BT launches first hybrid
fixed/mobile telephone service
BT Group has launched the
world’s first combined fixed and mobile telephone service. BT Fusion
is a pioneering internet phone service that allows users to switch
seamlessly between mobile networks and fixed lines, using a single
handset. The service is based on a specially equipped Motorola v560
mobile phone which, on the move, connects to Vodafone’s wireless
network. When making calls at home or in the office, the system
accesses BT’s fixed-line network via an access point called a BT
Hub, which switches it to a broadband line using Bluetooth wireless
technology. The hub also works as a wireless router, giving wireless
access to PCs, laptops and games consoles. To use the service,
subscribers need a BT telephone line and a subscription to BT
Broadband.
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Ian Livingston, CEO, BT Retail with BT Fusion Motorola v560 handset
and BT Hub
(wireless access point) (Photo from Vismedia) |
BT has been focusing recently on broadband technology in an effort
to offset a decline in its traditional fixed-line services, and the
company hopes the hybrid service will help it to compete against
both mobile networks and market newcomers offering cheap internet
telephony. It says that charges for the new BT Fusion service will
be low, with landline calls charged at the off-peak rate of 5.5p
(9.9 cents) for up to an hour and 3p (5.4 cents) per minute at peak
times. A 10-minute off-peak rate mobile call from home will cost up
to 95 per cent less than the same call using a rival mobile package,
according to the company. BT will offer two price plans of $17.99
and $26.99 a month. The service will be trialled among 400 early
users, with a more extensive roll-out planned for September.
Between April 2004 and April 2005 there was an increase of 5.1 per
cent in the number of active subscriptions to the internet,
according to the latest monthly survey of internet service providers
by the Office for National Statistics. The market share for
permanent connections continues to increase, and in April accounted
for 49.2 per cent of all new connections, compared with 47.5 per
cent in March and 28.5 per cent a year earlier. |
London celebrates links with both East and West
London was the destination for 50 per cent of Indian foreign direct
investment (FDI) projects into Europe between 1997 and 2004,
according to a new report from London investment agency Think London
and the office of the mayor, Ken Livingstone. The report, From the
Ganges to the Thames: An Analysis of Indian FDI into London, also
shows that the UK capital receives 50 per cent of Indian European
FDI projects in the software sector and a third of those in the
financial and business services sector. The city’s greatest share of
Indian investment is in the high-technology software sector, acting
firstly as a base for company headquarters and secondly as one for
sales and marketing operations.
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Andrew Fraser, Think London at the Indian Business Reception,
Wallace Collection, London |
The importance of the link was
celebrated in June with an Indian Business Reception held at the Wallace
Collection in central London. Over 300 senior Indian business leaders,
together with Mr Livingstone, attended the event, which was held to
highlight the strong cultural and business links that draw Indian
companies to London and the contribution they make to the city.
Indian-owned businesses now account for 5 per cent of London’s economy,
and the country is the second most important source of FDI for the city.
The UK is home to more Indian people than any other European country, with
40 per cent of them living in London.
Meanwhile, more than 120 companies based in California have opened offices
in London over the past few years, according to Think London, representing
as many as one in eight of all international investments into the city.
Fifty per cent of these have chosen London as their base in Europe, and
the capital hosts Europe’s largest base of leading-edge companies,
including household names such as Google, Yahoo! and Apple. One in five
Californian companies investing in London establishes a European
headquarters operation there, and more than half choose the city for their
sales and marketing hub.
Seventy-five per cent of all investments of Californian origin are in the
software and IT sectors, reflecting London’s status as the largest and
fastest-growing IT market in Europe (it has grown by 50 per cent over the
past five years). Among the factors drawing them to London are the city’s
advanced telecommunications infrastructure, its skilled talent pool and
flexible business environment.
It is not just Californian companies that are attracted to London. L-3
Communications, a US technology firm based in New York, has just opened an
operations office there, which will play a key role in its strategic
development plans for the UK and Europe. The company is a provider of
intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems, aircraft
modernisation, training and government services. It also acts as a
merchant supplier of a broad range of high-tech products. PrimeQ
Solutions, a US-based provider of online advertising technology and
services, has opened a subsidiary in the capital. The company will provide
lead generation services and localised sales and account management to
companies across the UK, using proprietary ad serving technology. The
London office will house sales, administration and client services, as
well as design and technology developers.
