financialtimes annuitysales fellbyathird afterreforms

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18 FINANCIAL TIMES FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12 2014 COMPANIES Special Ayr Service parachutes in to Scottish vote debate Scottish banks are readying plans to become English following a Yes vote, which Gordon Brown hopes to forestall with a devolution plan by Burns Night. Lombard imagines how the Bard of Ayrshire might have responded.* “Wee, cow’rin, timorous risk committee What a panic’s in thy breastie It’s clear to all that Eck’s dominion May put the kybosh on the union. Thus Clydesdale, Lloyds and RBS Decide that maybe England’s best If balance sheets the winds are strewin’ Then Carney may avert their ruin. E’en TSB, from Dumfries hailin’, Foresees bold Swinney’s largesse failin’, And Tesco Bank, borne wi’ the tide, In Edinburgh nae mair may bide. Now Ian Cheshire and Dougie Flint Say plainly what before they’d hint, Tell Scotia no tae play the fool And loose the bogle ca’ed self-rule. Brown, pudin’ o’ the chieftain race For No votes shows his glowrin’ face. Thus Cameron, before so precious, With devo max becomes mair gracious. Still, rank is but the guinea’s stamp, Whilst threats from business to decamp Imply financial calculation Counts mair than self-determination. Too late? The fight they a’ hae fumbled The warnins dire nae nats have humbled. Wealth managers, doon in the mouth, A’ scramble tae send savin’s south. Yet Salmond’s plans may gang agley, If auld acquaintance wins the day Ignairin’ fiscal spats in time, Scots may vote No for auld lang syne.” * NB: a) Robert Burns would probably have voted Yes. b) Lombard’s poetic skills are closer to McGonagall’s than those of Burns. Dunhelming The Dunelm website is awash with soft furnishings, but it is a hard decision that sees chief executive Nick Wharton leaving the homeware retailer with immediate effect, writes Alison Smith. Succeeding the first outside boss of the family business set up on a Leicester market stall in 1979 is Will Adderley, executive deputy chairman, Mr Wharton’s predecessor, and representative of a family that still owns 54 per cent of the shares. The group and its share price have performed strongly under Mr Wharton. It seems to have come as a surprise to him as well as the City that the operational talents that won him the job less than four years ago were not enough to keep him in post. The process has been messy. It is rare for an executive to sit on the nomination committee as Mr Adderley does. It is also rare for nomination committee members to be contenders for the jobs they seek to fill – and for good reason – no matter how quickly they excuse themselves. If Mr Adderley had lost to the shortlisted external candidate, or Mr Wharton kept his job, the next nomination committee meeting could have been a bit tense. Meanwhile, the business produced another year of solid growth, crowned by a 25 per cent rise in the full-year dividend. It was a reminder why Dunelm trades on a premium to peers, with a 2015 price/earnings rating of about 17.5x. So diehard Adderley family fans can be content and, really, anyone else in the stock probably shouldn’t be there. Gold bugged South Africa’s subterranean gold miners labour between a rock and a hard place. As does Srinivasan Venkatakrishnan, chief executive of AngloGold Ashanti. His rock is the state, which insists the domestic chunk of the business should be debt-free. His hard place is 6.6 per cent shareholder John Paulson, who opposes the terms under which AngloGold’s international business may be spun off via a London listing. Mr Paulson supports a partial demerger, which should unlock value via the share price of the new business. The threat of mine nationalisation depresses prices for mining stocks with South African exposure. However, the hedge fund manager is unhappy with the scale of the rights issue – $2.1bn – that Anglogold would deploy to pay the newco’s debt down to $1.1bn. The fact that Anglogold would keep a fat 65 per cent stake also bugs him. Mr Venkatakrishnan may be able to compromise on the size of the rights. But the untidy tie to South Africa looks like a sop to politicians. After three years of steep falls in the gold price, neither investors nor governments are proving easy to deal with. [email protected] Dunelm: [email protected] Jonathan Guthrie LOMBARD By Josephine Cumbo, Pensions Correspondent Annuity sales dropped by a third in the months after George Osborne announced radical reforms of the UK pension rules, according to industry figures. In the second quarter of this year, annuity sales fell to £1.8bn, from £2.5bn in the previous three months – a drop of 32 per cent, as sav- ers took advantage of a measure in the March Budget relaxing the require- ment to buy retirement income products. On a year-on-year basis, annuity sales fell even fur- ther: from £3.1bn to £1.8bn, or 42 per cent, according to data compiled by the Asso- ciation of British Insurers, the trade body for pension providers. This sharp fall in sales followed the chancellor’s announcement that his reform of pension rules would mean “no one would have to buy an annuity”. Under the changes that came into effect on March 19 – the day after the Budget – individuals with total pen- sion savings