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Marks & Spencer pauses online orders as firm struggles with cyber-attack fallout

Marks & Spencer has halted all orders through its website and apps as the retailer continues to battle the fallout from a cyber-attack that began on Monday.The company apologised to shoppers for “this inconvenience” and paused digital orders “as part of our proactive management of a cyber incident”.“Our experienced team – supported by leading cyber experts – is working extremely hard to restart online and app shopping,” it said.The retailer said shoppers could continue to browse online and shop in its physical stores using cash or card.The website closure comes after several days of problems in stores where contactless payments and the collection of online orders were hit from Monday

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Vinterior: meet the boss who quit finance to set up a thriving vintage furniture site

Vinterior may not have any showrooms or shops, but the home of the founder and chief executive, Sandrine Zhang Ferron, has plenty of finds from the classy secondhand furnishings site – from quirky vases to a vintage drinks cabinet.Zhang Ferron, who was born in China but grew up in France, readily admits that she created the site for herself, ditching her well-paid job in finance, after struggling to find interesting pieces to furnish her London home after a move to the UK.“I realised I don’t want to do that for the rest of my life, you know, helping rich people getting richer,” she says, speaking to the Guardian at her home with her cat Misifu – a male British Blue – mooching around.“I spent literally three months finding my yellow Poul Volther chair, which I eventually bought in a small shop in Hackney.“You know, it can be fun, but also, if you’ve got to buy a lot, it can be like, ‘I just don’t have time for this

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Retail sales rise unexpectedly in Great Britain as sunshine lures shoppers

Sunny weather fuelled an unexpected increase in retail sales in Great Britain last month, as shoppers flocked to clothing, outdoor and DIY stores.Retail sales volumes rose 0.4% in March, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), defying a forecast of a 0.4% fall by City economists and marking the third straight month of sales growth.The overall 1

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Drax needs a better policeman

Even government ministers sounded embarrassed in February when they threw yet more subsidies at Drax, recipient of £6.5bn to date, to keep its wood-burning power plant open until 2031. Few people think the biomass industry can survive in the long term unless as-yet-untested carbon capture technology can be installed.But the bizarre business of importing wood pellets from the US and Canada for incineration in North Yorkshire was given an extension because the UK’s power system, now more reliant on wind and solar generation, also needs firm “dispatchable” power that can be turned on and off in a hurry.At least Drax would have a “much more limited role” in future, explained the energy minister Michael Shanks, and 100% – not 70% as in the past – of the “woody biomass” would have to come from sustainable sources

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MPs question value of billions in subsidies granted to Drax power plant

A UK government spending watchdog has questioned the value of the multibillion pound subsidies granted to the Drax power plant in North Yorkshire – and said plans to hand over billions more may not represent value for money.The government has provided about £22bn of public money to businesses and households that burn biomass pellets as fuel over the past three years, including £6.5bn for the owner of the Drax plant.The power plant, which generates about 5% of the UK’s electricity, is expected receive more than £10bn in renewable energy subsidies between 2015 and the end of 2026 – despite ongoing concerns that wood pellets are not always sustainably sourced.The Public Accounts Committee has said that biomass generators have been left to “mark their own homework” when it comes to proving that their fuel met the sustainability standards set by the subsidy scheme

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UK consumer confidence dips to lowest level since 2023 amid tariff concerns

Consumer confidence in the UK has fallen to the lowest level for more than a year amid concern that Donald Trump’s trade wars could further drive up living costs for British households.The latest barometer of sentiment from the data company GfK fell in April to its lowest level since November 2023, as a combination of domestic tax increases, rising bills, and worries over the US president’s tariffs weighed on consumers.The consumer confidence index, which the government and the Bank of England have closely monitored for early warning signs from the economy since the early 1970s, fell by four points to -23.Neil Bellamy, the consumer insights director at GfK, said that consumers had not only been grappling with “multiple April cost increases” in the form of utility bills, council tax, stamp duty and road tax, but were also “hearing dire warnings of renewed high inflation on the back of the Trump tariffs”.The increasingly erratic approach of the US president, who is less than 100 days into his second term, has rattled the world economy as his tariffs threaten to wreck international supply chains in a major negative shock

