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Darling confesses that there may be budget cuts on the way.

January 11th, 2010 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Central banks, Daily News, Debt, Employment, Exchage Rate, Recession, Stocks and shares, UK Banks, UK employment

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In an interview held over the weekend, chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling predicted that should the Labour Party be re-elected in this year’s anticipated elections they will be prepared to tightly rein in spending and curb Government borrowing. The treasury chief warned that the UK has little option but reduce the massive budget deficit entailing making the toughest public spending cuts seen in 20 years.

Darling’s comments signaled a change in direction or a possible split in Labour’s election strategy as until recently Gordon Brown’s has pinned the bulk of his preliminary electoral campaign and its possible success on the need to support economic recovery, instead of reducing the country’s current £178-billion-pound deficit. The International Monetary Fund has forecast that the UK’s GDP deficit will peak this year at 13.2 percent.

To the chagrin of many, city bankers look likely to suffer minimal impact from the bonus super tax imposed on them by the government last month.

Most banks who were available for comment hinted they are preparing to absorb if not all at least part of the cost of 50 per cent tax by inflating their bonus pools, and are prepared to run the risk of irritating the government and even their own shareholders in order to keep their staff happy. The banks are unofficially conceding that dividends are likely to be hit by their capitulation, and they are already under pressure as regulators have pressurized banks to increase their capital holdings, which will have a consequent effect on their profit margins.

Meanwhile, the Association of British Insurers (ABI) has written a letter to the remuneration committee chairmen of the UK’s top 350 companies warning boards against paying big bonuses and keeping directors safe from tax increases. ABI are concerned that investors will lose out amid fears that banks will absorb the supertax on bonuses at the expense of dividends. Last year was marked by a number of cases of shareholders rebelling against companies’ plans.

With Christmas trading a fading memory, it has been reported that city analysts are taking a close look at Tesco and attempting to determine how much the extra £100 million pounds’ worth of loyalty vouchers given to customers affected their Christmas trading. Fears are that by Tesco’s inflating their Clubcard loyalty scheme they could have "artificially" inflated their UK sales figures for the period, with estimates that the extra vouchers could have added around 1.5% the supermarket chain’s UK turnover for the Christmas , which is due to be released on Tuesday.

The Crown Estate, owner of the UK’s coastal seabeds, have granted development rights to energy companies that will herald the largest wind energy project ever seen in the world.

The announcement has the potential to see an additional 32 GigaWatts (GW) of clean electricity feeding into the UK grid, on top of 8 GW from previous rounds. 32 GW will mean enough offshore wind energy to supply nearly all the homes in the UK, with projection that investment in UK offshore wind overall could be worth £75 billion and support up to 70,000 jobs by the year 2020.

A total of nine development zones, with a capacity of just over 25 GW, have been allocated to Ten European Companies following a competitive tender.

Plans are currently under approval by the UK Government to construct what will be the fastest railway in Europe. The multi billion pound project would see trains travelling from London to the West Midlands at 250 mph from a new station to be constructed in the capital.

Construction is scheduled to begin in 2017, and the first trains should toll out of London 2025, carrying more than a thousand passengers at a time. The project is expected to cost as much as £60 billion.

Taking a short term view, the UK is currently investigating a variety of options on how to deal with increasing stocks of swine flu vaccines, with the British public showing a lack of interest in taking advantage of the free injection. The department of health is looking at either renegotiating existing contracts with the drug companies, such as GlaxoSmithKline and Baxter International to reduce the consignments. Other last attractive options are to sell the vaccines on to other countries or simply give them away. France and Germany also intend to cancel millions of doses of the H1N1 vaccines because of oversupply.

All of the five UK mobile networks are now reported to be in talks with Google over plans to market their new Nexus One mobile phone. Vodafone are the first operator to officially announce that had sealed a deal to offer the device, while no official launch date has been set as yet. The remaining four UK mobile phone operators. While it is expected that the big four will be providing support and service for the Nexus One, Google will be marketing their new baby exclusively online.

A little reminder that the internet doesn’t yet rule all of the World came with the news that UK greeting cards company Clinton have reported a rise in sales of 3.5 percent on last year for the weeks approaching Christmas, with like-for-like sales in the 22 weeks to Jan. 2 rising. However this upturn in sales appeared to be a drop in the ocean as the company continues to experience difficult trading conditions and has closed 12 of their stores in the last six months.

The pound stuttered slightly above the dollar in pre-weekend trading, while sliding backwards against the Euro.

  • Dollar 1.6025
  • Euro 1.1116

As brokers set off home for the weekend in their snow ploughs and sleds, the FTSE 100 edged just 7.52 points higher to 5,534.24. For the week the index was up 2.4 per cent, making for the third straight weekly gain.