of £30,000 or less are now permitted to take this money in cash. Previously, only savers with less than £18,000 were allowed to do this. “The 2014 pension reforms radically over- hauled the pensions mar- ket,” said Yvonne Braun, head of savings, retirement and social care with the ABI. “[The sales figures] suggest customers with smaller pots have immedi- ately started to use the new freedoms to take their cash lump sum, which is some- thing the industry has cam- paigned for.” When the remainder of the chancellor’s pension reforms take effect in April, all savers in defined contri- bution pension schemes will be able to take their savings as a cash lump from the age of 55, subject to tax at their marginal rate. Some of the country’s top annuity providers forecast that this will result in a continuing contraction of the market into 2015. Legal & General recently warned that it expects its individual annuity volumes to fall a further 50 per cent in 2015. “It’s not surprising to see annuity sales plummet in the wake of the Budget announcement,” said Tom McPhail, head of pensions research with Hargreaves Lansdown, the investment managers. “We know from our own research that many investors are treading water to see what their options are before committing to a retirement income strat- egy.” By contrast, sales of income drawdown plans which allow retirees to draw a regular retirement income from funds that remain invested rose sharply as savers turned their backs on annuities, which provide a guaranteed income for life. Drawdown sales for the second quarter rose to £669m, from £487m in the previous quarter, as some providers relaxed the mini- mum investment require- ments on their plans to attract customers with lower pension savings. Annuity sales fell by a third after reforms GENERAL FINANCIAL Second quarter saw 32% plunge Further changes to take effect in April MasterCard has definitively lost its seven-year legal quest to overturn an EU antitrust decision, leaving it vulnerable to hefty damages claims and further regula- tory action to cap interbank fees for card transactions. The ruling from the EU’s highest court yesterday dis- missed MasterCard’s appeal, closing an antitrust saga that started in 1992 when British retailers complained about being overcharged for cross-border card transac- tions. Although the out- come was widely expected, the legal certainty the judg- ment brings could presage a new era for European card companies, with big com- pensation claims and tightly regulated fees that are more transparent to consumers. Most card users are una- ware of the charges. About €13bn a year is paid by retailers in Europe to banks for handling transactions, about 70 per cent of which is accounted for by inter- bank fees. While retailers and regu- lators want to stamp out profiteering through over- charging, the big two card groups MasterCard and Visa Europe – see the fees as underpinning cheap and secure service with benefits such as insurance and loy- alty rewards. The defeat confirms the European Commission deci- sion in 2007 that found the group restricted competi- tion and inflated prices for retailers and consumers. Following that decision, MasterCard cut its inter- bank rates while it awaited the appeal. Yesterday MasterCard said the “negative judgment will have little or no impact” on how it operates with regard to these cross- border interchange fees, where a consumer’s bank levies on a merchant’s bank for retail sales transactions. The judgment gives some momentum to damages claims against MasterCard. Alex Barker MasterCard loses appeal on foreign bank fees GENERAL FINANCIAL Recruit, Japan’s biggest staffing company, is plan- ning to raise $1.8bn through an initial public offering next month, in what would be one of the country’s larg- est listings this year. The growth of Recruit – which was hit by a corrup- tion scandal that shook Japan’s political world in the late-1980s – has hinged on the rise of temporary employment that has accompanied Prime Minis- ter Shinzo Abe’s economic revival plan dubbed “Abe- nomics”. The number of non-per- manent employees includ- ing part-timers and contract workers has risen to nearly 40 per cent of Japan’s work- force from less than a third a decade ago, as companies coped with sluggish eco- nomic growth by bringing down labour costs. For the fiscal year ended in March, Recruit reported a 14 per cent year-on-year increase in revenue to a record $11bn, about half of which was generated from temporary staffing services. Stock is tentatively priced at Y2,800 a share, which would value Recruit at $15bn – a larger market cap- italisation than Swiss staff- ing group Adecco’s $13bn. The valuation puts Recruit on a forward price/ earnings ratio of 24, com- pared with Adecco’s 13. Recruit’s offering is sched- uled for October 16. Analysts say Recruit has benefited as fees for job placement ads rose on the back of Japan’s tighter labour market. Kana Inagaki Japanese staff ing group Recruit plans $1.8bn IPO SUPPORT SERVICES BlackBerry has bought UK start-up Movirtu, a “virtual sim” company that lets users operate multiple phone numbers and profiles on a single device, as the Canadian handset-maker steps up its turnround strat- egy of trying to woo corpo- rate consumers. