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Battery maker Alexander Technologies confident as it introduces new ways to speed up development to manufacturing cycle

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The company has been developing products for the drone market

Workers at Peterlee's Alexander Battery Technologies

Production line workers at Peterlee’s Alexander Battery Technologies.(Image: Alexander Battery Technologies)

Battery maker Alexander Technologies says it is looking at strong pipeline of projects despite a recent fall in turnover and profits.

The Peterlee-based manufacturer, which was founded in the US in the 1980s, says it has continued investing in its South West Industrial Estate factory, including expertise and capabilities of laser welder equipment. Its engineers have also developed batteries for the drone market.

The update is part of newly published 2025 accounts which show turnover fell from £18.5m to £9.6m and operating profit slumped from £3.5m to £546,000. Directors said the results were explained by the completion of a long-standing supply deal with a customer who has moved its battery making in-house, and time needed for development projects to progress to full production.

Alexander specialises in the building of custom lithium-ion battery battery packs for customers across a range of markets including robotics, medical and industrial power tools, among others. In the recent accounts, the firm said it had introduced a new methods intended to speed up the transition between product development and production.

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The idea covers four models including “build to print”, where customers provide a completed design for Alexander to build in its factory; “core” and “core+” where an existing design is chosen from the company’s library and adapted to the customer needs; and “total custom”, where the battery pack is created entirely for the customer.

Historically, development for fully bespoke battery packs ranged from between a year to 18 months before production was stated. The firm’s new models are said to have improved those timings already, since being introduced in the latter part of last year.

Alexander said it has significant available capacity for increased production volumes as such development projects progress to the manufacturing phase.

Claire Brymer, Alexander Technologies’ chief financial officer, said: “2025 was a transitional year following the conclusion of a long-standing supply arrangement with a customer who moved to internal battery manufacturing capability – a change we supported and planned for. Our balance sheet remains strong, with net assets and cash both up year on year.

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“We’ve invested in automation, launched a new service platform, and expanded into new markets including drone applications. There is a strong pipeline of development projects converting to production, and we’re confident in the outlook for the business.”

The majority of Alexander’s turnover comes from EU customers, making up £7.3m, followed by US buyers at £1.6m and the UK at £658,000. Employee numbers also dipped in 2025, from 94 to 72, and driven by fewer production staff.

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Cummins raises 2030 financial targets on stronger demand

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Cummins raises 2030 financial targets on stronger demand

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Alaska Republican unveils bill to codify a strategic bitcoin reserve

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Alaska Republican unveils bill to codify a strategic bitcoin reserve

EXCLUSIVE: Rep. Nick Begich, R-Alaska, is unveiling the American Reserve Modernization Act to establish a U.S. strategic bitcoin reserve in an attempt to diversify America’s reserves balance sheet.

This bill, which is receiving bipartisan support, would establish the reserve within the Treasury Department with a separate digital asset stockpile for federally held digital assets different from bitcoin. Begich told FOX Business that bitcoin draws similarities to gold in the crypto asset class.

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“When you look at gold, it is the dominant precious metal reserve,” Begich said. “When you look at bitcoin, it represents about 60% of all market cap for the entire crypto space. So the market has decided, in the case of gold and in the case of bitcoin, that this will be the predominant store of value within that asset class.”

Reps. Nick Begich, Tom Emmer and Mike Johnson.

Rep. Nick Begich, R-Alaska, speaks during a news conference with House Republican leadership in the Capitol Visitor Center on Nov. 18, 2025. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

US TARGETS IRAN’S $7.7 BILLION CRYPTO NETWORK TIED TO REGIME OPERATIONS

In March 2025, President Donald Trump signed an executive order to establish a strategic bitcoin reserve, but it’s not yet fully operational. The Trump administration has been working on establishing a reserve with the hope that the U.S. will claim global dominance in crypto.

In the past, Trump shared his belief in crypto.

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“This could be perhaps the greatest revolution in financial technology since the birth of the internet itself,” Trump said at the signing of the Genius Act in July 2025.

