trading – Latest News https://latestnews.top Wed, 23 Aug 2023 10:53:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://latestnews.top/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-licon-32x32.png trading – Latest News https://latestnews.top 32 32 BUSINESS LIVE: Ofgem fines Morgan Stanley for trading comms failures https://latestnews.top/business-live-ofgem-fines-morgan-stanley-for-trading-comms-failures/ https://latestnews.top/business-live-ofgem-fines-morgan-stanley-for-trading-comms-failures/#respond Wed, 23 Aug 2023 10:53:07 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/23/business-live-ofgem-fines-morgan-stanley-for-trading-comms-failures/ LIVE BUSINESS LIVE: Ofgem fines Morgan Stanley for trading comms failures By Live Commentary Updated: 06:48 EDT, 23 August 2023 The FTSE 100 is up 1 per cent in midday trading. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Home REIT, Costain and Mulberry. Read the Wednesday 23 August Business Live blog below. […]]]>


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BUSINESS LIVE: Ofgem fines Morgan Stanley for trading comms failures

The FTSE 100 is up 1 per cent in midday trading. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Home REIT, Costain and Mulberry. Read the Wednesday 23 August Business Live blog below.

> If you are using our app or a third-party site click here to read Business Live

Camden Town Brewery advert banned for appealing to kids

A TV advert for AB InBev’s Camden Town Brewery has been banned by the Advertising Standards Authority for appealing to under 18s.

An unnamed complainant said their young children found the advert engaging and challenged whether it was likely to appeal strongly to people under 18 years of age.

Costain Group considers restarting dividends on Gatwick boost

Costain Group is considering the resumption of dividends after revealing a healthy first-half performance and an improved financial position.

The civil engineering firm, which helped construct the Channel Tunnel Rail Link and London’s Thames Barrier, saw flat turnover of £664.4million for the six months ending June.

MAGGIE PAGANO: The CMA bares its teeth

Hats off to the Competition and Markets Authority’s Sarah Cardell.

The watchdog’s boss took on the might of Microsoft by blocking its original £60billion bid for Activision Blizzard, provoking a barrage of gratuitous criticism from the US tech giant.

Home REIT tenant surrenders 100 leases

Troubled housing provider Home REIT will take control of 100 property leases comprising 418 bed after tenant (Housing & Support) CIC (One CIC) agreed to surrender them.

Mears Limited, guaranteed by housing and social care provider Mears Group, has been occupying the properties on a sub-lease from One CIC.

‘I’ve never seen turmoil like it,’ says PwC chief

PwC has experienced more ‘political and economic turbulence’ over the past year than ever before, its UK boss revealed yesterday.

Kevin Ellis was speaking as the UK arm of the accounting and auditing giant published results for a period which has seen three prime ministers and a bond market meltdown, as well as inflation at the highest level for four decades.

Morgan Stanley slapped with £5.4m fine by Ofgem amid WhatsApp debacle

Britain’s energy regulator has fined US banking giant Morgan Stanley over £5.4million after its energy traders communicated via private WhatsApp discussions.

The regulator said the group had failed to take ‘reasonable steps’ to ensure its staff did not use ways of communicating that it could not hand over to investigators should they ask for the information.

Market open: FTSE 100 up 0.4%; FTSE 250 adds 0.3%

The FSE 100 is trading higher this morning, helped by mining stocks on the back of gains in metal and gold prices, while Reckitt Benckiser is up after the company said its chief financial officer would retire next year.

Industrial metal miners are up 1 per cent, leading sectoral gains on the back of higher base metal prices.

Shares of personal care, drug and grocery store companies have recovered after a sell-off in the previous session, rising 0.5 per cent, helped by a 0.4 per cent gain in Reckitt Benckiser.

Microsoft launches new £60bn bid for Activision

Microsoft has tabled a revised £60billion offer for Activision Blizzard in a bid to secure approval from UK regulators.

The US tech giant had to submit another bid for the video game group after the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) blocked the original deal ‘to protect innovation and choice in cloud gaming’.

‘Markets return to a holding pattern’ ahead of Powell speech

Richard Hunter, Head of Markets at interactive investor:

‘Markets returned to a holding pattern ahead of two key imminent events which could shape the immediate outlook for investor sentiment.

‘The upcoming speech by Federal Reserve Chair Powell at the Jackson Hole symposium is eagerly awaited, as it is expected to provide further colour on the central bank’s current thinking. The probability of higher rates for longer in an attempt to finally quash inflation is increasingly being reluctantly accepted by investors, while the jury remains out as to whether there could actually be more rises to come.

‘In the meantime, US markets drifted, with some weakness in bank shares following a report from S&P Global which revised its outlook for the sector, based on the currently tough operating conditions.

‘Even so, the reaction was muted and did little to move the dial on the strong performance of the main indices in the year to date, where the Dow Jones has added 3.4%, the S&P500 14% and the Nasdaq 29%.

‘The FTSE100 maintained its own sideways shuffle in early trade, posting a marginal gain. Some tentative buying interest in the mining sector provided something of a prop, with investors now likely to return to macro matters as the latest quarterly earnings season moves into the rear-view mirror.

