Deliveroo on course for the biggest London floatation for almost a decade

Deliveroo expects its forthcoming flotation to value the company at up to £8.8bn, about £1bn more than initially forecast and putting it on course to be the biggest London stock market debut since Glencore almost a decade ago.

Will Shu, the founder of the meal delivery service, which is backed by Amazon, is expected to cash in 6.7m shares worth up to £30m when the company launches on the stock market on 7 April. He will retain a 6.3% stake, worth about £550m. Existing shareholders, including Amazon and private equity firms Bridgepoint, Index and Greenoak, will cash in shares worth £536m, according to the group’s prospectus published on Monday.

Deliveroo said in a trading update that it was continuing to benefit from the food home delivery boom during the latest national Covid-19 lockdowns.

The total value of transactions processed on its platform surged by 130% year on year in January in the UK and Ireland, and 112% in other markets. Overall growth across all markets stood at 121% for the period.

Deliveroo also announced that it had priced its initial public offering at between £3.90 and £4.60 a share. The price range values the business, which has never made a profit, at between £7.6bn and £8.8bn.

This would make it the biggest London Stock Exchange debut since the mining company Glencore floated in May 2011.

At the top end of the proposed price range, Deliveroo would be worth more than the Premier Inns and Beefeater owner, Whitbread (£6.6bn), the luxury goods group Burberry (£8.2bn), the housebuilder Barratt Developments (£7.8bn) and the broadcaster ITV (£4.9bn).

It would also be more valuable than J Sainsbury (£5.4bn) and Marks & Spencer (£3bn) combined. Deliveroo’s rival Just Eat Takeaway, which is now in the FTSE 100 and joined the stock market in 2014 worth £1.5bn, currently has a market capitalisation of £10.2bn.

“We are proud to be listing in London, the city where Deliveroo started,” said Shu.“Becoming a public company will enable us to continue to invest in innovation, developing new tech tools to support restaurants and grocers, providing riders with more work and extending choice for consumers, bringing them the food they love from more restaurants than ever before,” he said. “This will help us in our mission to become the definitive food company.”

The company, which plans to raise £1bn from its stock market flotation, announced its intention to list on the London stock market this month.

Deliveroo is also giving customers who have placed at least one order the chance to buy shares in the business, with what it calls “loyal” customers being given priority. The company has put aside £50m of shares for customers to purchase.

Deliveroo is also planning to launch a £16m “thank you fund” for a quarter of its riders, with those delivering the most orders set to receive up to £10,000. However, unions representing riders said the fund is “no compensation for bad pay”.

Alex Marshall, the president of gig workers’ union IWGB, said: “Deliveroo’s £8.8bn evaluation is an insult to key workers here in the UK who kept riding right through the pandemic. So too is the fact that, denied worker status, riders aren’t even eligible for shares in Deliveroo, which has instead offered a one-time tip as though that compensates for years of precarity and poverty. Riders deserve more.”

Last week it emerged that gig economy companies, including Uber and Deliveroo, have faced at least 40 major legal challenges around the world as delivery drivers and riders try to improve their employment rights. The cases have been brought by gig economy workers seeking access to basic rights, such as minimum wages and holiday pay.

Uber said it would start making these payments, following a supreme court ruling confirming worker status in the UK for its drivers. Just Eat has also pledged to stop using the gig economy model. Documents released before its IPO revealed that Deliveroo had set aside more than £112m to cover potential legal costs relating to the employment status of its delivery riders.

Shift to Remote Working Prompts British Airways to Consider Selling Its Headquarters

U.K. carrier, hammered by the pandemic but pleased with remote work, considers a more permanent flexible-office plan

A sale of British Airways’ headquarters would raise cash and cut costs for a carrier that has been hit hard by Covid-19.

British Airways is considering selling its sprawling headquarters on the periphery of London Heathrow Airport, as the pandemic prompts more companies to embrace remote working in the long term.

The airline, one of Europe’s biggest and the largest unit of International Consolidated Airlines Group SA, has been walloped by the pandemic. The company said the move is being considered in light of enthusiasm by employees over remote working. A sale could also raise cash and help British Airways cut costs amid pandemic-triggered financial…

Bitcoin is now ‘too important to ignore’, Deutsche Bank says

Bitcoin’s (BTC) market capitalization of $1 trillion and potential for continued growth have made the cryptocurrency “too important to ignore,” according to Deutsche Bank analysts.