UK mid-sized firms top
European super-growth league
The UK has the highest proportion of ‘super-growth’ medium-sized companies
in Europe and the fourth highest in the world, according to a study by
accountants Grant Thornton. The survey focused on businesses with
above-average growth in turnover and headcount among 6,300 medium-sized
companies – defined as those with a workforce of between 50 and 249 – in
24 countries across Europe. A quarter of the UK companies in this category
were classed as ‘super-growth’: an improvement of 5 percentage points on
the previous year and significantly higher than the global average of 17
per cent. The UK overtook Sweden to top the league, after the Scandinavian
country’s proportion of super-growth companies declined from 24 per cent
to 13 per cent.
Medium-sized enterprises account for just 2.3 per cent of all enterprises
in the UK (the vast majority are small businesses), but they provide 13.6
per cent of employment and 16.2 per cent of output, according to the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). They also produce more revenue per
employee than either small or large enterprises. Part of their improved
performance in comparison with similar-sized firms in other European
countries is the relatively poor performance of eurozone economies in
recent months.
UK-based tax companies scored well in the annual awards organised by
Euromoney’s International Tax Review magazine, presented at a ceremony at
Claridge’s Hotel in London, held in May. Baker & McKenzie won the coveted
European tax firm of the year award, while PricewaterhouseCoopers took the
prize for European transfer pricing firm of the year. Linklaters was
crowned European tax litigation firm of the year, and Dewey Ballantine won
the award for best US tax firm in Europe.
| British
‘national brand’ outperforms US |
 |
The UK has done better than the US in
maintaining its international reputation since the start of hostilities in
Iraq, according to a survey of “nation brands” by Anholt-GMI. |
The survey asked 10,000 consumers in
10 countries (Canada, China, Denmark, France, Germany, India, Japan, South
Korea, UK, US) to rate 10 countries in six different areas: tourism,
exports, governance, people, culture and heritage, and investment and
immigration. Overall, Sweden emerged with the strongest national brand,
followed by the UK, Italy, the US and Germany, Japan, China, India, South
Korea, Russia and Turkey.
The report’s authors say that the strength of a country’s brand is a
strong indicator of its economic performance. They expressed “shock” that
the US only managed to tie for fourth place, and said that it had spent
the past four years “trashing” a reputation it had taken 350 years to
build up. However, they also said that, although the US government was
unpopular in many countries, US brands remained highly regarded. The US
ranked only fifth in terms of governance, but topped the table in terms of
brands, products and investment climate.
The UK ranked third overall for “upholding international peace and
security”, despite its role in Iraq. The country’s overall score was also
boosted by high respect for its people: Britons ranked higher than any
other nationality, and were the preferred nationality for hiring. British
people scored exceptionally well on qualities such as “educated”,
“polite”, “honest”, “trustworthy” and “intelligent” – though they were
also thought by many to be “boring”.
Brown
declares war on red tape
Chancellor Gordon Brown has launched a drive to cut regulation and red
tape across government departments, and has challenged business to
identify “outmoded and unnecessary” regulations that are ripe for culling.
Among his proposals is a bill early next year to streamline the UK’s 29
industry regulatory bodies to just seven, followed by another bill in the
next parliamentary session to remove redundant regulations. Mr Brown wants
to switch to a new, limited, ‘risk-based’ inspection regime, but also
wants industry to back up its complaints about over-regulation with
concrete proposals for change.
In another move aimed at creating a more flexible business environment, Mr
Brown wants the 611 local authority watchdogs, which between them account
for 73 per cent of business inspections, to work together more closely.
These agencies include trading standards and environmental inspectors
operating at the county level. A new body – the Better Regulation
Executive – will also be set up to ensure that Whitehall departments set
and meet clear targets for regulation. Business leaders have welcomed the
reforms in principle, though many are reserving judgement on whether the
new system will work better than the old.