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Six-year-old Movirtu had previously raised $5.5m from a number of investors, including private equity group Gray Ghost Ventures and the non-profit Grass- roots Business Fund, which focuses on enterprises that help the poor in developing countries. BlackBerry’s share of the smartphone marketed has dropped precipitously in recent years as consumers shifted allegiance to Apple and Google Android devices. It makes both handsets and the software that runs on them, and is banking on getting more businesses to use its products as work tools, building on its traditional strength in data security and encryption. Both Apple and Google are taking aim at the corpo- rate market. Google bought a similar company to Mov- irtu in May, Divide, which provides split profiles on smartphones to separate work and personal data. The market for technolo- gies to manage corporate mobile devices is expected to grow 30 per cent a year and reach $1.8bn by 2016, according to research by technology group IDC. The Movirtu acquisition taps the trend of employees conducting ever more of their personal and work life on tablets and smartphones – the so-called “bring your own device” generation. Sally Davies BlackBerry acquires UK ‘virtual sim’ tech start-up MOBILE & TELECOMS 40% Number of non-permanent staff in Japan’s workforce China’s anti-monopoly regulator has fined Volkswagen’s Audi and Fiat’s Chrysler for fixing the price of cars and auto parts, as part of a probe into foreign carmakers that has international investors crying foul, write Lucy Hornby and Charles Clover. Luxury carmakers have already announced a change in the way they sell replacement parts in China, as the National Development and Reform Commission targets foreign companies for pricing violations in industries including pharmaceuticals, baby formula and software development. The NDRC’s local bureau in Hubei province yesterday fined FAW-Volkswagen Sales, which markets Audis in the country, Rmb249m ($40.6m). It also fined eight Audi dealerships a total of Rmb29m. Chrysler’s China unit was hit with a Rmb32m fine, and three dealerships were levied a combined Rmb2m, the NDRC said. “We accept the penalty and have been optimising the management processes and sales and dealership structure,” said Audi in China. Fiat Chrysler could not be reached for comment. The fines came the day after Chinese Premier Li Keqiang reassured foreign investors their money was still welcome, and that they would be treated equally to their local counterparts. In recent weeks, foreign chambers of commerce have suggested that the probes have unfairly targeted foreign companies – an accusation Mr Li has denied. Xu Kunlin, a senior official at NDRC, said yesterday: “If people say we are selective [towards foreign companies], the truth is that we do not have the time and energy to select. We do not select which companies to look into – the consumers do the selecting. We investigate the companies where we receive well-grounded complaints.” He added that the complaint against Audi arose in February following a discrepancy in repair appraisals after an accident between an Audi and a taxi. In a rare rift between foreign companies, European auto parts suppliers this week accused the carmakers of forcing them to sign exclusivity deals that artificially inflate prices – in effect supporting the NDRC’s accusations. Since the beginning of the year, foreign car companies including Mercedes, BMW, Chrysler and Audi have been under scrutiny for possible infractions of China’s 2008 Anti-Monopoly Law by allegedly fixing the retail prices charged by their downstream dealers. The regulator fined Volkswagen’s joint China venture, which makes Audis in China, for fixing the price of cars Getty China punishes Audi and Chrysler COMPANIES ROUND-UP George Osborne: relaxed the rules on buying annuities ‘Customers with smaller pots have started to use the new freedoms to take their cash’ More news at FT.com Luluemon sees shares rise after testing year Shares of Lululemon, the maker of high-end yoga wear, were jumping yesterday. The stock was up 15 per cent in pre- market trading as the Canadian company reported second-quarter profits and revenue that topped forecasts. Lululemon had net income of $48m or 33 cents per share, down from $56.5m or 39 cents a share, in the year-ago quarter. But revenues were $390.7m, up from $344m. Both profits and revenues beat expectations for 29 cents per share and $377m in revenue. Although the retailer’s same-store sales fell 5 per cent in the quarter to August 3, the better-than- expected results sent the shares surging. Lululemon also raised its guidance for revenue for fiscal 2014 to a range of $1.78bn to $1.8bn, compared with expecta- tions for $1.78bn. Once one of the hottest retailers, Lululemon has had a testing last year. It was forced to recall its black luon yoga pant after the material turned out to be too sheer. Shares of Lululemon, a once-loved stock, are down over 34 per cent so far this year. www.ft.com/retail Entertainments FT ENTERTAINMENTS Entertainments Advertising: UK: +44 20 7873 4922 US: +1 212 641 6500 ASIA: +852 2905 5554 Contracts & Tenders Business Opportunities Readers are strongly recommended to take appropriate professional advice before entering into obligations.

