Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

Business

Atom Bank sale process fails to attract desired bids, report suggests

Published

on

Business Live

The challenger bank is said to have seen interest from a number of potential suitors

Atom Bank is moving into the Pattern Shop in Newcastle

Atom Bank is now based in the Pattern Shop building in Newcastle.(Image: Atom bank)

Digital bank Atom has failed to attract a desired £600m bid amid a sale process led by its investors, a report suggests.

The Newcastle-based lender is said to been offered below asking price by London-based investor Pollen Street Capital, according to the Financial Times. Atom’s key backers – including BBVA and Toscafund – are reported to be considering halting the sale process as a result.

Yorkshire Building Society and Leeds Building Society are also said to have considered bids for Atom, which last year moved into new headquarters in Newcastle’s Stephenson Quarter. The sale process comes after many years of a mooted flotation for the challenger bank which last year reported it had more than 270,000 customers and mortgage balances of £4.2bn.

Atom was founded in 2013, secured a banking licence in 2015 and after nine years of losses struck a first pre-tax profit of £7m in 2023. The branch-less bank, which now employs more than 500 people, was valued at about £362m when it raised £100m in new equity capital in 2023.

Advertisement

A deal with Pollen Street Capital could have preceded a merger with Tandem, another digital-based lender which Pollen owns. The private equity firm is also linked to Newcastle-registered LSL Property Services via its Pivotal Growth joint venture which aims to grow a tech-led UK mortgage broker.

Atom has been a pioneer of the four-day week, and has talked positively of remote working. Last year, it made a multimillion-pound move from Durham to Tyneside, taking up residence in the historic Pattern Shop building. At the time, the bank said the shift of headquarters was “an important investment in the future of the franchise and one that will help us to drive delivery of the business plan and the realisation of our strategic vision”.

The sales process behind Atom comes after a period of big deals in the UK banking market, including Nationwide Building Society’s £2.9bn takeover of Newcastle-based Virgin Money and Coventry’s acquisition of Co-op Bank. In the bank’s 2025 report, Atom chairman Lee Rochford said valuations in the sector has progressed strongly and that the deals “further entrenched the dominance of high street brands”, raising questions about competitiveness in the market.

Nationwide earned a £2.3bn windfall from its acquisition of Virgin, where it has pledged to keep all branches open until at least 2030 – even where the two brands have locations close to each other.

Advertisement

Atom Bank did not comment on the reports.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

Business

Palantir Stock Jumps 7% Today as Nvidia Partnership, Trump Disclosure and Meta Cloud Plans Lift AI Software

Published

on

Palantir

Palantir Technologies shares surged more than 7% Wednesday morning, continuing a sharp recovery from their 52-week low as a combination of macro tailwinds, fresh contract momentum and a broader rebound in artificial intelligence software stocks pushed the data analytics company back toward levels not seen since early June.

Shares of the Denver-based company were trading at $125.21 as of 10:05 a.m. EDT, up $8.54, or 7.32%, on the day. The gain extends a recovery that began last week after the stock hit an all-time low of $106.37 and follows a 3.27% advance on June 29 and a 3.55% gain on June 30, suggesting a meaningful reversal of momentum after a seven-session losing streak that had erased nearly 25% of the stock’s value during the month of June alone.

Several converging factors are driving Wednesday’s move. The most significant immediate catalyst was Meta Platforms’ announcement that it is developing plans to sell its AI computing capacity to external customers in a cloud infrastructure business, a development that sent Meta shares up more than 7% and broadly lifted sentiment across AI software and infrastructure names. Palantir, which is simultaneously positioned as an AI software platform and a government data infrastructure operator, benefited from the sector-wide enthusiasm the Meta news generated, with investors interpreting the announcement as further validation that AI-driven enterprise technology spending remains a durable and expanding category.

Separately, President Donald Trump’s financial disclosure report released Tuesday revealed that the president holds a multimillion-dollar stake in Palantir Technologies, a detail that circulated widely among investors Wednesday morning. While the disclosure did not represent any new commercial relationship between the company and the federal government, it added to a narrative of political proximity that has historically amplified attention on Palantir’s defense and intelligence contracts. The stock rose more than 2% in premarket trading Wednesday in response to reports of the disclosure before extending those gains during the regular session.

