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UK economy is growing
strongly
The UK economy picked up strongly towards the end of 2003, with annual
growth reaching 2.1 per cent, according to figures from the Office for
National Statistics (ONS). This matched the rate estimated by Chancellor
Gordon Brown in his Pre-Budget Report, delivered in December. GDP growth
quickened to 0.9 per cent in the fourth quarter, faster than the predicted
0.8 per cent that was also the rate achieved in the previous three months.
It was the fastest quarterly pace of growth since the first quarter of
2000, when growth reached 1.2 per cent. The volume of retail sales rose by
0.9 per cent in December, taking the annual pace of retail growth to 4 per
cent, outstripping the predicted figure of 2.9 per cent. Output in the
service sector expanded by 1 per cent.
The manufacturing sector is in its healthiest condition since December
1999, according to the latest purchasing managers’ index by the Chartered
Institute of Purchasing and Supply (CIPS). The index stood at 56 in
January, the same as in December, and well above the 50 mark that
distinguishes expansion from contraction. New orders were up strongly,
from 58 to 60.2 in January, with particularly strong export demand from
the US, China and Japan. The manufacturing employment index also rose to
its highest level since October 1997, and for the first time in five years
stood above 50 for two successive months. In the services sector, the CIPS/Reuters
index showed the sharpest increase in business activity since June 1997,
registering 59.8 in January compared with 58.5 in December.
The positive trend in manufacturing was confirmed by the latest quarterly
survey by the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), which showed the
annual growth rate in manufacturing output accelerating to about 4 per
cent, up from 0.7 per cent in November. The survey of 828 companies found
that new orders were growing at their fastest rate since the mid-1990s,
with all 12 manufacturing sub-sectors reporting an improvement. The rate
of job cuts in the sector also slowed, with manufacturers reporting the
smallest fall in employment for almost three years. Optimism in the sector
moved into positive territory for the first time in almost two years.
Another survey, of 6,800 businesses by the British Chambers of Commerce,
also showed improvements in sales and exports in the manufacturing sector.
Overall, the UK’s economy, the fourth largest in the world, appears to be
expanding robustly, with strong domestic demand meaning that it has
weathered the global economic downturn better than most other major
economies. In January, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD) described its performance as “enviable”. Its strong
performance encouraged the Bank of England to raise its main interest rate
in February for the second time in three months, from 3.75 per cent to 4
per cent. The quarter-point rise was widely expected, particularly as the
rate of inflation was 1.3 per cent in December, well below the Bank’s
target of 2 per cent. The European Central Bank, meanwhile, kept its main
rate unchanged at 2 per cent.
Businesses
optimistic about upturn in climate
Despite the rise in interest rates, business optimism in the UK continues
to improve. The Institute of Directors (IoD), in its Economic Outlook,
says that investment intentions have risen sharply over the past year and
are still improving, despite further anticipated rate rises. The share of
member companies surveyed that were performing well rose from 53 per cent
to 62 per cent in the latest quarter, while the balance of those that were
more optimistic rose from 35 to 38 per cent. Ninety per cent said that the
previous rate rise, to 3.75 per cent, had made no difference to their
sales forecasts for 2004, while 92 per cent said it made no difference to
their expected employment levels.
The IoD said it believed the economy could be rebalanced with a “modest”
rise in interest rates, which are expected to peak at 4.5 per cent by the
end of the year. Global economic growth was expected to be much stronger
this year, while growth in UK GDP was forecast to be 2.7 per cent in 2004,
and 2.6 per cent in 2005.
Venture capitalists too are predicting an improvement in the business
climate. The British Venture Capitalist Association (BVCA)’s quarterly
Confidence and Attitude Survey found that 63 per cent of member companies
were expecting trade to pick up in the next three months, compared with 50
per cent last October.
In another positive sign, rates of pay for freelance IT workers in the
finance sector – among the first to be hired or fired as business expands
or contracts – have risen for the first time in four years. The rise
indicates that City firms are moving to beef up their IT investment,
especially in new trading systems, as the recovery gathers pace. The
average hourly rate for a contractor rose by 2 per cent to $84 an hour in
the second half of last year, according to the Association of Technology
Staffing Companies (Atsco), though this was still some way off the 2000
peak of $140 an hour.
