Tuesday, 29 September 2009

Fininvest is a financial holding company

Fininvest is a financial holding company controlled by Silvio Berlusconi's family and managed by Silvio Berlusconi's oldest daughter Marina Berlusconi.
The Fininvest Group is composed by many important companies, e.g. Mediolanum (an insurance and banking company), Medusa (a major Italian film production company), Mondadori (one of Italy's most important publishing companies), A.C. Milan (a football team) and Mediaset, which is, at present, the biggest private entertainment competitor in Italy, owning three channels (Canale 5, Italia 1, Rete 4), a digital TV broadcasting network and many other companies related to TV broadcasting.


Type Private


Founded Finanziaria d'Investimenti, Srl (1978)
Headquarters Milan, Italy
Key people Marina Berlusconi, Chairman
Pasquale Cannatelli, CEO


Industry Financial holding

  • Revenue ▲ € 6,196 Billion (2005)
  • Operating income ▲ € 2,871 Billion (2005)
  • Net income ▲ € 1,297 Billion (2005)
  • Employees 19,755

Tuesday, 22 September 2009

Government helpline aims to benefit UK workers and employers

Government helpline aims to benefit UK workers and employers


The government has launched a pay and work rights helpline, to offer advice to workers struggling with issues from redundancy to employee rights.

Commenting on the launch of the Government's new Pay and Work Rights helpline TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: “This vital new helpline was a key recommendation of the TUC's Commission on Vulnerable Employment final report last year. It will ensure workers at risk of mistreatment by their employers not only have a phone number that they can call to find out about their rights to the minimum wage, excessive working hours and agency standards, but they can also ask for help in enforcing these rights.”


Barber said the move should also enable better co-ordination between the national enforcement agencies, ensuring more effective enforcement of employee-related law.


“The helpline and enforcement agencies will champion the rights of vulnerable workers, and ensure that rogue employers who flout the law do not get away with it.


'This will not only benefit workers across the UK, but will also help employers by promoting fair competition and preventing good employers from being undercut by bad ones using unlawful practices,” he said.


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UK mortgage holders wasting low interest years



Research by professional advice website Unbiased.co.uk suggests that more than half, or 53 per cent of borrowers who say they are on a tracker mortgage are failing to take advantage of historic low interest rates to pay down their mortgage balances.


Of those surveyed, just one in five, or 20 per cent have kept mortgage repayments at the levels they were before the round of rate cuts earlier this year, allowing them to slice capital off the outstanding balance and cut down the amount of interest they pay or cut down their loan term.


Instead, nearly one in five, or 19 per cent of those tracker borrowers are spending their monthly repayment windfall on day-to-day expenses or treating themselves, while a more sensible 24 per cent say they are diverting these savings to pay off other debts. Just seven per cent say they are allowing the balance to build up month by month in their current account, and 20 per cent are bolstering their savings in deposit accounts.


Worryingly, said Unbiased, over one in ten (12 per cent) are not overpaying on their mortgage afraid that they will be charged for doing so.


David Elms, chief executive of Unbiased.co.uk said: "Tracker and standard variable rate mortgage borrowers have watched interest rates plunge to record lows during this year, presenting an ideal opportunity to pay off their outstanding mortgage more quickly. Such action would enable many thousands of borrowers to take years off their mortgage repayment term, or enjoy a greater level of repayment comfort down the line, should the economy take longer to recover.


"Our research suggests most tracker borrowers are not taking this action, however we're encouraged by the large number who are using their repayment savings to erode their more costly credit card and personal loan debts.”



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Wednesday, 16 September 2009

Isa limit rise is a boost for savers





Isa limit rise is a boost for savers

Sam Dunn guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 22 April 2009 14.19 BST

• Budget speech reveals increase in Isa limit to £10,200
• Over 50s will benefit from the change this tax year


Isa savers got some good news in the budget.

Savers will be able to put up to £10,200 into Isas, with those aged over 50 allowed to make the extra payments in this tax year, the chancellor announced in his budget speech today.

The Isa allowance is currently £7,200 and allows savers and investors over the age of 18 to invest that amount in shares and stockmarket funds, including up to £3,600 in cash.

The changes will mean up to £5,100 in cash can be invested. However, only the over-50s will benefit this tax year – they will be allowed to make use of the extra allowance from 6 October while for younger savers the new allowances kick in next April.

The Treasury said the move would benefit around 5 million savers who currently use their full Isa allowance. Around 18 million people hold the accounts, which allow savers to hold either cash or funds without paying tax on interest or capital gains.

This is only the second time limits have been raised since Labour launched Isas in 1999, and comes amid growing calls for the government to step in and help savers hit by recent interest rate cuts, which have seen interest on savings accounts reach record lows.

