🔒 Premium: Uber’s happy surprise for investors; UK’s nasty one for Bain & Co

START YOUR MORNING BY LISTENING TO TODAY’S BIZNEWS BREAKFAST BRIEFING PODCAST: Bain gets real SA-related pain with a 3 year UK ban; Markets fret as Pelosi teases China; ‘Generation Moonshot’ investors

(If you’re struggling to access BBB via Spotify or iTunes, an audio-only version is also available on YouTube. Click here). 


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Those who used BizNews Shyft model portfolio to structure their own US equity investments have welcome news this morning. One of our Wild Cards, Uber, delivered earnings surpassing market expectations with the share price jumping 19% last night. This is the portfolio’s second recent double digit overnight surprise after Amazon’s surge on Friday.

Read the full report on Uber’s quarterlies from our US partners WSJ.com by clicking here. In a nutshell, the company is benefitting from higher US inflation with the challenge of too few drivers now something of the past. The CEO says 70% of Uber drivers say they are on the platform to earn cash to offset inflation’s negative impact on their household budgets. 

The other news in the results which got Wall Street excited was Uber’s first ever quarter of free cash flow ($382m in the three months to end June) – something it had promised but which until now looked a way off from achieving.

Recent market action suggests we can hope for another positive surprise when Palantir reports its quarterlies next week. Its shares were up 4.3% last night in a Pelosi-spooked market, suggesting someone ‘knows’ something. At $10.92, Palantir shares are 23% above the Shyft portfolio’s entry level. Especially welcome after a difficult period.

More for you to read today: 


From the FT: Bain barred from UK state contracts over ‘grave misconduct’ in S Africa

Britain becomes first western country to impose penalties on consultant for role in Zuma scandal

By George Parker and Michael O’Dwyer in London, and Joseph Cotterill in Johannesburg

Bain & Co, the Boston-based global management consultant, was on Tuesday hit with a three-year ban from tendering for British government contracts because of its “grave professional misconduct” in a major corruption scandal in South Africa.

Jacob Rees-Mogg, Cabinet Office minister, told Bain that the affair had rendered the company’s integrity “questionable” and that he was not convinced that it had taken its role in the scandal “sufficiently seriously”.

Britain is the first western country to impose such penalties on Bain for its role in the “state capture” scandal in South Africa and there is already pressure on the US to follow suit.

In a letter seen by the Financial Times, Rees-Mogg told James Hadley, Bain’s UK managing partner, that the three-year ban would apply retrospectively from January 4 2022. “I trust that after three years have elapsed Bain & Co will have restored its reputation,” he wrote.

Rees-Mogg’s intervention came after pressure from Lord Peter Hain, the veteran anti-apartheid campaigner, who had urged Boris Johnson’s government to punish Bain for its “despicable” behaviour.

Initially, Cabinet Office officials advised that no action against the company was necessary but Rees-Mogg sought further advice, including from an external QC.

He told Hadley that the company would be banned from Cabinet Office contracts under 2015 legislation on the basis that “Bain & Co is guilty of grave professional misconduct which renders its integrity questionable”.

Rees-Mogg, who will advise all government departments to apply the same three-year ban, said he was particularly concerned at the way Bain’s South African division “colluded” with the regime of former president Jacob Zuma to undermine the country’s revenue service.

The consultancy has been awarded UK public sector contracts worth up to £63mn since 2018, including £40mn worth of Brexit consulting work for the Cabinet Office, but the damage to the company will be mainly reputational.

In a letter in February to Hain, the then Cabinet Office minister Steve Barclay wrote that the firm was “not a strategic supplier to the government and is not currently undertaking any substantial work for the government”. 

Hain said: “I’m very pleased. This sets down a marker for all companies which behave in an unlawful, unethical and unprofessional way that they won’t be able to tender for government contracts.

“I commend Jacob Rees-Mogg for doing this and I want the US government to do the same thing.”

Bain said: “We were disappointed and surprised by the minister’s decision . . . We will be responding to express our concern about the process and its outcome and to address inaccuracies in his letter.

“If necessary, we will then consider other options for review of the decision. In the meantime, we will continue to work with the Cabinet Office to ensure that we do what is required to restore our standing with the UK government.”

Earlier this year an inquiry into South Africa’s biggest post-apartheid corruption scandal found that Bain had helped to undermine the country’s revenue service through advisory work that aided Zuma’s allies.

Bain’s work on a restructuring of the South African revenue service was “a clear example of how the private sector colluded” with the breakdown of public institutions, said the inquiry.

It added that Bain sought to use a relationship with Zuma to acquire further government business.

Bain has previously admitted failings in its work in South Africa and repaid fees, but said that the inquiry’s findings mischaracterised its activities. Zuma has denied any involvement in corruption.

Other international consulting firms have been embroiled in corruption scandals in South Africa.

McKinsey agreed in 2020 to repay about R650m ($39mn) over irregularities in contracts it had entered into with a local partner at government-owned companies.

Auditor KPMG apologised in 2017 for “mistakes” in work for businesses linked to the Gupta family, accused of serious corruption through ties to Zuma.

UK public relations firm Bell Pottinger was brought down by its work for the Guptas, which led to accusations that it had stoked racial tensions in South Africa.

Banning a company from bidding for public sector contracts is rare. Security group G4S was temporarily barred in 2013 after overcharging the government for the electronic tagging of criminals, some of whom were dead or still in prison.

Consultancy Deloitte stopped pitching for public work for six months in 2016 after a note was leaked in which its consultants criticised the government’s Brexit strategy.


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