Retail sales fall off cliff in November in sign of Christmas spending slump November 28, 2022 Retail sales have fallen off a cliff, pushed by consumers reining in spending as scorching inflation eats away at their finances, a new survey out today reveals. A net 19 per cent of retailers said spending fell over the year to November, down from a net rise of 18 per cent in October, according to [...]
Standing at the Sky’s Edge is way duller than the estate it’s based on February 29, 2024 Standing at the Sky’s Edge is a boring musical that does a disservice to the fascinating story of Sheffield's Park Hill estate, writes Lucy Kenningham
Virtues of City life hide high-functioning eating disorders in our boardrooms September 24, 2021 Imagine being sat in a conference room with 100 people, picture their faces, their jobs, the conversations that you might have had with some of them, the ones that maybe you had your eye on to network with. Statistically out of that one hundred people in that room, sixteen people will at some point have [...]
What grassroots use of Bitcoin could mean for liquidity October 29, 2020 The road to the recent announcement from PayPal goes back 10 years. 2010 famously saw the first recorded commercial transaction of Bitcoin when a user spent 10,000 BTC on pizza. Pizza is delicious, but we would all be kicking ourselves for exchanging what is currently worth $130 million on 2 pizzas. This is now celebrated [...]
A tale of two industries: Government will regret saving steel over Britishvolt January 23, 2023 The government could regret backing British Steel while leaving Britishvolt to collapse, writes energy editor Nicholas Earl.
George Galloway’s Rochdale return will be loud but short March 1, 2024 The left-wing MP [I shudder that I have to say that once again] won in Rochdale due to a peculiar set of circumstances that are not likely to be replicated elsewhere.
Allies not adversaries – London and the North must be partners for growth February 28, 2024 Regional divides inhibit progress, and London and its core industries alone cannot fuel levels of growth we've not seen since the 90s
Even before the cost of living crisis, Brits struggled to understand their own finances April 11, 2023 Even before the pandemic, inflation and the energy crisis put the "cost of living" at the forefront of our minds, Brits across the country were struggling to manage their finances, writes Nicholas Lyons.
A ski holiday in Verbier, where Prince Harry practises his backflips February 7, 2024 A-Listers like Madonna and Diana Ross party in Verbier - Justine Gosling touched down to ski in the paths of legends
Sweet treats: Cake Box to repay furlough money after rise in sales September 1, 2020 Cake Box today said it will repay the money it received under the government’s coronavirus furlough scheme and pay a special dividend after posting a sharp rise in sales in the last three months. The cream cake specialist said it would hand back £156,000 it had secured and would make no further claims under the [...]