Advertisement

The most substantive company-specific driver of the recovery over the past week was the announcement of a strategic alliance with Nvidia, confirmed in early trading on June 29, that involves embedding Nvidia’s open-source Nemotron AI models into secure, classified computing environments for U.S. government agencies and critical infrastructure operators. The collaboration integrates Nvidia’s AI platform with several of Palantir’s core products, including its Artificial Intelligence Platform, Foundry data operating system and Apollo deployment infrastructure, allowing government customers to train, customize and deploy large language models in environments where sensitive data cannot be exposed to external model providers.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said: “Open-source AI is foundational to national security, public safety, and U.S. technology leadership. Palantir’s Nemotron-powered intelligent engine shows how open models can strengthen America’s leadership in AI, giving U.S. government agencies a secure, customizable, and fully controlled foundation to build mission-critical AI systems.”

That framing has resonated with investors who view Palantir’s government-facing AI business as structurally defensible in ways that consumer-facing AI companies are not, since the barriers to replacing a deeply integrated defense and intelligence software platform are considerably higher than switching between cloud providers or software-as-a-service vendors. Japan’s defense establishment has also been evaluating Palantir’s AI systems for potential military use, according to recent reporting, adding to the sense that the company’s international government business, which has faced headwinds from contract losses in parts of Europe, may be finding new growth vectors elsewhere.

Palantir’s first-quarter 2026 revenue rose 85% year over year and 16% sequentially to $1.63 billion, with CFO David Glazer calling it the company’s “strongest ever Q1 sequential growth rate.” U.S. revenue grew 104% to $1.28 billion, led by 133% growth in U.S. commercial revenue and 84% growth in U.S. government revenue, while customer count rose 31% to 1,007.

Advertisement

Management raised full-year guidance to $7.65 billion to $7.66 billion in revenue, representing a 71% growth rate. Operating margins stayed near the 46% first-quarter mark, validating what analysts have described as a Rule of 40 narrative for the company.

Despite that financial performance, the stock had spent much of June under intense pressure as a combination of high valuation concerns, institutional selling and sector-level rotation away from expensive software names took their toll. Ken Griffin’s Citadel cut its PLTR position by 40%, selling 1.33 million shares, a reduction in institutional backing that coupled with high-profile short-seller commentary criticizing Palantir’s shallow moat and aggressive revenue recognition, exacerbated downward momentum and pushed the stock toward new 52-week lows.

Wedbush has maintained an Outperform rating with a $230 price target throughout the selloff, while Wolfe Research upgraded the stock to Peer Perform from Underperform as the share price approached its lows. ARK Invest’s Cathie Wood purchased approximately 122,000 PLTR shares in late June, a contrarian bet made at prices near the bottom of the recent correction that has proven well-timed given Wednesday’s rally. Rosenblatt Securities analyst John McPeake, who initiated coverage in February with a Buy rating and a $150 price target, has maintained his position that the stock could reach that level by year-end 2026 based on the combination of revenue growth acceleration, margin expansion and the $4.92 billion U.S. commercial backlog already contracted.

According to 32 analysts, the average rating for PLTR stock is “Buy,” with a 12-month stock price target of $182.75, which represents an increase of roughly 56% from recent trading levels.

Advertisement

The stock’s next major fundamental checkpoint arrives August 10, when Palantir is scheduled to report its second-quarter results. Analysts will be closely watching U.S. commercial revenue growth, the pace of new customer additions and whether Palantir has made progress in rebuilding investor confidence following the sharpest single-month decline in the stock’s recent history, even as Wednesday’s rally suggests the market is willing, for now, to look past the recent correction and focus instead on the company’s expanding AI partnerships and accelerating growth trajectory.

Continue Reading

Business

Slideshow: Product innovation gets patriotic, part 2

Published

on

Slideshow: Product innovation gets patriotic, part 2

Limited-time products are being introduced ahead of the country’s 250th anniversary.