UK maintains
competitive edge on world stage
The UK was the top destination in Europe for foreign investment in 2003,
although the fast-growing economies of eastern Europe are challenging its
lead, according to a survey by IBM. The UK saw more jobs created with
overseas funds than any other European nation, with 55,000, accounting for
15 per cent of the European total. This saw the UK reclaim the top slot
from France, which briefly overhauled it during 2002. However, the Czech
Republic gained ground in second place and Russia climbed to fourth,
behind Germany.
Worldwide, the US attracts the most foreign investment, while the UK is
fourth. The US is becoming even more attractive, with a survey by tax
consultants KPMG showing it increasingly closing the gap on other
industrialised nations as a cheap place to set up a business. Partly this
is a consequence of the falling dollar, though hikes in electricity and
telecoms charges in a number of European countries have also improved its
relative advantage. Overall, Canada remains the cheapest place to set up a
business. Australia, a new entrant to the survey, bumped the UK down from
second to third place, closely followed by France, where labour costs have
been falling. The US was ranked seventh, while Germany and Japan were the
most expensive countries in which to do business. Productivity growth in
the US, meanwhile, continues to outstrip Europe and the rest of the world,
though the accession in May of 10 new member states to the EU promises to
close the gap.
A survey by the World Bank of 130 countries shows that the UK is in the
top 10 least regulated nations in the world. The report, Doing Business in
2004: Understanding Regulation, shows that it requires just 18 days to set
up a business in the UK, while it takes much longer in other European
countries – 45 days in Germany, for example. This kind of light-touch
regulation makes it easier for start-ups and tends to foster a greater
spirit of entrepreneurship, says the Bank. As well as starting a business,
the 230-page report looks at hiring and firing workers, enforcing
contracts, obtaining credit and closing a business. It can be viewed at:
http://rru.worldbank.org/DoingBusiness/default.aspx.
New estimates of purchasing power parities from the OECD mean that the
UK’s productivity performance relative to that of other countries is
better than previously thought. Relative to the average of the other G7
countries, GDP per worker in the UK in 2002 was 112.8 on the new
estimates, compared with 116.5 previously. Relative productivity measures
are based on UK=100, so any fall in the indices means an improvement in
performance. The UK’s productivity has improved significantly over the
past ten years, though it still remains lower (by about 13 percentage
points) than the G7 average. However, it now appears to have around the
same level of productivity on a GDP per worker basis as Germany, and it is
closing the gap on the US. The revised figures also indicate a better
productivity performance for other countries, such as France and Japan.
The UK was the world’s second largest exporter of services in 2002,
according to the ONS. The country accounts for 8 per cent of global
exports of services and almost 7 per cent of imports, making it also the
fourth largest importer of services. In 2002 it recorded a surplus of
$28.4 billion, a rise of $4.1 billion from 2001. It recorded surpluses
with all continents except Europe, where it had a deficit of $5.4 billion
with other European Union states and $2.4 billion with Europe as a whole.
The UK’s surplus with the US made up 56 per cent of its overall services
surplus, compared with 40 per cent the year before. Exports of services to
the US totalled more than $39.2 billion, while imports amounted to $24.3
billion.
All service categories except transportation, travel and government
services showed an increase, with the biggest gainer being insurance
services, which rose from $7.1 billion to $10.8 billion. Travel imports
rose from $49.4 billion in 2001 to $51.8 billion in 2002, accounting for
just under 39 per cent of the UK’s total services imports. Exports of
travel services totalled $25.4 billion, with visitors from the US
accounting for 18 per cent of the total.

Universities creating more
wealth than ever before
UK universities are generating more wealth and creating more jobs than ever
before, according to the third annual Higher Education Business Interaction (HEBI)
survey, published by the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). In 2001/02 the
amount of turnover produced by spin-off companies increased from $396.4 million
to $540 million, and the number of people employed by them increased from 10,500
to 12,000. The amount of income that Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) receive
from intellectual property increased by 83 per cent, from $33.7 million to $61.7
million, while the number of new patents filed by them rose by 8 per cent, from
896 to 967. Fifty-four per cent of HEIs now offer incubation or start-up
facilities.