In the US official figures have shown the unemployment rate holding steady at 10% despite the fact that employers unexpectedly cut 85,000 jobs in December. The US Labor Department had initially estimated that 11,000 jobs were cut in November, but now says that the economy had in fact added 4,000 jobs.

Since the recession began in 2007, 7.2 million jobs have been lost in the US, with 4.2 million of them in 2009 alone.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed for the weekend still on the up, eleven points to 10,618 while the NASDAQ also jumped 17 points to close on 2,3170.71.

General Motors (GM) reluctantly advised that they have begun "winding down" process for Saab, whilst continuing efforts to find a buyer for their Swedish car-making subsidiary.

GM intends to organize an "orderly" winding down at Saab, which they expects to take several months. The US group also confirmed that they are continuing to evaluate the several proposals they had received to acquire Saab, including the one from Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone.

With the news that the exports had risen by 17.7% in December, China now claims to have overtaken Germany to become the world’s largest exporter.

December’s remarkable rise ends a 13-month decline in trade as a result of the global downturn.

Total Chinese exports for 2009 were £7.5 trillion, which marked a downturn in foreign of 13.9%, as the global economic downturn led to a fall in demand.

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Willie discovers that if you ask nicely, you sometimes get what you want

June 27th, 2009 by admin | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Recession, UK employment

employmentThat time honoured analogy that ” if you ask you sometimes get” has just been proven yet again with the news that around 800 British Airways employees have indeed taken up the challenge laid down their chief executive, Willie Walsh by volunteering to work without pay for up to a month In addition, almost 7,000 BA staff have offered to take pay cuts, through opting for working part-time or without pay, whilst other have agreed to take unpaid A spokesman for the airline announced yesterday that the worker’s compromise would allow temporary savings of around £10 million in 2009 alone..

Walsh hailed the workers offer as “a fantastic response” despite the fact that he came under heavy attack from Unite, the biggest union at the airline.
Groupe Eurotunnel, the company that runs the Channel tunnel is considering making a bid for the UK’s only dedicated high-speed rail line.

The move comes as Groupe Eurotunnel prepares to buy back the last of a series of financial instruments formed during the company’s complex 2007 restructuring. The line known as High Speed 1 carries trains running at up to 300kph (186mph) between the Channel tunnel and St Pancras station in London.

The High Speed 1 line which cost £5.8 billion to build is likely to fetch between a third to half of that figure. The line’s current owners are none other than the UK government who took over the line’s former owner’s London & Continental Railways, on June 8.

In a deal costing around £3.5 million Clinton Cards has bought 196 Birthdays stores out of administration. Birthdays, a subsidiary of Clinton Cards, went into administration last month after Clinton cut off funding to it.

News of the buy -out, as well as forecasts that the acquisition would contribute at least £3 million in profits for the year to July for Clinton Cards, pushed shares in the company up by 24 per cent. Clinton will need to pay only £250,000 in cash for buying stores, with the balance offset by existing loan from Birthdays to Clinton.

A spokesman from Clinton announced that said that they had chosen only the stores that were making profit and that the stores that remain open will continue operate under the Birthdays label.

Signet Jewelers Limited rose to 4.58 percent to 1,187 pence in morning trading session and climbed earlier to 1,195 pence. Over the last year shares in the high street jewelry chain have fluctuated from a low of 42.50 pence to a high of 1,449 pence.

Shares in Britain’s biggest government-controlled bank, Royal Bank of Scotland Group plc, climbed 4.05 percent to 37 pence; after analysts pointed out that they expect the bank’s share price to rise against opposition banks “given its lower risk strategy.”

The benchmark FTSE 100 dropped 27.31 points to reach 4,252.57 ending a run of rises lasting three days. The FTSE 250 climbed by 22.86 points to reach 7,343.31

Sterling continued its topsy turvey trail rising slightly against dollar whilst retreating against the other major currencies on a mixed day for trading.

Pound/US dollar 1.6421
Pound/Euro 1.689
Pound/Japanese Yen 157.6885
Pound/Swiss Franc 1.7912

US stocks staged an impressive broad-based rally on Thursday with retail stocks leading the way with home furnishings retailers faring especially well. The Dow Jones was up a respectable 172.54 points to 8472.4, while the NASDAQ jumped a further 27.2 points to close on 1829.54

Reacting to accusations that he had overstepped his authority during the Bank of America’s acquisition of Merrill Lynch, US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke was forced to present a public defence of his actions, The House oversight committee asked him whether he had actually forced Bank of America to go through with the deal through applying excess pressure.

Prices for crude oil rose back just over the $70 a barrel mark on Thursday after an attack on a pipeline in Nigeria.
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