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UK watchdog raises competition concerns over Greencore-Bakkavor deal

about 9 hours ago
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Greencore’s £1.2bn deal to buy Bakkavor is under the spotlight after the competition watchdog said the tie-up between Britain’s biggest sandwich maker and its rival could harm competition.Greencore struck a deal in April to buy its rival Bakkavor, which supplies pizzas, salads and other snacks to leading supermarkets such as Tesco, Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose and Asda.Together the companies said they would create a UK convenience food business with a combined revenue of £4bn.However, the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has said the deal could result in a “substantial lessening of competition” within the market for supermarket own-label chilled sauces.

The watchdog, which has now completed its phase 1 investigation into the deal, told the companies that they have until 3 November to address its competition concerns,If the regulator is still unsatisfied, it will start the next phase of its investigation,However, Greencore and Bakkavor welcomed the decision, saying the regulator did not raise any competition concerns about 99% of the revenues of the combined group,The CMA in its ruling did not find a risk of market dominance in Italian chilled ready meals and own-label salads, leaving chilled sauces as the only area of concern,Dalton Philips, the chief executive of Greencore, said the CMA process had been “constructive” and that its phase 1 decision “is a welcome one”.

“I am really grateful to my colleagues at Greencore and Bakkavor in successfully getting us to this point and we are now working with the CMA and Bakkavor for the benefit of all our stakeholders to complete the Bakkavor transaction early next year,” he said.Mike Edwards, the chief executive of Bakkavor, added the CMA’s decision provided “welcome clarity which means we can collectively work at pace and stay on track to complete the transaction in early 2026”.Analysts at the broker RBC Capital Markets said chilled sauces represent just 1% of the two companies’ combined revenues, as both manufacturers supply pasta sauces to large retailers in the UK.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionShares in Greencore, which is headquartered in Dublin but listed on the London Stock Exchange, fell by about 2% in early trading on Monday.The group employs about 13,300 staff and has 14 factories across the UK.

Bakkavor was founded by the Icelandic brothers Lýdur and Ágúst Gudmundsson – a pair of “business Vikings” known as “the Bakka brothers” – who between them served as the chief executive of the business from 1986 until 2022,The group is now headquartered in London and employs about 14,900 people, with more than 30 sites across the UK and the US,
societySee all
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‘A medical miracle’: is period blood ‘the most overlooked opportunity’ in women’s health?

Somewhere in the US a woman on her period pulled out her dripping, saturated tampon. But instead of wrapping it in toilet paper and tossing it into a bin, she put the tampon in a special plastic sample container, screwed the lid on tight and mailed it to an address in Oakland, California.The address was that of NextGen Jane (NGJ), a Bay Area-based startup founded in 2014. And now Julia Carr, NGJ’s clinical research coordinator, stands in the company’s lab under a fume hood happily decanting a mixture of the woman’s blood and a preservation solution into a test tube. She will go on to pipette out small amounts to freeze and store for later analysis

about 7 hours ago
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England and Wales prison checks to be enhanced after inmate released in error

Prisons are expected to begin enhanced checks before inmates are released after a man who sexually assaulted a young girl was mistakenly freed from jail.The justice secretary, David Lammy, will set out a series of measures aimed at strengthening the system in England and Wales as he faces questions from MPs in parliament about the error.The former asylum seeker Hadush Kebatu was wrongly freed from HMP Chelmsford on Friday morning, instead of being sent to an immigration detention centre.The Ethiopian national, who had been living at the Bell hotel in Epping, in Essex, when he sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl, later travelled to London. He was arrested on Sunday morning in Finsbury Park after a two-day manhunt

about 9 hours ago
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Social landlords in England now forced to fix emergencies within 24 hours

The first phase of Awaab’s law, which promises to protect tenants from dangerous social housing conditions, comes into force in England on Monday, in memory of a two-year-old boy who died after exposure to mould in his home.The new legal duties compel landlords to fix emergency health and safety hazards within 24 hours of reporting, investigate significant damp and mould within 10 working days of being notified, make properties safe in five working days after inspection and write the findings to tenants within three working days of inspection completing.Awaab Ishak died in 2020 after prolonged exposure to mould in the property his parents rented on Rochdale’s Freehold estate, Greater Manchester, from the social landlords Rochdale Boroughwide Housing (RBH).Awaab’s law followed campaigning from his family and the Manchester Evening News.The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government says the changes will improve lives for tenants and families living in England’s 4m social rented homes

about 11 hours ago
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NHS trialling rapid blood test to help diagnose sepsis and meningitis in children

The NHS is trialling a rapid blood test to help diagnose life-threatening conditions in children.The 15-minute blood test can speed up the diagnosis of illnesses such as sepsis or meningitis by telling medical practitioners whether a patient is suffering from a bacterial or viral infection.Instead of relying on regular blood test results, which can take several hours and require lab analysis, the test can rapidly indicate whether a patient has a bacterial infection that could benefit from immediate antibiotics.Doctors who participated in the trial say they have witnessed the benefits. In one case, a child with meningococcal meningitis received treatment much more quickly, and another with sepsis started antibiotics straight away

about 18 hours ago
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NHS leaders warn of longer waiting times if demand for extra £3bn not met

NHS bosses are seeking an emergency injection of £3bn to cover unexpected costs and have warned ministers that without it patients will wait longer for treatment and hospitals will start rationing care.Their move presents a fresh problem for Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, as she tries to find ways to fill an estimated £30bn hole in the nation’s finances in her budget next month.Hospital chiefs said unless they received extra cash they would have to cancel weekend and evening sessions of surgery, which give patients who are stuck on the NHS’s massive waiting list faster care.They also threatened to stop doing procedures of “low clinical effectiveness”, such as removing painful bunions, which can restrict mobility, because they are not a good use of limited resources.The £3bn demand is needed to cover the cost of NHS staff redundancies, strike action by doctors and higher drug prices, and is likely to cause consternation inside a government that is desperately short of cash

about 18 hours ago
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Over 1,200 health leaders call for swift passage of UK tobacco and vapes bill

More than 1,200 public health leaders have called for the tobacco and vapes bill to be passed swiftly through parliament to “protect future generations”.They said in a cross-party letter that the “gamechanging” measures outlined were “far too important to let it slip off the agenda”.The House of Lords is preparing to scrutinise the bill on the first day of its committee stage. The letter notes there had been a six-month gap between the bill’s second reading and Monday’s debate.The bill would make it illegal for anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 to ever buy tobacco

about 18 hours ago
technologySee all
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Could the internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern world together

1 day ago
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Fare game: what the battle between taxis and Uber means for your airport trip in Sydney and Melbourne

1 day ago
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Amazon strategised about keeping its datacentres’ full water use secret, leaked document shows

2 days ago
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AI models may be developing their own ‘survival drive’, researchers say

2 days ago
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‘He’s one of the few politicians who likes crypto’: my day with the UK tech bros hosting Nigel Farage

2 days ago
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‘Sycophantic’ AI chatbots tell users what they want to hear, study shows

3 days ago