The number of spin-off companies formed in 2001/02 was 213, compared with 248 in
2000/01, 203 in 1999/2000 and an average of 70 a year in the previous five
years. The spin-off performance of UK universities is considerably better than
that of their US counterparts, when adjusted for their size. US universities
produce one spin-off company for every $82.3 million of research expenditure,
while in the UK the figure is one spin-off every $28 million – almost three
times the rate.
The number of international students at universities and other HEIs in the UK
has jumped by 23 per cent in just one year. Figures from the Higher Education
Statistics Agency show that the total of non-EU students rose to 174,575 in
2002/03, up from around 142,000 the year before. The biggest increases were in
the numbers of Chinese and Indian students, which both rose by 80 per cent, to
32,000 and 11,000 respectively. The numbers of students from Nigeria, Ghana and
Bangladesh all showed increases of between 40 and 60 per cent. The increase
reflects a new determination by the government to recruit international students
as a way of building long-term sustainable relations with other countries, to
benefit training and trade. Fee-paying international students have also become
increasingly attractive to universities in need of additional funding. They now
account for about 8 per cent of all higher education students in the UK,
compared with 6 per cent in 1996.
Regional training
schemes focus on business skills
Yorkshire and Humber is to become the first region in the UK to offer Apple
Certified Technical Coordinator (ACTC) training on Mac OS X, the new operating
system for Apple Mac computers. RDA Yorkshire Forward is investing $5.2 million
over three years to forge partnerships with a number of leading ICT providers –
including Apple, Adobe, Cisco, Macromedia, Microsoft and Oracle – and put in
place a programme of training and qualifications to boost ICT skills in the
region. The programme will be offered through local technology colleges. The
region has a $4.1 billion digital industries cluster that by 2012 is expected to
grow by more than 50 per cent, and it is keen to address future demand for
skilled technicians.
Darlington College of Technology in Darlington in the North East has secured
funding for a new $61.7 million campus development. The new campus, on a 16-acre
site near the town centre, will comprise a number of different learning
complexes run in partnership with local organisations and businesses. Among them
will be a university centre delivering higher education courses in partnership
with the University of Teesside and the Queen Elizabeth Sixth Form College; a
technology centre for engineering, construction and computing; and a high-tech
media centre that will include design, television and radio studios. Completion
is planned for June 2006, with the first students arriving in September of that
year.
An innovative centre that marks a new concept in university education has opened
in Hastings, on the South Coast. University Centre Hastings (UCH) is a serviced
educational centre where different universities can deliver degree courses to
students from the local community, nationally and internationally. A number of
academic partners, including the universities of Brighton, Sussex and
Westminster and the Open University, have worked to provide commercially focused
courses, designed in conjunction with local employers. Funding has come from a
number of sources, including the Higher Education Funding Council for England.
In Somerset, in the South West, a $19 million skills development that will help
5,000 local businesses has got under way. The Somerset Skills Alliance Project,
led by Business Link Somerset, is a partnership of the county’s business and
training organisations. Its aims include helping businesses to evaluate the
benefits of workforce training and identify training needs through specialist
advisers, and simplifying the process of finding the right training provider.
Boost for
renewable energy development
The DTI has launched a new campaign to raise awareness of the renewables
industry. The campaign – ‘It’s Only Natural’ will seek to inform key decision
makers such as planners, investors and the financial community, as well as the
wider public, of the potential benefits of renewable energy. The initiative was
launched by DTI minister Stephen Timms at the first national Wave and Tidal
Energy Conference, held in Bristol in South West England. The government is
committed to increasing use of renewable energy sources, and the UK has recently
become the most attractive national environment for wind power, according to
consultancy Ernst & Young’s renewable energy country attractiveness index.
Strong government backing and financial support for renewables saw it pip Spain
to the top spot.
