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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Business
Lauren Almeida

Apollo gatecrashes easyJet sale with surprise £5.7bn takeover offer – as it happened

EasyJet planes queue to take off at London Gatwick Airport in Crawley, West Sussex
EasyJet planes queue to take off at London Gatwick Airport in Crawley, West Sussex Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Closing post

Time to wrap up…

The board of easyJet has given the green light to a possible £5.7bn offer from the US private equity firm Apollo, as the low-cost airline becomes the subject of a surprise bidding war.

The company’s board said on Friday that it was “minded to recommend” the potential all-cash offer, which values the business at £7.15 a share, to shareholders.

Earlier this week, easyJet’s board agreed “in principle” to accept a £6.90 deal from Castlelake, after the US private equity firm upped its offer for the fifth time. However, analysts said that the offer, worth £5.5bn, undervalued easyJet.

The French telecoms billionaire Xavier Niel has become Vodafone’s largest shareholder after buying a 16% stake for £4.4bn.

On Friday, the Emirati telecoms group e&, which first took a stake worth £3.3bn in Vodafone in 2022, announced the sale of its entire shareholding for 112.5p a share.

Niel, who founded the telecoms company Iliad, has bought the stake through his family investment vehicle Vega at a 15% premium to Vodafone’s share price on Thursday.

A passenger on a Ryanair flight was reportedly almost sucked out of a window after it shattered in mid-air during a journey from Greece.

The man was said to have been sucked out of his seat into the plane’s slipstream and hung headfirst out of the window after an engine failure resulted in parts smashing the acrylic window, according to local reports.

The passenger, said to be a 61-year-old Serbian, was saved from being completely sucked out of the Boeing 737 because his wife “held him by the legs”.

Shein gets approval for IPO plans in Hong Kong

The fast fashion giant Shein has received approval from the Chinese regulator to move ahead with plans for an IPO in Hong Kong.

Shein is planning to sell up to 341.6m H shares in the IPO, according to a statement from the China Securities Regulatory Commission.

The news, which was first reported by Bloomberg, follows several years of attempts by Shein to become a public company.

The business was valued as high as $100bn in 2022, according to papers that the business filed when it was considering an IPO in London. However, it has come under pressure from shareholders to cut back its valuation, and reports suggest that its new market value could be in the range of $40bn to $50bn. Bloomberg reported that some investors had been advocating for a cut to $30bn.

There is no clear timeline on a potential listing in Hong Kong – but Reuters has reported that Shein is likely to aim for an IPO as early as September or October, citing an unnamed source familiar with the situation.

Updated

US stock market opens steady

The US stock market has opened slightly higher today, with the blue chip S&P 500 index nudging up 0.06% and the Dow Jones up 0.17%. The tech heavy Nasdaq has slipped 0.1%.

Updated

Ryanair passenger almost sucked out of shattered window during flight

A passenger on a Ryanair flight was reportedly almost sucked out of a window after it shattered in mid-air during a journey from Greece.

The man was said to have been sucked out of his seat into the plane’s slipstream and hung headfirst out of the window after an engine failure resulted in parts smashing the acrylic window, according to local reports.

The passenger, said to be a 61-year-old Serbian, was saved from being completely sucked out of the Boeing 737 because his wife “held him by the legs”.

The incident took place on Ryanair flight FR1879, which was scheduled to fly from Thessaloniki in Greece to Memmingen near Munich in Germany on Thursday. It was operated by the Ryanair subsidiary, Malta Air.

The US stock market is set for a mixed open later this afternoon: futures for the S&P 500 are down 0.01%, while the Nasdaq is poised to fall 0.28%.

Anticipation is building stateside over the debut of the South Korean chip company SK Hynix on the Nasdaq. The company, which is already listed in its home country, became one of the few publicly listed businesses to achieve a market value of above $1tn earlier this year.

Updated

Road fuel could face supply squeeze in coming months, IEA warns

More crude oil may have reached the global market via the strait of Hormuz in recent weeks, but supplies of road fuels could still become strained in the months ahead because refineries have been slower to respond to the US-Iran ceasefire, according to the International Energy Agency.

The global energy watchdog warned that fuel exports from refineries in the Gulf have yet to restart despite an increase in oil and gas tankers transiting the strait of Hormuz since the US-Iran peace talks began over two weeks ago.

