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By: Mark Kleinman

Sky News City Editor Mark Kleinman is City editor of Sky News

All 176 Articles
  • Oil boss needs buyers to Shell out for assets

    November 4, 2016

    A brave face. That's the best way to describe this week's trading updates from Britain's two oil behemoths. It’s now a familiar visage for BP's Bob Dudley and Shell's Ben van Beurden. Oil prices continue to hover stubbornly below $50-a-barrel, raising justifiable concerns about the companies’ ability to cover their dividends without substantial further cuts [...]

  • Gender is secondary at Walmsley’s‎ GSK

    September 23, 2016

    If the patient isn't responding, change the medicine: that's been the crude, but long-running, summary of some investors' prescription for Britain's biggest pharmaceuticals group. So for GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) investors, the least important aspect of Emma Walmsley's appointment as its next chief executive is her gender. That doesn't make it unimportant, of course: ‎as the global [...]

  • Pressure for pay ‎reform may now be irresistible

    September 9, 2016

    Chris Philp’s timing is impeccable. Theresa May’s fresh vow to reform executive pay had no sooner been uttered this week than her fellow Conservative MP was spraying bullets at company directors, institutional investors and remuneration consultants. A looming autumn crackdown by the government explains why committee room 15 in the House of Commons was packed on [...]

  • It’s time to purge the stock market’s noticeboard of PR puff and let activist investors report on what really matters

    August 12, 2016

    It's not exactly needle-in-a-haystack stuff: trawl through the reams of regulatory news announcements on most days and you will spot numerous examples of public relations puff masquerading as crucial investor information. So it’s disappointing that this week has thrown into sharp focus yet another of the perversities of London’s listings regime – and one which [...]

  • Andrew Tyrie’s claim about banks’ back-door lobbying is holed

    December 4, 2014

      There are few things bankers dread more than being summoned for hours of intel­lectual flagellation by Andrew Tyrie, the relentless chairman of the Treasury Select Committee.   He has scored several notable victories, including a blueprint for regulators to hold reserve powers to break up major UK banks.   On his latest target – [...]

  • BG vote against £12m share award may make a Norwegian blue

    November 19, 2014

    Desperate times call for desperate measures. How else to interpret the crude insinuation from BG Group that its newly anointed chief executive might not join if investors vote down a one-off share award worth £12m?   The FTSE 100 oil producer certainly falls into the camp signposted “urgent need”, which explains why the lavish pay [...]

  • Lord Myners’ report into Royal Mail mustn’t get lost in the post

    November 5, 2014

    It's the privatisation row that won’t go away. Royal Mail’s shares may have performed limply since their post-flotation peak earlier this year, but their initial surge makes it a safe bet that the sell-off will feature heavily during next year’s general election campaign.   Two reports – from the National Audit Office and the Business [...]

  • Tesco firefighter Dave Lewis has no time to pause as results come in

    October 22, 2014

    It's day 53 for Dave Lewis as chief executive of Tesco. Ordinarily, that might be a time for a new boss to pause for breath, but the fire­fighting engulfing him since his arrival looks like the first act of a much longer-term drama.   The word emerging from Tesco’s Cheshunt HQ is that there will [...]

  • A balance must be struck between accountability and preserving quality in banks’ boardrooms

    October 8, 2014

    The news that two directors of HSBC’s UK operation are stepping down because of proposed bank sanctions provoked a predictable reaction: good riddance, cried one commentator; they exerted no real influence anyway, exclaimed another. Both missed the point.   The timing of the resignations of Alan Thomson and John Trueman could not have been more [...]

  • Why Sir Richard Broadbent could be next to checkout at Tesco after £250m profit overstatement debacle

    September 24, 2014

    Things are always unnoticed until they’re noticed.” Those seven Rumsfeld-esque words could seal Sir Richard Broadbent’s fate as Tesco chairman.   Responding to questions about the accounting debacle at Brit­ain’s biggest retailer, Broadbent offered a painful reminder of how quickly events can spiral out of the control of even the grandest of grandees.   The [...]

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