Initiatives in the sector include a $935,000 study by the South West Regional
Development Agency into the feasibility of an electrical connection off the
Atlantic coast of Cornwall that would harness wave power and feed it into the
national electricity grid. The connection, known as the Wave Hub, would consist
of an underwater cable extending about nine miles out to sea, where it would
link with groups of wave power machines. The project would enable power
companies to test out the technology before moving into production on a
commercial basis. The South West has some of the best resources in the UK for
generating wave and tidal energy, including long coastlines and strong marine
and electro-hydraulic sectors.
In the North East, work has started on the Charles Parsons Technology Centre, a
new $9.4 million electrical power laboratory at the New and Renewable Energy
Centre (NaREC) located at Blyth, Northumberland. The new centre will be a key
research establishment for linking new and renewable sources of power generation
– such as wind and tidal turbines and biomass power stations – into the national
grid network.
Initiatives
launched across wide range of sectors
Plans to develop a high-tech corridor between Cambridge and Ipswich in Eastern
England have moved a step closer after the new Centre for Integrated Photonics
at Adastral Park, near Ipswich in Suffolk, secured $1 million in funding from
the DTI and a $2.3 million contract from the Engineering and Physical Sciences
Research Council. The East of England Development Agency is committed to helping
develop Adastral Park as a site for universities and industry, as part of an
emerging corridor linking IT developments in Suffolk with IT, biotechnology and
other facilities in the ‘Silicon Fen’ area around Cambridge. The future of the
photonics centre, part of a complex being developed at BT’s former research site
at Martlesham Heath, is now secure for at least the next two years, according to
its director. It hopes to develop applications for photonics in areas beyond
telecommunications, including biotechnology and defence.
Also in Cambridge, work has begun on the Babraham Research Campus to create
research facilities for early-stage biotechnology and biomedical companies. The
eight-year construction plan will provide three BioDevelopment buildings with
units ranging in size from 3,000 sq ft to 10,000 sq ft, fully fitted with
facilities for molecular biology and chemistry research. The first of the
buildings is expected to be completed by the end of this year, ready for
occupation in January 2005.
MIDAS, the Manchester Investment and Development Agency Service, has identified
seven key business areas that promise to be success stories for the North West’s
leading city in 2004. On the list are shared services, customer contact centres,
financial services, biotechnology, digital and the creative industries, air
transport industries and the food sector. Some of these, such as biotechnology
and shared services, were already high on MIDAS’s agenda, but an extensive
programme of research covering the whole of the Greater Manchester area has
revealed new areas for growth, including food and air transport.
Work has begun on a $7.5 million enterprise park on the outskirts of Shrewsbury
in the West Midlands that will be dedicated to the food and drink industry. The
26-acre site at Battlefield Enterprise Park will provide units for sale or lease
to companies of all sizes, and will act as a focus for the food and drink
sector, which employs 170,000 people in the West Midlands and accounts for 7 per
cent of the regional economy. The food and drink sector is also particularly
strong in Wales, where new research shows a 1.7 per cent rise in employment (400
jobs) in the 1998-2001 period, compared with a fall of 5.2 per cent over the UK
as a whole. The total output of the agri-food industry in Wales in 2001 was $3.8
billion, an increase of 2.6 per cent from 1998, compared with a 0.1 per cent
increase nationwide.
A three-year project aimed at improving skills in the advanced engineering
sector has been launched in the South West. The $7.5 million project, called ‘A
Journey Through Engineering’, will work with schools, employers and individuals
to address skills needs and raise the profile of engineering as a career choice.
In Cumbria, the Northwest Development Agency has opened a skills centre at the
Appleby Training and Heritage Centre aimed at young people interested in
developing skills in electrical engineering, part of its ‘Grow Your Future
Workforce’ initiative. In Wales, the Engineering Centre for Manufacturing and
Materials (ECM2), a multi-million-pound R&D facility set up by the Welsh
Development Agency, has been officially opened. Based in Port Talbot on the site
of the former Corus R&D laboratories, the centre has already attracted 13
organisations, employing a total of 70 people.