Although savings specialists had been calling for an increase in allowances, they were unimpressed with the chancellor's response. "An extra £1,500 allowance from 6 October on a cash Isa paying 3% will give extra income of £22.50 over the rest of the tax year, meaning a tax saving of just £9 for a 40% tax-payer," said Carolyn Steppler, associate partner in personal tax at KPMG in the UK.

Gary Shaughnessy of fund management group Fidelity International said: "Increasing the Isa limit for future years fails to meet the needs of hard-pressed savers today.

"Fidelity, with strong support from Independent Financial Advisers, urged the chancellor to reinstate the dividend tax credit within Isas as a way to immediately boost Isa income, especially for basic rate tax payers. Increasing the maximum limit to £10,200 is jam tomorrow for the minority of people who invest the full annual allowance."

Despite the new allowance levels, there's a wider savings malaise warns Richard Norman, head of savings at the Post Office. "There is [still] low awareness of the current Isa limits; 56% of people have admitted they do not know what the existing cash Isa limit is.

"Furthermore, one in four of existing cash Isa account holders admit they do not already utilise their existing allowance."

The cash Isa's appeal as a safe harbour for savings has seen its popularity soar since the onset of the credit crunch. In December the 17% annual rise in cash Isa savings to £163bn was the biggest since 2003-04.

Extra savings will also be given to families with disabled children – the government says it will put an extra £100 a year into their child trust fund, while the severely disabled will receive £200 a year

Tuesday, 15 September 2009

July property prices show first real rise since 2007




July property prices show first real rise since 2007Monday 14th September 2009

Remortgaging figures are still weak, but lending for house purchase showed its first material annual growth in July for the first time since early 2007, according to figures from the Council of Mortgage Lenders. (CML)

Home buyers borrowed GBP 14.5 billion, which is a significant rise on the second month running, but still 42 per cent lower than the figures for July last year.

Within this, house purchase lending accounted for 56,000 loans totalling £7.5 billion - up from 47,000 loans totalling £7.1 billion in July last year.

This lending splits down into 20,400 first-time buyer loans and 35,700 home mover loans in July, up 18 per cent and 28 per cent respectively on June. But compared with a year earlier, the rise in first-time buyer numbers was higher, up 22 per cent compared with a 17 per cent rise in the number of movers.

In terms of product choice, over three quarters of mortgages taken out in July were at fixed rates, with borrowers able to lock in to an average fixed rate of 4.7 per cent, well below the average of 5.57 per cent over the past decade.

Commenting on the latest survey data, CML economist Paul Samter said: “It's tempting to call the turn in the mortgage market at this point, and there is certainly concrete evidencethat lending for house purchase is increasing. But there are still constraints affecting the lending industry's capacity to fund increased lending, as well as less consumer motivation to remortgage for the time being. The overall lending picture is likely to stay relatively subdued for some time, especially as the wider economy is far from robust as yet."




Wednesday, 9 September 2009

Britain climbing out of recession

The recession is probably over, leading experts declared yesterday, as evidence showed that key parts of the economy were growing again.
By Edmund Conway and Angela Monaghan

The National Institute for Economic and Social Research, one of the foremost independent economic forecasters, estimated that Britain had seen economic growth in the three months to August.

Its announcement coincided with figures showing that the manufacturing sector was enjoying its strongest growth for 18 months, that consumer confidence was recovering and that the jobs market was improving for the first time in almost a year and a half. The stock market has bounced back, with shares in London hitting their highest level of the year yesterday. Estate agents reported that house sales and inquiries were up by more than 50 per cent in August on the same month last year.

The head of the International Monetary Fund also predicted that the world was likely to pull out from its economic slump earlier than expected.

Economists said that the data and forecasts indicated that Britain’s economy was growing for the first time in more than a year and a half – and the recession was most likely over. A recession is officially defined as the economy shrinking for two or more successive quarters.

The figures were a major boost for Alistair Darling, the Chancellor, who earlier this year insisted, to the derision of most observers, that the economy would be growing again before the end of the year.

In a further tonic for Mr Darling and Gordon Brown, Ray Barrell, the chief forecaster at the institute, said that government policies, alongside the Bank of England’s decision to slash interest rates to nearly zero, were largely to thank for the recovery.

Making particular reference to the car scrappage scheme, a £2,000 incentive to buy a new car, and the decision to cut VAT to 15 per cent, Mr Barrell said: “We are expecting growth in both the third and fourth quarters of the year, although only an anaemic rate of 0.3 per cent or 0.4 per cent. It has been partly boosted by the fact that the car industry has been stronger than expected, thanks to the Government’s scrappage scheme. Then there will be a boost from the VAT cut in the final quarter of the year.