UK retains
opt-out from working week directive
The UK has seen off attempts by other European Union countries to end by
2012 its opt-out clause from the EU working time directive, which limits
the numbers of hours an individual can work in a single week to 48. The UK
argues that people should have the flexibility to choose how long they
work, in order to promote economic competitiveness. At the latest meeting
of the European Commission in Luxembourg, UK ministers won the backing of
enough member states (including Germany, Poland and Slovakia) to block the
proposal. However, it seems likely that the issue will be revived in
future debates.
One new piece of legislation that will be a reality from next year is a
law banning discrimination on the basis of age in relation to employment
and vocational training. The website of the Age Partnership Group (www.agepositive.gov.uk)
contains details of the new legal requirements, together with best
practice advice and sources of further information. Employment advisory
group Acas has launched a booklet to help employers make the most of
skills offered by older workers. The guide, Employing Older Workers, can
be viewed at: www.acas.org.uk/publications/AL09.html.
The number of labour disputes resulting in strikes fell to 130 in 2004,
the lowest on record, according the Office for National Statistics. This
compares with 133 stoppages in 2003 and 146 in 2002. However, the number
of working days lost totalled 904,900, almost twice the 499,100 lost in
2003, although this was lower than the 1.3 million lost in 2002. The
figure was above the average of 560,200 for the period 1994-2003, but
considerably lower than the averages of 7.2 million in the 1980s and 12.9
million in the 1970s.
In 2004, 292,700 workers were involved in labour disputes, compared with
150,600 the year before. Almost half (48 per cent) of the working days
lost were in public administration, while 42 per cent were in education.
Five per cent were in transport, storage and communication. The regions
with the highest number of working days lost (per thousand employee jobs)
were Scotland (160) and Northern Ireland (99). The lowest were Eastern
England (11) and the South East (13), while the average was 34 days. The
main reason for strikes was disputes over wages (762,000 days), followed
by redundancies (107,400). Relatively few disputes were to do with working
conditions or disciplinary measures.
The Manufacturing Advisory Service (MAS) has exceeded its original targets
by 50 per cent, generating $279 million of added value for British
manufacturing in its first three years of existence, according to the DTI.
The service, operating through ten regional centres of excellence across
England and Wales, smashed its original target of $167 million, set in
2002. In its first three years, the MAS responded to almost 56,000 initial
enquiries from businesses seeking advice, visited over 11,000 companies to
carry out diagnostic health checks, completed 3,050 in-depth consultations
and staged over 1,300 events designed to educate and train local
businesses.
The Learning and Skills Council has announced an increased budget for the
funding of further education colleges, up to $9 billion in 2005/06,
compared with $7 billion in 2002/03. The government claims to have
injected an extra $1.8 billion into the sector over the past three years.
In individual regional initiatives, the first of three training centres of
excellence to serve the marine industry in the South West has been
officially opened at Poole in Dorset. The Poole Marine Skills Centre,
funded by local investment agencies and private companies, will provide
training for young people seeking work in the cluster of 300
marine-related businesses in the area. It will be followed by similar
establishments in Plymouth and Falmouth. In Yorkshire and Humber, Business
Link West Yorkshire has launched a Target Training Project to help SMEs in
the travel, tourism, transport and distribution sectors to meet their
training needs. The scheme offers assistance with funding for specialist
training; companies can check their eligibility at: www.blwy.co.uk.
An inspiring
year for science parks
The UK Science Park Association (UKSPA) had an “inspiring” year in 2004,
according to the organisation’s annual report. It continued to attract new
members, launched an award programme, delivered significant international
projects, improved its membership services and marketed its membership
widely. Initiatives included a new online system that allows members to
share statistical data through the association’s website (www.ukspa.org.uk)
and a national education programme to promote science to young people in
schools and universities. UKSPA also delivered a training programme for
the Chinese National Association of Science Parks in Beijing and is
preparing further collaborations with China for 2005/06.
Now in its 21st year, UKSPA has around 60 operating parks (including
full-scale science and research parks, technology centres and
innovation-based incubator units) around the country. It has more than 1.2
million sq ft of property either built or under construction, housing
2,000 tenant companies, which between them provide nearly 50,000 jobs
across the whole spectrum of knowledge-based activities.
