Author Topic: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat  (Read 87953 times)

Offline rob1966

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #240 on: December 31, 2018, 11:21:11 pm »
Could never consider digital books.

All my music is now digital but I can get really nostalgic, even tearful, seeing an album cover. I saw a copy of Atlantic's 1968 "This is Soul" and was immediately taken back to being 16.

Will you get that from iTunes?

I thought I'd never use a Kindle until I inherited  one after a death, i wouldn't be without it now, I've not touched a paper book since.Still buy cd's though, last I got was a Slipknot CD
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Offline So… Howard Philips

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #241 on: December 31, 2018, 11:27:45 pm »
I thought I'd never use a Kindle until I inherited  one after a death, i wouldn't be without it now, I've not touched a paper book since.Still buy cd's though, last I got was a Slipknot CD

I'll probably be buried with a book. Ever since my dad took me to Toxteth library when I was four right through to the Picton reading room and the British Library I just find the physical manifestation of a book comforting.

Offline Brissyred

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #242 on: January 1, 2019, 12:30:13 am »
Could never consider digital books.

All my music is now digital but I can get really nostalgic, even tearful, seeing an album cover. I saw a copy of Atlantic's 1968 "This is Soul" and was immediately taken back to being 16.

Will you get that from iTunes?
No but as the older generations die off it will be irrelevant because they won't have had that experience to look back on.
My daughter is 25, she has hundreds of paper books but hasn't purchased anything other than a digital book in 5 years. In 25 yrs paper books will be for the rich and collectors only.

Offline So… Howard Philips

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #243 on: January 1, 2019, 05:14:43 pm »
No but as the older generations die off it will be irrelevant because they won't have had that experience to look back on.
My daughter is 25, she has hundreds of paper books but hasn't purchased anything other than a digital book in 5 years. In 25 yrs paper books will be for the rich and collectors only.

And doesn't that sum up the ephemeral nature of digital media?

Offline Millie

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #244 on: January 1, 2019, 05:19:39 pm »
I like physical books if it's non-fiction.  Kindle for all my fiction though.
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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #245 on: January 1, 2019, 05:23:05 pm »
I like physical books if it's non-fiction.  Kindle for all my fiction though.

I read a lot of history and the first thing I do is head for the maps and then the illustrations (and any family trees) to get me warmed up.

Offline Zlen

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #246 on: January 1, 2019, 05:28:48 pm »
I like physical books if it's non-fiction.  Kindle for all my fiction though.

Same here. Probably 50% of my books are various art, design, photography books where the enjoyment of high quality reproductions and in general savouring the paper/print quality and techniques is half the fun. The rest I just get on Kindle as it's infinitely handier. I also definitely prefer Kindle for reading because I can adjust the typeface and font size - not be at the mercy of publisher.

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #247 on: January 1, 2019, 05:29:13 pm »
If it’s a really good book I will buy the hard copy, if not kindle will suffice, far easier especially when I have to travel

Offline Riquende

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #248 on: January 1, 2019, 05:56:28 pm »
Books are my last bastion of physical stuff, but lots of people ask me now why I don't have a kindle and I keep hearing good things.

I think there's something about the look of a well-stocked bookshelf that completes it as furniture so I'd probably always keep 'the classics' even if I gradually gravitated more towards e-reading generally.
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Offline killer-heels

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #249 on: January 10, 2019, 06:51:52 pm »
Christmas Sales slump at M&S and Debenhams.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-46820588

Debenhams and Mothercare wont be here this time next year. Marks and Sparks retail arm will be gone 2021.

Offline Mutton Geoff

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #250 on: January 11, 2019, 12:29:11 am »
Still prefer the feel of holding a book rather than a kindle  or any other type of reading platform they are all just to sanitised for me.
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Offline So… Howard Philips

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #251 on: January 11, 2019, 11:14:47 am »
Still prefer the feel of holding a book rather than a kindle  or any other type of reading platform they are all just to sanitised for me.

Half an hour spent rummaging the shelves in the library, Waterstones (other bookshops are available) or a charity shop is never wasted.

Offline Nobby Reserve

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #252 on: January 11, 2019, 01:05:18 pm »
Christmas Sales slump at M&S and Debenhams.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-46820588

Debenhams and Mothercare wont be here this time next year. Marks and Sparks retail arm will be gone 2021.


Mothercare's been teetering for a few years.

Debenhams will be there - as long as that c*nt Ashley doesn't manage to get his grubby mitts on it.

