Kamis, 30 November 2023

Tesla to begin delivering Cybertrucks after Musk said the car ‘dug our grave’ - The Guardian

Tesla is set to start deliveries of its long-delayed, much-hyped Cybertruck electric pickup on Thursday after its CEO, Elon Musk, tempered investor expectations, citing problems in ramping production of what he called a “radical” product.

Cybertruck, Tesla’s first new model in nearly four years, is critical to its reputation as a maker of innovative vehicles. At a time when the company is battling softening electric vehicle (EV) demand and rising competition, Cybertruck is also key for generating sales, though not to the extent of the company’s high-volume Models 3 and Y.

“We dug our own grave with Cybertruck,” Musk said last month, warning that it would take a year to 18 months to make the vehicle a significant cashflow contributor.

Pricing for the vehicle is expected to be revealed at an event scheduled to begin at 3pm ET. After saying in 2019 the truck would be priced at $40,000, Musk has not offered an updated price despite rising raw material costs. Seth Goldstein, equity strategist at Morningstar, said he expects the Cybertruck to be priced between $50,000 to the low-$70,000 range.

Ahead of the launch, Musk captured media attention on a different subject, giving a profanity-laced interview to the New York Times on Wednesday. He cursed advertisers who had left his social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, because of antisemitic comment. He also said that customers who didn’t like him should judge his products by their quality, including Tesla EVs.

The billionaire has claimed Tesla would reach a production rate of roughly 250,000 Cybertrucks a year in 2025, though even reaching the initial delivery day took two years longer than his initial timeline. Tesla has faced “enormous challenges in reaching volume production” with the Cybertruck because of its new technology and design, Musk said.

Cybertruck’s new body material and unconventional, futuristic styling add complexity and costs to production, and threatens to alienate traditional pickup truck buyers who focus on utility, experts say.

During its 2019 reveal, Tesla’s chief designer, Franz von Holzhausen, took a metal ball to demonstrate the truck’s unbreakable “armor glass” window, only to shatter it.

A few years ago, Musk had floated the idea that if people did not like the futuristic Cybertruck design, Tesla could “build a normal-looking truck”. On recent calls and interviews he has emphasized the model’s innovation.

“The larger problem for the Cybertruck is the Cybertruck wasn’t really designed for pickup truck users,” Eric Noble, president of automotive consulting firm, The Carlab, said. “It will have a much narrower appeal than a Ram or an F series,” he said of the popular Ford F-150 pickup.

Cybertruck, which is two years behind schedule, enters a hot and highly profitable pickup truck market to compete with the likes of Ford’s F-150 Lightning, Rivian Automotive’s R1T and General Motors’ Hummer EV.

Rivian’s R1T has a starting price of $73,000, while Ford’s F-150 Lightning starts at about $50,000, meanwhile the larger and more powerful GMC Hummer EV pickup costs more than $96,000.

Cybertruck has drawn more than a million reservation holders who have put down $100 as deposits. “Tesla’s products have largely appealed to more affluent early adopter types. And this is going to be no different,” said Paul Waatti, an analyst at consultancy AutoPacific. “It’s going to have a smaller audience than the SUVs will have, but I think it’s going to do surprisingly well.”

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2023-11-30 22:23:00Z
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Opec+ production cuts leave oil market sceptical - Financial Times

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2023-11-30 19:10:43Z
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Metro Bank to review seven day opening and cut jobs - BBC

Metro Bank branchGetty Images

Metro Bank has said it will review whether to stay open seven days a week as it also revealed plans to cut 20% of its workers.

The struggling lender said the measures were part of a strategy to save around £50m a year.

Since launching in 2010, Metro Bank sought to differentiate itself from more traditional lenders by staying open for longer.

But on Thursday it also revealed it will shorten its opening hours.

Metro Bank said: "The company is reviewing seven-day opening and extended store hours across the store network and is in discussions with the Financial Conduct Authority about the customer implications of any such changes."

Meanwhile, more than 850 Metro staff will lose their jobs. The bank currently employs 4,266 people and said that it plans to reduce "roles across the organisation, including at senior leadership level".

This week, shareholders voted to back a £925m rescue deal aimed at securing the bank's future.

It has faced challenges in recent years after an accounting scandal. The bank had been struggling to make a profit and in October, reports emerged that it wanted to raise money and refinance some of its debts.

