Strong wage growth gives Bank of England interest rate dilemma
There was a brief period when the Bank of England was poised to cut interest rates and cut them quickly. Official figures showing strong wage growth appear to have ruled that out, at least for the time being.That is because policymakers at the central bank are likely to consider persistently high pay rises as inflationary. With prices already on track to edge up this year in response to elevated energy prices, only one or two quarter-point reductions in the cost of borrowing are possible without letting inflation jump even higher.There is always an element of doubt about the labour market figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which have taken a battering from MPs concerned about their accuracy after a drop-off in survey respondents
Europe’s seaborne imports of gas fall by fifth to lowest since 2021, report finds
European imports of seaborne gas shipments fell by a fifth last year to their lowest level since the pandemic, according to a new report, while the UK’s plunged by nearly a half, but governments are continuing to spend billions on new import terminals.The Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA) found that Europe’s imports of liquefied natural gas, known as LNG, fell by 19% last year to lows not seen since 2021 as governments worked to replace fossil fuels with renewable energy.However, a wave of fresh investments in new LNG import infrastructure after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has moved ahead, which could mean that infrastructure worth billions will sit idle in the years to come, the institute warned.The findings are also likely to spark debate in the UK over the need for investment in new North Sea oil and gas projects and gas storage facilities. The report found that the UK recorded the steepest drop in LNG imports last year – a fall of 47% compared with the year before – after its gas demand fell to a record low
‘We must avoid a chilling effect’: the CMA chief on the UK’s pro-growth shift
Signs by the lifts in the Canary Wharf headquarters of the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) remind staff not to talk about their work in public, given the billions of pounds resting on its decisions.But a very public debate is taking place about how the competition watchdog works and is run, with the Labour government determined to make an example of it.In October the prime minister rebuked regulators in front of global business leaders for “needlessly holding back the investment we need to take our country forward”.In January they were hauled into 10 to explain how they would support the government’s growth ambitions.Then days later, the government defenestrated the CMA’s chair, Marcus Bokkerink, replacing him with the former head of Amazon in the UK, Doug Gurr
Support for ESG proposals at record low driven by US investors, report shows
Support for shareholder proposals aimed at tackling environmental and social risks hit a record low last year, figures show, amid a “worrying retreat” by investors, particularly in the US.A report compiled by the responsible investment campaign group ShareAction found that, out of 279 environmental, social and governance (ESG) shareholder resolutions put forward at annual general meetings last year in the UK, Europe and the US, only four – or 1.4% – secured majority support.It marks a sharp decline from recent years, having dropped from 21% in 2021 to 14% in 2022, and 3% in 2023. However, it also reflects a severe drop in support for ESG issues in the US, where rightwing activists and politicians have targeted financial firms for supporting climate and diversity policies
European defence stocks rise by €18bn to record high ahead of Ukraine peace talks – as it happened
More than £10bn has been added to the value of Europe’s defence industry today, as investors anticipate a surge in military spending.Weapons makers are leading the risers on many of Europe’s stock exchanges today, as leaders from major European powers prepared to meet in Paris for emergency talks on the Ukraine war.Last week’s shock move by the US to sideline Kyiv and its European backers from peace negotiations has prompted expectations that Europe must spend more on defence.Before today’s summit Ursula von der Leyen said the issue was “about Ukraine – but also about us. We need an urgency mindset
Supreme court judges reject Reeves’ motor finance intervention
Rachel Reeves was dealt a fresh blow on Monday when her attempt to intervene in a high-profile supreme court case and curb a potential £44bn bill for lenders caught up in the car loan commissions scandal was rejected.Judges at the supreme court rejected the chancellor’s application, lodged last month, in which she urged them to avoid handing “windfall” compensation to borrowers harmed by allegedly secret commission payouts to car dealers that arranged the loans.The news weighed on lenders’ share prices, which had soared after the Treasury’s intervention amid hopes that it would reduce their potential compensation bill. Shares in Lloyds and Close Brothers, two of the biggest providers of motor finance in the UK, fell as much as 3.8% and 8
