Trade union calls for Deliveroo UK riders strike to highlight IPO risks

Deliveroo is bracing for strikes by riders as it gears up for its IPO. (AFP)
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Updated 29 March 2021
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Trade union calls for Deliveroo UK riders strike to highlight IPO risks

  • Some investment firms have said they will not participate in the initial public offering (IPO)

LONDON: A trade union called for Deliveroo’s UK riders to strike when the meal delivery service floats on the stock market next month, saying on Sunday the action would highlight dissatisfaction with the company’s business model and approach to workers’ rights.

Deliveroo, whose turquoise-uniformed couriers delivering chicken kormas and American hot pizzas are a common sight in many British suburbs, is set for Britain’s biggest stock market debut in nearly a decade after setting a share price range that values it at up to $12 billion.

But some investment firms have said they will not participate in the initial public offering (IPO). Insurer Aviva for instance highlighted a lack of rights for riders as an investment risk as the company might be forced to change its business model.

Deliveroo said investor demand had continued to build since its roadshow began on Monday, and said the views of the union, which announced the strike, the Independent Workers’ Union of Great Britain (IWGB), did not represent the vast majority of riders.

The IWGB previously lost a legal challenge to Deliveroo in 2018. The case sought to secure rights such as the UK minimum wage for riders, but the court ruled riders were self-employed.

“Investing in Deliveroo means associating yourself with the exploitative and unstable business model,” IWGB President Alex Marshall said in a statement, adding the strike was planned for April 7, to coincide with the IPO.


Dar Al Arkan annual profit rises 41% to $301m on stronger property sales 

Updated 13 sec ago
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Dar Al Arkan annual profit rises 41% to $301m on stronger property sales 

RIYADH: Dar Al Arkan Real Estate Development Co. posted a 40.54 percent rise in annual net profit to SR1.13 billion ($301 million) in 2025, supported by higher property sales.

According to a filing on Saudi Exchange, the company’s net profit rose from SR806.84 million a year earlier, while annual revenue increased 3.75 percent year on year to SR3.90 billion. 

Operating profit climbed 18.96 percent to SR1.59 billion, while gross profit rose 15.22 percent to SR1.84 billion. 

“The increase in net income is mainly due to the increase in property sales. The increase in finance costs was offset by the increase in lease revenue, decrease in operating expenses, increase in share of income from associates, and increase in non-operating income from Islamic Murabaha deposits and positively impacted the net income,” the company said in the statement. 

Shareholders’ equity after minority interest stood at SR22.22 billion as of Dec. 31, compared with SR21.09 billion a year earlier. 

In February, Dar Al Arkan announced the full redemption of its $400 million sukuk. 

In a Tadawul statement, the company said that the sukuk were redeemed at maturity using internal resources, with the amount transferred to the designated account. 

The company further said that the impact of the sukuk redemption will appear in its first-quarter financial statement. 

The company also disclosed last month that it had received three white land tax-related invoices totaling about SR201.15 million for plots within the Shams Ar Riyadh development, licensed under the Wafi off-plan sales program. The invoices were valued at SR48.32 million, SR108.10 million, and SR44.73 million , respectively. 

In a separate disclosure in September, Dar Al Arkan said 2.83 million sq. meters of its land portfolio falls under the Kingdom’s White Land Tax Law.