Ed Miliband Calls For Company Takeovers To Be Tightened Up

Ed Miliband Turns His 'Responsible Capitalism' Ire On Fund Managers

Ed Miliband has called for tighter regulation on takeovers to protect the long-term interests of British business.

In an article for the Financial Times, the Labour leader said hostile takeovers of recent years highlighted the "short-termism that blights British enterprise".

Under plans being considered by Labour, he said investors who buy shares after a company receives a takeover approach would be banned from voting on its sale.

He said firms needed a defence "against fund managers chasing the fast buck".

Under another proposal, a threshold of two-thirds rather than a majority of shareholders would be required before a takeover can succeed.

The Labour leader wrote: "Some argue that the Government should just stay out of the way.

"But the rules that govern the system shape outcomes and it is no accident that too many takeovers are decided on the basis of short-term decision-making by people who never had any interest in the long-term success of the company concerned.

"The rules need to change to help companies take decisions that drive long-term value creation."

In his article, he also referred to "unedifying spectacle" of Cadbury being bought by US firm Kraft in 2010 as investors gambled that the bid would succeed.

Prime Minister David Cameron will set out his vision for "moral capitalism" in a major speech on the economy today.

He is expected to suggest the need for greater transparency to help stem the worst excesses in business as well measures that will make it easier for co-operatives to be created.

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