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18 ★ † FINANCIAL TIMES FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 12 2014

COMPANIES

Special Ayr Service parachutes in to Scottish vote debate

Scottish banks are readying plans tobecome English following a Yes vote, whichGordon Brown hopes to forestall with adevolution plan by Burns Night. Lombardimagines how the Bard of Ayrshire mighthave responded.*“Wee, cow’rin, timorous risk committeeWhat a panic’s in thy breastieIt’s clear to all that Eck’s dominionMay put the kybosh on the union.

Thus Clydesdale, Lloyds and RBSDecide that maybe England’s bestIf balance sheets the winds are strewin’Then Carney may avert their ruin.

E’en TSB, from Dumfries hailin’,

Foresees bold Swinney’s largesse failin’,And Tesco Bank, borne wi’ the tide,In Edinburgh nae mair may bide.

Now Ian Cheshire and Dougie FlintSay plainly what before they’d hint,Tell Scotia no tae play the foolAnd loose the bogle ca’ed self-rule.

Brown, pudin’ o’ the chieftain raceFor No votes shows his glowrin’ face.Thus Cameron, before so precious,With devo max becomes mair gracious.

Still, rank is but the guinea’s stamp,Whilst threats from business to decampImply financial calculationCounts mair than self-determination.

Too late? The fight they a’ hae fumbledThe warnins dire nae nats have humbled.Wealth managers, doon in the mouth,A’ scramble tae send savin’s south.

Yet Salmond’s plans may gang agley,If auld acquaintance wins the dayIgnairin’ fiscal spats in time,

Scots may vote No for auld lang syne.”* NB: a) Robert Burns would probably havevoted Yes. b) Lombard’s poetic skills arecloser to McGonagall’s than those of Burns.

DunhelmingThe Dunelm website is awash with softfurnishings, but it is a hard decision thatsees chief executive Nick Wharton leavingthe homeware retailer with immediateeffect, writes Alison Smith.

Succeeding the first outside boss of thefamily business set up on a Leicestermarket stall in 1979 is Will Adderley,executive deputy chairman, Mr Wharton’spredecessor, and representative of a familythat still owns 54 per cent of the shares.

The group and its share price haveperformed strongly under Mr Wharton. Itseems to have come as a surprise to himas well as the City that the operationaltalents that won him the job less thanfour years ago were not enough to keephim in post.

The process has been messy. It is rarefor an executive to sit on the nomination

committee as Mr Adderley does. It is alsorare for nomination committee members tobe contenders for the jobs they seek to fill– and for good reason – no matter howquickly they excuse themselves. If MrAdderley had lost to the shortlistedexternal candidate, or Mr Wharton kepthis job, the next nomination committeemeeting could have been a bit tense.

