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11 votes
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Lloyd’s John Neal: ‘You’ll never find an insurer saying, “I don’t believe in climate change”’
36 votes -
Undemocratic, anachronistic, fantastic. How the City of London survives.
7 votes -
The macroeconomic cost of the UK's Conservative government
5 votes -
You can’t call a company Scorpio Bastardo [in the UK]
7 votes -
WASPI [Women Against State Pension Inequality] Campaign's legal action is morally wrong
3 votes -
Spending cuts are often false economies that end up costing society dearly
16 votes -
A campaign run by an anonymous entity to block international tax transparency initiatives
16 votes -
Abolishing inheritance tax sent Stockholm's startup ecosystem soaring – tax cut could revive Britain's flagging economy
9 votes -
Stop pretending you’re not rich [2017]
31 votes -
British trader Sanjay Shah has landed in Denmark after being extradited from the United Arab Emirates over tax fraud charges worth £1.46bn
6 votes -
Klarna reports first quarterly profit in four years – swing to profit of £9.6m by Swedish firm improves its fortunes in run-up to possible £12bn flotation
9 votes -
The fallout from Mozambique’s debt scandal reaches a London court
4 votes -
Novo Nordisk, the maker of weight-loss drug Wegovy has become Europe's most valuable firm, dethroning the French luxury conglomerate LVMH
20 votes -
Bank of England outage hits key payments systems processing billions
10 votes -
We need to raise a lot more in tax from the wealthy but that does not convince me that we need a wealth tax
39 votes -
UK vendors started boycotting the Etsy platform over its payment reserves system
18 votes -
Banks in UK and US are closing customer accounts with little to no warning or explanation
15 votes -
Centre for Economic Policy Research - The impact of Brexit on the UK economy - reviewing evidence
10 votes -
Term deposits — are they worth it? At what point are they worth it?
Now, rationally, I suspect the answer is "Of course!". But I'm looking for general advice, if my fellow Tildesians would be so kind. This question has arisen while investigating opening a Monzo...
Now, rationally, I suspect the answer is "Of course!". But I'm looking for general advice, if my fellow Tildesians would be so kind.
This question has arisen while investigating opening a Monzo account. Apparently, you can lock away some money for 12 months and get 5.3% AER interest on it - meaning for every, say, £1,000 I put in, I get £50 back, right?
My question: is that really worth it, in the grand scheme of things? Even if I put in £10,000, I'd be locking myself out of that much money for a grand total of £500. I understand that's a lot to some people (even me), but it hardly seems worth it.
Perhaps there's something I'm missing. Perhaps some bad maths on my part or some other type of interest that I don't know about. All advice is welcome and appreciated!
21 votes -
The Spider's Web: Britain's Second Empire
4 votes -
Iceland Foods has lost its ongoing legal battle with the country Iceland over the frozen food retailer's trademark name after the EUIPO dismissed its appeal
7 votes -
Norway-style windfall tax on energy companies could raise £33.3bn extra by 2027, plugging a hole in UK government finances, analysis has found
4 votes -
UK scraps tax cut for wealthy that sparked market turmoil
11 votes -
Liz Truss's UK growth plan is nothing but a magic potion
11 votes -
UK in turmoil as government's gamble to solve economic woes fuels crisis, instead
9 votes -
UK inflation to hit 18.6% next year according to Citi
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2 From the article: UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices,...
Archive: https://archive.ph/t0oH2
From the article:
UK inflation is on course to hit 18.6 per cent in January — the highest peak in almost half a century — because of soaring wholesale gas prices, according to a new forecast from Citigroup based on the latest market prices.
The investment bank predicted that the retail energy price cap would be raised to £4,567 in January and then £5,816 in April, compared with the current level of £1,971 a year — shifts it said would lead to inflation “entering the stratosphere”.
[...]
UK and European wholesale natural gas prices are already trading at close to 10 times normal levels and other forecasters have also raised their inflation predictions.
Goldman Sachs and EY said they expected an inflation rate of at least 15 per cent around the start of next year and the Bank of England said this month that inflation would exceed 13 per cent towards the end of the year.
The energy regulator Ofgem will on Friday announce the energy price cap for the period between October and January, which most analysts expect to rise to more than £3,500 for a household with average usage of energy — an increase of 75 per cent on current levels.
12 votes -
Norway seeks solution to looming EU tax on car batteries – batteries produced outside the UK or the EU after 2027 face a 10% customs tax
5 votes -
McDonald’s runs out of milkshakes amid ‘supply chain issues’ in UK
11 votes -
Alt-milk maker Oatly loses trademark case against family-run UK firm – Swedish company took legal action against Cambridgeshire-based Glebe Farm Foods over oat drink
7 votes -
Prosecutors in Denmark have charged three Britons and three Americans with defrauding the Danish treasury of more than 1.1bn kroner through a German bank
7 votes -
Scottish fishermen have increasingly turned to fish auctions in Denmark to avoid having their deliveries to the EU blocked by post-Brexit red tape
6 votes -
Inside the surprisingly big business of UK packaged ice
8 votes -
Goodbye to the ‘Pret economy’ and good luck to whatever replaces it
11 votes -
Britain should not quake before Xi Jinping: China has already peaked and faces economic stagnation
7 votes -
David Willetts discusses how baby boomers have become the biggest and richest generation in British history at the expense of younger generations
8 votes -
Under cover of capital gains, the hyper-rich have been getting richer than we thought: the earnings of the top 0.1% grew 50% more from 1996 to 2018 than previously measured
20 votes -
Why we're seeing mass layoffs in the US but not the UK
14 votes -
Iceland wins EU trademark battle against United Kingdom-based supermarket chain
7 votes -
Danish police seize Hyde Park mansion owned by Sanjay Shah, British businessman accused of defrauding Danish taxpayers
6 votes -
Are bankers scared of Corbyn? We asked them
10 votes -
The British show how to improve 401(k)s
8 votes -
British travel firm Thomas Cook collapses, stranding hundreds of thousands
16 votes -
Uncertainty about US President Donald Trump's trade war with China and Brexit are creating a "flying blind" economy
5 votes -
Hans Rausing, head of the family that became Britain's richest thanks to his father's invention of Tetra Pak food containers, has died aged 93
4 votes -
Yield curves invert in US, UK as ‘doom and gloom’ spreads
25 votes -
How Britain can help you get away with stealing millions: a five-step guide
7 votes -
UK austerity has inflicted 'great misery' on citizens, UN says
9 votes -
The real Goldfinger: The London banker who broke the world
8 votes -
Brexit stage left: Spending cuts and British strategic denial
9 votes