Among the UK’s leading science facilities are the three Scottish Life
Science Centres of Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow, where scientists have
recently won an $18.6 million government grant to help study the proteins
that make up part of human cells and tissues. The Interdisciplinary
Research Collaboration in Proteomic Technology award will be used for a
number of research projects, including studying how cells in the immune
system communicate with one another, and the dynamic movements of proteins
within cells. Such research will have applications in combating diseases
such as arthritis, diabetes and cancer.
Dundee is a leader in bio-sciences and in many other areas of high
technology. The University of Dundee is currently in the midst of a $360
million campus redevelopment, which will see a number of new buildings
added to its city centre facilities. The $32.4 million Centre for
Interdisciplinary Research, for example, will form a significant extension
to the Wellcome Trust Biocentre on the university’s main campus, and will
house 250 scientists and support staff. A Clinical Research Centre is
being built at Ninewells Hospital, aimed at attracting international
researchers in disease prevention, nutrition and neuroscience. Also in the
city centre, a new creative media district, Seabraes Yards, is taking
shape. Occupying the 20-acre site of a former railway goods yard, this $90
million mixed-use project is one of Scotland’s most high-profile
investment schemes. The first facility to be completed is a new creative
media centre, vision@seabraes, in the former Seabraes Mill.
Another transformation is taking place across the sea in Northern Ireland,
where Belfast’s famous Harland & Wolff shipyard is being reinvented as a
science park. The shipyard was once a symbol of Belfast’s engineering
skills, and is the place where the Titanic was built. Now the city’s
Institute for Electronics, Communications and Information Technology (ECIT)
has opened in a new building in Titanic Quarter, the new name for the
area. An offshoot of Queen’s University, Belfast, the $72 million research
centre is headed by electrical engineer and entrepreneur John McCanny, one
of whose companies was behind the video technology used in Steven
Spielberg’s Jurassic Park films. ECIT describes itself as a “germinator”
for new businesses rather than an incubator. Its facilities include one of
Europe’s largest anechoic chambers, used to measure electromagnetic
radiation.
Energy
prices remain low as green revolution gathers pace
Although costs have risen over the past year, the UK still has some of the
lowest electricity prices in Europe, according to research by management
consultant company Accenture. British industry pays the lowest prices of
any of the 15 established member states of the European Union, while
household customers pay less than anywhere in Europe except for Finland.
Prices are highest in Germany, Italy and Ireland and this, says the
report, harms the competitiveness of these countries.
Prices varied widely across Europe, influenced by factors such as the
degree of openness and competition in a country’s energy sector and the
types of fuel used. Ireland, for example, uses a lot of peat to generate
power, while Italy uses fuel oil. In the UK, many power stations use
natural gas. The cost of this has risen recently, but the high degree of
competition among utility companies has helped to keep costs down. Since
the UK power sector was liberalised in the mid-1980s, many overseas firms
have invested in it. Across Europe the picture is less rosy, and the EC is
planning to set up an investigation into the electricity and gas markets.
The UK’s most powerful onshore wind farm to date has opened at Cefn Croes,
near Aberystwyth in Mid Wales. The $90 million facility includes 39
turbines up to 328ft high, and will produce 20 per cent of all onshore
wind energy in Wales, enough to power 42,000 homes. Falck Renewables, the
Italian firm that built the 58MW-capacity wind farm, said it would save
the equivalent of 4 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions over its
25-year lifetime. The principality currently has 20 onshore wind farms and
395 turbines.
German hydropower company Voith Siemens Hydro has acquired wave energy
systems company Wavegen, based in Inverness, Scotland. Wavegen was founded
in 1990 and builds and researches wave energy systems. Voith Siemens
Hydro, a division of the Voith group, says the acquisition will help it
take a leading development role in this innovative field.
Energy Minister Malcolm Wicks has announced that 14 new solar photovoltaic
(PV) energy projects across the UK will be awarded $2.4 million in
funding, bringing the amount the government has put into the sector since
2002 to $33.8 million. The government has a target of 10 per cent of all
electricity generated in the UK to come from renewable sources by 2010.