“In short, the Government has been able to spend some of the money they were intending to spend.”

However, he gave warning that the coming months would be far from pleasant. “This is not going to be a V-shaped recovery,” he said. “This is going to be very tough. It will take until late 2012 for the economy to return to the size it was at the peak in 2008. This will be a long, painful recession.”

According to the Office for National Statistics, the manufacturing sector grew by 0.9 per cent in July, the biggest leap since early 2008, helped by sales of cars to both British and overseas customers.

“These data support other signs that the overall recession is ending,” said Michael Saunders, an economist at Citigroup. “We do not expect that recovery will be rapid, because of poor credit supply and the need for major fiscal restraint to get the public finances back on a sustainable path. Even so, as these data indicate, upside surprises in activity data continue to outweigh downside surprises.”

Alan Clarke, an economist at BNP Paribas, said: “[It is] a good start to the third quarter and adds to the weight of evidence that suggests the recession is over.” Recruitment agents reported that permanent job appointments rose for the first time in 17 months in August. The Recruitment and Employment Confederation also stated that temporary appointments increased and vacancies declined at a slower pace.

Last month, the Nationwide’s consumer confidence index rose to its highest level since May 2008, up two points to 63. Countrywide Estate Agents, which has more than 1,000 branches, said that it had seen a 69 per cent increase in inquiries from potential buyers and a 53 per cent rise in sales in August, compared with a year earlier.

However, many leading authorities remained sceptical that the figures were anything other than a blip in the midst of a lengthy slump.

David Blanchflower, a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, pointed out that the institute previously called an end to the recession in the spring, before data subsequently proved it wrong.

“I am worried that in the UK and the rest of Europe people don’t appreciate that unemployment is still rising, and that this, alongside rising negative equity, will be extremely damaging for confidence and for the broader economy,” he said. “Despite these figures, banks are still not lending; these are not green shoots – they are just noise.”

Dominique Strauss-Kahn, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said: “For the [global] economy, we have been saying for a year that the recovery will come in the first half of 2010. It might even be a quarter ahead. We are seeing the end of the tunnel, but we are still in crisis.”

Tomorrow, the Bank is expected to leave interest rates unchanged at 0.5 per cent, and to carry on with quantitative easing — pumping cash directly into the economy. However, Prof Blanchflower said that it would be unwise to rule out further action.

In a further boost, Britain’s triple A credit rating is unlikely to be reduced, as had once been feared, even though the country’s budget deficit will soon be the worst among advanced economies.

Moody’s, the rating agency, will announce today that the rise in debt appears affordable, due to the political consensus that there must be spending cuts.


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Tuesday, 1 September 2009

Fininvest

Fininvest S.p.A è la holding di uno dei maggiori gruppi di comunicazione a livello internazionale, che opera in posizioni di leadership nei settori della televisione commerciale e del cinema con Mediaset e la sua controllata Medusa, dell'editoria con Mondadori oltre che dello sport con il Milan. Il Gruppo ha poi un'importante partecipazione, pariteticamente con il Gruppo Doris, nel Gruppo Mediolanum, una delle principali realtà imprenditoriali italiane specializzata nei servizi bancari e nei prodotti assicurativi e previdenziali.

Nata come impresa familiare, Fininvest ha poi aperto agli investitori le sue principali società (Mediaset, Mondadori e Mediolanum sono quotate alla Borsa Italiana) e oggi può contare sulla fiducia di circa 300.000 azionisti, dai piccoli risparmiatori a importanti operatori finanziari e industriali, italiani ed internazionali.

Il Gruppo Fininvest dalla metà degli anni ’90 ha intrapreso un vasto processo di focalizzazione sul proprio core business investendo negli ultimi 10 anni oltre 15 miliardi di Euro. Tale scelta strategica ha tra l’altro avuto effetti estremamente positivi sulla reddittività operativa del Gruppo (intesa come incidenza del risultato operativo sui ricavi) che è più che quintuplicata rispetto al 4% del 1996.

on un valore complessivo stimato in circa 6 miliardi di euro, un fatturato di oltre 6 miliardi e 20 mila dipendenti, il Gruppo Fininvest è una delle maggiori realtà imprenditoriali italiane e si pone tra i grandi protagonisti internazionali della comunicazione e dell'intrattenimento, settori sui quali dalla metà degli anni Novanta ha progressivamente concentrato il proprio impegno.

