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Former Northampton Town FC chairman appears in court over fraud case
- All five are charged with conspiracy to commit fraud by false representation between September 2013 and April 2015. These relate to false representations, allegedly made to Northampton Borough Council, that money loaned by the authority to the football club would be used solely for developing Sixfields Stadium and an adjoining hotel, which were “untrue or misleading.”
- The Cardozas are also both charged with fraud by abuse of position, contrary to section 1 of the Fraud Act, which relates to a sum of £8.75m being paid from the football club to 1st Land Limited, a company owned by Howard Grossman.
- David Cardoza is further charged with transferring criminal property, namely £166,000 in a credit balance via a bank transfer from the bank account of Northampton Town Football Club Limited, knowing or suspecting it to constitute or to represent, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, the benefit from criminal conduct.
- In addition to fraud, Howard Grossman faces three charges of transferring criminal property, specifically amounts of £650,000 from the bank account of his company County Homes (Herts) Ltd to his son and fellow director, Hayden Grossman, as well as transferring £10,000 from 1st Land Limited to Simon Patnick and £15,000 from 1st Land Limited to Simpa Investments Limited, a company owned by Simon Patnick.
- Mr Grossman and his son Marcus are further charged with transferring criminal property, namely £20,000, from Marcus Grossman’s account to Simon Patnick, knowing or suspecting it to constitute or to represent, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, the benefit from criminal conduct.
- As well as fraud, Patnick is accused of acquiring criminal property contrary to the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002, namely £61,800 in credit balances via bank transfers from or on behalf of Howard Grossman and Marcus Grossman knowing or suspecting it to constitute or to represent, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, the benefit from criminal conduct.
- Howard Grossman faces the same allegation, relating to a sum of £10,000 transferred to Margro Properties Ltd, a company run by Marcus Grossman.
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Sales grow at Dunelm
Dunelm Group, the Leicester-headquartered homewares retailer, has seen a rise in second quarter sales.
According to a trading update for the 13-week period ended 28 December 2024, sales grew by 1.6% to £490m, in a challenging market.
It sees first half sales reach £894m, a 2.4% increase, with the business’s furniture categories performing particularly well. “We are pleased with this solid performance in a market which remained volatile,” Dunelm shared.
Nick Wilkinson, Chief Executive Officer, said: “We’re pleased with our performance in the first half; we are growing sales and volume, with customers again responding well to the value and choice we offer across our ranges.
“At the same time, we’ve made significant strategic progress across multiple initiatives which are helping us to improve our attractive, specialist offer and continue to gain market share. We have taken our first steps outside the UK with the acquisition of 13 stores in Ireland, opened our first inner London store in Westfield, and made further improvements to our online customer experience which is contributing to continued strong digital growth.
“As we move into the second half of FY25, we have successfully launched our Winter Sale which is being well received by customers seeking amazing value across a wide choice of relevant products for the colder months. As we navigate this challenging environment, we see even more opportunities to harness our unique business model, raise the bar on our proposition and fulfil our ambitions as The Home of Homes.”
Revenue slips at Ibstock in challenging year for construction markets
Full year revenues at the company are expected to have decreased by 10% to approximately £365 million, in comparison to £406 million in 2023. The decline comes in hand with 2024 being a challenging year for UK construction markets, with total UK brick deliveries expected to be over 30% below the 2.5 billion recorded in 2022.
Ibstock highlighted a progressive improvement in sales volumes across the second half of 2024, with revenues in H2 2024 being 3% ahead of the prior year period and 6% ahead of H1 2024.
Adjusted EBITDA for 2024 is expected to be approximately £79 million.
Joe Hudson, CEO of Ibstock PLC, said: “We are pleased to have delivered a resilient performance, consistent with the guidance we gave at the half year, in a market where revenues continued to be impacted by subdued activity levels.
“This result reflects our active management of capacity and cost, continued disciplined pricing and a progressive improvement in demand across the second half, as expected.
“Looking to 2025, we expect a further improvement in market volumes to build through the year. We made good strategic progress during 2024 to add efficient and sustainable new capacity to our network and we will continue to bring capacity back into production selectively to support our customers.
“We see a significant opportunity for a new era in housebuilding in the UK and with the investments we have made and our market leadership positions, the Group remains well placed to support this over the medium term.”