Scottish Daily Mail

Founder left friendless after failed Amigo coup

- by Francesca Washtell

THE founder of Amigo has thrown in the towel, promising to back away from the controvers­ial lender after he failed to unseat the company’s board.

Multi-millionair­e James Benamor wanted to oust bosses and install two of his own directors following a dire period of trading and the launch of an investigat­ion by the Financial Conduct Authority into its lending practices.

But around 91pc of independen­t shareholde­rs voted against him in a showdown, ending his efforts to reclaim the firm he started in 2005, which has been branded a ‘legal loan shark’ by MPs.

Amigo is the UK’s largest guarantor lender, meaning it lends money to people who have a poor credit rating but can offer family and friends as a back-up to guarantee any missed payments.

Benamor owned nearly 61pc of the company ahead of the vote, but agreed not to participat­e in the ballot and let minority shareholde­rs decide its fate.

On Twitter, he wished investors the best, saying: ‘They believe in the board’s vision, not mine.

‘It’s not the first time I’ve thought investors were wrong about something, but it is the most painful. Amigo will move forward with shareholde­rs and a board that are united.’

Benamor previously said he would sell 1pc of the company every day if the vote failed. The prospect of months of selling pressure sent Amigo down 17.9pc, or 2.68p, to 12.3p.

Domino’s Pizza also plunged into the red. The takeaway staple tumbled after it said the cost of measures introduced to manage the pandemic would weigh on profit for the first half. Investors had been betting it would benefit from customers treating themselves in lockdown.

But it said that while UK sales were up around 3.7pc between January and June, people were ordering less profitable items such as sides and desserts. Shares slid 5.8pc, or 19.8p, to 319p.

The FTSE 250 stayed in the black, rising 0.7pc, or 117.66 points, to 17,582.36, while the

FTSE 100 rose 0.2pc, or 10.46 points, to 6253.25, despite a renewed sell-off of travel stocks such as Carnival – down 5.9pc, or 80p, to 1275p – and British Airways-owner IAG, which fell 3.5pc, or 9.7p, to 270.5p.

The Footsie was aided by utilities group SSE climbing 9.1pc, or 116p, to 1385p and housebuild­er

Berkeley Group rising 4.1pc, or 175p, to 4397p after pledging to keep their dividends.

SSE was at the top of the Footsie leaderboar­d on its plans to hand back a final dividend of 56p per share, despite profit before tax falling 55pc to £588m and a warning that it will take a hit of up to £250m from the coronaviru­s as electricit­y demand falls and the numbers of customers who can’t afford to pay their bills rises.

Berkeley said revenues and profits fell 35pc in the year to April 30, as developmen­ts in London were completed. It is committed to handing back £280m to shareholde­rs each year until 2025, and will work out how much of this is paid in a dividend in August.

Elsewhere, contractor Serco shot 15.7pc, or 20.9p, higher to 153.9p, making it the top gainer on the FTSE 250, after it restated its financial guidance.

Its work during the pandemic has included running the UK’s first drive-through testing centre – but first-half revenues have also been boosted by its takeover of a naval business last year, and will rise around 23pc in total.

It withdrew guidance in early April during the early stages of the pandemic – but now expects annual revenues will reach £3.7bn (up from £3.4bn-£3.5bn) and profits of between £135m and £150m (previously £145m).

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