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Burnt Turkey
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
Every now and then, financial markets lay a beating on a nation with a severity that seems completely unjustified.
A new speed limit
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
Well, we thought it would never happen: the Bank of England (BoE) actually went through with a 25-basis-point interest rate hike on Thursday.
Hot streak
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
It’s been a red hot week. Temperatures soared around the globe, sparking forest fires in the Arctic Circle and Brits to long for winter.
Red hot US GDP growth rocketed to an annualised 4.1% in the second quarter (it’s running at 2.8% for the past 12 months).
Boom time
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
American company earnings grew 20% in the second quarter, relative to a year ago, and profit margins are at record levels.
Reality bites
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
The beautiful thing about the World Cup is how it reminds you that we are all of us alike.
Brexit means fudge
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
Brexiteer-in-chief David Davis has resigned in protest of the soft Brexit strategy revealed by the Prime Minister at the weekend.
Chequers
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
There’s nothing like an off-site to get everyone back on the same page.
The warring UK Cabinet is meeting this Friday at the Prime Minister’s country house, Chequers, in the Chiltern Hills. Theresa May’s top ministers have been at loggerheads since her election – we all know how divisive Brexit can be. However, things have got a bit out of hand over the past few weeks. Cabinet members have gone increasingly rogue without censure, exposing just how fragile the Prime Minister is.
Getting serious
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
For months the US and China have been trading angry words about tariffs, but for the most part the spat has seemed simply that: words and unlikely to come to anything lasting.
Sounding the death knell for QE
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound? When the European Central Bank (ECB) finally bit the bullet and called time on its asset purchase programme last week, its hawkish announcement passed almost unheard by the markets. The euro did fall 1% against the dollar, presumably on concerns that the eurozone economy might still need the life support. But there was a negligible decline in bund yields, while most major European equity markets rallied in response to the announcement.
Crunch time
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
A slew of important Brexit votes on Tuesday and Wednesday will be a litmus test for Theresa May’s leadership.
The tempest
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
The Italian political crisis turned out to be a storm in an espresso cup.
Damaging policies dreamed up by the right-wing/left-wing coalition sent Italian debt yields upward at a gallop. Then the President vetoed prospective Cabinet members and yields really took off. The two-year government bond got as high as 2.70% last week; it was -0.25% just three weeks ago. This morning, that had calmed right down to about 0.72%.
Rathbones to launch range of Luxembourg-domiciled funds
Last Updated: September 30, 2025
Rathbone Unit Trust Management (Rathbones) confirms its intention to launch four offshore funds, offering Europe-based investors access to its UK funds for the first time.