This has been compounded by intensifying Ukrainian attacks on Russian refineries and export infrastructure, while Asian refineries have also continued to run at reduced rates, the Paris-agency said.

The combination of lower fuel production and the start of the summer driving season could mean that concerns over jet fuel shortages will soon be replaced by worries about tightening supplies of ​gasoline and diesel, the IEA added.

The short-lived reprieve in hostilities during the US-Iran peace talks allowed an increase in crude exports on board oil tankers which had been left stranded in the Gulf for months due to Iran’s effective blockade on the strait of Hormuz.

But exports have slowed this week after the breakdown of talks led to renewed attacks in the region, causing global oil prices to climb to over $76.50 on Friday, putting the market on track for weekly gains of around 6%.

US President Donald Trump ​has effectively kept a lid on significant oil price gains after saying he did not think ​the war would restart and that “anything that happens is going to be over very ​quickly“.

Updated

UK to regulate cloud providers Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Oracle as 'critical third parties'

The UK’s Treasury has just announced that it will classify cloud service providers Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Oracle as ‘critical third parties’, bringing them under direct regulatory oversight.

The government has said in a statement:

As banks, insurers and financial market infrastructures become increasingly reliant on cloud services, disruption at a major supplier could affect multiple firms at the same time, potentially impacting services customers depend on.

The new status will come into effect from 13 July, which the government said followed “a period of evidence gathering and collaborative engagement with third parties.”

It comes as cloud service providers have become a critical part of the daily operations of a digital banking and payments system.

When the regulatory powers were first introduced, it was hoped that extra oversight could help to avert banking blackouts.

All four US tech companies have said that they are committed to complying with the new requirements.

Now at the midday point, the FTSE 100 is up by just 0.1% today. St James’s Place is the worst performer, with its shares down 9% after a report from Financial News that one of its biggest partner firms is set to leave.

EU warns Meta over Facebook and Instagram’s 'addictive' infinite scrolling

The European Commission has warned Meta that the addictive design of Instagram and Facebook’s infinite scroll features may breach the EU’s new content rules.

Its preliminary findings suggested that Meta had failed to adequately assess the risks posed by addictive design features on the physical and mental wellbeing of users, particularly children and vulnerable adults.

It found that features such as autoplay and infinite scroll “fuel the user’s urge to keep scrolling and shift the brain into ‘autopilot mode’, contributing to unhealthy habits and compulsive use.”

Moreover, Meta disregarded available information about the time minors spend on Instagram or Facebook at night and how the optimisation of its different formats - such as reels and stories - could lead to excessive or compulsive use of the services.

Henna Virkkunen, executive vice president for tech sovereignty, security and democracy at the European Commission, said:

Protecting the physical and mental health of Europeans must be a priority for social media platforms. The Digital Services Act provides a clear framework to hold platforms accountable for the addictive design and effects of their services. We are fully committed to enforcing our legislation in Europe.

A spokesperson for Meta told Reuters:

We disagree with these preliminary findings, which don’t accurately take into account the significant steps we’ve taken to protect teens.

Since this investigation began, we rolled out Teen Accounts that automatically protect teens and put parents in control - allowing them to block access to Instagram at ‌night and cap daily screen time at just 15 minutes.

Preliminary findings are the second step in a Digital Services Act investigation process. If the findings are confirmed, then Meta could face a fine as much as 6% of its global revenue.

Updated

Oil prices have slipped today, but are still set to end the week 6% higher as investors grow uneasy about the situation in the Middle East.

Kathleen Brooks, of the broker XTB, says:

The oil price is falling due to two factors, firstly, news that the US will continue its technical talks with Iran, and confirmation that the US remains committed to finding a diplomatic solution to this crisis, and secondly, reports from the IEA that oil demand is set for its first annual decline since 2020. Global oil stocks also posted an increase in June, their first monthly increase since the war began earlier this year. The UAE also lifted oil production to a record, which suggests that oil supply is rapidly normalizing, and is unlikely to get impacted by the latest flare up in tensions.

News that oil demand will fall this year is interesting, as it is only having a mild impact on growth. The IMF lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 3%, but growth is expected to bounce back in 2027 to 3.4%. The inflation outlook is less rosy, and the IMF raised its headline inflation forecast by 0.3% to 4.7% for this year, however, inflation is expected to moderate next year.

Thus, if we do not return to a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the impact from the war in the Middle East should not leave a lasting scar on the global economy, which is good news for risk assets.