Metro Bank was founded in 2010 by American businessman Vernon Hill in the immediate aftermath of the financial crisis, becoming the first bank to open in the UK in more than a century.

Vernon Hill and Duffy

Its branches were branded in red, white and blue, and there were posters of Mr Hill's Yorkshire Terrier Sir Duffield - who was officially the bank's "chief canine officer" - advertising its policy of welcoming dog owners.

Metro Bank chose an unusual strategy, building a network of more than 60 physical branches, which opened earlier and closed later than its rivals, at a time when most banks were scaling back their presence on the High Street.

It wanted to be a "challenger" to the main High Street banks and it said that part of its strategy was to help customers avoid "the lunchtime sprint" by being open between 8am and 8pm for the entire week.

On Thursday, the bank said on its website that its branches would be open from 9.30am to 5.30pm but these are just for one day.

"No decisions have yet been made" about opening hours, a spokeswoman said.

Metro Bank said last month that it wanted to make annual cuts of £30m a year but it has now raised that to £50m.

It said it "remains committed to stores and the High Street", and it still looking for sites for branches in the north of England.

But it will aim to cut costs in part by increasing automation for services and by cutting back-office jobs.

The bank is talking to regulators about the implications for customers of reduced opening hours.

The financing deal, backed by investors earlier this week, means Metro Bank will raise £325m and refinance £600m worth of debt.

Colombian banking billionaire Jaime Gilinski Bacal will become Metro Bank's controlling shareholder with a 53% stake, and his firm Spaldy Investments will invest £102m in the bank.

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2023-11-30 10:01:51Z
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Elon Musk apologises for antisemitic X post - but tells fleeing advertisers to 'go f*** yourself' - Sky News

Elon Musk has launched a fiery attack on advertisers who have stopped promoting on his social media platform X, telling them to "go f*** yourself".

At the New York Times DealBook summit on Wednesday, the X boss was asked about American firms - including Disney - who pulled ads after he apparently endorsed an antisemitic conspiracy theory.

Bluntly, Musk said: "Don't advertise. I don't want them to advertise.

"If somebody's gonna try to blackmail me with advertising, blackmail me with money? Go f*** yourself," he said.

"Go. F***. Yourself. Is that clear? I hope it is. Hey, Bob, if you're in the audience," he added, in an apparent reference to Robert Iger, chief executive of Disney.

"That's how I feel. Don't advertise."

Despite the expletive-laden defence, Musk acknowledged the advertising row could be the end for X, which he purchased for $44bn in 2022.

"What this advertising boycott is going to do is, it is going to kill the company," he said.

"And the whole world will know that those advertisers killed the company."

It comes after Musk visited Israel, where he toured a kibbutz attacked by Hamas militants and held talks with top leaders.

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Musk on 'difficult' kibbutz visit

The New York Times reported X's own internal documents say losing the advertisers could see the company lose as much as $75m in revenue by the end of the year.

In the on-stage interview, Musk also apologised for endorsing an antisemitic conspiracy theory in response to a post on X that fuelled the advertiser exodus.

Musk agreed with a post on X that falsely claimed Jewish people were stoking hatred against white people, saying the user who referenced the "Great Replacement" conspiracy theory was speaking "the actual truth".

That conspiracy theory holds that Jewish people and leftists are engineering the ethnic and cultural replacement of white populations with non-white immigrants that will lead to a "white genocide".

Musk described his post as possibly the worst he had made during a history of messages that included many "foolish" ones.

He told yesterday's summit in New York: "I mean, look, I'm sorry for that … post.

"It was foolish of me. Of the 30,000 it might be literally the worst and dumbest post I've ever done.

"And I've tried my best to clarify six ways from Sunday, but you know at least I think it'll be obvious that in fact far from being antisemitic, I'm in fact philosemitic."

Following the post, major US companies including Disney, Warner Bros and Sky News' parent company Comcast suspended their ads on X.

Rishi Sunak, who recently conducted a Q&A with Musk at a two-day summit on Artificial Intelligence in London, condemned antisemitism after Musk's comments and added: "It doesn't matter whether you're Elon Musk or you're someone on the street who's shouting abuse at someone who happens to be walking past."

Since taking over Twitter - rebranded as X, Mr Musk's ownership has caused jitters among advertisers who have raised concerns about policies like reduced content moderation.

The platform's US ad revenue is down by at least 57% each month compared to the same month last year since Musk's takeover, according to Reuters news agency.

