Business
Business news live: The firms bidding for Costa Coffee and Nvidia share price falls
Costa Coffee: How much will it cost and what happens next?
Reports suggest Costa Coffee could be on the market for around £2bn.
That’s half of what it was bought for six years ago but coffee sales in the UK are below the level now from when Coca-Cola bought it.
There are more than 2,000 stores in the UK and Costa operates across 50 different countries, though Coca-Cola have not released figures on total stores or employees worldwide.
Costa has about 38% of the UK coffee market share according to research, but it is under pressure from cheaper alternatives like Gregg’s, and more upmarket offerings such as local specialist coffee boutiques or independent cafes.
Add in increased employer costs this year in the UK and it’s clearly a tough time for many businesses right now – though it’s still one which recorded revenues of £1.2bn in 2023.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 10:00
Costa Coffee up for sale: Who wants to buy it?
Costa Coffee is a UK high street staple. You see it pretty much everywhere: main shops, inside shopping centres, even within petrol stations in a tiny kiosk or machine.
But it’s not a standalone company; Costa was bought by Coca-Cola in 2019 for nearly £4bn.
Since then the drinks firm has struggled to integrate it properly within its wider ecosystem and doesn’t feel the brand is generating the return it wanted. So, it’s up for sale – potentially at least, as one of several possible outcomes of a review.
At present there are three main parties who seem to be at least exploring a deal.
Apollo Global Management is the eventual parent of restaurants like Wagamama, and Bar Burrito.
KKR is a US-based private equity firm who have also held early talks, according to reports.
And Sky News initially reported a “small number” of firms who may have had exploratory talks.
There’s still a chance a sale doesn’t go through, but bids are expected in October.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 09:45
Reeves ‘plots tax raid on landlords’ to help plug £40bn Budget black hole
The plans aim to make the Treasury £2bn, as it attempts to avoid breaking the chancellor’s “red lines” outlined before the general election, which included not increasing VAT, income tax or national insurance.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 09:10
Lottery firm valued at £9.6bn after Czech owner sells part of stake
Czech tycoon Karel Komarek’s investment vehicle has sold a stake in Allwyn in a deal valuing the National Lottery operator at 11.2 billion euros (£9.6 billion).
Allwyn said central European investment fund J&T Arch has snapped up a 4.27% stake in the business from Mr Komarek’s KKCG business, which remains the majority owner.
In 2019, KKCG took 100% control of European lottery group Sazka Group before rebranding it as Allwyn.
It was awarded the licence to run the National Lottery in 2022.
Later that year, Allwyn then agreed a takeover deal for Camelot, which had previously run the UK’s National Lottery licence.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 08:45
Nvidia: Shares fall despite $46.7bn earnings beating expectations
Last night was a key event in the stock markets as Nvidia reported their earnings for the last quarter.
Without going into the finances in too much detail, $46.7bn in earnings was more than expected and earnings per share was higher than analysts’ anticipated levels too – but the share price fell after data centre revenue fell $0.2bn short of predictions.
It fell around 3 per cent initially but has since bounced back in pre-market trading, with the Nasdaq firm set to open 1.9 per cent lower according to the latest futures markets.
Nvidia is the biggest company in the world, valued at over $4tn, and the share price hit a new all time high at just over $183 earlier this month.
It’ll be around $177-178 later this afternoon when markets open, if it stays down in the 2-3 per cent range.
It’s value is so carefully watched as it makes up a significant chunk of many funds, including a basic tracker of US companies or more specifically tech-focused ones.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 08:30
Royal Mail launches services to help customers post to US after new charges
Royal Mail has announced it will be the first international postal operator to launch new services so people can continue sending goods to the United States ahead of new customs requirements coming into effect on Friday.
From today, Royal Mail customers can use the company’s new postal delivery duties paid (PDDP) services.
The move follows a US executive order last month which said that goods valued at 800 dollars or less will no longer be exempt from import duties and taxes from August 29.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 08:15
FTSE 100 in small rise after opening
The FTSE 100 fell yesterday as an afternoon slump left it around 0.1 per cent down for the day – and it’s up by less than that at the start of trading, about 0.06 per cent in the green.
There are no massive names reporting today but a few such as the Macfarlane Group and PPHE Hotel Group – which owns brands like Park Plaza, Radisson Collection and others – are some of the smaller or FTSE 250 firms set for reporting.
Karl Matchett28 August 2025 08:06
Business
Trump administration in advanced talks for a rescue package for Spirit Airlines, source says
A Spirit commercial airliner prepares to land at San Diego International Airport in San Diego, California, U.S., January 18, 2024.
Mike Blake | Reuters
The Trump administration is in advanced talks for a financing package for Spirit Airlines as the carrier is facing the risk of a liquidation, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Spirit had been facing a potentially imminent liquidation, people familiar with the matter told CNBC last week, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss matters that had not yet been made public. The Dania Beach, Florida-based carrier in August filed for its second Chapter 11 bankruptcy in less than a year, after it struggled to increase revenue to cover rising costs.
President Donald Trump hinted at potential government aid on Tuesday, telling CNBC’s “Squawk Box“, “Spirit’s in trouble, and I’d love somebody to buy Spirit. It’s 14,000 jobs, and maybe the federal government should help that one out.”
The White House didn’t immediately comment.