Office rentals set
to remain at low levels
The decline in rental levels in the central London office market has bottomed
out, but rents are expected to remain at low levels until 2006, according to
property consultant Knight Frank. Office vacancies in the City at the end of
2003 were at their highest level since the recession of the early 1990s – 13.7
per cent compared with 9.6 per cent a year earlier – and the situation is
expected to remain the same until the summer. Any upturn after that is expected
to be slow. There was 15 million sq ft of vacant office space available in the
City and 27.5 million sq ft in central London as a whole at the end of the year
– an increase of 29 per cent year-on-year – while take-up was just 8.6 million
sq ft. Headline rents in the City fell to about $84 per sq ft, compared with
$103 per sq ft a year earlier, and were expected to drop to $75 per sq ft by the
end of 2004. Prime rents in the West End currently stand at around $122 per sq
ft.
Competition among landlords has led to generous incentives, such as three years’
free rent on some 15-year leases. Speculative City developments such as 30 St
Mary Axe and 30 Gresham Street remain empty, although no major new speculative
developments are expected to come onto the market between the end of this year
and 2007. The depressed state of the office market, contrasted with the boom in
residential property values, has led some developers to convert office space
into residential flats, particularly in the West End. This trend could take
500,000 sq ft of commercial space out of the market, says Knight Frank.
Outside London, take-up in the M25 market increased by 50 per cent in the final
quarter of 2003, but was still at its lowest level since records began in 1993.
The vacancy rate grew in the fourth quarter, from 9.5 per cent to 9.8 per cent.
In Oxfordshire, mergers and consolidations among biotechnology companies, a
traditionally strong sector, have seen a slowdown in take-up of business park
space. However, active requirements for 750,000 sq ft of office space – from
companies such as GE Capital, Exxon Mobil, Syntegra, Bechtel and Sony – has
raised hopes among agencies that 2004 will see the beginning of a revival in the
Thames Valley region, which has suffered particularly badly from the recent
downturn in the dotcom and high-tech sectors.
Planners and
developers look to the future
Despite the somewhat gloomy property picture, developers continue to bring new
plans to the drawing board. Fifty-two acres of derelict land in the Thames
Gateway regeneration area to the east of London, for example, are set to be
developed as a business park. The White Hart Triangle scheme will provide more
than 1 million sq ft of industrial and office units, together with warehousing
and distribution space, at a cost of $150 million. Plans are also afoot for a
500,000 sq ft distribution complex in Maidstone, Kent, in South East England.
The scheme involves the redevelopment of 30 acres of land at the New Hythe
Industrial Estate, comprising three warehouse buildings. Its hub will be a
100,000 sq ft building that has been pre-sold to food distributor Brakes.
In Leicester in the East Midlands, plans are progressing for a new office core
in the centre of the city. A public consultation exercise has seen one proposal
emerge as the favoured option; this will see a large new area of office
development together with housing and leisure facilities and uninterrupted
pedestrian access between the office area, the railway station and the city
centre. Work on the site is due to start in 2005. It forms part of a masterplan
to regenerate central Leicester, other elements of which include a science and
technology park, redevelopment of the city’s waterside area, new housing and an
expanded retail core.
Work has begun on a $9 million office project with the potential to create up to
800 new jobs in Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria in North West England. The
two-storey, 43,000 sq ft contact centre on the Furness Business Park is designed
to help revive the fortunes of the former shipbuilding town. Due for completion
in the autumn, it will be marketed at a rental of around $15 per sq ft. Also in
the North West, a major new office development is planned for Liverpool’s
commercial district. City Square, on the corner of Moorfields and Tithebarn
Street, will be a speculative seven-storey Grade A development with car parking
facilities.
Gloucester, in South West England, is to establish an Urban Regeneration Company
(URC). Representatives from local partners and the private sector will sit on
the URC board and will plan a comprehensive vision for future development of the
city. Their priority will be to revive historic areas of the city while creating
a modern urban centre, and a number of schemes are already under consideration.