Meanwhile, the business producedanother year of solid growth, crowned bya 25 per cent rise in the full-year dividend.It was a reminder why Dunelm trades ona premium to peers, with a 2015price/earnings rating of about 17.5x. Sodiehard Adderley family fans can becontent and, really, anyone else in thestock probably shouldn’t be there.

Gold buggedSouth Africa’s subterranean gold minerslabour between a rock and a hard place.As does Srinivasan Venkatakrishnan, chiefexecutive of AngloGold Ashanti. His rockis the state, which insists the domesticchunk of the business should be debt-free.

His hard place is 6.6 per cent shareholderJohn Paulson, who opposes the termsunder which AngloGold’s internationalbusiness may be spun off via a Londonlisting.

Mr Paulson supports a partial demerger,which should unlock value via the shareprice of the new business. The threat ofmine nationalisation depresses prices formining stocks with South Africanexposure.

However, the hedge fund manager isunhappy with the scale of the rights issue– $2.1bn – that Anglogold would deploy topay the newco’s debt down to $1.1bn. Thefact that Anglogold would keep a fat 65per cent stake also bugs him.

Mr Venkatakrishnan may be able tocompromise on the size of the rights. Butthe untidy tie to South Africa looks like asop to politicians. After three years ofsteep falls in the gold price, neitherinvestors nor governments are provingeasy to deal with.

[email protected]: [email protected]

JonathanGuthrieLOMBARD

By Josephine Cumbo,Pensions Correspondent

Annuity sales dropped by athird in the months afterGeorge Osborne announcedradical reforms of the UKpension rules, according toindustry figures.

In the second quarter ofthis year, annuity sales fellto £1.8bn, from £2.5bn in theprevious three months – adrop of 32 per cent, as sav-ers took advantage of ameasure in the MarchBudget relaxing the require-ment to buy retirementincome products.

On a year-on-year basis,annuity sales fell even fur-ther: from £3.1bn to £1.8bn,or 42 per cent, according todata compiled by the Asso-ciation of British Insurers,the trade body for pensionproviders.

This sharp fall in salesfollowed the chancellor’sannouncement that hisreform of pension ruleswould mean “no one wouldhave to buy an annuity”.

Under the changes thatcame into effect on March 19– the day after the Budget –individuals with total pen-sion savings of £30,000 orless are now permitted totake this money in cash.Previously, only savers with

less than £18,000 wereallowed to do this.

“The 2014 pensionreforms radically over-hauled the pensions mar-ket,” said Yvonne Braun,head of savings, retirementand social care with theABI. “[The sales figures]suggest customers withsmaller pots have immedi-ately started to use the newfreedoms to take their cashlump sum, which is some-thing the industry has cam-paigned for.”

When the remainder of

the chancellor’s pensionreforms take effect in April,all savers in defined contri-bution pension schemes willbe able to take their savingsas a cash lump from the ageof 55, subject to tax at theirmarginal rate.

Some of the country’s topannuity providers forecastthat this will result in acontinuing contraction ofthe market into 2015. Legal& General recently warnedthat it expects its individualannuity volumes to fall afurther 50 per cent in 2015.

“It’s not surprising to seeannuity sales plummet inthe wake of the Budgetannouncement,” said TomMcPhail, head of pensionsresearch with HargreavesLansdown, the investmentmanagers. “We know fromour own research that manyinvestors are treading waterto see what their options arebefore committing to aretirement income strat-egy.”

By contrast, sales ofincome drawdown plans –which allow retirees todraw a regular retirementincome from funds thatremain invested – rosesharply as savers turnedtheir backs on annuities,which provide a guaranteedincome for life.

Drawdown sales for thesecond quarter rose to£669m, from £487m in theprevious quarter, as someproviders relaxed the mini-mum investment require-ments on their plans toattract customers withlower pension savings.

Annuity salesfell by a thirdafter reformsGENERAL FINANCIAL

Second quartersaw 32% plunge

Further changes totake effect in April

MasterCard has definitivelylost its seven-year legalquest to overturn an EUantitrust decision, leaving itvulnerable to hefty damagesclaims and further regula-tory action to cap interbankfees for card transactions.