‘In the meantime, the FTSE100 has drifted by 2.2% in the year to date, underperforming many of its global peers and having seen earlier year gains disappear into thin investment air.’

Arm sounds alarm over its Chinese business

Arm has raised alarm bells about China as it gears up for the biggest stock market listing in the US for nearly two years.

The Cambridge-based chip designer – which is owned by Japanese investor SoftBank – revealed it was ‘particularly susceptible to economic and political risks’ in China, where it rakes in nearly a quarter of its revenues.

Itsu sales bounce back as workers return to office

Business at Asian food chain Itsu remains below pre-pandemic levels despite a strong recovery last year as workers returned to the office.

The group’s restaurant division saw sales hit £101million in 2022 – below the £114.7million it took in 2019 but up 73 per cent on 2021. Profits reached £6.5million, up 42 per cent on 2021, as commuters flocked back to towns and cities.

Home REIT surrenders 100 property leases

Beleaguered homeless housing business Home REIT has agreed to surrender its leases on 100 properties comprising a total of 418 beds as the investment trust attempts to stabilise its portfolio.

Home REIT said the surrender will give it ‘a sustainable income stream’ from a strong tenant covenant and it is expected to generate ‘significantly higher rent collection than has previously been received… despite lower headline rent’.

It added: ‘The transaction is in line with AEW’s strategy as Investment Manager to stabilise the Company’s portfolio. The current occupiers of the Properties will not be impacted as a result of this transaction.’

M&S set for FTSE 100 return but builder Persimmon heading for exit

Marks & Spencer looks set to return to the FTSE 100 after a four-year absence as its turnaround gathers pace.

The High Street stalwart is on course to be one of four companies promoted to the blue-chip benchmark in next month’s quarterly reshuffle, according to an update from index compiler FTSE Russell last night.

Going in the opposite direction could be housebuilder Persimmon, which faces relegation to the FTSE 250 as the property market is battered by rising interest rates.

Ofgem fines Morgan Stanley for trading comms failures

Energy regulator Ofgem has levied a £5.4million fine on Morgan Stanley for not recording and retaining electronic communications relating to trading wholesale energy products.

The fine was for the period between January 2018 and March 2020.

Cathryn Scott, regulatory director of enforcement and emerging issues at Ofgem, said:

‘This fine sends a strong message to market participants that they must comply with all REMIT rules or face enforcement action.

‘It is unacceptable that MSIP failed to prevent electronic communications which could not be recorded or retained. It risks a significant compromise of the integrity and transparency of wholesale energy markets.

‘We welcome the steps MSIP has taken to ensure the breaches do not happen again.’





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BUSINESS LIVE: Plus500 profits slump as trading volumes fall https://latestnews.top/business-live-plus500-profits-slump-as-trading-volumes-fall/ https://latestnews.top/business-live-plus500-profits-slump-as-trading-volumes-fall/#respond Mon, 14 Aug 2023 07:12:45 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/08/14/business-live-plus500-profits-slump-as-trading-volumes-fall/ BUSINESS LIVE: Plus500 profits slump as trading volumes fall By Live Commentary Published: 02:36 EDT, 14 August 2023 | Updated: 02:46 EDT, 14 August 2023 The FTSE 100 will open at 8am. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Plus500, Lok’nStore Group and L’Occitane. Read the Monday 14 August Business Live blog […]]]>


BUSINESS LIVE: Plus500 profits slump as trading volumes fall

The FTSE 100 will open at 8am. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Plus500, Lok’nStore Group and L’Occitane. Read the Monday 14 August Business Live blog below.

> If you are using our app or a third-party site click here to read Business Live

Nigel Farage accuses NatWest of delaying debanking review

Nigel Farage has accused NatWest of kicking its review into the closure of his bank account ‘into the long grass’.

The banking sector is continuing to feel the fallout of the debanking scandal, which came to light when Coutts closed the former Ukip leader’s account without warning due to his political views.

Cheers, Graham! sales of Norton’s own wine hit 3.7m

Sales of Graham Norton’s wine are fizzing as drinkers increasingly seek out celebrity alcohol brands.

The TV host’s GN label, which he launched a decade ago, sold more than 3.7million bottles last year, according to its New Zealand maker Invivo.

The firm had to buy more vineyards this year to meet demand.

Plus500 profits slump as trading volumes fall

Plus500 profits slumped 43 per cent in the first half as the online platform suffered a drop in trading volumes.

Core profit for the six months to the end of June fell to $174.1 million, from $305.3 million a year earlier.

Separately, the London-listed company announced a $60million share buy back.

‘In the first half of the year, we executed on our strategy to produce a strong performance, thanks to the power of Plus500’s market-leading proprietary technology and our consistent ability to attract and retain higher value customers over the long term.

‘Our increasingly diversified revenue streams, broadened product offering, deep customer relationships and the structural growth drivers in our end markets, mean we are able to deliver both growth and attractive shareholder returns.