In South Wales, a huge redevelopment is planned for part of the giant Llanwern
steel plant near Newport. Birmingham-based developer St Modwen Properties has
signed a deal with steel-maker Corus, the land owner, which is selling off 600
acres of the site after it ceased iron and steel production there in 2001
(although it still employs 2,000 people at the site). The plan involves a
mixture of industrial, business and housing development, and will be the biggest
of its kind in Wales since the regeneration of Cardiff Bay. St Modwen says it
will invest $374 million in the project, but estimates that it will create an
end value of $1.4 billion. Depending on planning approvals, work should start by
the end of 2005 and will extend over a period of 10 years.
Two new high-specification business units have been completed at St Asaph
Business Park in North Wales by Welsh Industrial Partnership, a new partnership
formed between the Welsh Development Agency (WDA) and the Royal Bank of
Scotland. The Integra development, on a 2.7-acre site, consists of one 16,000 sq
ft unit and a larger one of 20,000 sq ft, both suitable for a wide range of
business uses. Meanwhile, a new business park is planned for the site of a
former World War Two airbase in Flintshire, North Wales. The WDA has invested
$7.5 million in infrastructure to kickstart development of the 42-acre Hawarden
Business Park, just off the A55. Located adjacent to Airbus’s new A380 wing
manufacturing facility and to Hawarden Airport, the development will target a
range of investors, including suppliers to the aerospace industry.
North East gets wired for
broadband
Every community in the North East of England is to be connected to broadband
internet services by March 2005, making it the only region outside London where
every telephone exchange has broadband capability. A total of 87 regional
telephone exchanges will be upgraded by BT under a $19 million scheme, providing
94.5 per cent of the region’s population with access to ADSL broadband services.
RDA One NorthEast is investigating alternative methods of delivery, such as
satellite systems, to reach the remaining residents and businesses, located
mainly in isolated rural areas.
Countrywide, permanent internet connections made up 22.5 per cent of total
subscriptions in December 2003, reflecting the rise in broadband take-up. The
figure was up from 21.6 per cent of all subscriptions in November, and compared
with 10.8 per cent just a year before. Overall, internet subscriptions in
December grew by 6.5 per cent year-on-year, and by 0.8 per cent from November to
December.
Overseas
investment in Telford grows
Three overseas investors based in Telford, in the West Midlands, have announced
plans to expand their operations. French-owned Lyreco, a leading distributor of
stationery and office products, is doubling the size of its UK headquarters to
624,000 sq ft, creating 300 new jobs over the next five years and taking its
total staffing levels to 900. Stirchley Technical Services Ltd, a subsidiary of
Japanese-owned Toyota Tsusho UK Ltd, has expanded and relocated its HQ to a new
85,000 sq ft premises. It has created 50 new jobs over the past year and has
plans to create more. Phoenix Contact, one of Germany’s leading manufacturers of
connectivity products and automation solutions, has relocated its UK
headquarters from Wokingham in Berkshire to Telford, creating a number of new
jobs in the process. The company has a global network of subsidiaries in more
than 30 countries, with a workforce of over 5,000 people.
Situated at the heart of a major manufacturing region, Telford is also
benefiting from a number of infrastructure improvements. The M6 Toll Road,
Britain’s first toll motorway, opened in December 2003 and has already reduced
journey times through the region. Plans are progressing for a new railfreight
terminal in the town with the capacity to handle an initial 200,000-250,000
tonnes of freight a year, and the potential to grow to 750,000 tonnes annually.
More than half of the town’s BT telephone exchanges are now broadband-enabled,
and the remainder should make the switch by the summer. A new 32,000 sq ft
office building is under construction at the Euston Park development near the
town’s railway station, with a further 15,000 sq ft design-and-build opportunity
becoming available in June or July. Telford’s International Centre was named
‘Most Improved Venue’ in this year’s prestigious Event Awards, following a $24.3
million refit. The centre, which has nearly 125,000 sq ft of exhibition space,
now ranks in the top ten conference and exhibition centres in the UK.
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Telford is already home to around 150
foreign-owned companies, which employ 20 per cent of the local workforce.
Telford Development Agency is hoping to attract more, with the help of a
new range of information leaflets covering topics such as investor
development services, workforce data and its land and property database.