Iniziata circa cinquant’anni fa, la storia del Gruppo fondato da Silvio Berlusconi è ricca di successi legati dapprima a realizzazioni d'avanguardia nell'edilizia e più tardi a settori fortemente innovativi.
Alla base delle affermazioni di Fininvest c'è una visione imprenditoriale attenta ai cambiamenti della società e all'evoluzione del mercato, visione sospinta da un forte spirito di iniziativa e capace di guardare con creatività ai settori più avanzati dell'economia.

Proprio queste caratteristiche portarono sul finire degli anni Settanta ad una intuizione decisiva. La possibilità di raggiungere direttamente le famiglie attraverso la tv, unita alla filosofia di servizio maturata da Fininvest nelle precedenti esperienze, indusse ad un duplice utilizzo della televisione: destinata da una parte a soddisfare il bisogno di intrattenimento e informazione del pubblico, dall'altra ad offrire alle imprese nuovi spazi per la comunicazione commerciale. Questa intuizione è stata all'origine della rapida crescita di Fininvest e contemporaneamente ha avuto un sensibile effetto spinta sullo sviluppo del Paese. Oggi il Gruppo è impegnato in importanti sfide lungo le grandi direttrici individuate per la crescita del core business: il processo di internazionalizzazione delle proprie attività, che ormai vede un 30% del fatturato consolidato realizzato all’estero, l’estrema attenzione alle tecnologie e alle opportunità che queste consentono di cogliere e il costante rafforzamento nel settore dei contenuti, reso sempre più decisivo dal moltiplicarsi delle piattaforme distributive.

Nell’ambito del sistema economico italiano, Fininvest rappresenta indubbiamente un esempio di grande valorizzazione dell'imprenditoria e un fattore insostituibile di crescita, culturale e civile. Grazie, ancora una volta, alla chiarezza delle proprie scelte strategiche, all'eccellenza delle proprie aziende, a una solida situazione patrimoniale-finanziaria, e soprattutto alle grandi qualità di quanti nel Gruppo lavorano e che da sempre rappresentano il suo principale punto di forza.

Finivest The Group

With an estimated overall value of around €6 billion, revenues of more than €6 billion and 20,000 employees, the Fininvest Group is one of Italy’s leading companies and a world leader in media and entertainment, sectors in which, since the mid nineties, the company has increasingly concentrated its efforts.

Begun around fifty years ago, the history of the Group founded by Silvio Berlusconi has been marked by success, linked firstly to an avant-garde approach to real estate and subsequently in a number of highly innovative sectors.

Underlying the success of Fininvest is an entrepreneurial vision that is attentive to changes in society and the evolution of markets, a vision that is sustained by a spirit of initiative that is able to look creatively at the most advanced sectors of the economy.

It was precisely these characteristics that led, in the late seventies, to the decisive intuition; the possibility of reaching households directly through television. Combined with the philosophy of service developed by Fininvest in its previous experience, this lead to a dual approach to television: on the one hand as a means of satisfying the public’s demand for entertainment and information, and, on the other, the opportunity for companies to find new space for commercial communication. This intuition formed the basis for Fininvest’s rapid growth and had, at the same time, a marked impact on the economic growth of the country.

Today the Group is engaged in important challenges along the lines identified for the development of its core business: the process of internationalisation, which now sees 30% of revenues generated outside Italy, a close attention to innovation and the opportunities offered by technological development and the continuous reinforcement of content, which has become increasingly important with the multiplication of distribution platforms.

In the context of the Italian economy, Fininvest is undoubtedly a prime example of the value of enterprise and is an irreplaceable element in the country’s cultural and civic growth. Thanks, yet again, to the clarity of its strategic choices, the excellence of its operating companies, a solid financial basis and, above all, the extraordinary qualities of the people who work in the Group, who have, from the beginning, represented its main assets.

Finivest holding

Fininvest is the holding company of one of the world’s leading media groups with a leadership position in commercial television and cinema, through Mediaset and its subsidiary Medusa, in publishing, through Mondadori, as well as in sport, through A.C. Milan. The Group also holds, together with the Doris Group, an important stake in the Mediolanum Group, one of Italy’s leading companies specialised in banking, insurance and financial services.

Created as a family business, Fininvest subsequently opened up its most important companies to investors (Mediaset, Mondadori and Mediolanum are all listed on the Milan stock exchange) and can today count on the confidence of around 300,000 shareholders, from individual private investors of Italian and international financial institutions.

In the middle of the 1990s, the Fininvest Group conducted an extensive reorganisation process to focus on its core business, media and entertainment, investing over the last twelve years some €17 billion. This strategic decision has also had an extremely positive impact on the Group’s operating profitability (in terms of operating profit as a proportion of revenues) which has increased to more than five times the 4% of 1996.