‘With continued operational and financial momentum being achieved, we also made substantial progress in delivering against our strategic priorities, particularly in harnessing the attractive growth opportunities in the US futures market and obtaining new regulatory licences in the high growth UAE market and very recently in the Bahamas

Our track record of delivering outstanding shareholder returns puts us amongst the top cohort of companies on a total returns basis within the FTSE All-Share Index over the past ten years.’





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Squad member AOC teams up with GOP’s Gaetz, Fitzpatrick on bill to BAN stock trading in https://latestnews.top/squad-member-aoc-teams-up-with-gops-gaetz-fitzpatrick-on-bill-to-ban-stock-trading-in/ https://latestnews.top/squad-member-aoc-teams-up-with-gops-gaetz-fitzpatrick-on-bill-to-ban-stock-trading-in/#respond Tue, 02 May 2023 17:34:13 +0000 https://latestnews.top/2023/05/02/squad-member-aoc-teams-up-with-gops-gaetz-fitzpatrick-on-bill-to-ban-stock-trading-in/ Squad member AOC teams up with GOP’s Gaetz, Fitzpatrick on bill to BAN stock trading by members of Congress Gaetz and AOC have frequently sparred over the years, with the progressive firebrand calling the Florida Republican a ‘bad haircut in a cheap suit’ ‘When members have access to classified information, we should not be trading […]]]>


Squad member AOC teams up with GOP’s Gaetz, Fitzpatrick on bill to BAN stock trading by members of Congress

  • Gaetz and AOC have frequently sparred over the years, with the progressive firebrand calling the Florida Republican a ‘bad haircut in a cheap suit’
  • ‘When members have access to classified information, we should not be trading in the stock market on it. It’s really that simple,’ added Ocasio-Cortez

A rare mix of House members from across the ideological spectrum is reintroducing legislation to ban stock trading this Congress

Moderate Pennsylvania Republican Brian Fitzpatrick, co-chair of the Problem Solvers’ Caucus, together with Florida Republican Matt Gaetz, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., and Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Calif., introduced the Restoring Faith in Government Act on Tuesday to prohibit financial investments by members of Congress, spouses and dependents. 

‘The fact that Members of the Progressive Caucus, the Freedom Caucus, and the Bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus, reflecting the entirety of the political spectrum, can find common ground on key issues like this should send a powerful message to America,’ Fitzpatrick said in a statement on the bill. 

‘When members have access to classified information, we should not be trading in the stock market on it. It’s really that simple,’ added Ocasio-Cortez. 

'When members have access to classified information, we should not be trading in the stock market on it. It's really that simple,' said Ocasio-Cortez

‘When members have access to classified information, we should not be trading in the stock market on it. It’s really that simple,’ said Ocasio-Cortez

'Members of Congress are spending their time trading futures instead of securing the future of our fellow Americans. We cannot allow the Swamp to prioritize investing in stocks over investing in our country,' Gaetz said of the new bill

‘Members of Congress are spending their time trading futures instead of securing the future of our fellow Americans. We cannot allow the Swamp to prioritize investing in stocks over investing in our country,’ Gaetz said of the new bill

Gaetz and Ocasio-Cortez have frequently sparred over the years, with the progressive firebrand calling the Florida Republican a ‘bad haircut in a cheap suit’ when Gaetz said Rep. Jamie Raskin might be unable to perform his job through the grief of losing his son to suicide. 

‘Members of Congress are spending their time trading futures instead of securing the future of our fellow Americans. We cannot allow the Swamp to prioritize investing in stocks over investing in our country,’ Gaetz said of the new bill.  

Public momentum for a stock trade ban came to a head last Congress after ex-Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband made a number of questionable high-value trades. 

A stock trading ban has had bipartisan support – and quiet opposition – in both parties in both chambers. ‘The dirty secret here is that members of Congress hate this, they hate this bill,’ Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who introduced another ban told DailyMail.com earlier this year. 

Last July Paul unscrupulously purchased  $5 million in semiconductor chip stock days before a House vote that handed $52 billion to semiconductor producers. He sold the shares at a loss to avoid ‘misinformation’ – or the appearance of a conflict of interest. 

The Pelosis have a combined net worth of around $46 million.

Many Americans had hoped to see stock ban legislation last Congress after reports revealed hundreds of lawmakers regularly trade stocks directly related to their work in Congress.

In September Pelosi backed a bill to ban congressional stock trades that some government reform advocates said didn’t go far enough. She and other Democratic leaders failed to bring a ban up for a vote on the House floor. 

Nearly 100 House members bought or sold financial assets that intersected with the work of the committees they sit on, according to a New York Times report from September.

Of the 435 House members, 183 traded stocks through themselves or their immediate family members from 2019 to 2021. At least 97 bought or sold stocks, bonds or other financial assets through themselves or their spouses that directly intersected with their congressional work.

The trades that intersect with committee work are split evenly on partisan lines – 49 Republicans and 48 Democrats.

Since 2012, Congress members have been bound by the STOCK Act which requires they report stock transactions of $1,000 or more by themselves or their family members within 45 days. Members of Congress are also supposed to be confined by insider trading laws. 



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