More information at: www.cometotelford.co.uk. |

Lyreco UK, Donnington
Wood, TelfordHead Office and National Distribution Centre. |
US companies buy a slice
of the pie
US food giant Smithfield Foods, Inc has acquired two British food businesses,
Ridpath Pek, based in London, and the Norwich Food Company, which operates from
locations in Norwich and Spalding in Eastern England. The newly acquired
companies have been merged to form Smithfield Foods Ltd. Smithfield, based in
Smithfield, Virginia, is the leading supplier of fresh pork and processed meats
in the US, as well as the leading producer of hogs. It previously owned 50 per
cent of Ridpath Pek, an importer and exporter of a variety of foods, including
delicatessen meats, canned meats and canned fruit. The Norwich Food Company was
formed in 1993 and has evolved into a marketing and distribution organisation,
working with leading poultry and other food brands.
Meanwhile US conglomerate Cargill, based in Minneapolis, has acquired The
Duckworth Group (TDG) of Manchester, North West England, a flavour company that
supplies the food and beverages industry. Cargill is an international processor
and distributor of agricultural, food, financial and industrial products and
services. TDG employs 170 people at two locations in the UK and a further 100 at
sites in India, South Africa and the Middle East. It exports a third of its
turnover to a further 40 countries. It will become part of Cargill’s Food System
Design platform, a group of businesses dedicated to formulating integrated food
solutions.
Around the regions
HCL BPO, a subsidiary of Indian company HCL Technologies, has employed an extra
75 staff at its call centre in Belfast, Northern Ireland, after winning a
contract with a major UK retail chain. The move brings the workforce to 861, an
increase in staffing levels of 30 per cent over the past year. The Belfast
centre, which serves blue chip companies in the UK and the US, employs staff
fluent in a wide range of European languages.
Oslo-based software firm Fronter is the first company to move into the Norwegian
Collaboration Centre in the Fabriam Centre in North Tyneside, North East
England. The new centre is an incubator unit designed to house high-tech
Norwegian companies looking to put down permanent roots in the North East.
Fronter is seeking to employ local workers to help supply its virtual learning
environment software to 100,000 school pupils and teachers across the UK. Two
other Norwegian companies are being lined up to move into the new centre,
potentially creating dozens of new jobs. The UK is Norway’s single most
important export market outside Scandinavia and the country traditionally has
strong links with the North East, with 25 Norwegian firms based in the region.
Rosti Technical Plastics (UK), part of the Danish AP Moller group, has invested
more than $750,000 in its plant at Nantgarw, near Cardiff in South Wales,
increasing the size of the workforce from 100 to 170. The company has been
operating at Nantgarw since 1997, where it makes precision-moulded plastic
components for a wide range of customers in the automotive, medical equipment,
domestic appliance and office furniture sectors. Seeing significant potential
for growth in Wales and southern England, it has transferred a large amount of
plant and machinery from other Rosti plants to Nantgarw.
Brightmail, an anti-spam software specialist based in San Francisco, has
established an office in London to serve as the headquarters of its EMEA
operations, as part of a global expansion plan. Iteration Software, based in
Mountain View, California, has opened a primary sales office in the capital to
serve the same geographic region. Iteration provides real-time reporting,
analytics and information delivery products to financial services and
manufacturing companies.
Cyclades Corporation, a supplier of data centre management technology based in
Fremont, California, has opened a sales office in High Wycombe, South East
England. The office will serve users of the company’s incident management
solutions in the South East as well as resellers throughout the UK.
Fisher Scientific International, of Hampton, New Hampshire, has acquired Oxoid
Group, based in Basingstoke, South East England, for $330 million. Oxoid
supplies microbiological culture media and other diagnostic products used in
microbiology research laboratories, food testing and biopharmaceutical
production and process validation to isolate bacteria and other organisms. The
acquisition allows Fisher to offer products and services across the entire
life-science spectrum, including tools used by researchers studying DNA, RNA and
proteins.
Scientific software company Accelrys, based in Cambridge, Eastern England, is to
expand its operations as it prepares to separate from its American parent
company Pharmacopeia. The expansion will create 30 new jobs in the first half of
the year, and will bring together all of the company’s material science research
and development team on a single site. The company develops software with a wide
range of applications in the chemicals industry and in nanotechnology.
