BROKERS' BONANZA

Founders of Britain’s biggest stockbroker will bag £844m windfall from its £5.4m takeover

Shares in the firm rose by 2 per cent after the long-awaited deal was announced

THE founders of Britain’s biggest stockbroker will bag an £844million windfall from its upcoming takeover.

After months of talks, Hargreaves Lansdown bowed to a £5.4billion acquisition bid by a financial services consortium.

Dwayne Senior - The Sunday Times  
Peter Hargreaves and Stephen Lansdown, chairman founders of investment management firm Hargreaves Lansdown

The deal with CVC Capital Partners, Nordic Capital and the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority is priced at £11.40p-a-share, while investors will also get a last 30p dividend.

Shares in the firm rose by 2 per cent after the long-awaited deal was announced.

Peter Hargreaves, 77, will cash in half his 19.8 per cent stake for £535million, while Stephen Lansdown, 71, will sell off his entire 5.7 per cent stake for £309million.

The broker duo started their DIY investment platform from a spare bedroom in Bristol back in 1981.

They have already bagged £80million from share sales after the business floated in 2007.

Some analysts suggested the firm was still another UK giant sold on the cheap, since it manages assets worth £155billion.

But Hargreaves Lansdown’s board said it was struggling agsinst rivals and needed a turnaround.

Revved down

REVOLUTION BARS is shutting 25 of its sites after a court sanctioned its restructuring plan to cut losses.

The chain will axe nearly a third of its 89 cocktail bars after a weak recovery from the pandemic and punters cutting back on nights out.

Boss Rob Pitcher said it now had a “more secure financial base”.

With lenders slashing rates, is now the right time to fix your mortgage? Here’s what the experts think

Pound’s woe

THE pound is on track for its worst losing streak against the euro in two years — just as many Brits head away on holiday.

Sterling slumped to €1.17 after the Bank of England cut rates for the first time in four years last week.

Market volatility also weakened the pound against the dollar to $1.27.


GOOD WEEK: WILL Shu, chief of Deliveroo, which posted its first ever profit and share buyback after years of doubts about the takeaway app.

BAD WEEK: LOÏC Guilloux, boss of asset manager H20, which is to pay investors £215million after a probe by regulators.

Exit mobile version