Weekly Trading Update

Weekend Paper Roundup 30/11/2015



Financial Times
- Boom time for builders but not for houses
- Currency moves to have big impact on agri-commodities in 2016
- Argentina investors await Macri reforms
- Amazon shows new Prime Air drone
- Deutsche Bank created tax avoidance plans

The Wall Street Journal 
- Raspberry Pi offers $5 computers
- IAAF president cuts ties with Nike
- Japan cuts long hours at the office
- Cost of skin drugs shows rapid increase
- Facebook to expand instant articles in Asia

The Guardian
- Chinese yuan likely to be added to IMF special basket of currencies
- Rising London property costs could lead to firms relocating, says study
- AB InBev plans to sell Peroni and Grolsch in takeover of SABMiller
- Four-day shopping spree promises £3 billion sales record for UK retailers
- Black Friday sales fall 10% from last year

The Telegraph 
- Boost for UK car manufacturing as Nissan ramps up in Sunderland
- French Connection shares jump 15% on ‘strong’ winter trading
- Emerging market turmoil hits Aberdeen Asset Management
- Shell-BG deal to win green light
- Adviser rankings put small-scale Finncap above JPMorgan

The Times
- Woodford hires Feds in biotech showdown
- Betfair boss hits £50 million jackpot
- Virgin to raise £200 million from Heathrow slots
- Creditors close in on property tycoon Gertner
- ECB chief plans new €600 billion injection

Daily Mail
- Banks braced for new curbs on buy-to-let boom with potential clampdown on risky lending
- Turnover at South West Trains tops £1 billion for first time after rising ticket sales 
- Life is sweet as famous caramel wafer maker Tunnock’s announces £1 million dividend
- Fury as Chancellor grabs £400 million from struggling High Street after axing business rate relief
- Experts predicting slew of retailer profits warnings in wake of massive Black Friday discounting

The Independent
- Gap between bosses’ pay and average wage ‘getting wider each year’
- Third quarter GDP growth held back by record drag from trader
- Robots ‘will create UK jobs, not destroy them’
- More publishers fail as e-books rise
- Thousands of City firms use outdated broadband

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