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Stunned resignation and foreboding: a week in Trump’s shadow at IMF

Kristalina Georgieva’s favourite film, the International Monetary Fund boss told the audience at a packed panel event in Washington on Thursday, is Tom Hanks’s cold war romp Bridge of Spies.In one of the stranger digressions in a frequently strange week, Georgieva recalled the moment when Hanks’s character, a US lawyer, tells the Soviet spy he has been appointed to defend that he will probably be executed. “You don’t seem alarmed,” Hanks says to him; to which the spy – played by Mark Rylance – replies, “Would it help?”Georgieva mentioned the vignette to underline the fact that this week’s spring meetings of the IMF and World Bank were not swept up in panic, despite the mayhem emanating from the Trump administration.Instead, the reaction to the uncertainty of many of the hundreds of policymakers present has been a kind of stunned resignation.Trump was barely mentioned by name at the scores of public events where policymakers chewed over how to respond to the challenges thrown up by his chaotic tariffs

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Reeves holds ‘positive and upbeat’ trade talks with Bessent

Rachel Reeves discussed what she called a “prosperity deal” with the US treasury secretary, Scott Bessent, in a meeting her team claimed was “upbeat and positive” on Friday.“Today I met with Scott Bessent to discuss the UK-US economic prosperity deal and our goal of reaching an agreement that is in both our national interests,” Reeves said, after meeting the treasury secretary.The UK has been negotiating hard in the hope of securing exemptions from some of Donald Trump’s harshest tariffs, including the 25% levy on car imports, but Reeves left Washington without being able to claim any tangible progress.The US has made fresh demands in recent days, including calling for tariffs on car imports to the UK to be cut; and the chancellor was forced to concede earlier in the week that she was “not going to rush a deal”.UK Treasury sources said trade negotiators from the two countries would continue to work hard on a deal

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Elon Musk’s xAI accused of pollution over Memphis supercomputer

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence (AI) company is stirring controversy in Memphis, Tennessee. That’s where he’s building a massive supercomputer to power his company xAI. Community residents and environmental activists say that since the supercomputer was fired up last summer it has become one of the biggest air polluters in the county. But some local officials have championed the billionaire, saying he is investing in Memphis.The first public hearing with the health department is scheduled for Friday, where county officials will hear from all sides of the debate

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Google reports strong earnings amid DoJ antitrust lawsuits and Trump tariffs

Google’s parent company Alphabet reported strong first quarter earnings on Thursday, despite being embroiled in antitrust lawsuits brought by the US government and seeing a 17% drop in its stock price since the beginning of the year. This is the company’s first earnings report since Donald Trump levied tariffs on trade partners around the world.Despite the upheaval for Alphabet, it exceeded Wall Street’s expectations, reporting revenue of $90.23bn, up 12% since the same time last year, and $2.81 in earnings per share

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County cricket day one: Gus Atkinson’s pace puts Somerset on the back foot

Gus Atkinson had the Surrey faithful purring on the day he was given his county cap. With his tiptoeing, tightrope approach and tightly knit hands, he made the ball spit like an overheated wok against Somerset. In his first over he hit Sean Dickson on the hand, who retired hurt, and later removed a softened-up Archie Vaughan, did James Rew for pace and greeted Kasey Aldridge with a missile at his neck. Jordan Clark, all muscle to Atkinson’s venom, did most of the rest, picking up five wickets, including two in two balls. Some oomplah from Lewis Gregory took Somerset to a first batting point and beyond

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First Europe, then the world: Twickenham awaits in year of twin peaks for England

Grand slam clash is vital stepping stone in Red Roses’ quest to reclaim the World Cup crown they last held in 2014There are two games to think about at Twickenham on Saturday, the one the Red Roses will play in, and the one they want to play in. The first is their grand slam decider against France, which kicks off at 4.45pm. The second – at the same venue, five months and one day later – is the World Cup final which, if everything goes as the team hopes at the Stadium of Light, Franklin’s Gardens, Ashton Gate and the other grounds they will visit between now and then, will be the next game they play at the home of English rugby.The Red Roses head coach, John Mitchell, has been around long enough to know the smart thing to do is separate the two