The ruling from the EU’shighest court yesterday dis-missed MasterCard’s appeal,closing an antitrust sagathat started in 1992 whenBritish retailers complainedabout being overcharged forcross-border card transac-tions. Although the out-come was widely expected,the legal certainty the judg-ment brings could presage anew era for European cardcompanies, with big com-pensation claims andtightly regulated fees thatare more transparent toconsumers.

Most card users are una-ware of the charges. About€13bn a year is paid byretailers in Europe to banksfor handling transactions,about 70 per cent of whichis accounted for by inter-bank fees.

While retailers and regu-lators want to stamp outprofiteering through over-charging, the big two cardgroups – MasterCard andVisa Europe – see the feesas underpinning cheap andsecure service with benefitssuch as insurance and loy-alty rewards.

The defeat confirms theEuropean Commission deci-sion in 2007 that found thegroup restricted competi-tion and inflated prices forretailers and consumers.Following that decision,MasterCard cut its inter-bank rates while it awaitedthe appeal.

Yesterday MasterCardsaid the “negative judgmentwill have little or noimpact” on how it operateswith regard to these cross-border interchange fees,where a consumer’s banklevies on a merchant’s bankfor retail sales transactions.

The judgment gives somemomentum to damagesclaims against MasterCard.

Alex Barker

MasterCardloses appealon foreignbank fees

GENERAL FINANCIAL

Recruit, Japan’s biggeststaffing company, is plan-ning to raise $1.8bn throughan initial public offeringnext month, in what wouldbe one of the country’s larg-est listings this year.

The growth of Recruit –which was hit by a corrup-tion scandal that shookJapan’s political world inthe late-1980s – has hingedon the rise of temporaryemployment that hasaccompanied Prime Minis-ter Shinzo Abe’s economicrevival plan dubbed “Abe-nomics”.

The number of non-per-manent employees includ-ing part-timers and contractworkers has risen to nearly40 per cent of Japan’s work-force from less than a thirda decade ago, as companiescoped with sluggish eco-nomic growth by bringingdown labour costs.

For the fiscal year ended

in March, Recruit reporteda 14 per cent year-on-yearincrease in revenue to arecord $11bn, about half ofwhich was generated fromtemporary staffing services.

Stock is tentatively pricedat Y2,800 a share, whichwould value Recruit at$15bn – a larger market cap-italisation than Swiss staff-ing group Adecco’s $13bn.

The valuation putsRecruit on a forward price/earnings ratio of 24, com-pared with Adecco’s 13.Recruit’s offering is sched-uled for October 16.

Analysts say Recruit hasbenefited as fees for jobplacement ads rose on theback of Japan’s tighterlabour market.

Kana Inagaki

Japanese staff ing groupRecruit plans $1.8bn IPO

SUPPORT SERVICES

BlackBerry has bought UKstart-up Movirtu, a “virtualsim” company that letsusers operate multiplephone numbers and profileson a single device, as theCanadian handset-makersteps up its turnround strat-egy of trying to woo corpo-rate consumers.

Terms of the deal werenot disclosed.

Six-year-old Movirtu hadpreviously raised $5.5mfrom a number of investors,including private equitygroup Gray Ghost Venturesand the non-profit Grass-roots Business Fund, whichfocuses on enterprises thathelp the poor in developingcountries.

BlackBerry’s share of thesmartphone marketed hasdropped precipitously inrecent years as consumersshifted allegiance to Appleand Google Androiddevices. It makes both

handsets and the softwarethat runs on them, and isbanking on getting morebusinesses to use itsproducts as work tools,building on its traditionalstrength in data securityand encryption.

Both Apple and Googleare taking aim at the corpo-rate market. Google boughta similar company to Mov-irtu in May, Divide, whichprovides split profiles onsmartphones to separatework and personal data.

The market for technolo-gies to manage corporatemobile devices is expectedto grow 30 per cent a yearand reach $1.8bn by 2016,according to research bytechnology group IDC.

The Movirtu acquisitiontaps the trend of employeesconducting ever more oftheir personal and work lifeon tablets and smartphones– the so-called “bring yourown device” generation.