Read more:
Elon Musk meets Israeli officials amid antisemitism row
Musk accused of promoting 'Pizzagate' conspiracy theory

Last week's mass exodus of advertisers came after Media Matters, an antisemitism watchdog, published a report that found firm's promotions were being shown next to racist posts on X.

It said adverts from major brands including Apple and Oracle were placed next to antisemitic material.

In response, Musk's firm filed a lawsuit in Texas against the watchdog, accusing it of "knowingly and maliciously" portraying ads next to hateful material "as if they were what typical X users experience on the platform".

Media Matters said it stood by its reporting, with its president Angelo Carusone adding: "This is a frivolous lawsuit meant to bully X's critics into silence."

In August, Musk's X also sued The Center for Countering Digital Hate after it reported a rise in hate speech on the platform.

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2023-11-30 08:15:00Z
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Dr Martens issues fourth profit warning of year amid weak US sales - The Guardian

Dr Martens has issued its fourth profit warning this year as a tough consumer environment in the US continues to affect sales of its sturdy boots.

The Northamptonshire-based footwear brand said sales fell 5% to £396m in the six months to 30 September and pre-tax profits dived 55% to £26m. While this was better than City analysts had expected, the company warned that the outlook for the following six months had worsened because of a slower than hoped for recovery in its US business.

Shares in the retailer plunged 20% after the announcement, making Dr Martens the top faller on the FTSE 250 on Thursday. Priced at 92p, shares are now 75% lower than the 370p float price in January 2021.

Sales for the full year are now expected to fall by about 8% and underlying profits to drop back below the £223.7m minimum expected by the City – continuing the slide seen since the company listed on the London Stock Exchange in January 2021.

Kenny Wilson, the Dr Martens chief executive, said the group had fixed problems with its US warehouse, changed most of the management team there and was rebooting its marketing effort but said it was proving “more challenging than expected” to return that part of the business to growth.

While the macroeconomic environment over the Atlantic is quite strong, Wilson said shoppers were holding back. “Virtually all of the big footwear and apparel brands have had difficult numbers,” he said.

The latest problems come after costs soared earlier this year after a string of “operational mistakes” at the footwear group’s Los Angeles distribution centre, which opened in 2022. It was forced to open temporary US warehouses in late 2022 after it bought too much stock and suffered supply chain bottlenecks.

Wilson said Dr Martens had achieved better profits than expected in the first half of the year as it had taken action to reduce costs in its supply chain that had helped offset inflation.

The brand put its footwear prices up in July, by about £10 to £169 for a classic boot, but Wilson said there would not be another price rise until at least the end of 2024 because inflation had now dropped well below the 6% seen in 2023.

Dr Martens continued to trade well in Europe and Asia, with sales up 8% in the UK in the half-year, helped by a return of tourists to London as well as a 4% contribution from price rises. The brand has opened a second store on London’s Oxford Street, with shoppers from the US and continental Europe returning to the capital after the coronavirus pandemic.

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2023-11-30 09:01:00Z
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Elon Musk launches profane attack on X advertisers - BBC

Elon Musk sits for an interview at DealBook SummitGetty Images

In a profanity-laced outburst, Elon Musk has slammed advertisers that have left X, warning they will kill the social media platform.

At an event in New York, he accused companies that have joined an ad boycott of the site formerly known as Twitter of trying to blackmail him.

"Go [expletive] yourself," the billionaire said in an interview.

Some firms have paused advertising on X amid concerns over antisemitism, including a post from Mr Musk himself.

The Tesla and SpaceX boss apologised on Wednesday for that post, saying it might be the "dumbest" thing he has ever shared online.

But it was his response to a question about an advertising boycott by companies including Disney, Apple and Comcast that caused a stir at the gathering of leaders from the worlds of business, politics and culture.

"I don't want them to advertise," Mr Musk said at the New York Times' DealBook Summit.

"If someone is going to blackmail me with advertising or money go [expletive] yourself.

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Go. [Expletive]. Yourself. Is that clear? Hey Bob, if you're in the audience, that's how I feel."

He was apparently referring to Disney chief executive Bob Iger, who spoke at the summit earlier in the day.

In the room with Mr Musk was Linda Yaccarino, X's chief executive, who has been charged with trying to bring back advertisers to the platform.

Mr Musk also said that advertisers could kill X.

"What this advertising boycott is going to do is it's going to kill the company," he said.