“We are hopeful that the government will recognize the needs for emergency funds especially in the current economic environment,” a spokesperson for the Associated of Flight Attendants-CWA, which represents Spirit’s cabin crews, said in a statement. “The last thing our economy needs is tens of thousands more people out of work and the last thing the travelling public needs is fewer choices in air travel.”
The terms of the financing deal weren’t immediately known. The Wall Street Journal earlier reported that the talks were in an advanced stage.
The U.S. airline industry accepted more than $50 billion in taxpayer aid to weather the Covid-19 pandemic, which is still its biggest-ever crisis, but those funds weren’t handed to one specific airline. Some of the aid gave the U.S. government stock warrants for airlines.
Airlines also received a government bailout following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, but that money was also for more than one company. The U.S. in 2008-2009 also bailed out the auto industry during the financial crisis and took stakes in manufacturers.
The Trump administration has taken equity stakes in some companies it deemed critical to national security like Intel and USA RareEarth, though Spirit stands out as it is in bankruptcy.
In February, Spirit said it expected to exit bankruptcy in late spring or early summer, telling a U.S. court that it would shrink and focus its planes on high-demand routes and travel periods. Pilot and flight attendant unions had also made concessions, including going on furlough in recent months, in a bid to help Spirit survive.
But jet fuel prices have nearly doubled in some parts of the U.S. since then, further adding to challenges for Spirit and the rest of the airline industry.
As a low-fare airline that also faces competition from larger carriers with their own no-frills, basic economy offerings, it has grown harder for Spirit to cover expenses. Spirit had introduced extra-legroom seats and other premium options to try to cater to higher-spending customers.
Business
United Airlines slashes 2026 forecast as fuel costs surge, but demand remains strong
A United Airlines plane approaches the runway at Denver International Airport on March 23, 2026.
Al Drago | Getty Images
United Airlines slashed its 2026 earnings outlook Tuesday as it grapples with a surge in jet fuel prices due to the Iran war, but CEO Scott Kirby said demand remains strong.
United said it could earn between $7 and $11 a share on an adjusted basis this year, down from its previous forecast of between $12 and $14 a share that it released in January, more than a month before the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran.
Wall Street had already been adjusting its expectations for the year because of higher fuel. Analysts polled by LSEG had forecast that United’s adjusted, full-year earnings would be $9.58 a share.
The carrier, like others, is trimming some of its planned flying this year to reduce costs. Lower capacity can drive up airfare, with fewer seats on the market.
For the second quarter, United forecast adjusted earnings of between $1 and $2 a share. Analysts had expected $2.08 a share for the quarter. United estimated its fuel price would average $4.30 a gallon in the second quarter.
The carrier said it expects its revenue to cover between 40% to 50% of the fuel price increase in the second quarter, as much as 80% in the third and between 85% and 100% by the end of the year.
United reiterated that it is tweaking its schedules to adjust to higher fuel, with capacity in the second half of the year expected to be flat to up about 2% on the year. It grew 3.4% in the first quarter.
Here is what United Airlines reported for the quarter that ended March 31 compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on estimates compiled by LSEG:
- Earnings per share: $1.19 adjusted vs. $1.07 expected
- Revenue: $14.61 billion vs. $14.37 billion expected
Revenue, profit climb
Revenue overall rose more than 10%, to $14.61 billion, up from the $13.21 billion from a year before.
For the first quarter, United’s net income rose 80% to $699 million, or $2.14 cents a share, compared with net income of $387 million, or $1.16 cents a share, a year earlier. Adjusted for one-time items, United posted earnings per share of $1.19 a share.
Unit revenue was up in every reported segment, including for domestic U.S. flights, where it rose 7.9% to $7.9 billion from a year earlier, signaling strong pricing power in the quarter.
Jet fuel in the U.S. was going for $3.51 a gallon on Monday, down from the high on April 2 of $4.78, but far above the $2.39 on Feb. 27, the day before the first attacks on Iran, according to prices assessed by Platts.
Airline executives have said demand has remained robust even while they have increased fares and checked bag fees as they pass along higher fuel prices to customers.
“Bookings are strong,” Kirby told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday.
United and the rest of the industry have become more reliant on travelers who are willing to shell out more for flights and bigger seats, and who are less affected by price increases.
Alaska Airlines pulled its 2026 forecast on Monday because of higher fuel prices. It has raised fares about $25, CEO Ben Minicucci told analysts Tuesday.
Merger ambitions?
Kirby is likely to face questions on the company’s 10:30 a.m. ET earnings call on Wednesday about his ambitions for a merger with another airline.
Kirby floated a potential merger with American Airlines to a Trump administration official earlier this year, according to a person familiar with the matter, but President Donald Trump said he was against the idea.
“I don’t like having them merge,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Tuesday morning. He said he would like someone to buy struggling discount carrier Spirit but he also suggested that the federal government could “help that one out.”
American also rejected the idea of a merger with United last week.
When asked about floating the merger, Kirby declined to confirm the meeting to CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday but said: “We want to create a truly global airline.”
Kirby reiterated his view that the U.S. is at a deficit in international air travel as customers fly on international competitors, some of which are state owned.
Business
Energy prices ‘could stay high into winter’
NI Affairs Committee told even if conflict ends immediately it will take time for supply chains to return to normal.
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