Ex-Barclays boss Jes Staley admits having sex with member of Jeffrey Epstein staff
UK drops down list of affluent nations after decade of stagnation, NIESR finds
The UK has tumbled down the league of affluent nations after almost a decade of welfare cuts and stagnant incomes, according to a report that found the poorest districts in Britain now rank below the lowest-income areas of Malta and Slovenia.In a warning for ministers to protect welfare spending before Rachel Reeves’s spring statement later this month, the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) said the UK’s reputation for high living standards was under threat.Districts in Birmingham were ranked as the poorest in the UK, according to the study, and below the poorest areas of Finland, France, Malta and Slovenia, it found.Between 2020 and 2023, a combination of welfare cuts and near-zero real income growth meant the bottom 10% of earners in the West Midlands saw their living standards fall below the level in parts of Slovenia, researchers said.“UK regional income growth has been among the slowest in Europe, whilst real incomes in the majority of European regions have grown at a faster rate than those in UK,” the report said
Poor results at Puma and Zara owner fuel fears of slowing US consumer demand
Unexpectedly poor results from the sports brand Puma and the fashion group Inditex, which owns Zara, have fuelled fears about slowing consumer appetite in the US amid uncertainty over Donald Trump’s tariffs.Shares in Puma dived by more than a fifth as the company warned that sales growth this year would be slower than hoped as “geopolitical tensions and macroeconomic challenges will continue, especially trade disputes and currency volatility, which is expected to weigh on consumer sentiment and demand”.Piral Dadhania, a retail analyst at the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), said: “There are some concerns around brand heat, increasing competition and North America distribution.”Inditex shares were down by 8% on Wednesday as the company said underlying sales grew by 4% in the five weeks to 10 March, well behind analysts’ expectations, and slower than the 10.5% increase rung up for the year to 31 January
Timid FCA has retreated too far on its ‘name and shame’ proposals
Lobbying victories for the City do not come much more comprehensive. Last year, the Financial Conduct Authority, the industry regulator, put forward a proposal that it should be able to name firms under investigation more frequently.Greater openness at an earlier stage, argued the FCA, could deter bad behaviour and protect consumers. A “public interest” test on disclosure would be better than the existing “exceptional circumstances” rule that was so stifling that the FCA was silent even as British Steel pensioners, in a well-publicised scandal in 2017, were fleeced by unscrupulous financial advisers who gave them terrible advice.But the uproar from City firms and lawyers over the FCA’s proposals was loud and persistent
Ex-Barclays boss Jes Staley admits having sex with member of Jeffrey Epstein staff
The former chief executive of Barclays, Jes Staley, has admitted to having sex with a member of Jeffrey Epstein’s staff in an apartment owned by the child sex offender’s brother in New York, a court has heard.Staley made the admission at the end of a testy day of cross-examination at the upper tribunal, but maintained that his friendship with Epstein was not personal and had always been based on business.The former Barclays boss, who resigned in 2021, is trying to overturn the regulator’s decision to ban him from taking any senior roles in the UK financial sector for allegedly lying about the depth of his relationship with Epstein. Barclays declared to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) in a letter in 2019 that the two men “did not have a close relationship”.The FCA’s lawyer Leigh-Ann Mulcahy KC handed documents to Staley and tribunal judges without presenting them to the public, before asking Staley: “Do you accept that you had sexual intercourse with a woman at Mr Epstein’s brother’s apartment?”“Yes,” Staley said
Trump tariffs of 25% on steel and aluminium come into effect globally as Europe says it will retaliate – as it happened
Here is European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen announcing the EU’s countermeasures this morning.As of this morning, the United States is applying a 25% tariff on imports of steel and aluminium. We deeply regret this measure.Tariffs are taxes. They are bad for business and worse for consumers
Donald Trump’s tariffs are disrupting markets around the world – here’s why it could be hurting your super
The Trump administration has imposed taxes on imports from a number of important trading partners, prompting fears of a global trade war.This is creating major disruption in global share markets, including in Australia, which is having a flow-on effect on superannuation balances.Why is this happening? And what can you do about it?The Trump administration has imposed taxes on imports from important trading partners.This includes new tariffs of 25% on all imported steel and aluminium, including against allies and major suppliers Canada and Mexico.The Trump administration rejected Australia’s plea for an exemption from the tariffs on steel and aluminium imports, which came into effect on Wednesday
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