Page last updated at 12:02 GMT, Sunday, 9 January 2005

�4-a-share pledge from M&S chief

M&S chief executive Stuart Rose
Stuart Rose rebuffed a 400p a share takeover bid last year

Marks & Spencer's (M&S) chief executive has vowed to return the group's share price to the �4 level or admit failure.

Stuart Rose made the pledge in an interview with the Sunday Times.

Shares in the high street retailer closed at 348p on Friday, valuing the firm at �5.7bn, the same day as it warned weak sales would hit profits.

Mr Rose was drafted into the company last year as it tried to fend off a 400p-a-share, or �9.1bn, takeover bid from retail entrepreneur Philip Green.

I have to get sales growth. Growth will deliver a higher multiple and hopefully a slap on the back from me
Stuart Rose, M&S
"Judge us on whether we get the magic �4 a share," Mr Rose told the newspaper.

However he declined to give a timeframe for the group's shares reaching that level.

Lacklustre sales

"I have to get sales growth. Growth will deliver a higher multiple and hopefully a slap on the back for me."

His comments come days after the retailer warned its annual profits were likely to come in at �600m-�625m, against analyst expectations of about �675m.

Despite unveiling disappointing Christmas sales figures, the group's share price rose on Friday amid hopes that former bidder Philip Green could return with another offer when the Takeover Panel's six month ban on any offers for M&S expires at the end of the month.

However, such an approach may be rebuffed once again.

In another interview - with the Times newspaper on Saturday - Mr Rose said he had been right to rebuff Mr Green's �9.1bn takeover offer last year.



video and audio news
Why the season was gloomy for M&S



SEE ALSO
M&S profit warning as sales slide
07 Jan 05 |  Business
M&S unveils management shake-up
09 Nov 04 |  Business
M&S starts share buyback scheme
25 Oct 04 |  Business
M&S share buyback wins approval
22 Oct 04 |  Business
M&S says sales fall now slowing
12 Oct 04 |  Business
The Battle for Marks and Spencer
05 Oct 04 |  Business

RELATED INTERNET LINKS
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites


FEATURES, VIEWS, ANALYSIS
Has China's housing bubble burst?
How the world's oldest clove tree defied an empire
Why Royal Ballet principal Sergei Polunin quit

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

AmericasAfricaEuropeMiddle EastSouth AsiaAsia Pacific