M&S will still have a retail arm in 10 years.

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Offline SamAteTheRedAcid

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #253 on: January 11, 2019, 05:51:09 pm »
In 25 yrs paper books will be for the rich and collectors only.

I'll be fucking minted then  8)
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Offline ShakaHislop

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #254 on: January 22, 2019, 05:51:23 pm »
The Patisserie Valerie group (owns Philpotts, Druckers, Baker & Spice, Flour Power) looks set to crash - with a fraud, possibly involving their suspended FD, being widely reported as the backdrop to this.

2,500 jobs at risk in a company, owned by venture capitalists and valued at £440m on Monday (with £28.8m in cash reserves reported in their last accounts) unless they receive a substantial capital injection quickly.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-45824285

Patisserie Valerie collapses into administration as rescue talks fail

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-46965761

Offline ShakaHislop

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #255 on: February 3, 2019, 08:28:42 pm »
Patisserie Valerie: Redundant staff 'not receiving final pay'

Quote
Staff made redundant by Patisserie Valerie have told the BBC they have not been paid for their final month's work.

Up to 900 staff members lost their jobs in January when administrators KPMG closed 70 of the cafe chain's outlets.

They must now apply to the government for redundancy and statutory notice pay, which may take up to six weeks.

Quote
A spokesperson for the administrators said: "We recognise this is a very difficult time for those members of staff who have lost their jobs. We are providing them with support, including assisting with claims to the Redundancy Payments Service."

Meanwhile, Dave Turnbull from the union Unite said the redundancies could constitute unfair dismissal.

"The company is still trading so it does still have some money," he said. "They should be demanding they get paid.

"This could be unfair dismissal. Even if the company is in administration, it should have gone through the proper process to make them redundant."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47107659

Offline Iska

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #256 on: February 16, 2019, 07:21:18 pm »
BMI goes bust.  Currently no.6 on the BBC headlines, two behind a story about misogynistic bullying among the French media.  You’d think it would be a bigger story than that.
« Last Edit: February 16, 2019, 07:23:39 pm by Iska »

Offline CraigDS

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #257 on: February 16, 2019, 07:23:45 pm »
BMI goes bust.  Currently no.6 on the BBC headlines, two behind a story about misogynistic bullying in the French media.  You’d think it would be a bigger story than that.

Citing Brexit as a major reason for them going out of business I see.

Offline gamble

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #258 on: March 15, 2019, 09:35:03 am »
Sounds like Interserve aren’t going to make it. Over 45,000 employees. Great timing

Offline BarryCrocker

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #259 on: March 25, 2019, 11:01:48 am »
Not necessarily a business going backwards but definitely a black spot on the high street. Will more than likely have an impact on the stores around its current locations.

Majestic Wine to close stores and rebrand under Naked name

Retailer to focus on its online and international business amid decline of the high street

Majestic Wine, Britain’s biggest specialist wine retailer, said it would shut a number of stores and adopt the Naked Wines name as part of plans to focus on its online and international business.

Faced with a declining high street, Majestic set out plans to focus all its efforts on Naked – the online wine retailer it acquired in 2015 for £70m – increasing annual investment by £6m to £26m. The Majestic name will disappear, with the whole business being brought under the Naked brand.

Its new “transformation plan” involves store closures at the 200-strong Majestic chain as well as asset sales. The company will review its dividend in June in light of the increased investment and restructuring, which will cost up to £10m.

The retailer makes almost 45% of its sales online and more than 20% internationally, and is eyeing up opportunities in the US.

Rowan Gormley, Majestic’s chief executive and the founder of Naked, said: “Where we have no choice but to close stores we will aim to minimise job losses by migration into Naked.

“Therefore we have taken a decision to focus all of our capital and energies into delivering the long-term potential of Naked, and releasing value from Majestic. Our plans for doing this are well advanced and we look forward to sharing the final details in June.”

Majestic still expects to achieve its sales target of £500m this year and to meet forecasts for adjusted pre-tax profits of £11.1m, compared with £8.3m last year.

A string of well-known high street names, including House of Fraser, John Lewis and Poundworld, have shut stores or collapsed in the past year as shoppers increasingly spend online. Retailers have also been hit by rising business rates and minimum wage levels, as well as Brexit uncertainty, which has weighed on consumer spending.

Since the acquisition, Naked has more than doubled in size, with sales expected to exceed £175m this year. It sells more than 1,000 wines in 18 countries from a 200-strong winemaker portfolio, including the makers of Grange, Tignanello, Solaia, Stags’ Leap Winery and Ruinart Champagne.

