Daily Mail

Lagging aid for UK’s tech

- Alex Brummer CITY EDITOR

THE way in which American big-tech companies have led global equity markets out of the stock market wipeout of the early days of the pandemic is remarkable.

Britain may not have a Tesla or an Amazon but it is reassuring that UK start-ups are attracting big inward investment and more establishe­d quoted firms are having a good war.

Ocado is among the biggest winners and its use of artificial intelligen­ce and robotics sets it apart from other grocers.

Beneath the radar there are other tech firms which are defying gravity, providing confidence that when this crisis is over it is not all doom and gloom for UK plc.

Latest results from Oxford Instrument­s, an early spin-out from Oxford University, are a case in point. The year ending in March 2020 was better than expected, with profits 5pc higher than forecast.

The post-lockdown order book for the first two months looks robust, with Asia up 19pc, offsetting the collapse in the EU (down 23pc) and declines in the US. Semi-conductor growth is outpacing demand for precision scientific optical products.

Also doing well is French-controlled electronic­s group Aveva. It is not to be confused with insurer Aviva, French nuclear experts Areva, transport outfit Arriva, Israeli cosmetics brand Ahava or Aviva Vodka.

Before-tax profits at Aveva doubled in the last year as the firm rode a digitalisa­tion boom. No-nonsense chief executive Craig Hayman is confident that it can expand through the pandemic.

Just as encouragin­g is data put together by Tech Nation and other industry groups, showing that in January to May of this year, London attracted £4.2bn of new funding. That is more than rival tech cities Paris, Stockholm, Berlin and Tel Aviv combined.

The post-financial crisis period saw an upsurge in UK start-ups and Tech Nation is expecting the sector to emerge strongly from Covid-19. It will get some help from

Whitehall initiative­s such as the justlaunch­ed Future Fund of £250m of matching resources.

This will run in parallel with an initiative from the Department for Internatio­nal Trade to bolster digital trade with AsiaPacifi­c countries – less so, China!

Terrific that the Government is acting. But the sums that are involved are distinctly sub-octane.

French airlift

PICKING winners is something UK government­s have striven to avoid. When it comes to world-beating bits of the UK economy – aerospace, the creative sector, banks (bailed-out in the financial crisis) and even research universiti­es – there is no case for the Government to sit on its hands.

A dirigiste French government shows no hesitation in coming to the rescue of aerospace. It is piling £13.3bn into the sector.

The largest chunk is £6.25bn for Air France. This is the unfair competitio­n which Michael O’Leary of Ryanair is belly-aching about at every opportunit­y.

Several carriers, including O’Leary’s, BA and Easyjet, have been given access to the Bank of England’s cheapo credit commercial paper facility. More critical is the rest of the French package, which includes a fund of up to £893m, targeted at medium-sized players in the aerospace supply chain.

There is £267m to assist updating factories and a whopping £1.3bn over three years to support R&D in the sector. If that kind of new cash were forthcomin­g in the UK, then Rolls-Royce might not find itself having to shed 9,000 jobs in rapid time.

Some French funding could indirectly find its way into the UK via Airbus suppliers among other things. Britain should not look at the French interventi­ons as unfair competitio­n. Instead, it should regard them as a good reason to dig deep to maintain the UK’s technologi­cal edge.

Tobacco road

FOR many investment funds British American Tobacco (BAT) is beyond the pale.

Selling killer tobacco products to emerging market countries breaks all the ethical rules even though there are claims that smokers do better with Covid-19.

The alleged benefits in the pandemic have not been enough to inoculate BAT against lockdowns and the closure of South Africa to its products.

Still, for those willing to defy the ethical and woke tendency there is nothing like a handsome dividend, maintained at 65pc of earnings, for cheer in a payout wasteland.

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