TRUMP CREATES STRATEGIC BITCOIN RESERVE, OTHER CRYPTOCURRENCIES TO BE USED IN STOCKPILE

Over the past month, the Treasury Department launched Operation Economic Fury to obstruct Iran’s revenue streams and pressure its financial systems, as the fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran continues. As of late April, the Treasury Department announced it had seized nearly $500 million in Iranian cryptocurrency assets.

However, Rep. Pat Harrigan, R-N.C., who is one of more than a dozen co-sponsors of the bill, says the U.S. needs to find out how to manage previously seized bitcoin.

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“The United States government already holds billions in seized bitcoin with no coherent strategy for managing it, and that needs to change,” Harrigan said.

KEVIN O’LEARY REVEALS THE ONLY TWO CRYPTOCURRENCIES HE SAYS ARE WORTH OWNING

This comes as the Senate Banking Committee passed the Clarity Act with bipartisan support in a 15-9 vote to send the bill to the Senate floor. Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., says this could be voted on by the middle of June, but adds that it is “probably pretty optimistic.”

Cynthia Lummis

Senator Cynthia Lummis, a Republican from Wyoming, speaks during the Bitcoin 2021 conference in Miami, Florida. (Getty Images)

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Begich hopes the U.S. will hold about 5%, or about 1 million coins, of the world’s bitcoin in the reserve. This would be roughly equivalent to what the U.S. government currently holds in gold.

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Mercantile Bank Corporation (MBWM) Shareholder/Analyst Call Prepared Remarks Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

Raymond Reitsma
President, CEO & Director

Good morning, and welcome to Mercantile Bank Corporation’s Annual Meeting of Shareholders. I am Ray Reitsma, President and Chief Executive Officer of Mercantile. Today’s virtual-only meeting is a live webcast. We believe in engaging with our shareholders, and it is our hope that this virtual meeting will maximize the participation of shareholders regardless of their location. Thank you very much for participating in our virtual meeting today, and please note that this meeting is being recorded.

I would like to call the formal portion of this meeting to order. Rules of conduct. I’d like to draw your attention to the rules of conduct set forth for this meeting. The rules of conduct for this meeting are available in the Resources section of the webinar, which you can access by selecting the resources button located in the Zoom toolbar at the bottom of your screen. Shareholder ability to comment or ask questions is available in the Q&A section of the toolbar at the bottom of your screen.

The Board of Directors has appointed Amy Kam and Scott Setlock to serve as inspectors for this meeting. I would like to ask Mr. Setlock to also serve as the Secretary of the meeting. Mr. Setlock is Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Mercantile Bank Corporation and Mercantile Bank. Ms. Kam is First Vice President and Executive Operations Manager. I would now like to introduce our directors who are present today on the webcast. Michael S. Davenport, Michelle L. Eldridge, Joseph D. Jones, Richard D. McDonald, Michael H. Price, David B. Ramaker; Raymond E. Reitsma, Nelson F. Sanchez, Sarah A. Schmidt, Stephen J. Schwhoffer, Amy L. Sparks and Shoran R. Williams. I would also like to introduce Robert Bondi of Plante Moran, PLLC, our accounting firm; and Brad Wyatt of Greenberg Traurig LLP, our legal counsel.

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VS Group plans more IT acquisitions in North and Midlands after securing Foresight backing and buying The PC Support Group

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Deal for Liverpool firms boosts customer base at Lancashire firm

Foresight Group has invested in VS Group. From left: Jason Savion, Kevin Penman and Hannah Cork of VS Group

From left: Jason Savion, Kevin Penman and Hannah Cork of VS Group(Image: Foresight)

A North West IT group has acquired a Liverpool IT business after securing the backing of private equity group Foresight.

VS Group has acquired managed services provider The PC Support Group, which has some 200 customers, in what it says will be the first in a number of bolt-on deals following Foresight’s investment.

VS Group, based in Manchester and in Barrowford, Lancashire, was founded in 2012 by experienced telco and technology entrepreneurs Kevin Penman and Jason Savion.

