Scott Tod

8 results about this entity

Period: 26 Jan 2005 - 24 Jan 2007

NoteMachine buys TRM's European ATM business for £47.1m

US ATM deployer TRM Corporation has sold its European subsidiary, which owns and operates cash machine networks in Britain and Germany, to UK-based NoteMachine for £47.1 million ($92.6 million).

Scott Tod agrees £7.4m takeover bid

Troubled independent ATM operator Scott Tod has agreed to be taken over by private equity fund Rutland Partners, in a 21 pence-per-share deal that values the AIM-listed vendor at £7.4 million.

Scott Tod shares fall on widening losses

Shares in independent ATM operator Scott Tod dropped 19.30% after the firm reported heavy losses for the six months to December 31 2005 due to restructuring charges - including a payout to former CEO Nick Tod - and an absence of orders from a major customer.

Scott Tod rises on bid approach

Shares in independent ATM operator Scott Tod have jumped on news that it has received a tentative bid approach that may lead to an offer for the company.

Scott Tod chairman survives EGM vote

David Massie, the chairman of fee-charging ATM operator Scott Tod, has managed to hang on to his job after shareholders voted down resolutions to remove him at an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) called by outsted chief executive Nicholas Tod.

Ousted Scott Tod CEO seeks quick return

Nick Tod, ousted chief executive of independent ATM operator Scott Tod, is calling on shareholders to reinstate him and depose chairman David Massie who removed him in August following a profit warning. The news comes as the AIM-listed vendor reports heavy losses for its first full year as a public company.

Scott Tod sacks CEO; warns of full year losses

Shares in struggling ATM operator Scott Tod plummeted after the vendor sacked its chief executive officer and warned that it will incur full year pre-tax losses of around £1.1 million.

Campaign against fee-charging ATMs hits Scott Tod profits

Shares in AIM-listed independent ATM operator Scott Tod fell 26% to 38 pence yesterday and continued to slide this morning after the firm warned that second-half results would be substantially below market expectations.