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Tuesday 07 April 2015 3:19 amVivendi confi <a href=www.stanley-uk.uk>stanley uk</a> rms bid for YouTube rival DailymotionBy: Lynsey BarberShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleVivendi has confirmed a bid for Orange-owned YouTube rival Dailymotion.The French media group, which owns Universal Music and Canal+, confirmed reports it was in talks to buy a majority stake in the video site, in a deal thought to be wortheuro;250m pound;182.6m for a 75 to 80 per cent share.Earlier, Hong Kong telecoms group PCCW withdrew a bid for the video site after the French governmentndash; Orange s biggest shareholder ndash; urged the mobile operator to explore all offers.An environment where policies appear to favour a French or European solution is discoura <a href=www.bru-mate.ca>brumate ca</a> ging for international business participation. Wewill thereforewithdraw from our discussions with Dailymotion and its current owners, said PCCW in astatement. The ten-year-old Dailymotion has 128m monthly unique visitors and 2.5bn video views a month.The euro;250m is a drop in the ocean said analysts at Liberum, considering Vivendi should have a pro-forma net cash position of euro;16bn-euro;17bn post-disposal of assets such as Global Village Telecom, its 20 per cent <a href=www.bru-mate.ca>brumate cup</a> stake in Numericable and other non-core assets. Orange bought a 49 per cent stake in Dailymotion in 2011 and bought the remaining share in 2013. Shortly after the French government bloc Nrtp A Lab-Lib deal would be terrible for Britain
Sunday 18 September 2011 11:29 pm|Updated:Thursday 30 May 2019 11:13 pmCity lawyer faces her biggest challenge yetBy: KCS-contentShareFacebookShare on Facebo <a href=www.stanley-cups.pl>stanley cup</a> okXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleAS a partner at niche law firm Kingsley Napley, an expert in financial crime, writer, editor and military adviser, Louise Hodges is a woman of wide experience. She may need to call on all her skills when representing Kweku Adoboli.She may also turn for advice to her colleague, Stephen Pollard, who represented Nick Leeson in the 1990s.Hodges, who attended Walthamstow High School before going up to Oxford University in 1985, joined Kings <a href=www.stanleyquencher.uk>stanley quencher uk</a> ley Napley as a trainee in 1997. She went on to develop a reputation for representing people suspected by the Financial Services Authority or <a href=www.stanley-de.de>stanley deutschland</a> police of market abuse, insider dealing or misconduct.A former vice-chair of the European Criminal bar association, Hodgesrsquo; online profile lists her specialities as white collar crime, fraud, bribery and financial regulatory defence work.Her career has taken her beyond the confines of the City, however. This year she has been the lead partner in a team representing a number of military witnesses in the public inquiry into the death of Baha Mousa, the Iraqi hotel worker who was abused by British soldiers in 2003. She was also a contributor and co-editor of Kingsley Napley: Serious Fraud, Investigation and Trial wh