Tuesday, February 2, 2016

LVMH rings up record sales, operating profit jumps

LVMH rings up record sales, operating profit jumps

[PARIS] Luxury leader LVMH defied global economic gloom last year to ring up record annual sales of 35.67 billion euros (S$55.6 billion), while operating profit soared.
The maker of Louis Vuitton handbags and Moet & Chandon champagne said Tuesday that its net profit for 2015 came in at 3.57 billion euros.
The figure represents a drop of 37 per cent, but 2014 figures were bloated due to 2.8 billion euros in capital gains the company booked on its exit from rival Hermes.
Excluding such exceptional items net earnings were up by 20 per cent.
Operating profit rose by 16 per cent to 6.6 billion euros in the group whose stable of luxury brands also includes Givenchy and Kenzo.
"The 2015 results confirm the capacity for LVMH to progress and gain market share despite economic and geopolitical uncertainty," chief executive Bernard Arnault said in a statement.
The company said it made strong progress in Europe, the United States and Japan while the performance of Asian markets was contrasted.
All of its market segments reported double digit gains in revenue and profit.
Management announced it would propose an 11 per cent increase in the dividend payment to 3.55 euros per share.
The record sales beat market expectations. Analysts surveyed by financial data provider FactSet had expected 35.5 billion euros.
The net profit figure was below the 3.71 expected by analysts.
AFP

Amazon plans to open 300-400 bookstores, says mall company CEO

Amazon plans to open 300-400 bookstores, says mall company CEO

[SAN FRANCISCO] Amazon.com Inc is planning to open hundreds of brick-and-mortar bookstores, the head of a major US mall operator said.
Such an expansion, which Amazon itself has not confirmed, would position the world's No. 1 online retailer as a competitor to booksellers such as Barnes & Noble Inc. At present, Amazon operates a single bookstore in its home city, Seattle. "You've got Amazon opening brick-and-mortar bookstores and their goal is to open, as I understand, 300 to 400 bookstores," Sandeep Mathrani, chief executive of General Growth Properties Inc, said on Tuesday.
He was responding to question about mall traffic during a conference call with analysts, a day after the No.2 US mall operator reported quarterly earnings.
Amazon spokeswoman Sarah Gelman declined to comment.
Amazon recently opened its first bookstore in Seattle's University Village, where visitors can also test-drive Amazon's Kindle, Fire TV and other devices. In-store and online book prices would be the same, Amazon said in November.
Barnes & Noble, the largest US bookstore chain, operated 640 bookstores across all 50 states as of Jan 1.
The Wall Street Journal first reported Mr Mathrani's comments earlier in the day. Kevin Berry, vice-president of investor relations at General Growth Properties, declined to comment beyond what was said during the conference call.
REUTERS

ChemChina 'eyeing Syngenta' in biggest ever Chinese takeover

ChemChina 'eyeing Syngenta' in biggest ever Chinese takeover

[BEIJING] China National Chemical Corp is closing in on a US$43 billion deal to buy the Swiss pesticide giant Syngenta, according to reports Tuesday, which would be the biggest-ever acquisition by a Chinese firm.
The deal could be announced as soon as Wednesday - when Syngenta's results are published - but it has not yet been finalised, Bloomberg quoted people familiar with the matter as saying.
If it goes ahead, the deal would outstrip the China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd.'s purchase of China Netcom Group Corp in 2008, according to data from the organisation.
Syngenta declined to comment when contacted by AFP.
An offer would be welcomed by investors "because it is entirely in cash," said an analyst at Germany's Baader Bank.
However, "it could pose political problems," added the analyst.
Last month, ChemChina said it would buy Germany's KraussMaffei Group, which makes machinery for producing plastics and rubber, for 925 million euros (S$1.42 billion).
The state giant also in January announced it had bought a 12 per cent stake in Swiss energy and commodities trader Mercuria in a bid to expand its portfolio.
AFP

Barclays investors can sue as group over dark pool, judge rules

Barclays investors can sue as group over dark pool, judge rules

[MANHATTAN] Investors claim Barclays Plc misstated the operation of its "dark pool," Barclays Liquidity Cross, where investors traded with near-anonymity.
Investors say Barclays concealed the amount of aggressive high-frquency trading in the dark pool and routed too many orders into it.
New York's attorney general sued Barclays in June 2014, claiming the bank concealed information about the dark pool operation.
Barclays American Depositary Shares dropped 7.4 per cent on news of 2014 suit.
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