Francesca McDonagh has announced her surprise decision to step down as chief executive of Bank of Ireland, the country’s biggest lender, in what industry sources say is the latest high-profile casualty of a cap on top executives’ pay. The bank, which was rescued along with Ireland’s other lenders in the eurozone’s biggest banking bailout after
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Britain’s City minister has agreed with estimates that about 7,000 jobs moved from the Square Mile to the EU after Brexit, but added that the financial services sector “has not experienced the haemorrhaging” of roles that many had anticipated. John Glen, economic secretary to the Treasury and City minister, said on Tuesday that he broadly
One of the Bank of England’s senior officials on Tuesday proposed that the global regulatory system for banks’ capital requirements be overhauled to make it simpler and allow companies more flexibility to lend during a crisis. Sam Woods, head of the UK Prudential Regulation Authority, used a speech to outline a streamlined system that would
The Royal Ballet dusted off the family silver last weekend for a sublime triple bill of work by Frederick Ashton that reasserts the genius of their founder-choreographer. Ashton first heard Scènes de Ballet while soaking in his bath to the Third Programme and was obliged to telephone the BBC to identify it. His choreography embodies
When Priti Patel was chosen as Boris Johnson’s home secretary, liberal opinion was affronted. What possible logic could there be, so it went, in putting one of the Conservative party’s tub-thumpers, and one with a patchy ministerial record, at the helm of Whitehall’s most dysfunctional department? Simple, one of the prime minister’s aides told me
Such is their devotion to the suburb of Wandsworth, in south-west London, that when James and Victoria Robbins sold their 1,400 sq ft three-bedroom railway workers’ cottage last October in search of more space, they moved just 157 metres away to a 2,200 sq ft, four-bedroom semi with a larger garden. Both old and new
The lockdowns stemming from China’s zero-Covid strategy have worsened General Electric’s supply chain challenges, prompting the US industrial conglomerate to caution on Tuesday that its full-year results would come in at the low end of its previous expectations. Shares in GE fell 10 per cent to $80.71 in morning trading in New York after chief
The container shipping industry is riding a wave that has not yet peaked. Denmark’s AP Moller-Maersk has just announced a more than doubling of first-quarter ebitda. Record results come at a cost. High freight rates have infuriated customers. The White House says they are likely to push up US consumer prices by 1 per cent
Government plans to enable more adults in England to do training courses throughout their lifetimes will have an important role in tackling the national skills shortage and boosting productivity, according to the minister for higher and further education. Michelle Donelan said the policy to introduce a “life-long loan entitlement” would address the UK’s low productivity
Schroders plans to scrap an “anachronistic” ownership structure that has deprived some shareholders of voting rights, as one of the UK’s largest asset managers tries to burnish its governance credentials. Under a plan laid out on Tuesday, Schroders said that each of the company’s non-voting shares, which account for a quarter of the total in
What price a vote? Long before Google and its ilk brought dual-class shares to public markets, Britain plc routinely disenfranchised swaths of the investor base. Most — think Whitbread in hospitality or WHSmith in retail — merged their voting and non-voting shares in the early 90s. Straggler PZ Cussons, home of Imperial Leather soap, did
In the movie Toy Story, attempts at flying by astronaut Buzz Lightyear are described as “falling with style” by a rival. Detractors of UBS may have the same complaint after underlying pre-tax profits — to adjust for the losses from Archegos — slipped 8 per cent to $2.7bn. The Swiss bank still soared clear of
British Airways is to cut flights until the end of June — a month longer than expected — to help it through the wave of disruption hitting the travel industry. Airlines have been forced to cancel flights over the past month as they have struggled to rehire sufficient staff to cope with increased demand as
They say money can’t buy you love, but disagreements with a partner about how to manage your joint finances can give couples plenty to argue about. On this week’s Money Clinic podcast, presenter Claer Barrett meets newly-weds Sahil and Priya, who have very different financial priorities. Although the couple have been together for several years,
The biggest revelation of Colombia’s presidential election campaign is a black female social activist who is no longer running for the top job. Francia Márquez, who was little known outside the Afro-Colombian community until this year, caused a sensation when she won the third-largest number of votes of any candidate in national presidential primaries last
The world’s largest serviced office company, IWG, warned that inflation, Covid-19 and the war in Ukraine could weigh on profits this year, pushing its shares down even as it reported record demand from big companies signing up to hybrid working. The WeWork rival reported improved revenues for the first quarter of the year on Tuesday
A bad trump break and a frozen suit combined to cause most declarers to fail in this game contract. Can you do better? BiddingDealer: SouthLove All North East South West — — 1S NB 3S NB 4S West led Q♥. Most declarers won, played ♠AK and then breached diamonds. East took dummy’s J♦ with K♦;
US law firm Skadden Arps has lost its top Asia capital markets lawyer as the flow of Chinese companies selling shares in New York and Hong Kong dwindles. Julie Gao is to move to Chinese tech giant ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, where she will take over as chief financial officer. The Beijing-based company has
HSBC’s profits fell by more than a quarter in the first three months of the year, as Europe’s largest lender increased reserves for bad loans in response to war in Ukraine and slowing growth in its core Asia markets. The London-based bank reported profit before tax of $4.2bn for the first quarter, a decline of
Good morning. Today we process chancellor Rishi Sunak’s continuing slide in the ConservativeHome rankings and Elon Musk’s looming purchase of Twitter (I for one think that $44bn is a very reasonable price given the quality of my tweets). Thank you to everyone who has kindly left feedback on our newsletter — we always welcome suggestions