Big UK pub chains signal price rises as result of budget hit

A picture


The pub chain Young’s has said it is preparing to take an £11m annual hit from rises in employer taxes announced in the budget, and signalled that some of this could be passed on to customers through higher prices.The chief executive, Simon Dodd, said a rise in employer national insurance contributions (NICs), coupled with an increase in the national minimum wage, would result in “significant increased costs for our industry in the near term”.“We will work to see how we can mitigate these headwinds without passing on all the cost to our loyal customers,” he said.He also called for “certainty and delivery of real business rate reform which will benefit all hospitality businesses”.The chair of JD Wetherspoon, Tim Martin, has warned of price increases across the hospitality industry, saying that the pub chain’s tax and business costs would go up by about £60m over the next year.

Fellow pub chain Fuller, Smith & Turner is said to have told Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, that its annual investment could be halved to £30m due to rising costs,The heads of more than 200 of the UK’s largest restaurant, pub and hotel businesses have written to the chancellor this week to warn that some businesses would be forced to close or cut jobs and investment as a result of the tax rises,Business leaders say the government has not fully considered the impact of the tax rises on sectors that employ a large number of part-time workers, such as hospitality,The rate of employers’ NICs will increase by 1,2% to 15% from April, while employers will also start to pay NICs on employees’ earnings from £5,000 instead of the current £9,100 threshold.

The warning from Young’s comes as the company reported higher half-year profit, helped by the Euros football tournament in the summer.Pre-tax profit for six months to 30 September rose by 3.3% to £25.3m, while revenue climbed by 27.2% to £250m.

Dodd noted the company’s recent acquisition of the City Pub Group had been successful, but poor summer weather kept punters away,“The weather was frustrating yet again, with a wet spring and limited periods of prolonged sunshine during the summer months,” he said,“However, Euro 2024 and England’s successful run to the final provided a welcome boost to drink sales with our pubs performing exceptionally well on match days,”
technologySee all
A picture

Cryptocurrency traders: share what got you into crypto, and how you feel about recent developments

It’s been an eventful few days for the cryptocurrency market, with the price of bitcoin having risen above $87,000 for the first time amid traders’ hopes that cryptocurrencies will boom in a favourable regulatory environment when Donald Trump returns to the White House.Bitcoin reached a record high of $87,198, before slipping back slightly on Monday. The price more than doubled from about $37,000 12 months ago.Other cryptos such as Dogecoin also experienced a “Trump pump” surge.We’d like to hear from retail investors who have bought crypto and how they have fared since they entered the market

A picture

Genetic testing firm 23andMe cuts 40% of its workforce amid financial struggles

The genetic testing firm 23andMe said on Monday it would cut about 40%, or 200 employees, from its workforce and discontinue further development of all its therapies as part of a restructuring program.“We are taking these difficult but necessary actions as we restructure 23andMe and focus on the long-term success of our core consumer business and research partnerships,” said the company’s CEO, Anne Wojcicki.The company said it was evaluating strategic alternatives, including licensing agreements and asset sales, for its therapies in development.The company has been left with few options as its value has plummeted in the aftermath of a massive data breach. The DNA testing company is being investigated by British and Canadian authorities over the 2023 breach that exposed 6

A picture

TechScape: Will Elon Musk fire a third of the US government?

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m Blake Montgomery, US tech editor at the Guardian. In this week’s newsletter: Elon Musk and Donald Trump want to create a “Department of Government Efficiency”, crypto wins big across the board, and a modern equivalent of Lysistrata takes hold on TikTok. Thank you for joining me.Trump, president-elect of the US, said he wants to appoint Musk, the world’s richest man, as the country’s “secretary of cost-cutting” to reduce bureaucracy in the federal government by an order of $2tn, roughly a third

A picture

Musk’s influence on Trump could lead to tougher AI standards, says scientist

Elon Musk’s influence on a Donald Trump administration could lead to tougher safety standards for artificial intelligence, according to a leading scientist who has worked closely with the world’s richest person on addressing AI’s dangers.Max Tegmark said Musk’s support for a failed AI bill in California underlined the billionaire’s continued concern over an issue that did not feature prominently in Trump’s campaign.However, Musk has warned regularly that unrestrained development of AI – broadly, computer systems performing tasks that typically require human intelligence – could be catastrophic for humanity. Last year, he was one of more than 30,000 signatories to a letter calling for a pause in work on powerful AI technology.Speaking to the Guardian at the Web Summit in Lisbon, Tegmark said Musk, who is expected to be heavily influential in the president-elect’s administration, could persuade Trump to introduce standards that prevent the development of artificial general intelligence (AGI), the term for AI systems that match or exceed human levels of intelligence

A picture

Bitcoin price tops $87,000 for first time amid ‘Trump pump’

The price of bitcoin has risen above $87,000 for the first time as it benefited from traders’ hopes that Donald Trump will favour cryptocurrencies when he returns to the White House.Bitcoin reached a record high of $87,198, before slipping back slightly on Monday. The price has more than doubled from about $37,000 12 months ago.The election has also affected traditional currency markets, individual stocks – most notably Elon Musk’s electric car company, Tesla – and broad US equity markets, as investors bet on deregulation and tax cuts from Trump.Trump has in the past called bitcoin a “scam against the dollar”, but he changed his tune on cryptocurrency during the US presidential election campaign, courting the crypto community and appearing at industry events

A picture

How a second Trump term could further enrich Elon Musk: ‘There will be some quid pro quo’

Donald Trump owes his decisive 2024 presidential victory in no small part to the enthusiastic support of the world’s richest man. In the months leading up to the election, Elon Musk put his full weight behind the Maga movement, advocated for Trump on major podcasts and used his influence over X to shape political discourse. Musk’s America Pac injected nearly $120m into the former president’s campaign.Now, Trump is looking to return the favor. Speaking with reporters last month, he said he would appoint Musk as “secretary of cost-cutting”