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2019/mar/25/majestic-wine-to-close-stores-and-rebrand-under-naked-name
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Offline PaulF

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #260 on: March 26, 2019, 10:51:59 pm »
Interesting comment about the album . Back in their heyday they were expensive , sometimes hard to find. Digital media is the opposite. No surprise which one people value more highly. Got to say I love the convenience of digital though.
As for the high st. No surprise Mothercare and Debenhams are struggling. Nor that Gregg's and Travelodge are doing well. Just wish I could think of another company I rate that I could punt on before results announced and shares rise !
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Offline ShakaHislop

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #261 on: April 11, 2019, 03:38:16 pm »
Interserve outsource firm accounts investigated

Three years of accounts of one of the UK's biggest government contractors, Interserve, will be investigated by the accountancy regulator.

The Financial Reporting Council said the audit for the years 2015, 2016 and 2017 by accountants Grant Thornton would be investigated.

Last month Interserve, which has 45,000 UK staff, and 68,000 globally, was put under administration.

It is the latest major company whose accounts have come under scrutiny.

A Grant Thornton spokesperson confirmed the firm had been told about the FRC's decision to investigate. "We will of course fully cooperate with them in this matter," the spokesperson said.

Its work auditing the accounts of Patisserie Valerie - which collapsed in January - is also being scrutinised. The cafe chain's former director, Chris Marsh, was arrested after having been suspended by the company when the financial irregularities were uncovered.

A rival to the "big four" auditors of Deloitte, KPMG, EY and PwC, Grant Thornton was fined £3m last year after four of its senior employees admitted misconduct in handling the financial audits of Vimto-maker Nichols and the University of Salford.

The investigation into Interserve's accounts comes at a time when the accounting industry is under intense scrutiny after high-profile company collapses.

MPs are calling for a break-up of the firms while the Competition and Markets Authority is also looking into the industry.

The way the industry is regulated has also been criticised. The FRC is to be scrapped and replaced by a new regulator for accountancy firms, the Audit, Reporting and Governance Authority.

One of the highest-profile collapses in recent years was construction firm Carillion, where the FRC is reviewing audits by KPMG.

Carillion, which had nearly 12,000 employees in the UK, had about 420 UK public sector contracts and its collapse in January 2018 will cost UK taxpayers £148m, according to the National Audit Office.

The FRC has a number of on-going investigations. Among these are KPMG's audits of Conviviality, the alcoholic drinks distributor with brands including Matthew Clark and Bibendum which went into administration a year ago, and KPMG's audits of engineering company Rolls-Royce.

Audits by Deloitte of SIG, which supplies insulation and roofing products and has admitted overstating its profits, are also among those being investigated by the FRC.

The FRC had also looked at Tesco's accounts for 2012, 2013 and 2014 but concluded in 2017 there was "not a realistic prospect" that PwC would be found guilty of misconduct.

That investigation was sparked by Tesco's 2014 accounting scandal, in which profits were overstated and led to a £129m fine from the Serious Fraud Office to avoid prosecution.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47891701

Offline jymbojetset

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #262 on: May 22, 2019, 11:04:09 am »

Offline Jiminy Cricket

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #263 on: May 22, 2019, 11:16:03 am »
British Steel now :(

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-48365241
Just another 'price worth paying to satisfy the will of the people'.
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Offline Red-Soldier

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #264 on: May 22, 2019, 11:16:06 am »

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Offline ShakaHislop

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« Last Edit: May 22, 2019, 11:57:44 am by ShakaHislop »

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #267 on: May 22, 2019, 12:09:00 pm »
Small sacrifice to 'stick it to the government'
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Offline BarryCrocker

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #268 on: May 22, 2019, 12:20:21 pm »
And to add to the woe.

M&S announces plans to close another 110 stores as profits tumble

https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/ms-announces-plans-close-110-16311393
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Offline killer-heels

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #269 on: May 22, 2019, 01:25:09 pm »
M&S are fucked.

You can list down the large organisations that are. Basically nearly all the big retailers and Royal Mail.

Offline CraigDS

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #270 on: May 22, 2019, 01:27:32 pm »
M&S are fucked.

You can list down the large organisations that are. Basically nearly all the big retailers and Royal Mail.

Royal Mail will be fine, there are loads of big retailers who will go in the next few years though.