Continue Reading

Business

Halifax Brand Scrapped: What It Means for Customers

Published

on

Halifax Brand Scrapped: What It Means for Customers

Few names have loomed larger over the British high street than Halifax, and after 173 years it is being retired. Lloyds Banking Group, which has owned the lender since 2009, has confirmed it will phase out Halifax as a standalone brand and move all customer accounts to Lloyds over time.

For account holders, the headline is reassuring: there is nothing you need to do. Lloyds says customers will be contacted directly about the changes through trusted channels, including the Halifax app, online banking, email and by letter. Crucially, sort codes and account numbers will stay the same, and there is no change to the deposit protection savers rely on.

The move had been trailed for weeks. Reports in May flagged that the group was weighing up whether to drop Halifax altogether, and the decision has now been formalised. The logic, as Lloyds tells it, is simplification. Running four overlapping consumer brands – Lloyds, Halifax, Bank of Scotland and MBNA – has looked increasingly hard to justify as the distinction between them has faded, and as customers migrate en masse to a single app.

That last point is the real engine behind the shake-up. More than 21 million Lloyds Banking Group customers now use its mobile app as their main way of banking, a shift that has already prompted the group to close a further 95 branches across its brands. When most people rarely set foot in a branch, the commercial case for maintaining separate names on separate shopfronts weakens considerably.

Halifax has been part of the national furniture since it was founded in West Yorkshire in 1853. It granted its first mortgage that year and grew into one of the UK’s largest building societies before demutualising and, eventually, being folded into Lloyds during the financial crisis. At its peak in the early 2000s, a customer services adviser named Howard Brown became its most recognisable face, singing his way through a run of television adverts that lodged the brand firmly in the public memory.

Advertisement

Jas Singh, Lloyds Banking Group’s chief executive of consumer relationships, sought to soften the sentimental blow. “As Halifax changes to Lloyds, our Halifax customers will keep everything they know and love today – the same fantastic app design, the same friendly faces in our branches – even the same sort code and account number,” he said. “But as Lloyds customers, they’ll get the best innovation and experiences we offer.”

There is a regional dimension too. Lloyds insists it remains committed to the town of Halifax and the wider Yorkshire and Humber region, where roughly 3,000 staff are based at its Trinity Road office. No job cuts have been announced as part of the transition, and Halifax branches will either be rebranded as Lloyds or their customers moved to a nearby Lloyds site during 2027.

For savers, the most important detail sits in the small print. As the group confirmed in May, and reiterated in its official announcement, account numbers will not change and there is no change to protection under the Financial Services Compensation Scheme, which safeguards eligible deposits up to £85,000 per person, per banking licence. Customers who hold money with both Halifax and Lloyds should, as ever, check how that licence structure affects their own cover.

The disappearance of Halifax is part of a broader rewiring of British retail banking, one that has already seen challengers such as Revolut secure a full UK banking licence and traditional lenders thin out their branch estates. For customers, little changes tomorrow. But the slow fade of a 173-year-old name is a reminder of how quickly the familiar architecture of the high street is being redrawn.

Advertisement

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.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Business

Owl’s Brew adds functional mixers

Published

on

Owl’s Brew adds functional mixers

The non-alcoholic mixers are available in four flavors.

Continue Reading

Business

Oberweis adds protein ice cream

Published

on

Oberweis adds protein ice cream

Each pint contains 30 grams of protein.

Continue Reading

Business

Form 4 First Solar Inc For: 1 July

Published

on


Form 4 First Solar Inc For: 1 July

Continue Reading

Business

UK Now World’s Third-Largest Unicorn Nation With Record 80 Start-ups

Published

on

Revolut launches UK bank after PRA approval with FSCS-protected accounts for 13 million customers

Britain has cemented its position as Europe’s undisputed home for high-growth business, with a record 80 “unicorn” companies now valued at more than $1 billion apiece.

The country’s strength in building promising financial technology and artificial intelligence firms has helped it record the third-highest number of unicorns anywhere in the world. Only the United States and China are home to more private companies worth in excess of $1 billion, according to a new global ranking.