Brent crude, the international benchmark for oil prices, is down 0.4% to $76.01 a barrel this morning.

Updated

The FTSE 250 index – which tracks the UK’s listed mid-sized companies – is also rising this morning, nudging up 0.1%

EasyJet is leading the way, with its shares now up 14%. The recruiter Hays is a close second, with its shares up almost 13%, after it reported better-than-expected fees for its fourth quarter and said that its profit is expected to end the year at the higher end of its forecast range. Shares in its FTSE 250 rival Page Group have also risen by 4.5%.

Reeves to launch City ‘skills compact’ committing firms to retrain staff in AI

Chancellor Rachel Reeves is to announce a new City “skills compact” that will commit firms such as Barclays and Lloyds to retraining thousands of financial sector workers for the AI revolution.

The financial services skills compact will be launched on Tuesday, during what is likely to be Reeves’s final Mansion House speech to City bosses before Andy Burnham’s expected takeover of No 10. The government-backed initiative will commit employers to improving workers’ skills and helping them “keep pace” with significant technological changes that have prompted fears of mass redundancies.

In the coming weeks, nearly 20 initial signatories, including the London Stock Exchange, Nationwide building society and the asset manager Fidelity, will start drafting rolling three-year plans aimed at training and certifying their UK staff in up to five critical skills – including AI – that they believe are essential to future-proofing their jobs.

High street footfall drops as heatwave pushes people indoors

It is another baking hot day in the UK – and new data from the British Retail Consortium shows that heatwaves are hitting high street footfall, as people seek refuge from the sun by staying indoors.

Total UK footfall dropped 3.4% in June compared with the same period last year, and accelerated from a 2.6% annual drop in May, it found. The fall was even starker on high streets, which dropped 6.2% in June, down from a drop of 1.5% in May.

Scotland was the only riser, where footfall rose by 1.7% in June, the BRC found.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said:

Footfall dropped in June as the record heatwave kept many shoppers indoors. High streets saw the sharpest declines, while air-conditioned shopping centres and retail parks proved more resilient.

While London and the South East – where temperatures were highest – registered the biggest decline, other regions performed markedly better. Scotland saw footfall rise, buoyed by cooler weather and the continued gradual opening of Glasgow City Centre after March’s devastating Union Corner fire.

The heatwave may have affected footfall, but retailers face a bigger challenge: rising costs. Businesses are working hard to deliver value for customers, yet higher taxes and regulatory burdens are making it harder to invest, create jobs and grow. Government action on business rates and energy costs would help unlock investment to revive our local communities.”

Neso says it will conduct internal review over cover-up allegations

Elsewhere this morning, a director at Britain’s grid operator Neso (National Energy Systems Operator) has said it will conduct an internal review over allegations of a cover-up.

Claire Coutinho, the shadow energy secretary, has alleged that bosses at Neso ordered control-room staff to hide information that showed the grid was not being run securely.

This allegedly involved ordering staff not to keep permanent records of operational decisions to ensure there was no paper trail.

Julian Leslie, director of strategic energy planning at Neso, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

We take all allegations seriously and we will conduct our own internal review into those allegations to get to the root cause of those. But what I can assure everybody…is that the control room is staffed by experienced, expert engineers that take real pride in their job, that they are authorised to make the decisions they make and only authorised people can make those decisions.

In terms of recording information, obviously those engineers in the control room are dispatching the generation across the nation and that is done through computer systems where there is clear records and logs of decisions that have been made, both at our end of the computer system and at the receiving end. So our investigation will look into all of that. We will get clarity as to what actually happened very soon.

European stock markets open higher

European stock markets have opened broadly higher this morning – the UK’s blue chip FTSE 100 index is up 0.3%, led by a 11.7% rise in Vodafone after the news that the French billionaire Xavier Niel has bought a £4.4bn stake in the business.

The French Cac 40 is broadly flat, while the German Dax has slipped 0.07%. But the Stoxx Europe 600, which tracks the biggest companies across the whole continent, is up very slightly by 0.08%.

Updated

EasyJet shares pop 13% after surprise £5.7bn takeover deal

Shares in easyJet have popped 13% this morning after surprise news of a new £5.7bn takeover deal with the US private equity firm Apollo.

Aarin Chiekrie, an equity analyst at the broker Hargreaves Lansdown, notes that Castlelake could still come back with a higher bid.