"The whole world will know those advertisers killed the company, and we will document it in great detail," he added.

Ms Yaccarino has since reposted what she called his "candid interview", adding her perspective on advertising that "X is standing at a unique and amazing intersection of Free Speech and Main Street — and the X community is powerful and is here to welcome you".

Mr Musk has been on a visit to Israel after he last month appeared to personally back an antisemitic conspiracy theory.

"I'm sorry for that tweet... it might be literally the worst and dumbest post that I've ever done," he said on Wednesday.

The boycott isn't just to do with that post, though.

Many advertisers had already decided to spend their dollars elsewhere.

In an interview with the BBC in April, Mr Musk said "almost all of them [advertisers] have either come back or they're going to come back".

Three months later he acknowledged in a post on X that ad revenue had fallen by 50%.

That was before a report by liberal pressure group Media Matters, which claimed to have found evidence that some adverts had been placed next to Nazi content.

X says the group's report had "misrepresented the real user experience of X" in order to "undermine freedom of speech and mislead advertisers". X has filed a lawsuit against Media Matters.

It's hard to see how Mr Musk's comments will bring advertisers running back. The company is heavily reliant on their money.

It is unclear how much of X's revenue currently comes from ads, because it's now a private company and no longer publishes quarterly reports.

But before Mr Musk took over the firm, advertising made up about 90% of Twitter revenue.

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2023-11-30 06:42:44Z
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Metro Bank to cut 800 jobs and may axe seven day branch opening - Sky News

Metro Bank has revealed plans to cut 20% of its workforce and slash its business hours commitments as part of efforts to save it from collapse.

The struggling challenger lender, which announced a £30m cost-cutting plan last month, said it was now targeting £50m in annual savings amid wider efforts to shore up its balance sheet.

It employs about 4,000 staff, meaning it expects to lose around 800 people under the plans.

Metro, which earlier this week received shareholder approval for a £925m refinancing and recapitalisation plan, is also in talks to sell a £3bn mortgage book.

Sky News revealed exclusive talks with Barclays earlier this week which, if successful, would strengthen its capital position further.

Metro said the cost reduction action was expected to be completed early in 2024.

It forecast a a one-off charge of up to £15m which, a statement said, would be booked in the current financial year.

More from Business

The bank, which was founded in 2010, has about 2.7 million customers and 75 branches in the UK.

Metro Bank has more than 60 branches
Image: Metro's business model has been to offer branch services as major lenders focus on closures and digital banking

It has looked to capitalise on public anger over high street branch closures by mainstream banks since the financial crisis by focusing purely on branch services - opening seven days per week.

However, it has struggled to recover from a blunder in 2019 that saw £900m in loans mis-classified, sparking an investor and deposit outflow at the time.

"Whilst the company remains committed to stores and the high street, it will transition to a more cost-efficient business model, investing in automation for service and back-office operations and improving digital channels, particularly for deposits," the bank said on Thursday.

"The company is reviewing seven day opening and extended store hours across the store network and is in discussions with the FCA [Financial Conduct Authority] about the customer implications of any such changes.

Metro said the cost-cutting plan would not affect its growth areas.

The statement continued: "The company continues to seek sites in the North of England for new stores as previously communicated.

"Metro Bank will also take action to simplify its operations and selectively streamline lending to focus on relationship banking and maximise risk-adjusted returns on regulatory capital."

Separately, it announced that three board members would step down at the end of the year, leaving the board with five non-executive and two executive directors.

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2023-11-30 07:41:15Z
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Rabu, 29 November 2023

Google agrees to pay C$100mn a year for news in Canada - Financial Times

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2023-11-29 20:09:07Z
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LIVE: FTSE 100 down and Wall Street up as US economy grows faster than expected - Yahoo Finance UK

FTSE 100 was in the red on Wednesday in London

The FTSE 100 closed 0.3% lower on the day, held back by a stronger pound. Photo: PA/Alamy (Hannah Mckay / reuters)

European stock markets were mixed on Wednesday, while Wall Street advanced, as the pound continued its rally and the US economy grew faster than expected.

In London, the FTSE 100 (^FTSE) closed 0.4% lower on the day, held back by a stronger pound, which hit a three-month high against the dollar during the session.

Meanwhile the CAC (^FCHI) gained 0.4% in Paris and the Frankfurt DAX (^GDAXI) surged 1.1%, touching a four-month high after data showed consumer prices in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia fell 0.3% month-on-month in November and to 3% year-on-year.