The UK now boasts a record 80 unicorns worth a combined £242.4 billion, overtaking India to take third place in the annual index produced by the Hurun Research Institute, the Shanghai-based firm behind the closely watched Global Unicorn Index.

With 23 new unicorns minted over the past 12 months, the research concluded that Britain had reinforced its “position as Europe’s undisputed start-up capital”, noting that it now has more unicorns than Germany, France, the Netherlands and Sweden combined.

The nation’s unicorn count has nearly doubled since 2016, and the “pipeline of new companies entering the billion-dollar club is the strongest it has ever been”, Hurun said. In total, the firm tracked 1,603 unicorns across 52 countries, with the combined value of the world’s unicorns rising 43 per cent to $8 trillion.

Advertisement

The number of unicorns a country produces is watched closely as a barometer of the health of an economy, its appetite for innovation and its ability to create companies with the potential to scale globally.

Britain’s continued strength comes against a backdrop of concern about the appeal of the London Stock Exchange as a home for the most promising businesses, as well as government efforts to nurture emerging domestic technology firms amid questions over the wisdom of relying on a handful of American giants for essential technology.

Ministers have already stepped in to keep home-grown talent listed in the UK, part of a wider push to strengthen the appeal of the London Stock Exchange after a run of de-listings and companies shifting their primary listings overseas. That includes fresh government backing for AI firms weighing a domestic float.

Revolut, the financial services group, remains the UK’s most valuable unicorn with a £57.8 billion valuation, having recently leapfrogged Barclays in value after an Nvidia-backed deal. It is followed by Nscale, the artificial intelligence data centre business, worth £11.6 billion at its last funding round, Hurun said.

Advertisement

Fintech companies account for a third of the UK’s unicorns and more than half of their total value. It is a sector in which fresh names keep emerging, from data platforms to challenger lenders, with recent arrivals such as 9fin reaching unicorn status with British Business Bank support.

Artificial intelligence, meanwhile, was the fastest-growing sector for UK unicorns, with nine such companies worth a combined £40.6 billion, quadrupling in value in a single year. Just ten of the UK’s 80 unicorns are developing physical products, with the rest building software or services.

Rupert Hoogewerf, chairman and chief researcher at Hurun Research Institute, said the UK had shown it was “the best gateway into European tech” for international investors.

Hurun’s broader global report identified a record 1,603 unicorns worldwide, with six of the world’s ten most valuable examples working on AI, an industry that also dominated the list of private companies posting the largest valuation increases.

Advertisement

“The concentration of economic power in a small number of AI companies is unprecedented,” the report said.

The enormous valuations attached to leading AI businesses have prompted concern about a bubble in public markets, and there are signs the boom is reshaping the venture market too. Analysts say the capital-raising environment has tilted towards founders working in AI, while remaining challenging for many entrepreneurs in other sectors.

AI is accounting for an unprecedented share of total deal value in European venture capital, and “non-traditional investors” such as corporations and hedge funds are joining funding rounds at record levels.

Other sectors producing UK unicorns include energy, with four such businesses, among them Octopus Energy, the UK’s largest energy supplier, and its spin-off Kraken Technologies, as well as life sciences, which accounts for eight unicorns.

Advertisement

Hurun’s analysis of the 136 founders behind the UK’s largest private technology companies underlined the industry’s continuing lack of diversity. More than one in four attended Oxford or Cambridge. Only eight are women, prompting Hurun to warn that “the UK is failing to capture the full potential of its female entrepreneurial talent.” More encouragingly, more than half of all the founders were born outside the UK.

The UK’s unicorns have an average valuation of £3.2 billion, Hurun said, and took an average of 3.6 years to reach the $1 billion mark.


Jamie Young

Jamie Young

Jamie is Senior Reporter at Business Matters, bringing over a decade of experience in UK SME business reporting.
Jamie holds a degree in Business Administration and regularly participates in industry conferences and workshops.

When not reporting on the latest business developments, Jamie is passionate about mentoring up-and-coming journalists and entrepreneurs to inspire the next generation of business leaders.