Some 180 medium- and large-scale projects have been assisted since the PV
project was set up. Recipients under the latest round of funding include
the London Transport Museum, housing projects in Yorkshire and the North
East and a church in Norfolk in Eastern England.
Applications are being invited under the second round of the Low Carbon
Technology Research, Development and Demonstration Grant. The scheme is
administered by the Carbon Trust and is aimed at research projects that
could help with the move towards a low-carbon economy. Awards have a
maximum value of $450,000 and the scheme is open to any UK business,
university, public sector or voluntary organisation, with collaborative
projects being particularly encouraged. The closing date for applications
is 22 July.
Around the regions
JP Morgan Invest, a new arm of JP Morgan Asset Management and part of the
US-based JP Morgan Chase & Co, is to open a new headquarters in Liverpool
in North West England. The company plans to provide financial education to
workers via the workplace and to provide resources for individuals to
assess how their assets might meet the needs of retirement. This comes as
new pensions legislation creates a more flexible environment but also one
in which employers need to make provisions to ensure their staff fully
understand their options for retirement planning. The investment will
create 150 jobs over five years.
Komatsu Reman, based in Birtley in North East England and one of seven
re-manufacturing facilities operated internationally by construction
equipment company Komatsu of Japan, is to expand its premises. The Birtley
plant supplies Komatsu engines, pumps and drives, rebuilt and tested with
the latest technological upgrades, to mining and construction companies
worldwide. The expansion will create 28 new jobs.
Genesis Genomics (GGUK), a biotech research corporation based in Canada,
is to establish a base in Newcastle, North East England. The company
specialises in skin cancer and sun-damaged skin testing and is currently
developing an early warning system to aid in the treatment of such
conditions and alert patients to their individual risk. It plans to use
its new base at Newcastle University to push the commercial development of
its word-first ‘skin physical’ test, which applies new advances in DNA
research to sun-damaged cells. Regional Development Agency One NorthEast
provided an R&D grant of $360,000 to help set up the project, which is
expected to create an initial 15 jobs.
A new business centre has been set up to help German companies looking to
establish a presence in North East England. The European Business Centre
is based at the Fabriam Centre, within Atmel’s headquarters in North
Tyneside. The office will offer telephone, broadband and administrative
services to companies looking for a permanent base, as well as assistance
with business contacts and accommodation for staff.
The success of a Danish-owned company in building a thriving business in
the North East was recognised recently by a royal visit by HRH the Duke of
Kent. E.J. Badekabiner (UK) Ltd, Europe’s leading manufacturer of pod
bathrooms, set up a base in Cramlington, Northumberland two years ago and
since then has invested $6 million and created 180 jobs. It supplies pod
bathrooms to a wide range of clients, including leading hotel chains,
university halls of residence and the Ministry of Defence.
Bekaert, a Belgian supplier to the textile machinery manufacturing
industry, is negotiating to buy the ECC card clothing division of Carclo,
including its UK facilities at Osset in Yorkshire and Humber. Carclo is a
global supplier of technical plastic components and specialist wire
products. Carding is a preparatory step in textile manufacturing; the
cylinders of carding machines are finished with card clothing, a
consumable product made from serrated carding wire.
Yorkshire Forward is launching a digital TV channel for the Yorkshire and
Humber region, with the aim of helping local media businesses promote
themselves in the UK and abroad. The RDA has invested $5.2 million in the
project, which will create up to 30 new jobs at the East Coast Media
Centre at Immingham. The channel, named Propellor, will start broadcasting
in the autumn and will showcase the region’s talents in all aspects of
film and TV production. SMEs from the media and digital industries are
being invited to work on the channel to promote their skills and develop
staff. Yorkshire and Humber has more than 110,000 people working in the
media and digital industries and last year produced more hours of
programming for major TV networks than any other region.
CAM-I, a US-based not-for-profit R&D group set up to serve needs in
manufacturing, service and public sector industries, has chosen a
pioneering Yorkshire Forward project to be its first affiliated European
member. The Virtual Enterprise Network (VEN), part-funded by the European
Union, is a programme that enables smaller companies to pool their
expertise to meet the needs of major public and private sector contracts.