German inflation was less than expected in November, boosting hopes that the European Central Bank (ECB) will start cutting interest rates soon.

The consumer price index for Europe’s largest economy came in at 2.3%, lower than the 2.5% predicted by analysts. Overall eurozone inflation numbers will be published on Thursday.

Across the pond, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) climbed 0.3%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq (^IXIC) was also 0.3% higher. The Dow Jones (^DJI) advanced 0.1% by the time of the European close.

It came as the US economy grew by 5.2% in the three months to September, better than estimates of 4.9%.

Consumer spending also grew during the period, albeit at a slower than forecast pace of 3.6%

Sterling (GBPUSD=X) was more than 0.2% higher against the US dollar at $1.2715 on Wednesday morning while it was was more than 0.1% up against the euro (GBPEUR=X) at 1.1562, at the time of writing.

The currency has gained 4.7% verses the global reserve currency over the last month as investors have increased bets that the US Federal Reserve will begin cutting interest rates soon.

Pressure on the dollar has continued to rise after a Fed official said monetary policy is well positioned to slow the US economy and get inflation back to target.

The comments from Fed governor Christopher Waller fuelled expectations that interest rate hikes are over. He went on to say that if disinflation starts to become a concern, then rates could be cut in response.

Read more: UK mortgage take up rises as interest rates hit pause

He told a conference: "I am encouraged by what we have learned in the past few weeks — something appears to be giving, and it’s the pace of the economy.

”Economic data from October are consistent with the kind of moderating demand and easing price pressure that will help move inflation back to 2%"

Sterling stood at its highest level since August at $1.27 on Wednesday morning, with demand also reflecting more warnings from Bank of England policymakers that UK interest rates need to stay higher for some time in order to tame inflation.

Meanwhile, global bonds are rising at their fastest pace since the 2008 financial crisis, according to new analysis, as traders bet that interest rate cuts are looming.

  • Markets close and recap

    Well that's all that we have time for today, thanks for following along. As a quick reminder, here's a breakdown of the top stories from today...

    UK mortgage approvals rise for first time since June

    Households up borrowing at fastest rate in five years

    London Metal Exchange wins court case

    UK urged to reform triple lock

    US economy grows faster than expected

    Halfords slumps 20% after weak sales warning

    Berkshire Hathaway slides as Charlie Munger dies

    Saudi Arabia buys 10% of London Heathrow airport

    Have a great evening!

  • Telegraph sale potential national security threat

    A number of Conservative MPs have written to the deputy prime minister urging him to use national security powers to review the potential sale of the Daily Telegraph.

    Ministers are being asked to intervene after RedBird IMI, an investment fund owned by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan, vice-president of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), reached a deal to purchase the broadsheet newspaper and The Spectator magazine.

    In a letter co-ordinated by Neil O’Brien, who was a health minister until the reshuffle a fortnight ago, the 18 MPs said they believed that the proposed transaction “presents a very real potential national security threat”.

    he backbenchers said ministers should not be “railroaded into clearing” the change of ownership and should instead “pause the deal” to review its impact on Britain’s security and press freedom.

    They urged Oliver Dowden, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s deputy, to conduct a review of the transaction linked to Sheik Mansour, who owns Manchester City football club, by using powers under the National Security and Investment Act (NSI).

  • CMA to investigate baby formula market

    <span>Photograph: Eric Gay/AP</span>
    Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

    The competition watchdog has launched an investigation into the baby formula market after it discovered manufacturers were raising prices by 25%.

    The probe showed that increases had taken place over two years and that companies had managed to increase profit margins during the cost of living crisis.

    Danone and Nestlé accounted for 85% of sales.

    The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it was concerned there was too little choice in the market, with a very limited number of own-label products, and that very few parents were switching to cheaper alternatives where available.

    If families did shop around, they could make savings of more than £500 in the first year of a child’s life, it found.

    Sarah Cardell, the chief executive of the CMA, said:

    Food price inflation has put huge strain on household budgets, so it is vital competition issues aren’t adding to the problem. While in most cases the leading brands have raised prices more than their own cost increases, own-label products are generally providing cheaper alternatives.

  • Wall Street to open higher as US economy grows faster than expected

    S&P 500 futures (ES=F) are up 0.5%, Dow futures (YM=F) have gained 0.2%, and Nasdaq futures (NQ=F) are 0.8% higher an hour before the opening bell in New York.