Apollo said that it believes easyJet has significant long-term growth potential and supports its existing strategy of strengthening its low-cost carrier model by upgrading its fleet to newer, more efficient planes. This is an expensive task for any airline, and easyJet’s ambitions could be sped up by access to new capital and the longer-term strategic planning that’s afforded to private companies.

Apollo’s offer is now the preferred option and the one that easyJet’s management would recommend to shareholders. But the deal’s not off the runway yet, with Apollo having until 7 August to decide whether to make a formal bid. In that time, rival bidder Castlelake could still come to the table with improved terms.”

Updated

French billionaire becomes biggest investor in Vodafone with £4.4bn stake

French telecoms billionaire Xavier Niel has become Vodafone’s largest shareholder after buying a 16.21% stake for £4.4bn.

On Friday, Emirati telecoms group e&, which first took a stake in Vodafone in 2022, announced the sale of its entire shareholding for 112.5p a share.

Niel, who founded the telecoms company Iliad, has bought the stake through investment vehicle Vega at a 15% premium to Vodafone’s share price on Thursday.

Niel said that Vega, which has been set up solely to house his stake in Vodafone, intends to be a long-term minority shareholder in the telecoms company.

In recent years Vodafone has restructured its business - including selling its Italian and Spanish operations and its 50% stake in its Dutch joint venture - as well as merging with Three to create the UK’s largest mobile operator.

Niel said Vodafone is now a “compelling investment opportunity”. He said:

As a simpler, more focused business, Vodafone is ready for a new phase of growth and is well-placed to unlock substantial untapped value across its European and African operations.

We are confident Vodafone can deliver sustainable growth and strong cash flow generation over the long term and – as an anchor investor based in Europe – we are ready to contribute our deep sector expertise and operational know-how to its future success.”

The 59-year old, who has built telecoms businesses in France, Italy, Poland and Iceland, first took a 2.5% stake in Vodafone in 2022.

Niel, who is estimated to be worth $15.5bn by Forbes, has been the partner of Delphine Arnault, the daughter of France’s richest man, Bernard Arnault, for more than a decade.

His other business interests include French newspaper Le Monde, which he saved from bankruptcy, although two years ago he sold almost all of his shares for €1 to the Fund for Press Independence in a restructure to safeguard the independence of the publication.

Updated

The sudden appearance of Apollo on the scene follows multiple rounds of talks between easyJet and Castlelake. EasyJet had told investors earlier this week that it had reached an agreement in principle with the firm at £6.90 per share.

Apollo has said today regarding its chunkier offer:

EasyJet management’s operational and commercial ambitions can be substantially accelerated via the access to incremental capital and longer-term business and strategic planning that a private company setting affords.

It said easyJet investors will have the option to roll their existing stock into a “stub equity alternative”, through which Apollo’s funds would hold their investment in the business.

Introduction: Apollo gatecrashes easyJet sale with surprise £5.7bn takeover offer

Good morning and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

A surprise corporate twist this morning: the US private equity firm Apollo has agreed to buy the airline easyJet in a £5.7bn deal, beating a rival bid for the company by Castlelake.

EasyJet has reached an agreement in principle for an offer of £7.15 per share, and has said this morning that its board is inclined to recommend the deal to shareholders.

The airline had been set to be taken private in a £5.5bn deal with the US private credit group Castlelake, which had until 3 August to make its formal offer.

But easyJet said in a statement this morning:

The proposed cash offer delivers a superior outcome for easyJet shareholders by providing a higher cash value than Castlelake’s latest proposal of £6.90 per easyJet share, submitted on 4 July 2026.

Apollo’s offer represents a 22% premium against easyJet’s closing share price yesterday, and an 81% premium compared with its price the day before the offer period for the bid from Castlelake.

Apollo also added that it would agree to take “all necessary steps” to satisfy any EU local ownership rules. Current regulation requires European airlines to be majority owned by a European entity, Castlelake had planned around this by intending to bring two Irish airline executives on board.

Elsewhere today, Asian stock markets have been largely mixed – the Japanese Nikkei and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng are both up by about 1%. The South Korean Kospi is yet again the stand out, up by almost 3%. On mainland China however, shares are slipping – the SSE Composite is down by 0.3%.

The agenda

  • 7am BST: EU consumer price index and harmonised consumer price index

  • 11am BST: Delta Air Lines earnings

Updated

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