Road traffic levels in the UK rose by 1.4 per cent between 2002 and 2003,
boosted by strong growth in the fourth quarter, according to the latest
statistics from the Department for Transport. The estimated annual increase in
goods vehicle traffic was 1 per cent and in light van traffic 5 per cent, while
car traffic rose by 1 per cent. Levels of motorway traffic remained virtually
unchanged.
ABN AMRO Capital, the private equity business of Dutch-based bank ABN AMRO, has
acquired Dennis Eagle, a manufacturer of refuse collection vehicles, from UK
private equity firm Bridgepoint for around $93 million. Dennis Eagle, based in
Warwick in the West Midlands, is the only UK supplier of both chassis and bodies
for refuse trucks. It also manufactures fire engine cabs under a long-term
agreement with Transbus International.
MGM Mirage, the US gaming and entertainment company, and The British Land
Company are to jointly develop a leisure and entertainment complex adjacent to
the Meadowhall Shopping Centre in Sheffield, Yorkshire and Humber. The
development is projected to cost between $364 million and $455 million, and
could create up to 4,500 construction jobs and 2,000 leisure-related jobs at the
site, which is owned by British Land. Subject to planning approvals and
forthcoming UK gaming law reforms, the complex will contain a casino,
restaurants, entertainment venues and a hotel and conference centre. MGM Mirage,
based in Las Vegas, operates 12 casino resorts in Nevada, Mississippi, Michigan
and Australia and has investments in two other resorts in Nevada and New Jersey.
Bermuda-based Bank of NT Butterfield & Son is to acquire UK private bank Leopold
Joseph through its subsidiary Bank of Butterfield (UK), in a deal worth $94.5
million. Leopold Joseph, which offers banking, treasury, investment management,
offshore company administration and trust services, has headquarters in London
and a wholly owned subsidiary in Guernsey. At the end of financial year 2003 it
had total assets of $923 million. Bank of Butterfield offers a range of
community banking services in Bermuda, Barbados and the Cayman Islands, and is a
specialist offshore financial services group, with subsidiary offices in the
Bahamas, the Cayman Islands, Guernsey and the UK.
The Europe Bank Ltd subsidiary of US credit card issuer MBNA, based in
Wilmington, Delaware, is to buy Premium Credit of Epsom, South East England.
Premium Credit, with nearly two million customers, claims to be the UK’s largest
independent insurance premium finance company, and makes loans to businesses to
help them pay their premiums.
Another company from Reston, Virginia, 4FrontSecurity, has chosen the Surrey
Enterprise Hub as its location after winning the US/UK ‘Touchdown’ incubator
competition. The competition was organised by UK Trade & Investment and the
Fairfax County Economic Development Authority, in conjunction with British
American Business Inc. The aim of the competition was to identify innovative
start-up companies ready to take advantage of a global market at an early point
in their development and 4FrontSecurity, which specialises in information
security, was selected on account of its business approach and the suitability
of its solutions for the UK market. It opted for the Royal Holloway, University
of London site because of its strengths in information security; while there, it
will enjoy business development and administration support, and access to
university facilities. Travelling in the opposite direction to take up space in
a US incubator is UK company ProImmune, based in Oxford, South East England.
The Humber Sea Terminal at Killingholme in North Lincolnshire, Yorkshire and
Humber, is set to double in size as part of a large-scale investment programme
that will create 100 new jobs. Owner the Simon Group plans to invest $46.8
million to build a fourth ro-ro berth at the terminal, with two more berths to
follow at a cost of at least $75 million over the next two years.
In Scunthorpe, also in North Lincolnshire, Canadian-owned CCL Industries is to
spend $1.9 million to extend the production facilities at its dedicated aerosols
plant. The company manufactures, packages and labels aerosol products for some
of the world’s leading consumer brands. Partners include companies such as
Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Gillette, Nabisco, Schering-Plough and Johnson &
Johnson. Headquartered in Toronto, CCL supplies leading consumer product
companies in the fields of personal care, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, and
household and specialty food products. It employs 7,000 people and operates 33
production facilities in North and Central America and in Europe.
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