Foresight’s investment in VS Group was the first from its third dedicated North West Fund, which has been backed by Greater Manchester Pension Fund, Clwyd Pension Fund and Merseyside Pension Fund to provide flexible equity investments of up to £15m into companies in all sectors.

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Since its first North West fund launched in 2015, Foresight has backed more than 30 companies in the North West and North Wales, helping to create more than 2,000 jobs.

As part of its investment in VS Group, Foresight has introduced experienced executive Iain O’Kane to the business as chair. Mr O’Kane was CEO of cyber specialist Xperience Group and saw the business grow to £25m in revenue before attracting investment from private equity firm Bowmark. He still has a non-executive role at Xperience.

Sophie Clough, investment manager at Foresight in Manchester said: “VS Group is a great example of a founder-led regional business with lots of growth potential and we are delighted to be working with Kevin and Jason, alongside both the VS Group and The PC Support Group teams, on the next stage of their growth journey.

“The need for every business with people working flexibly to have secure IT networks and strong cyber security has never been higher so we are investing in a growing and highly resilient sector. The market place is highly fragmented and we are keen to support VS Group’s organic growth with further strategic acquisitions across the North and Midlands. “

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Kevin Penman and Jason Savion, co-founders at VS Group added: “We are thrilled to be working with Foresight Group, an investor that shares our passion and ambition for growth. We are equally pleased to welcome The PC Support Group team and their clients to VS Group.

“Like us, the team are delivering an excellent service to their clients across a wide range of sectors and we look forward to working with them moving forward.”

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Summer VAT Cut Snubs Night-Time Economy, Warns NTIA Chief

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Summer VAT Cut Snubs Night-Time Economy, Warns NTIA Chief

The Government’s headline-grabbing summer VAT giveaway has been dismissed as politically convenient window-dressing by the head of the UK’s night-time economy trade body, who argues that the country’s clubs, festivals and live music venues have once again been left to fend for themselves.

Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), launched a withering critique of the Great British Summer Savings scheme unveiled by Chancellor Rachel Reeves, which slashes VAT from 20 per cent to 5 per cent on a narrow band of family attractions, including theme parks, zoos, museums, children’s cinema tickets and kids’ meals, between 25 June and 1 September. The cut, ministers say, is designed to help households afford summer days out and bolster the hospitality sector through its peak trading window.

For an industry that has watched roughly a third of the country’s nightclubs disappear since 2017, however, the measure looks less like a lifeline and more like a snub. The full details of the chancellor’s family-focused VAT package made no mention of the late-night venues, festivals or grassroots music spaces that have been pleading for sector-wide tax relief for the better part of a decade.

“The Government’s latest VAT announcement is not just a missed opportunity, it is a glaring example of short-term thinking and a fundamental misunderstanding of the UK’s leisure and cultural economy,” Kill said. “While positioning this as support for families, the policy completely overlooks and effectively sidelines the night-time economy, including festivals, clubs, live music venues and late-night cultural spaces that have been fighting to survive under relentless financial pressure.”

A backbone, not a footnote

Kill’s frustration is rooted in hard numbers. NTIA data shows the UK lost roughly 1,940 licensed clubs between 2015 and 2025, a 26 per cent decline, while 26 per cent of British towns that previously had at least one nightclub now have none at all. Industry research published earlier this year warned that, without urgent intervention, Britain risks losing 10,000 late-night venues and 150,000 jobs by 2028.

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The festival circuit is faring little better. More than 40 UK festivals were scrapped in 2024, with a similar tally lost in 2025 and a fresh wave of 2026 cancellations, including Red Rooster, Stone Valley South and WestworldFest, already announced as operators buckle under soaring production costs, post-pandemic debt and softer ticket sales.

“These businesses are not peripheral, they are the backbone of the UK’s global cultural reputation and a critical driver of jobs, tourism and economic activity,” Kill argued. “For years, we have consistently lobbied for a fair and meaningful reduction in VAT across hospitality, live events and cultural experiences. Instead, what we have been given is a narrow, temporary measure that cherry-picks certain activities while leaving the rest of the sector to absorb rising costs, punitive tax burdens and ongoing instability.”