Offline thejbs

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #271 on: May 22, 2019, 01:56:04 pm »
This will all be spun by leavers so that brexit is at zero fault.  British steel will be because of China (despite British Steel directly blaming Brexit).

And poor M&S, having to close stores because they only posted pre-tax PROFIT of half a billion quid.  How will the shareholders cope with less dividends...
« Last Edit: May 22, 2019, 01:59:05 pm by thejbs »

Offline Red-Soldier

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #272 on: May 22, 2019, 02:37:08 pm »
M&S are fucked.

You can list down the large organisations that are. Basically nearly all the big retailers and Royal Mail.

I saw it coming back in 05.  That's why I got the fuck out of dodge.

Offline CraigDS

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #273 on: May 22, 2019, 05:28:06 pm »
Philip Green's Arcadia Group (Top Shop, etc) shutting another 23 stores putting 520 jobs on the line - had already closed 200 in the UK over the last 3 years. Also after cutting rent in another 194 subject to a CVA being agreed.

Offline killer-heels

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #274 on: May 22, 2019, 05:42:22 pm »
Royal Mail will be fine, there are loads of big retailers who will go in the next few years though.

Not sure. Royal Mail is so massive and so slow to do anything that they will shedding cash before they get their house in order.

They will have to cut the firm in half or something.

Offline killer-heels

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #275 on: May 22, 2019, 05:42:52 pm »
I saw it coming back in 05.  That's why I got the fuck out of dodge.

Its going to be the big ones as well. M&S, John Lewis etc.

Offline Red-Soldier

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #276 on: May 22, 2019, 06:07:39 pm »
Its going to be the big ones as well. M&S, John Lewis etc.

I used to work for Dixons and Currys

You could see it happening a mile off. What with people starting to buy all their stuff online and the extended warranty shame coming to a head, plus all the expensive overheads.  It was easy to predict the slow death of the large retailers.

Offline thejbs

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #277 on: May 22, 2019, 11:58:50 pm »
Not sure. Royal Mail is so massive and so slow to do anything that they will shedding cash before they get their house in order.

They will have to cut the firm in half or something.

Amazon buyout for a nominal £1.

Offline CraigDS

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #278 on: May 25, 2019, 10:12:05 am »
Philip Green's Arcadia Group (Top Shop, etc) shutting another 23 stores putting 520 jobs on the line - had already closed 200 in the UK over the last 3 years. Also after cutting rent in another 194 subject to a CVA being agreed.

And announced today that another 25 stores closing under a different CVA.

Offline ShakaHislop

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Re: Carillion scrambles to stay afloat
« Reply #279 on: June 10, 2019, 01:49:05 pm »
Patisserie Valerie collapses into administration as rescue talks fail

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-46965761

Ex-Patisserie Valerie boss 'felt like emigrating'

Luke Johnson, the former chairman of bakery chain Patisserie Valerie, has said he considered emigrating.

He also feared becoming a "pariah" in business, he said in his column for the Sunday Times.

The former boss said that in contrast to corporate struggles such as those of Debenhams, the fall of his firm was "horribly rapid".

Mr Johnson was the largest shareholder in the chain, which went into administration in January.

He blamed part of the company's failure on the industry becoming tougher to operate in, including having to pay higher wages and the increasing cost of ingredients.

The accounting black hole at Patisserie Valerie was found to be £94m in March, more than double a previous estimate, according to a report by its administrators.

After it fell into administration, the cafe chain was found to have overstated its cash position by £30m and failed to disclose overdrafts of nearly £10m.

KPMG's latest report says the company falsely claimed to have £54m in cash.

The majority of Patisserie Valerie has been sold to a private equity firm.

The former finance director of the chain, Chris Marsh, is under investigation by the Serious Fraud Office.

"If I was arrogant at times before, my ego has taken quite a battering since," Mr Johnson said in his column. "In business, we rely on honesty from those around us and systems designed to prevent misbehaviour."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-48573511

I wonder if the thought was to emigrate to the EU he wanted the UK to leave.

As an aside, parts of his Wikipedia page read like how I imagine Alan Partridge's Wikipedia page would look like if he was told he could personally edit it.

Quote
Among Johnson's business maxims are that, consciously or not, every successful company that he knows has followed kaizen, the Japanese management philosophy of constant, incremental improvements, often driven from the bottom up.

Quote
Johnson was Chairman of Channel 4 Television Corporation from January 2004 to January 2010, during which time he appointed a new CEO, restructured the board and saw the organisation enjoy record ratings, revenues and surplus.

No citation for "record ratings, revenues and surplus"