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Three water companies appeal against Ofwat’s ‘unacceptable’ curb on bill rises
Three water companies have asked the UK’s competition watchdog to allow them to raise bills even higher than they have been allowed over the next five years, as one chief executive said the industry regulator’s recent ruling was “unacceptable”.Southern Water, Anglian Water and South East Water said on Tuesday that they had asked Ofwat, the water regulator for England and Wales, to refer its ruling on their business plans for 2025 to 2030 to the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).Southern – which also announced plans to raise £900m of new equity – had already been allowed a 53% increase to average bills for its 4.7 million customers over the next five years in a December ruling by Ofwat.The Southern Water chief executive, Lawrence Gosden, said that settlement “would not enable us to deliver the environmental and performance improvements and new infrastructure that our customers and communities rightly expect”
UK pay growth rises 6% despite job loss warnings after Reeves’s budget
UK workers’ pay grew sharply in the final quarter of last year and unemployment remained unchanged despite warnings from business that Rachel Reeves’s autumn budget would lead to job losses.Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show annual growth in total average weekly earnings rose by 6% in the three months to the end of December, up from 5.6% for the November period and above a 5.9% forecast made by City economists.Regular pay, excluding bonuses, accelerated from 5
Lessons for Elon Musk from the original Doge | Brief letters
As Elon Musk’s unelected “Doge” troops slash and burn US federal departments (Elon Musk appears with Trump and tries to claim ‘Doge’ team is transparent, 12 February), it is ironic to note that the Doges of ancient Venice were always elected, and by a process that was designed to avoid wealthy families taking too much power.John JacobsAlton, Hampshire I agree with your correspondents about the difficulty of hearing the lyrics in musicals (Letters, 13 February), but there’s little mention of the problem in cinemas, where conversations are drowned out by background music. In the recent film about Bob Dylan, Timothée Chalamet perfectly captured the musician’s mumble. What words he actually said remain A Complete Unknown.Joanna RimmerNewcastle upon Tyne Re the letters on analogue photography (14 February), there is a good compromise
Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra review: still the superphone to beat
The Ultra is Samsung’s largest and greatest phone and is packed to the gills with the very latest technology, which means more artificial intelligence than ever before.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.The Galaxy S25 Ultra is at the front of the line of a new wave of Android phones that promise to basically do everything for you
New franchise owners in the Hundred pushing for IPL-style auction next year
The Hundred could introduce an Indian Premier League-style open auction next year with the new investors who have bought stakes in the eight franchises pushing for unlimited budgets to attract the best players in the world.Under the existing regulations the Hundred player draft operates on the basis of franchises taking turns to pick players at a number of set salary levels controlled by the England and Wales Cricket Board, rather than entering an open bidding war. While the Hundred salary pot has increased by 25% this season, with the highest men’s contract worth £200,000 and the best-paid women earning £65,000, there is a strong feeling among the new owners that it is insufficient.Jos Buttler and Jofra Archer will both be paid more as individuals by their IPL teams this year than the entire playing budget of a men’s Hundred franchise. With a maximum budget of £1
The Breakdown | ‘Clubs are going to disappear’: grassroots rugby crying for help in Six Nations’ shadow
The community game’s feedback for the Bills, Sweeney and Beaumont, makes for painful reading as RFU hits the road in week of Calcutta CupYou may have noticed that the sports pages are less, well, sporty than they once were. There is rather more chance of reading stern-faced stories about Sir Jim Ratcliffe and the Glazers or Manchester City’s latest legal dispute than, say, the muddy winter joys of grassroots rugby union. It is the way of the modern world and, anyway, England playing Scotland in the Six Nations this Saturday is a bigger deal, right?Well, yes and no. If you are counting the beans inside the Rugby Football Union’s offices in Twickenham there is barely a contest. The Six Nations annually bankrolls the rest of the domestic game: it is the commercial goose that lays the golden Gilbert‑shaped eggs
Kemi Badenoch says ‘western civilisation will be lost’ if Tory party fails
Lib Dems say Badenoch is echoing Trump’s ‘dangerous rhetoric’ as she claims ‘some cultures better than others’ – as it happened
More than 900 Labour figures decry party’s migration and asylum policy
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