Weekly Trading Update

Weekend Paper Roundup 16/11/2015



Financial Times
- Yen’s days as weakest among peers limited
- Louis Vuitton stung by China luxury woes
- Allergan warns US on blocking tax deals
- Caterpillar warns on China’s slowdown
- BT Openreach boss moves to Nationwide

The Wall Street Journal
- EU presses US on access to user data
- Airbnb offers conciliatory pledges
- VW asks employees to assist with probe
- GM to export auto made in China to US
- Vivendi seeks seats at Telecom Italia

The Guardian
- Greece misses bailout deadline as talks with creditors drag on
- More delivery problems for Royal Mail
- Teeside steels itself for bleak midwinter as each week sees more jobs vanish
- Whistle-blower at HBOS attacks ‘ludicrously bad’ City regulation
- Warmer autumn weather triggers coats and knitwear discounts

The Telegraph
- New CBI boss tones down pro-EU stance
- Rolls-Royce woes spread to car brand
- Saudis consider economic refocus as low oil prices bite
- Finance chiefs feel less confident due to Eurozone woes
- UK ‘snoopers’ charter’ is horrible idea, says Dell chief

The Times
- Paris attack rattles markets as ECB readies cash injection
- Treasury tells City: we’ll sort banker visa row
- £1.5 billion battle for Travelodge
- Osborne struggles on deficit target
- FanDuel whacked by New York ban

Daily Mail
- Aldi and Lidl have 171 new supermarkets in the pipeline as they look to overtake rivals
- easyJet set to post its highest ever annual profits of about £700 million next week
- Small businesses key to solving UK’s productivity gap, claims Goldman Sachs
- Rolls-Royce shares plummet nearly 20% to 5 year low after new warning
- Britain sees biggest drop in prices since 1960s with Black Friday still to come

The Independent
- Cuts blamed for drop in City fraud investigations
- Protect manufacturing innovation, George Osborne told
- Excess oil supply is at record-high with 3 billion barrels spare
- Bank of England says it can’t solve the housing crisis
- UK government sells £13 billion of Northern Rock mortgages to Cerberus

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