Will the bonus bubbly still flow as reality bites for British banks?
Thames Water chairman accused of conflict of interest over £37m share dividend payment
The chair of Thames Water was suspected by government officials of holding a potentially “conflicted position” when his company made an “unjustified” dividend payment of £37.5m to its shareholders.The water provider, on the brink of bankruptcy, was in the high court last week seeking an emergency £3bn loan as it struggles to stay afloat under massive debts. It is under fresh scrutiny over its dividend payments.Thames Water – long accused of favouring the interests of its shareholders over its 16 million customers – faces an £18
Will the bonus bubbly still flow as reality bites for British banks?
The fortunes of Britain’s biggest lenders may well be reflected by a mix of celebratory champagne and commiserative pints by next week, as bankers with an eye on their bonus assess the fallout from a patchy earnings season.Bosses of the UK largest lenders are due to kick off the annual reporting period from Thursday, but their financial performance – and any resulting bonuses – will be overshadowed by corporate shake-ups and job losses.Of the big four bank bosses, NatWest’s Paul Thwaite has one of the easiest jobs ahead. While he is expected to report a 1.8% drop in annual pre-tax profits to £6
How some objects can have a mind of their own | Brief letters
I have great empathy with Adrian Chiles’ protectiveness of inanimate objects (Why am I so sad about seeing a robot get beaten up?, 5 February), but these objects can exercise tyranny, so we should beware the jacket that won’t let you put it on, the paper serviette that it is impervious to fluid and, of course, any self-hiding object.Jonathan HauxwellCrosshills, North Yorkshire If President Trump thinks that it is reasonable to relocate 2 million people from the Gaza Strip in the interests of peace (Report, 6 February), presumably the same logic should apply to the 500,000 Jewish settlers illegally occupying lands in the Palestinian West Bank.Ian MartinFalmouth, Cornwall If Donald Trump Jr decided to eat the rare duck he’s alleged to have shot in the Venice lagoon (Report, 5 February), would he get the orange sauce from his dad?David ProtheroHarlington, Bedfordshire When did laundry become the word for getting clothes at home clean (Pass notes, 5 February)? I still do the washing.Janet MansfieldAspatria, Cumbria A case of cutting his nose off despite his face (Makeup artist tried to remove Adrien Brody’s nose by mistake on set of The Brutalist, 6 February).Steve BarnesLondon Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section
Trump’s meme coin sparks more than 700 copycats posing as official crypto
Despite once calling cryptocurrency “a scam”, Donald Trump made a theoretical fortune of billions after launching a self-named and highly controversial meme coin immediately before his second inauguration in January.Now an army of digital imposters is trying to cash in on the president’s name and online presence to make their own crypto killing, according to a report in the Financial Times that details hundreds of “copycat and spam coins” uploaded to Trump’s official wallet in cyberspace.Creators sent more than 700 new meme coins to the wallet in recent weeks, many named after Trump or his family members – but none of them have any formal connection.Experts say speculators can be easily duped by names that make it seem the fake coins are allied to the real $Trump cryptocurrency – which itself has seen a precipitous collapse in value – and risk the digital equivalent of being taken to the cleaners.Eswar Prasad, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and an economics professor at Cornell University, told the FT that by launching his own coin, Trump had “opened the floodgates to deception … and at a minimum to rampant speculation”
France’s carelessness proves costly as win slips through their fingers | Michael Aylwin
It’s still there. That kink in the psyche of so many France teams over the years, a niggle that has kept them from joining the very best sides in history, despite all the talent, despite the heritage. It has cost them World Cups, it has cost them championships.Here they failed to land the telling blow time and again, despite the sword in their hand hovering over exposed flesh. How to tear open a side, how to contrive ways of not scoring
England 26-25 France: Six Nations player ratings from Twickenham
Marcus Smith Got lucky after he was stripped by Bielle-Biarrey. Both missed kicks were poor, but he always looks likely to spark something. 6Tommy Freeman Silly penalty against when chasing box-kick but came up with final pass for Lawrence’s try. Took own try very well. 8Ollie Lawrence Came up with a turnover after Boudehent found himself isolated
‘Repeated failures’ at Nottinghamshire prison where three inmates took their lives
‘It infuriates me’: why the ‘wages for housework’ movement is still controversial 40 years on
Calls for UK government to tackle alcohol-related deaths in older people
Anger as council prioritises London hotel view over playground plan
Watchdog to investigate two former figures at bankrupt Woking council
Delay to ‘Awaab’s law’ risks lives of social housing tenants in England, Shelter says