Wednesday newspaper round-up: Darktrace, Twitter, EnQuest
It is an award-winning pioneer in the fast-growing cybersecurity industry, boasting veterans of the spy community and the British political establishment on its payroll. It is also the subject of admiring glances from a deep-pocketed US private equity house pondering a takeover that could lead to payouts worth £200m for its management team. But there are clouds hanging over Darktrace, in the shape of analysts’ criticism of its business model and concerns about its workplace culture, not to mention an escalating legal battle over a multi-billion pound fraud. – Guardian
A trial over Elon Musk’s bid to end his $44bn deal for Twitter should be delayed by several weeks to allow him to investigate a whistleblower’s claims about security on the social media platform, Musk’s lawyer told a judge on Tuesday. “Doesn’t justice demand a few weeks to look into this?” said Musk’s lawyer, Alex Spiro, at a hearing in Wilmington, Delaware. – Guardian
Russia is hunting for Western semiconductors built by the Chinese-backed owner of Welsh factory Newport Wafer Fab as it seeks to restock critical high-tech components for its war machine. Ukrainian intelligence has warned Vladimir Putin’s regime is desperately seeking chip technology built by European and American companies, Politico reported. – Telegraph
Workers will suffer a real-terms fall of £2,000 in the value of their wages by the end of this year and energy prices could hit nearly £7,000 in 2023 without government intervention, PwC has warned. In its latest economic outlook, the Big Four professional services group has predicted that the economy will tip into recession this year as people face a double hit to their incomes from higher inflation and rapidly rising energy bills. – The Times
Rising profits prompted an outbreak of profit-taking at EnQuest after the North Sea’s largest independent operator was boosted by higher oil prices and increased production. EnQuest, an oil and gas producer focused on the North Sea and Malaysia, said its pre-tax profits in the six months to the end of June had more than trebled to $182.6 million from $49.1 million in the previous year. The average oil price per barrel in the period was $89.90, compared with $62.80 in the first half of last year. – The Times