    It comes as the US economy grew faster than expected in the third quarter of 2023.


    Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 5.2% in the period, according to revised data by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis.


    Economists had expected an upward revision from the first estimate of 4.9%, but it was faster than the 5% annualised growth predicted in a poll of economists.

    The US economy grew at the fastest rate since 2021 in the third quarter of 2023.
    The US economy grew at the fastest rate since 2021 in the third quarter of 2023.
  • How to protect yourself from scams this Christmas

    It’s officially scams season. For the next month, with Christmas shopping in full swing, criminals will ramp up their efforts to cash in on shoppers looking for deals.

    And when the festive frenzy dies down in the new year, they can still exploit our vulnerabilities as we rush for the tax return deadline.

    The festive shopping season is particularly fruitful for scammers, because we’re in the perfect frame of mind to fall for a scam.

    We’re busy and distracted, we’re desperate to buy the perfect gifts and we’re often spending with several online retailers at a time, so we can lose track.

    Read Sarah Coles' tips here

  • OECD triple-lock commentary

    Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, said.

    While the peak of the rate hiking cycle appears to have been reached, the effects are lagging in nature and thus 2024 is going to see economic growth slowdown even further than it has already, and cause developed nations to feel the effects of the weakening environment.

    In better news, they now believe that a soft landing is the most likely outcome across the developed economies, with recession avoided – although were at pains to emphasise this was far from a certainty.

    The OECD isn’t expecting any rate cuts until late 2024 and for some economies not until 2025. As a result, stimulating economic growth is going to be very challenging, and thus investors need to adapt and look for quality businesses and more tactical opportunities that can still thrive in uncertain times.

    “The OECD also gives some options to help loosen the restrictive fiscal backdrop, and although supportive of the measures in the Autumn Statement, it clearly does not think these go far enough. The state pension triple lock is specifically called out as one way to ease the pressure on government spending – reforming it instead to a double lock of average inflation and wage increases.

    There is a growing problem with the state pension and in its current state can be financially unpredictable and at worst unsustainable in the long run. It’s unfortunate but not unsurprising that this government has not opted to make long term decisions about reforming how the state pension is uprated, particularly given the economic benefits that could be realised with such a change.

  • UK urged to reform triple lock

    The OECD’s latest Economic Outlook is out.

    My colleague Pedro Gonçalves writes...

    Jeremy Hunt should scrap the pensions triple lock to pay for net zero policies, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has said.

    The Paris-based economic body said the UK should reform the pensions triple lock to improve public finances.

    "Reforming the costly triple lock uprating of state pensions would help, by indexing pensions to an average of CPI [consumer price index of inflation] and wage inflation, and by providing direct transfers to poor pensioners to mitigate poverty risks," the OECD said.

    The triple lock means that the state pension must rise every April by whichever is highest out of average earnings, inflation or 2.5%. Next year, it is going up by 8.5%, from £10,600 to £11,502.

    The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) said the triple lock added an extra £11bn a year to public spending.

    The OECD said that the UK government should do more to shore up the public finances.

    Read the full article here

  • London Metal Exchange wins court case

    Traders in the Ring at the London Metal Exchange, in the City of London, in 2021 after open-outcry trading returned for the first time since March 2020, when the Ring was temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Traders in the Ring at the London Metal Exchange, in the City of London, in 2021 after open-outcry trading returned for the first time since March 2020, when the Ring was temporarily closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

    The London Metal Exchange has won its court case in a £450m lawsuit over its controversial decision to halt a runaway short squeeze in the nickel market last year.

    The LME was brought into the spotlight last March after it suspended the nickel market and retroactively cancelled $12 billion of trades.

    Elliott Management and Jane Street were seeking damages of $472m (£372m) but their challenges were dismissed in a ruling today.

    Elliott said it was “naturally disappointed by the court’s decision and concerned about the precedents that it establishes for market participants in the UK”, They intend to appeal the decision.

  • UK households up their borrowing at fastest rate in five years

    UK households increased their borrowing at the fastest rate in five years in October, according to Bank of England data on Wednesday.

    The annual growth rate for all consumer credit hit 8.1% in October, the highest since October 2018 as the cost of living crisis continues to bite.

