April 23, 2017

Polymetal CEO fears anti-Russian bias

©Bloomberg Vitaly Nesis, chief executive officer of Polymetal International Plc The Russian miner that will rejoin London’s FTSE 100 index this month still faces a fight to win acceptance from investors who remain biased against the country, its chief executive says. Polymetal International was part of a wave of emerging

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Clive’s Will Come to Waitrose

Starting with the 4th of June 2018, Clive’s delicious organic vegan goodies will be made available in Waitrose stores across the country. Waitrose will stock the much loved wholemeal Creamy Mushroom Pie and three gluten free products: Clive’s Nut Roast, Tomato & Olive Provençale and Lentil & Kale Ragout with

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Issue 324 : Jan 2025

April 23, 2017

Polymetal CEO fears anti-Russian bias

©Bloomberg Vitaly Nesis, chief executive officer of Polymetal International Plc The Russian miner that will rejoin London’s FTSE 100 index this month still faces a fight to win acceptance from investors who remain biased against the country, its chief executive says. Polymetal International was part of a wave of emerging markets resources companies that listed in the UK several years ago, amid surging commodity markets. The gold and silver miner was part of the FTSE 100 from 2011 until a sharp fall in precious metals prices in 2013. More On this topic IN Mining A resurgence in gold and silver this year has contributed to an 80 per cent rise in Polymetal’s shares and propelled it back into the ranks of blue-chip UK stocks, following London Stock Exchange’s latest index review last week. Since Polymetal’s UK listing five years ago investor sentiment towards emerging markets resources companies has broadly soured, with corporate governance concerns at miners including Indonesian-controlled Bumi and Kazakh-backed Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation, which have both left the London market. Vitaly Nesis, who has led Polymetal since its listing, said the miner remained significantly undervalued compared with peers and said investors were “using rules of thumb to make judgments about jurisdictional risk” about companies operating in Russia and neighbouring countries. “If you look at facts you will see that fundamentally these are solid jurisdictions where mining companies can make good money and can repatriate cash and profits to investors without any problems,” said Mr Nesis, whose brother Alexander is Polymetal’s largest shareholder. “It is an uphill battle for Polymetal to convince international institutional investors that this is the case, but we have been around for almost five years in London and it is the persistence and consistency of the story that will turn the tide and help Polymetal get the sort of valuation that our peers have.” In specific cases of poor corporate governance “the underlying causes were company-specific not country-related”, said Mr Nesis. “We as a company have to work and overcome this bias.” Mr Nesis said Polymetal had “got off the radar” of many investment funds in the two years since it left the FTSE 100 and said he would spend more time in London to “reconnect” with investors. Recent volatility in commodity prices “still weighs heavy on the sector”, Mr Nesis said. “A lot of investors are not convinced that the current uptick is here to stay. The longer [gold] is rangebound or drifts slightly higher, the more comfortable investors will become.” Polymetal, which mines in Russia and Kazakhstan, said last week that its latest Russian mine had started up nine months early and at less cost than budgeted. The group’s inclusion in the FTSE 100 will lift to eight the number of miners in the blue-chip index. The list includes two other precious metals miners, Fresnillo and Randgold Resources, focused on Latin America and Africa respectively. Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2016. You may share using our article tools. Please don’t cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web. Source link

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Clive’s Will Come to Waitrose

Starting with the 4th of June 2018, Clive’s delicious organic vegan goodies will be made available in Waitrose stores across the country. Waitrose will stock the much loved wholemeal Creamy Mushroom Pie and three gluten free products: Clive’s Nut Roast, Tomato & Olive Provençale and Lentil & Kale Ragout with Cranberry. “I can’t tell you how excited we are to see our food in Waitrose. As a small business we have been gearing ourselves up to meet this increased demand and are over the moon to see our product alongside bigger brands in Waitrose stores. We can’t wait to hear what Waitrose customers think,” said Sally Carson, Managing Director at Clive’s. The Creamy Mushroom Pie has been a people’s favourite for many years now and the more recent additions – the Nut Roast and the tarts – are becoming increasingly popular as well, particularly on warm summer days. All products are ready to eat and can be served as a snack, a meal on the go or picnic style. They can also be served hot with roasted vegetables or your favourite salad. Clive’s, a family-owned organic vegetarian bakery perched on the edge of Dartmoor in glorious Devon, have been hand making and supplying their delicious fare to health food shops for many years. Clive’s are particularly proud of their Soil Association accreditation and three decades of pie making experience, starting with Clive himself.

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