The trade body has repeatedly pressed Treasury ministers for a permanent VAT cut from 20 to 10 per cent across hospitality and the cultural sector, a campaign that has gathered momentum after a string of nightclub closures prompted renewed calls for action.

Squeezed at every turn

Operators say the picture on the ground is bleak. April’s business rates reforms removed the 40 per cent Hospitality, Leisure and Night-Time Relief, pushing the typical rates bill for a £100,000 rateable-value venue from £28,800 to roughly £43,000. Combined with higher employer National Insurance contributions, a steeper National Living Wage and double-digit increases in utilities, the cumulative cost burden has tipped many otherwise viable businesses into the red.

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A recent New Statesman investigation into the policies killing Britain’s nightlife painted a similarly grim picture, charting how successive Westminster decisions, from licensing reform to tax tinkering, have hollowed out the cultural infrastructure of British towns and cities.

“Festivals are being squeezed to breaking point. Grassroots venues are closing at an alarming rate. Clubs and late-night operators are facing unsustainable operating conditions,” Kill said. “And yet, once again, they have been completely sideswiped by policy that claims to support leisure and participation.”

A test of credibility

The political calculation behind the Great British Summer Savings scheme is straightforward. A targeted, family-friendly cut delivers a punchy headline, plays well with voters facing another stretched school holiday and concentrates the Treasury’s fiscal firepower on a tightly bounded window. The trouble, as Kill sees it, is that such tactical interventions cannot substitute for a coherent strategy.

“This is not just short-sighted, it is economically reckless,” he warned. “You cannot claim to support the visitor economy, regional growth and cultural output while actively ignoring the sectors that deliver it at scale. If the Government is serious about growth, it must stop delivering piecemeal, headline-driven interventions and start engaging with the full reality of the industries it relies on. That means meaningful VAT reform, long-term policy stability and a commitment to supporting the entire ecosystem, not just the parts that are politically convenient.”

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Until then, Kill concluded, the summer VAT cut “will be seen for what it is: a superficial fix that fails the very industries it should be backing.”

For SME operators across hospitality and the cultural economy, the message from Whitehall is becoming uncomfortably familiar. The headline is generous; the small print is not.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Detroit bankruptcy case officially closes more than 13 years after historic filing

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Detroit bankruptcy case officially closes more than 13 years after historic filing

Detroit’s historic bankruptcy case — the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history — has officially closed more than 13 years after the city first sought Chapter 9 protection amid a financial collapse that reshaped the city’s finances, pensions and long-term fiscal strategy.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Thomas Tucker granted the city’s motion for a final decree this week, formally ending the case after determining administration of the bankruptcy had been completed.

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The closure marks the end of a years-long restructuring effort that eliminated roughly $7 billion in debt and restructured another $3 billion, according to the city, freeing up an estimated $150 million annually for city services.

SPIRIT AIRLINES LAWYER SAYS JET FUEL PRICE SURGE LEFT CARRIER WITH ‘NO REMAINING WAY OUT’ OF BANKRUPTCY

detroit mayor mary sheffield

Mary Sheffield speaks after being sworn in as the 76th Mayor of Detroit during the city of Detroit’s Investiture Ceremony at the Detroit Opera House on January 09, 2026, in Detroit, Michigan.  (Monica Morgan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

Mayor Mary Sheffield called the milestone evidence that Detroit “has its financial house in order,” pointing to 12 consecutive balanced budgets and surpluses, reserve funds topping $500 million and the city’s return to investment-grade status.

The formal closure also comes as major credit-rating agencies have highlighted Detroit’s improved fiscal position.

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downtown Detroit

An aerial view of downtown Detroit. (iStock / iStock)

One day before the bankruptcy case officially closed, S&P Global Ratings upgraded Detroit’s general obligation bond rating to BBB+ from BBB, citing the city’s “sustained strong financial performance and governance conditions.”

Moody’s similarly said Detroit had strengthened its “financial resiliency” in recent years, citing strong reserves and improved fiscal management since emerging from bankruptcy in 2014.