Sally Davies

BlackBerry acquires UK‘virtual sim’ tech start­up

MOBILE & TELECOMS

40%Number of non­permanentstaff in Japan’s workforce

China’s anti­monopolyregulator has finedVolkswagen’s Audi and Fiat’sChrysler for fixing the priceof cars and auto parts, aspart of a probe into foreigncarmakers that hasinternational investors cryingfoul, write Lucy Hornbyand Charles Clover.

Luxury carmakers havealready announced a changein the way they sellreplacement parts in China,as the National Developmentand Reform Commissiontargets foreign companiesfor pricing violations inindustries includingpharmaceuticals, babyformula and softwaredevelopment.

The NDRC’s local bureau

in Hubei province yesterdayfined FAW­Volkswagen Sales,which markets Audis in thecountry, Rmb249m($40.6m). It also fined eightAudi dealerships a total ofRmb29m.

Chrysler’s China unit washit with a Rmb32m fine, andthree dealerships were levieda combined Rmb2m, theNDRC said.

“We accept the penaltyand have been optimisingthe management processesand sales and dealershipstructure,” said Audi inChina. Fiat Chrysler couldnot be reached for comment.

The fines came the dayafter Chinese Premier LiKeqiang reassured foreigninvestors their money was

still welcome, and that theywould be treated equally totheir local counterparts.

In recent weeks, foreignchambers of commerce havesuggested that the probeshave unfairly targetedforeign companies – anaccusation Mr Li has denied.

Xu Kunlin, a senior officialat NDRC, said yesterday: “Ifpeople say we are selective[towards foreign companies],the truth is that we do nothave the time and energy toselect. We do not selectwhich companies to lookinto – the consumers do theselecting. We investigate thecompanies where we receivewell­grounded complaints.”

He added that thecomplaint against Audi arose

in February following adiscrepancy in repairappraisals after an accidentbetween an Audi and a taxi.

In a rare rift betweenforeign companies, Europeanauto parts suppliers thisweek accused the carmakersof forcing them to signexclusivity deals thatartificially inflate prices – ineffect supporting theNDRC’s accusations.

Since the beginning of theyear, foreign car companiesincluding Mercedes, BMW,Chrysler and Audi have beenunder scrutiny for possibleinfractions of China’s 2008Anti­Monopoly Law byallegedly fixing the retailprices charged by theirdownstream dealers.

The regulator fined Volkswagen’s joint China venture, which makes Audis in China, for fixing the price of cars Getty

China punishes Audi and Chrysler

COMPANIES ROUND­UP

George Osborne: relaxed therules on buying annuities

‘Customers withsmaller pots havestarted to use thenew freedoms totake their cash’

More news atFT.com

●Luluemon sees sharesrise after testing yearShares of Lululemon, themaker of high­end yogawear, were jumpingyesterday. The stock wasup 15 per cent in pre­market trading as theCanadian companyreported second­quarterprofits and revenue thattopped forecasts.

Lululemon had netincome of $48m or 33cents per share, downfrom $56.5m or 39 centsa share, in the year­agoquarter. But revenueswere $390.7m, up from$344m. Both profits andrevenues beat expectationsfor 29 cents per share and$377m in revenue.

Although the retailer’ssame­store sales fell 5 percent in the quarter toAugust 3, the better­than­expected results sent theshares surging.

Lululemon also raised itsguidance for revenue forfiscal 2014 to a range of$1.78bn to $1.8bn,compared with expecta­tions for $1.78bn. Onceone of the hottestretailers, Lululemon hashad a testing last year. Itwas forced to recall itsblack luon yoga pant afterthe material turned out tobe too sheer. Shares ofLululemon, a once­lovedstock, are down over 34per cent so far this year.www.ft.com/retail

Entertainments

FT ENTERTAINMENTS

Entertainments Advertising:UK: +44 20 7873 4922US: +1 212 641 6500 ASIA: +852 2905 5554

Contracts & Tenders

Business OpportunitiesReaders are strongly recommended to take appropriate professional advice beforeentering into obligations.

SEPTEMBER 12 2014 Section:Companies Time: 11/9/2014 - 20:04 User: crawcourk Page Name: CONEWS1, Part,Page,Edition: LON, 18, 1