Deutsche Bank Research, the financial research subsidiary of global banking giant Deutsche Bank, issued a report devoted exclusively to Bitcoin, titled “The Future of Payments: Series 2 Part III. Bitcoins: Can the Tinkerbell Effect Become a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy?”

In the 18-page study, Deutsche Bank Research describes the basic characteristics of Bitcoin and analyzes the key drivers of its historical price growth to a $1 trillion asset.

Deutsche Bank analysts suggested that the Bitcoin price “could continue to rise” further as long as asset managers and companies continue to enter the market. The firm emphasized that central banks and governments now “understand that Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are here to stay” and thus are expected to start regulating them by late 2021.

Despite its rising valuation, Bitcoin’s growth as an asset class could be hampered by its “still limited” tradability and liquidity, Deutsche Bank Research warned. “The real debate is whether rising valuations alone can be reason enough for bitcoin to evolve into an asset class, or whether its illiquidity is an obstacle,” the analysts stated.

Bitcoin is expected to “remain ultravolatile” in the short term, Deutsche Bank analysts concluded, forecasting a turning point for Bitcoin in the next “two or three years” as a consensus about its future may emerge.

Ledger - Crypto Beginners Pack

Germany’s financial regulator issues retail crypto investment warning

Germany’s Federal Financial Supervisory Authority, or BaFin, has warned investors about the risks involved in cryptocurrency investments.

In a consumer protection alert issued on its website on Friday, the regulator offered a cautionary tale about crypto involvement on the part of retail investors.

As part of its statement, BaFin echoed similar admonitions espoused by several European regulators including the European Securities and Markets Authority and the European Banking Authority.

According to BaFin, retail investors need to be aware of the risks of incurring 100% losses from their crypto investments.

While European Union lawmakers are still working toward creating an EU-wide set of laws for digital currencies, German regulators already have some legal framework for digital assets in the country.

Crypto custody providers, exchanges and other businesses can only operate in Germany under license from BaFin. As previously reported by Cointelegraph, the country legalized digital securities back in December 2020.

Under the somewhat clear-cut regulatory landscape for cryptocurrencies in Germany, some banks in the country have even sought approval to begin offering crypto custody solutions.

In December 2020, 224-year-old German bank Hauck & Aufhauser announced plans to establish a cryptocurrency fund.

Despite these laws, BaFin said there is no protection against losses for retail consumers in the cryptocurrency space, hence the warning.

Crypto investment warnings are a popular occurrence among financial regulators across the globe, especially against the backdrop of the current bull market. Unlike mainstream finance with its qualified investor criteria, the crypto market offers easier market participation channels to “Mom and Pop” investors.

In 2021 alone, regulators from South Africa to the United Kingdom, and even Thailand, have issued similar warnings. Back in February, Thailand’s finance minister criticized the current cryptocurrency speculative surge and warned of the potential for massive losses on the part of retail investors.

Meanwhile, the European Commission’s Markets in Crypto Assets legislative proposal is still causing some concern among industry stakeholders.

Earlier in March, the International Association for Trusted Blockchain Applications issued a detailed report based on surveys and engagements with crypto industry players indicating that some MiCA provisions were hostile to the growth of startups.

Default Locations for VMware SRM Log Files

Purpose:
This article provides the default location of the most common Site Recovery Manager (SRM) log files.

Resolution:
VMware Site Recovery Manager server logs are located on the server where SRM is installed, in the All Users profile:

For SRM 4.x and 5.x:

On Windows XP and Server 2003:

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\Application Data\VMware\VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager\Logs\


On Windows Server 2008 and 2012:

\ProgramData\VMware\VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager\Logs\

On Windows Vista, 7:

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\VMware\VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager\Logs\


For SRM 1.0:

On Windows 2000, XP and 2003:

%ALLUSERSPROFILE%\Application Data\VMware\VMware Site Recovery Manager\Logs\
Installation logs for VMware Site Recovery Manager are located in the Temp directory for the user performing the installation:

On Windows XP and 2003:

%USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Temp\VMSrmInst.log


On Windows Vista, 7, and 2008:

%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Temp\VMSrmInst.log
%TEMP%\VMSrmInst.log


Storage Replication Adapters (SRAs) write logs in locations specific to the SRA type and vendor. Contact the SRA vendor’s documentation for more information. Common locations include:

C:\Program Files\VMware\VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager\scripts\SAN\<SRA Vendor Name>\log\
C:\Program Files\<SRA Vendor Name>\


Note: The logs can also be gathered from the GUI of the vSphere Client if connection to the SRM plug-in is still available. The Gather Logs link from the SRM Site window imports the logs from the preceding location(s).

