Tag: UK

Co-op buys Somerfield for GBP 1.57bn

Co-op boss Peter Marks says the deal will provide “rocket fuel” for the firm
The Co-operative Group (Co-op), the UK’s fifth largest supermarket chain, has agreed to buy rival Somerfield.

The Co-op said the £1.57bn ($3.1bn) purchase would strengthen its position in the UK retail market.

Manchester-based Co-op, a mutual group run on behalf of its 2.5 million members, also said the deal was done on a cash-free and debt-free basis.

With more than 4,300 UK retail outlets, it employs 85,000 people. Bristol-based Somerfield has about 900 stores.

The latest figures from research firm TNS, show that in the 12 weeks to the middle of June, the Co-op had 4.4% of the UK grocery market, and Somerfield 3.7%.

Stores sell-off?

Somerfield is owned by a consortium that includes private equity firm Apex, Barclays Capital and property magnate Robert Tchenguiz.

They bought the chain for about £1.1bn three years ago.

Somerfield was put up for sale in January and the Co-op first expressed an interest in a possible purchase in April.

The Co-op may now be told by competition watchdogs to sell some of the stores it has purchased, with Morrisons, Waitrose and Iceland touted as potentially interested parties.

Co-op chief executive Peter Marks says Somerfield’s acquisition will provide “rocket fuel” for his group’s growth plans.

Mr Marks said the deal, which is subject to regulatory approval, would “create a stronger fifth player in food and a convenience store chain with unrivalled geographic reach”.

In April, the Co-op said it would spend £1.5bn to revamp its business and lift its fortunes, after 2007 profits fell 46% to £195.5m.

The firm also said then that it aimed to double its profits over the next three years.

It expanded in July 2007 when it merged with fellow mutual United Co-operatives.

‘Big four’

Neil Saunders, consulting director at Verdict Research, told the BBC: “The benefits for the Co-op of this move are that they have a larger scale, and it propels them into a different league in terms of food retailing.

“Unless you have scale in the market, it is hard to compete with the big four grocers.

“Now it can compete more effectively, but it has to be said that the big four will still remain some bit ahead.

“For consumers, it probably means a slightly better standard of store. The Co-op has traditionally been better at that than Somerfield, although Somerfield has put a lot of effort into their stores recently.”

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Pallet scanner boosts bottom line for DHL

DHL has installed a pallet measuring system at its international gateway in London Colney to enable it to weigh measure and scan large pallets quickly.

Angus MacDougall, DHL’s International Gateway manager, says: “When large parcels and pallets have a low overall weight, we calculate their shipment cost according to their volumetric or dimensional weight – the amount of space they take up in a vehicle or aircraft.”

“While measuring smaller parcels is standard practice in the transport and logistics industries, measuring large pallets is often very difficult using conventional technology, so their dimensions often have to be manually measured and recorded. This is obviously a time-consuming process and is not cost-effective.

“What we needed was a product that could quickly, reliably and accurately capture and record a pallet’s weight, volume and barcode information and transfer this information in a format compatible with our information management system,” he says.

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Postcomm welcomes appointment of Lucy Scott-Moncrieff as Commissioner

The Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, John Hutton, has confirmed the appointment of Lucy Scott-Moncrieff as a Postcomm Commissioner for a three year term commencing on 1st September 2008.

Lucy Scott-Moncrieff qualified as a solicitor 30 years ago and is now managing partner at Scott-Moncrieff, Harbour and Sinclair, an innovative legal aid practice that specialises in acting for detained patients, prisoners, and children and young people with complex needs. The firm’s fee-earners work from their homes, which are all over the country, enabling them to offer services to their local communities whilst being part of an organisation with a national reputation which offers them full professional support.

Lucy is a member of both the Law Society’s Mental Health and Disability Committee, and its Regulatory Affairs Board. She has recently stepped down after four years as Chair of the Society’s Access to Justice Committee, which advises on legal aid matters.

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Royal Mail puts its stamp on Olympic handover

Royal Mail and China Post are going for gold in an historic joint issue of a special set of stamps to mark the handover of the Olympic Flag from Beijing to London.

From 22 August the stamps are available at Post Offices across the UK, two days before the Games’ closing ceremony when the Olympic Flag will pass from Beijing to London. The special stamps mark the first event in the handover celebrations and everyone across the UK can participate.

Stamps with identical images will be issued across China by China Post from 24 August 2008. This stamp issue is the first partnership of its kind between Royal Mail and China Post.

The four 1st Class stamps feature landmarks of the two cities. The astonishing mesh of steel of the National Stadium in Beijing sits next to the London Eye which recently welcomed its 30 millionth visitor.

Representing the past tradition of each country, further stamps show Beijing’s Corner Tower of the Forbidden City – home to China’s Emperors for five centuries – beside another former Royal residence, The Tower of London.

Each stamp on the Sheet- entitled ‘Olympic Games – Handover of the Olympic Flag from Beijing to London’- features the famous Olympic rings, representing the five continents of the world.

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CEVA selects Birch Coppice for flagship freight forwarding facility

Leading global logistics and freight management company CEVA has established a flagship freight forwarding facility at Birch Coppice Business Park one of the Midlands most successful rail served distribution locations. The purpose built 55,000 sq ft (5,110m2) warehousing facility developed by IM Properties to incorporating bespoke requirements for CEVA Freight (UK) underwent a fit out investment of GBP 200,000 to embrace the latest technology in global freight management systems.

The relocation to Birch Coppice sited alongside junction 10 of the M42 motorway north east of central Birmingham brings together two original Midlands facilities to provide a portfolio of blue-chip customers with competitive operational solutions in road transportation and international air and sea freight.

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