Maximilian Riedel: The 11-generation boss guiding the legendary glassmaker September 30, 2022 Walking down the street with Maximilian Riedel, the 11th generation chief of the glassware firm that bears his family name, sounds like a demanding experience – at least if you work in his sales team. “I said to Steve (McGraw, Riedel’s UK managing director), when I walk the streets of London, I tend to look [...]
Under the hammer: Why Dalmore is doubling down on limited edition whisky September 30, 2022 Historic Scotch distillery The Dalmore is set to double down on a growing reputation for luxury single malts in a growing sign of the industry’s growth as an asset class. The Dalmore will send one of three rare 48 year old whiskies to auction at Sotheby’s, with the golden liquid housed in a sculpture conceived [...]
‘Safe home’ app gets support as cost of living puts night-owls off taxis and Ubers September 30, 2022 The cost of living is set to increase the number of women walking home from a night out rather than getting a taxi or a minicab home, according to new research. A fifth of women told pollsters that they were walking more and taking few taxis at the end of a night out. The safety [...]
Government has a second chance – it can’t fluff its lines yet again September 28, 2022 The UK Economy: Apocalypse Now? Black Wednesday, Mark 2? Not quite. But if social media’s hot takes on the state of the UK economy are wide of the mark, the pressure on Kwasi Kwarteng and the Bank to restore credibility is now immense. The good news is that will not be as difficult as some [...]
Keir Starmer only halfway there on persuading business of his merits September 27, 2022 It is hard to imagine a more friendly wicket for Keir Starmer to have turned up to at Labour conference. A party broadly united behind him, and a government that (fairly or unfairly) is being blamed left, right and centre for precipitating a currency crisis and a drastic increase in the value of borrowing. We [...]
Former City minister: Scrapping bonus cap could have waited ‘a little longer’ September 27, 2022 John Glen, the former City minister, has said the decision to scrap the bankers’ bonus cap should have waited amid a cost of living crisis. Glen told the Following the Rules podcast that the removal of the cap, announced last week by new Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng, “was something that I would have deferred for a [...]
Sterling crash: Plenty of blame to go round but much of it falls on the Bank September 27, 2022 The British economy has been through a lot in recent years but a full-scale currency crisis still wins points for novelty. But for all the sound and fury of yesterday’s market movements and the so-called sterling crash, the panic is overdone. Much of the blame for yesterday’s excitement lies, rightly, with the government. This newspaper [...]
Truss’ migrant plan a welcome triumph for pragmatism over ideology September 25, 2022 On the face of it, you can see why those sitting in European capitals might scoff at Liz Truss’ plan to open up the door to higher migration in order to assist Britain’s growth push. After all, the vote for Brexit – perhaps not for its architects but unquestionably for many of those who put [...]
Kwarteng marks himself out as the most radical Chancellor since Lawson September 23, 2022 When Kwasi Kwarteng said he wanted to go for growth, it appears he meant it. Some will say the tax reforms announced today are ‘unfunded’ and reckless. Others will say it’s not the time for changes to banker’s pay. But in his ambition and his vision of a competitive Britain, the Chancellor has placed the [...]
Let the battle for business’ hearts and minds begin September 22, 2022 Ladies and gentlemen, girls and boys, roll up, roll up to the greatest political show on earth. That may be slightly overselling it, but it is heartening to see the economy and business once again at the heart of our political debate. Today will see the first of what we imagine will be pretty dramatic [...]