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Business

GLP-1s impacting mix more than volume

Published

on

GLP-1s impacting mix more than volume

Manufacturers are reviewing their portfolios to ensure alignment with current trends.

Continue Reading

Business

US stocks today: S&P 500, Nasdaq edge lower as tech shares slide

Published

on

US stocks today: S&P 500, Nasdaq edge lower as tech shares slide
U.S. stocks ​finished slightly lower on Wednesday with falling technology shares, but gains in Meta Platforms provided some support along with comments from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh that inflation risks had eased recently. Warsh also said he will stick firmly to the U.S. central ‌bank’s 2% inflation ⁠target and “disappoint” ⁠anyone who expects loose monetary policy despite President Donald Trump’s call for interest rate cuts.

Oil prices rose sharply at the start of ​the Iran war. Traders slightly pared their rate-hike expectations as Warsh spoke, but they still expect at least one hike ​from the U.S. central bank this year, according to data compiled by LSEG. Shares of Meta Platforms rallied after Bloomberg News reported that it is building a cloud business to sell excess AI computing capacity.

“This does ​seem to be something that is likely to continue to help the ⁠stock,” said ‌Tim Ghriskey, senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder in New York. “It has underperformed the ​Mag 7 group” ​of other megacap stocks. Meta shares remain down for the year to date.

An ⁠index of semiconductors was off sharply.

Advertisement

Investors are keeping a close eye ​on talks between the U.S. and Iran and they remain cautious, especially ​with a long U.S. holiday weekend coming up, Ghriskey said.


According to preliminary data, the S&P 500 lost 14.34 points, or 0.19%, to end at 7,485.02 points, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 169.56 points, or 0.65%, to 26,044.16. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 3.62 points, or 0.01%, to 52,315.58.
The key monthly U.S. jobs report is due out on Thursday, while the market will be closed Friday ahead of the Fourth ‌of July holiday. U.S. Vice President JD Vance said discussions between the U.S. and Iran were going well as they held indirect technical talks in Qatar about the Strait of ​Hormuz on Wednesday, ​adding Washington would not return to ⁠full combat unless necessary. The U.S. and Iran signed an interim accord last month. Investors are also digesting data from the Institute for Supply Management that showed U.S. manufacturing activity had slowed in June but was ​still solid.The day’s lackluster performance comes after a strong second quarter for the indexes. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite registered their biggest quarterly gains since 2020, while the Dow marked its best showing since 2022.

Among the day’s decliners, shares of Alcoa fell after Australia’s South32 agreed to sell most of its aluminium assets to Alcoa.

Continue Reading

Business

BSE launches REITs and Commercial Real Estate Index for passive investment products

Published

on

BSE launches REITs and Commercial Real Estate Index for passive investment products
BSE Index Services, a wholly owned subsidiary of BSE, on Wednesday launched the BSE REITs and Commercial Real Estate Index, a new benchmark designed to track the performance of listed real estate investment trusts (REITs) and companies with significant exposure to commercial real estate.

The index includes companies belonging to the REIT category as well as firms classified under the residential and commercial projects segment that derive meaningful exposure from commercial real estate assets and rental income.

The BSE REITs and Commercial Real Estate Index has a base value of 1,000, with September 2022 as the first value date. It will be reconstituted semi-annually in March and September.

Announcing the launch, Ashutosh Singh, MD & CEO of BSE Index Services, said the index is the first in the industry to provide focused exposure to India’s yield-generating real estate ecosystem, including office, retail and leasing-led business models.

Advertisement

He said the index combines listed REITs with companies having significant commercial real estate assets and rental income streams. It also incorporates a 20% cap on individual constituents to ensure diversification, making it suitable for creating investable products and targeted investment strategies.


According to BSE, the index can serve as the underlying benchmark for exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and index funds, while also being used for benchmarking portfolio management services (PMS), mutual fund schemes and institutional portfolios.
Also read: Only 1/5th the size of NSE? Why Jefferies predicts 27% upside for this near-monopoly stockThe launch expands BSE’s suite of thematic indices and comes amid growing investor interest in income-generating commercial real estate assets through listed REITs and related companies.

(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025