The new alliance, announced at the recent Paris Air Show, means that
members will have access to some of the biggest and most innovative
companies in the aerospace sector. CAM-I members currently include Boeing,
IBM, Rockwell Collins, SAP and the US armed forces and Department of
Defense.
Advantage West Midlands has unveiled a three-year plan to support a group
of business clusters in strategic sectors, with $91.8 million to encourage
business collaboration and increase the region’s competitive advantage.
The ten clusters it has identified are transport (including automotive,
motorsport, rail and aerospace), building technologies, food and drink,
tourism and leisure, high value-added consumer products, business and
professional services, environmental technologies, screen image and sound,
and medical technologies. Each cluster has a manager and a cluster
opportunity group (COG) comprised of business people from the private
sector, which will advise the RDA on funding for specific products to help
the growth of each sector.
SAI Global Ltd, an Australian-based business publishing, training and
assurance organisation, has acquired Easy i Holdings Ltd, of Kenilworth in
the West Midlands. Easy i provides training and internal communications
solutions, using a range of media and advanced electronic techniques.
Anixter International, a distributor of communications products, wire and
cable, fasteners and other small parts to original equipment manufacturers
(OEMs), based in Illinois, is to acquire Infast Group plc for $72 million.
Infast, based in the West Midlands, is a distributor of fasteners and
other components to OEMs, and employs about 900 people at 25 distribution
centres in the UK and six in the US.
Freefoam, an Irish manufacturer of cellular foam PVC-UE building products,
is to set up a manufacturing centre alongside its existing distribution
centre in Northampton in the East Midlands. The Cork-based firm is
investing around $5.3 million in the expansion, which will see four
extrusion lines installed in the initial phase, and possibly a fifth later
in the year. The facilities in Northampton will occupy a total of 86,000
sq ft, and there will be enough floor space to house 18 lines in total.
Jefferies Group Inc, a US-based global investment bank and institutional
securities firm, has acquired private fund equity placement company Helix
Associates, based in London. Helix is a global placement agent, serving
private equity general partners; it also acts for the hedge funds of funds
and related product providers.
Halcyon Asset Management, a New York-based hedge fund manager that
controls $3 billion in assets, has opened a European research office in
London. The firm has been an investor in European securities for a
considerable time, but the new office will be its first physical presence
in the market.
Global Trader, an online derivatives broker based in South Africa, has
been approved by the UK regulator the Financial Services Authority to sell
products in Britain, and has moved its head office to London. The company
said that last year it made 300,000 trades, worth $5 billion, in contracts
for difference (CFDs) and spread betting products. It estimates
“conservatively” that by gaining FSA approval and moving to London, it can
expect to double its annual turnover to $10 billion.
Unilever, the Anglo-Dutch conglomerate based in London, is to sell its
global fragrance business Unilever Cosmetics International (UCI) to
US-based beauty products company Coty Inc for about $800 million. The
purchase, subject to the necessary regulatory approvals, includes perfume
licences for Calvin Klein, Cerruti, Vera Wang, Chloé and Lagerfeld
fragrances.
French power and control group Schneider Electric is to acquire the
Advanced Building Systems (ABS) operations in the EMEA region of Invensys,
the London-based automation, controls and process solution group. ABS EMEA
is a major provider of business management systems in the UK under the
Satchwell brand name, and has a strong presence across Europe and the
Middle East. The $150 million cash deal is subject to regulatory approval,
but is expected to be completed by the end of July.
COMSYS Information Technology Services Inc, a provider of technology
staffing services and solutions based in Houston, Texas, has opened a new
sales and recruiting office in Crawley, near Gatwick Airport in South East
England. The company has already been providing vendor management services
in the UK from an administrative office for more than a year. The addition
of full sales and recruiting capabilities comes in response to growing IT
staffing demand from US companies with operations in the UK.
Bureau Veritas UK, a subsidiary of French health and safety, environment
and social accountability management specialist Bureau Veritas, has
acquired the consulting division of Casella Consulting, based in Worcester
Park in Surrey, South East England. Casella Consulting provides
environmental and health and safety solutions, and employs 490 people in
17 offices across the UK. The division includes environmental consultancy
Casella Stanger; Casella Hazmat, an asbestos consultancy; Casella Winton,
a building health, safety and occupational hygiene consultancy; and
Casella Analytic, which offers laboratory testing services.
