy people move here. On a chaotic and anxious planet, Switzerland offers the luxury of living in a parallel reality – a chance to take a break from the world. That is the Swiss dream. That is the story of the children's book Heidi, in which a wealthy German girl suffering big city life in Frankfurt escapes to the Alps. That is the story of Thomas Mann's The Magic Mountain, in which Europe's neurotic elite retreats to the Swiss Alps to pontificate on the state of the world from a safe, numbing distance. Switzerland's long history of neutrality and deliberate remoteness also nurtured a feeling of Swiss exceptionalism. Surviving two world wars untouched convinced many that staying alone means staying safe – indeed, that it can even be profitable, especially if you are happy to trade with Nazi Germany and apartheid South Africa. Isolationism carries benefits even today. Not being part of either Nato or the EU allows Switzerland to be the only European country, apart from Iceland, to have a free trade agreement with China. It also allows Berne to spend just 0.7% of GDP on defence – far below Nato's 3.5% target. Swiss aid to Ukraine stands at just 0.13% of GDP, eight times lower than that of the Netherlands. Switzerland has thrived on being part of the free world without shouldering any of the burdens that come with it. But in the new era of cutthroat geoeconomics, this 'have your cake and eat it' policy doesn't work any more. Moreover, Trump's move completely blindsided Berne. In Switzerland, many people assumed that the president Karin Keller-Sutter's majority rightwing government would get along well with the Rolex-wearing Trump. After all, he dislikes the EU, taxes and wokeness, and so do the Swiss. When the US vice-president, JD Vance, argued at the Munich Security Conference in February that social media 'censorship' was a bigger danger to Europe than Russia, Keller-Sutter praised the speech as 'very Swiss'. Trump's shocking tariff announcement has left the Swiss establishment clueless as to how to respond. Last week, Keller-Sutter tried to convince Trump to let go of the US's $38bn trade deficit with Switzerland. Trump later said of the call, 'The woman was nice, but she didn't want to listen.' Switzerland has little leverage at its disposal. The country has already committed to buying F-35 fighter jets. Keller-Sutter can't even promise to cut tariffs on US products. In 2024, Bern unilaterally eliminated tariffs on industrial products. If Trump adds pharmaceuticals to the 39% tariffs, the economic pain will be real: up to 0.7% of GDP a year or 700 Swiss francs a head, according to the Swiss Economic Institute. But the greater shock is psychological. A nation that has become accustomed to always getting its own way is now floundering, with a worse tariff rate than Algeria (30%). In a multicultural, federal country with four official languages, the grand unifying narrative of Swiss exceptionalism is in tatters. Perhaps worst of all, Brussels is getting a better trade deal than Berne. That is provoking a lot of head scratching in a country where support for EU membership stood at 17% in a 2024 poll. Keeping the EU at a distance may no longer be the best option. The first test will come soon: the Swiss will vote on new economic treaties with the EU – something that the Swiss far right is fighting tooth and nail. Trump's golf-cart style of governing ought to see him fit right in to the Swiss country club. Who would have guessed that he would be the one to finally shatter its splendid isolation? Joseph de Weck is a fellow with the Foreign Policy Research Institute