    Paul Dales, chief UK economist at Capital Economics, a consultancy, said:

    Some of this might be because the cost of living crisis has forced some households to borrow to fund necessary spending.

    But he added that the fact that borrowing was continue to rise “suggests that higher interest rates are yet to significantly crimp unsecured borrowing”.

  • Saudi Arabia buys 10% of London Heathrow airport

    Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund has bought a 10% stake in Heathrow airport for £1bn.

    It comes as infrastructure group Ferrovial has sold a quarter of the business.

    Ferrovial late on Tuesday said it had agreed the sale of a 25% of London Heathrow, which it has owned for 17 years, for £2.4bn.

    The Saudi PIF will take 10%, while European private equity group Ardian will snap up 15%.

Watch: What are SPACs?

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2023-11-29 16:35:20Z
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Full list of 280 first postcodes getting £25 in cold weather payments direct to bank accounts NOW... - The Sun

THOUSANDS of hard-up households in 280 postcodes are due up to £25 in cold weather payments.

Cold weather payments are made in locations where residents experience continuous below-zero weather.

Last year, some areas which experienced extended periods of freezing temperatures saw two £25 payouts triggered - meaning households received £50 in free cash
Last year, some areas which experienced extended periods of freezing temperatures saw two £25 payouts triggered - meaning households received £50 in free cashCredit: The Mega Agency

Households can get £25 during each seven-day period of low temperatures from now until March 31.

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) hands out the extra cash to households on low-incomes.

Those eligible will have the cash paid directly into their bank accounts within 14 days.

The payment is made automatically, including to those on Universal Credit and pension credit.

Read more in money

Commenting on the triggering of the scheme this week, Paul Maynard, Minister for Pensions said: "Cold weather payments provide much needed support to households when colder weather kicks in, so that families reduce anxiety about bills.

"This is part of our wider plan to help those who need it the most, while our number one priority remains driving down inflation – and helping everyone’s money go further."

We've listed all the postcodes that are now eligible for one cold weather payment worth £25.

You can also check if a payment is due in your area by entering your postcode in the government's cold weather payment checker.

Most read in Money

Full list of eligible postcodes triggered since November 27:

  • Blackburn - BB4, BB8-12, BB18
  • Bolton - BL0-9
  • Bradford - BD1-24
  • Carlisle - CA1-12, CA16-CA17
  • Cleveland - TS21, TS28-29
  • Crewe - CW4, CW6-11
  • Darlington - DL4-5, DL8, DL11-17
  • Dumfries and Galloway - DG16
  • Durham - DH1--9
  • Halifax - HX1-7
  • Huddersfield - HD3, HD7-9
  • Lancaster - LA8-LA10, LA21-LA23
  • Leeds - LS21, LS29
  • Manchester - M1-9, M11-35, M38, M4-46, M50, M90
  • Newcastle upon Tyne - NE1-13, NE15-21, NE23, NE25-49
  • Oldham - OL1-16
  • Preston - PR7
  • Sheffield - S36
  • Shrewsbury - SY1-6, SY11-13
  • Stockport - SK1-12, SK14-16
  • Sunderland - SR1-7
  • Telford - TF1-13
  • Warrington - WA1-16
  • Wigan - WN1-8
  • Yorkshire - YO13, YO18, YO21-22, YO62

Who is eligible for cold weather payments?

Households are eligible for the extra cash if they are getting the following:

Depending on your specific circumstances, you may also need to meet one or more of the following additional criteria:

  • Have a disability or be in receipt of pension premium
  • Have a child who is disabled
  • Be in receipt of child tax credit that includes a disability or severe disability element
  • Have a severe or enhanced disability premium
  • Be in receipt of a limited capability for work amount
  • Have a child under five living with you

You can find out more about eligibility on the government's website.

Getting the cold weather payment doesn't affect any other benefits you get.

If you're eligible, you should get the payments automatically within 14 days, into the same account where you get your benefit payments.

Read More on The Sun

But if you think you should get the payment and haven't, then contact your pension centre or Jobcentre Plus office, or call the Universal Credit helpline on 0800 328 5644.

If you’re getting Universal Credit, you can also sign in to your account and add a note to your journal.

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2023-11-29 15:32:13Z
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Leading grocery brands fuelling greedflation, UK regulator finds - The Guardian

Most makers of popular brands in areas such as baby milk, baked beans, mayonnaise and pet food fuelled greedflation by putting up prices faster than their costs rose, the competition regulator has found.

