The Mail on Sunday

Bitcoin miner falls back in love with real money

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KIER Group bosses could be getting a bloody nose over executive pay – for the second year in a row – at the contractor’s annual meeting on Thursday.

Proxy advisers Pirc and ISS have urged shareholde­rs to vote down the firm’s 2021 pay report over concerns about hefty longterm bonus payments.

There remains ‘no compelling justificat­ion’ for the size of these awards, ISS said, especially when boss Andrew Davies saw a jump in salary from £595,000 to £750,000. His total pay rocketed from £1.3 million to £2.2 million.

At the group’s last AGM, 26 per cent of votes pushed back against the pay report. But the constructi­on giant’s share price has almost halved this year – which could add more fuel to the fire.

THE crypto world was rocked again last week – this time by the collapse of exchange FTX and another fall in the price of Bitcoin.

One person who avoided at least some of the latest pain is Peter Wall, head honcho at London-listed

Bitcoin ‘miner’ Argo Blockchain. In March 2021, he became the first boss of a listed company to be paid exclusivel­y in Bitcoin.

As he told an interviewe­r: ‘I actually woke up in the middle of the night and asked myself, “Why am I getting paid in fiat [government-issued currency]? Why don’t we just start paying ourselves in Bitcoin?” ’

But Whispers understand­s Wall quietly backtracke­d on the decision earlier this year and is now being paid in real money.

When he switched to the digital currency it was worth about $48,000 a coin. It is now around $17,000.

Bitcoin’s value has tanked by two-thirds since the start of this year – and Argo shares have fallen even more, by 91 per cent.

THERE’S been little but tumbleweed on the London stock market for the last couple of months amid all the economic turmoil.

But independen­t British healthcare provider One Health has braved the listings desert and is pursuing plans for a flotation.

Founded in 2004, its services are free to GPreferred patients who are promised surgery six to eight weeks after an initial consultati­on.

Chairman Derek Bickerstaf­f describes the group as a ‘safety valve’ for the NHS as it relieves pressure on stretched waiting lists – offering procedures in orthopaedi­cs, gynaecolog­y and general surgery.

The flotation could raise more than £3 million – which could fund growth beyond its current roster of 30 clinics.

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