Visa Anticipates Extreme Cryptocurrency Mainstream Adoption

Visa has escalated its efforts to support digital currencies and is introducing products that help bridge the gap between traditional currencies and cryptocurrencies. In a recent podcast, Visa CEO Al Kelly suggested that he anticipates cryptocurrencies will become ‘extremely mainstream’ within five years. He further stated his desire to position Visa in the middle of this cryptocurrency boom.

Visa’s crypto ventures – In September 2020, Visa integrated the firm Cred into their program to allow issuance of crypto credit cards. In December 2020, Visa partnered with Wirex, which is able to issue Visa cards to its customers. The latest statement from its CEO confirms that it’s accelerating its efforts to facilitate easy access to cryptocurrencies to its users.

Visa’s Cryptocurrency Strategy

Visa is working towards two strategies in Bitcoin – one is to enable the purchase of Bitcoin on Visa credentials, and the second is to work with Bitcoin wallets so that Bitcoin can be translated into a fiat currency and utilized across Visa’s 70 million merchants.

In regards to cryptocurrencies, Kelly stated that Visa is working with 35 different players to facilitate users’ purchase of these digital currencies using their Visa credentials or to cash out onto Visa credentials to make a fiat purchase at any of the 70 million merchants.

Looking ahead – Visa wants its fair share of Bitcoin in case the cryptocurrency industry does take off on the scale that many anticipate.

Ledger - Crypto Beginners Pack

Morgan Stanley Offers its Clients Exposure to Bitcoin

A new report reveals that Morgan Stanley is accelerating its efforts to engage in the cryptocurrency industry. A CNBC report states that the Wall Street firm is offering its high-end clients access to three funds that provide exposure to Bitcoin. The report cites an internal memo and unnamed people as the sources of the latest news.

Morgan Stanley’s crypto ventures – Last month, Cryptohopper reported that Morgan Stanley’s $150 billion investment arm, Counterpoint Global, was considering investing in Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Earlier this month, the $4 trillion firm joined a $200 million investment in Bitcoin firm NYDIG. Morgan Stanley also holds a major stake in MicroStrategy, which now holds more than 72,000 Bitcoins.

Exposure to Bitcoin

CNBC’s report reveals that this latest move is due to Morgan Stanley clients’ increasing demand for exposure to Bitcoin. The report details involvement with three funds: two of the funds are from Galaxy Digital and the third is a joint effort from FS Investments and NYDIG.

Morgan Stanley has restrictions in place to limit risk – participating firms must comply with restrictions, including at least $5 million at the bank in order to qualify for exposure to these funds. Additionally, it is limiting its exposure to Bitcoin investments to 2.5% of the firms’ total net worth.

Bottom line – The move directly correlates to the rise in institutional client’s demand towards exposure to cryptocurrency investments.

Ledger - Crypto Beginners Pack

Facebook building a version of Instagram for children under 13.

Facebook is considering launching a version of its popular photo social media platform, Instagram, for children under the age of 13.

BuzzFeed News first reported Facebook announced in an internal company post that the company would begin building a version of Instagram for people under the age of 13 years to allow them to “safely” use Instagram for the first time. Currently the company does not allow people who are under this age to create an account on the platform.

A spokesperson for Facebook told the Guardian the company was exploring a parent-controlled version of Instagram, similar to the Messenger Kids app that is for kids between six and 12.

“Increasingly kids are asking their parents if they can join apps that help them keep up with their friends. Right now there aren’t many options for parents, so we’re working on building additional products … that are suitable for kids, managed by parents,” the spokesperson said.

“We’re exploring bringing a parent-controlled experience to Instagram to help kids keep up with their friends, discover new hobbies and interests, and more.”

In a blog post earlier this week, which did not mention the proposed new Instagram service, the company noted that although people were asked to enter their age when signing up for Instagram, there was nothing to prevent people from lying about it at registration.

Facebook said it would overcome that by using machine learning in combination with the registration age to determine people’s ages on the platform.

The company also announced plans to roll out new safety features, including preventing adults from messaging people under the age of 18 who do not follow them, safety notices for teens when messaged by an adult sending a large amount of friend requests or messages to people under 18, and make it more difficult for adults to find and follow teens using the search function in Instagram.

Teens will also be encouraged to put their profiles on private at the point of registration.

A study of Australian teens’ internet usage published by the Australian eSafety commissioner in February found 57% of Australian teenagers use Instagram, while 30% reported being contacted by a stranger, and 20% reported being sent inappropriate unwanted content on the social media sites they used.