Walt Disney Internet Group, part of the US-based Walt Disney group, has
acquired Minds Eye Productions, an interactive television games developer
based in Milton Keynes, South East England. Minds Eye is the UK’s leading
developer in the growing interactive TV market. It has been at the
forefront of game development for the Sky Active platform, developing game
titles such as ‘Monopoly’ and ‘Who Wants To Be A Millionaire’.
Cape Technologies, a provider of revenue assurance solutions for mobile
phone operators based in the Irish Republic, has opened an office in
Reading, South East England. The new office will provide on-site service
and support for local customers. Cape’s flagship product is RevenueOffice,
an enterprise-wide revenue assurance program that analyses call-data
records and billing information in real time.
Dainippon Screen Manufacturing Co, a Japanese manufacturer of system
components for the pre-press and printing industries, has acquired Inca
Digital Printers, based in Cambridge, Eastern England, for around $52.6
million. Inca Digital is a specialist manufacturer of wide-format digital
inkjet printers and has built a global distribution network with Fujifilm
Sericol for its Eagle, Columbia and Spyder printers. In April this year,
the company won prestigious Queen’s Awards for Enterprise in the
Innovation and International Trade categories.
Cardtronics Inc, a Houston-base owner/operator of a network of 26,000
automatic teller machines around the US, has acquired Bank Machine, an
independent ATM operator with headquarters in Hatfield in Eastern England.
Bank Machine has over 1,000 ATMs in the UK, at locations such as shopping
centres, cinemas, convenience stores, pubs, clubs and post offices.
Xilinx, a global leader in the semiconductor industry, is to relocate its
European Intellectual Property Development Centre, currently based at
Mortonhall in Edinburgh, Scotland, to the Edinburgh Technopole. The move
will also see a major expansion of the operation, with a further 25 staff
being recruited to join the existing workforce of 32. The new jobs will be
in the fields of digital signal processing, connectivity and software
engineering. Xilinx, based in San Jose, California, is a world leader in
programmable semiconductor chips and employs over 3,000 people worldwide.
French IT service provider Sopra Group has acquired Scottish IT
consultancy Newell & Budge for an estimated $81 million. Over the past 20
years Newell & Budge has built up a wide client base that includes Royal
Bank of Scotland, easyJet, Standard Life and ScottishPower. The combined
firm will operate in the UK as Sopra Newell & Budge, and will mainly
target businesses in the financial services, public sector and
telecommunications markets.
Adler Manufacturing, a US-based producer of corporate business gifts, has
opened a new sales office in the Welsh capital Cardiff. It has recruited a
core sales team of 15 people, but anticipates that this will increase
significantly over the coming year. The family-owned firm opened its
European headquarters in Slough in South East England 15 years ago, and
now operates in 12 countries on four continents. It specialises in
high-quality gifts – such as diaries, pens, clocks and calculators –
targeting the mid to higher end of the market, and is the European market
leader in this sector.
The mayor of Tucson, Arizona has officially opened a new business
incubation suite at Technium OpTIC in North Wales. Mayor Bob Walkup
visited the Technium at St Asaph Business Park in Denbighshire as part of
a continuing relationship between the State of Arizona, the Welsh Opto-electronics
Forum and OpTIC and collaborations between opto-electronics companies in
the North Wales cluster and in Arizona. The new facility, christened the
Arizona Suite, will be available to users ranging from individuals
generating a business plan through to companies new to the European market
and seeking to gain a foothold.
US medical technology and healthcare company Gambro BCT, which acquired
Ivex Pharmaceuticals in 2004, is to invest nearly $13 million over the
next three years in its plant in Larne, Northern Ireland. The investment
by the Lakewood, Colorado-based company, which will create 86 new jobs, is
intended to enhance R&D activities and position Gambro Northern Ireland to
exploit new market opportunities, trading under the Ivex name. Investment
agency Invest NI has contributed $1.5 million to the project.
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