MAJOR US CITY OFFERS CASH INCENTIVES TO SPARK GROWTH, ATTRACT NEWCOMERS

Still, both ratings agencies warned the city remains vulnerable to broader economic pressures tied to the automotive sector, inflation and long-term pension obligations.

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Detroit skyline

Skyline and urban skyline of Detroit. Soft light on an overcast day over the river. (Roberto Machado Noa/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The closure came after Detroit completed a final distribution of roughly $10 million tied to accrued interest on “Class 14 B notes,” financial recovery bonds issued to unsecured creditors during the restructuring.

Detroit filed for bankruptcy in July 2013 under a state-appointed emergency manager after years of population decline, shrinking tax revenues and rising pension liabilities pushed the city into insolvency. 

CLICK HERE TO GET FOX BUSINESS ON THE GO

The city officially exited bankruptcy in late 2014 under a restructuring plan that became a national case study in municipal financial recovery.

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LIC announces 1:1 bonus issue, sets May 29 as record date

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LIC announces 1:1 bonus issue, sets May 29 as record date
Life Insurance Corporation of India‘s (LIC) board on Thursday approved issuance of bonus shares in 1:1 proportion and India’s largest life insurer has set May 29 as the record date to determine shareholders’ eligibility for the payment of an extra share.

Under the issue, the company will pay one new fully paid-up equity share of Rs 10 each for every one existing fully paid-up equity share of Rs 10 each.

The announcement was made along with company’s Q4 earnings where the State-owned company reported ‌a ⁠23% year-on-year (YoY) growth in its consolidated net profit at Rs 23,467 crore in the fourth quarter, compared with Rs 19,039 crore in the last year period.

The company’s board has also recommended a final dividend of Rs 10 per share for the financial year 2025-26. The board has fixed Thursday, June 25, 2026 as the record date for the purpose of ascertaining the eligibility of members of the corporation for the proposed final dividend.

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LIC’s net premium income in the quarter under review stood at Rs 1.64 lakh crore compared to Rs 1.48 lakh crore in the year ago period. It was an 11% year-on-year jump. The net premium income increased 30% on a sequential basis versus Rs 1.26 lakh crore in the October-December quarter of FY26.


PAT for the full financial year stood at Rs 57,419 crores, reporting an increase of 19% YoY. Individual Business Non-Par APE increased by 43.78% to Rs 15,214 crore while non-par APE share within individual business at 35.11% for FY26 as compared to 27.69% for FY25.
Value of New Business (VNB) increased by 41.63% to Rs 14,179 crore VNB margin (net) increased by 360 bps to 21.2%. The new business premium income (Individual) increased by 8.29% to Rs 67,676 crore.Total group business premium income increased by 16.26% to Rs 1.97 crore and total premium income increased by 9.80% to Rs 5.36 crore.

Indian Embedded Value (IEV) increases by 1.58% to Rs.7,89,185 crore

The assets under management (AUM) increased by 5.08% to Rs 57,29,396 crore with solvency ratio increased to 2.35 from 2.11. Expense Ratio reduced by 51 bps to 11.91% for FY26 from 12.42% for FY25 while the bonus to policyholders stood at Rs 59,726 crore.

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Prosur develops clean label-focused ingredient toolbox

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Prosur develops clean label-focused ingredient toolbox

Get It Natural Toolbox offers manufacturers perceived as natural ingredients. 

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Cyfrowy Polsat S.A. 2026 Q1 – Results – Earnings Call Presentation (OTCMKTS:CYFWY) 2026-05-21

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

This article was written by

Seeking Alpha’s transcripts team is responsible for the development of all of our transcript-related projects. We currently publish thousands of quarterly earnings calls per quarter on our site and are continuing to grow and expand our coverage. The purpose of this profile is to allow us to share with our readers new transcript-related developments. Thanks, SA Transcripts Team

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Bioriginal Food & Science Corp. names new president, CEO

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Bioriginal Food & Science Corp. names new president, CEO

Randy Fournier takes over position from Shannon Sears.

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