The latest release from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) in its review of the grocery market concluded that over the past two years about three-quarters of branded suppliers with products in those sectors increased their profits by raising prices more than their costs increased.

“Food price inflation has put huge strain on household budgets, so it is vital competition issues aren’t adding to the problem,” said Sarah Cardell, the chief executive of the CMA. “While in most cases the leading brands have raised prices more than their own cost increases, own-label products are generally providing cheaper alternatives.”

The CMA said that of the 10 product categories it examined in depth, it had the biggest concerns over baby milk and was launching a further investigation into that market, which will report its findings next year.

It said that the price of infant formula had increased by 25% in the last two years, with two companies accounting for 85% of market share. Unlike other products examined, it found little evidence of parents switching to cheaper branded options and very limited availability of own-brand options.

However, the CMA estimated that if families shopped around they could make savings of more than £500 in the first year of a child’s life.

“Unlike other products examined, there is little evidence of parents switching to cheaper branded options as prices have risen and very limited availability of own-brand alternatives,” Cardell said.

“We’re concerned that parents may not always have the right information to make informed choices and that suppliers may not have strong incentives to offer infant formula at competitive prices. We will investigate this further and consider whether changes to regulations are necessary to ensure parents can get the best deal possible.”

According to market share figures, Danone, which makes the Cow & Gate and Aptamil brands, has a 71% share of the UK baby formula market.

Nestlé, which owns SMA and Little Steps, has a 14% share, while Kendamil, the only British maker of baby milk products, has a 9% share.

HiPP is the fourth biggest player in the market, with a 5% share.

Food price inflation continues to run at historically high levels despite falling to 4.6% in October, with the consumer group Which? estimating that supermarket prices have increased by more than a quarter over the last two years.

The watchdog’s latest release, like its initial investigation into retail competition in the groceries sector published in July, found that most of the food inflation since early 2021 had been caused largely by passing rising input costs on to consumers, and that overall profit margins had fallen across most branded manufacturers since 2021.

However, it identified several product lines where price rises of branded goods had outstripped cost increases. The findings will increase accusations that brands have made the cost of living crisis worse by raising prices unnecessarily to protect profit, a phenomenon known as greedflation.

Which? said cash-strapped consumers would be shocked to learn of the profit-increasing tactics used by the big brands, and raised concerns that shoppers reliant on smaller-sized shops and convenience stores did not have the choice of budget-priced options.

“This will be shocking for many people who have been struggling to deal with food price inflation,” said Sue Davies, the head of food policy at Which?. “The evidence reinforces Which?’s concerns that shoppers relying on convenience store branches of the big supermarkets, which rarely stock the cheapest own-brand ranges, may struggle to find more affordable food.”

The CMA said that it also intended to launch an investigation into loyalty scheme pricing in January, where supermarkets only offer deals to customers who sign up to their scheme.

“We have seen an increase in the use of loyalty scheme pricing by supermarkets, which means that price promotions are only available to people who sign up for loyalty cards,” Cardell said. “This raises a number of questions about the impact of loyalty scheme pricing on consumers and competition.”

Which?’s Davies said the investigation was positive for consumers as loyalty card deals were not always the bargain that supermarkets advertise them to be.

“A recent Which? investigation found these deals aren’t always as they seem,” she said. “In September we asked the regulator to look at whether supermarkets could be hiking ‘regular’ prices to make it appear that loyalty scheme customers are getting a better deal than they really are.”

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2023-11-29 11:04:00Z
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Mortgage approvals rise for first time since June as housing market stabilises - latest updates - The Telegraph

Mortgage approvals increased in the UK for the first time in four months in a sign that stability is returning to the property market.

The net number of agreements rose from 43,700 in September to 47,400 in October, which was the most since July, according to data from the Bank of England.

The figure was ahead of 45,300 expected by economists.

However, the substantial rise in October still leaves approvals below their pre-pandemic average of 66,000.

Imogen Pattison, assistant economist at Capital Economics, said: “Despite the stronger reading in October, mortgage approvals for house purchase are on track to total just 570,000 in 2023, the lowest since 2010.

“Our view that mortgage rates will hover close to 5pc until the second half of 2024 means the recovery from here will be muted, with approvals only rising to 600,000 in 2024 still someway short of their usual level of around 800,000 before the pandemic.”

Read the latest updates below.

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2023-11-29 10:33:00Z
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