What will crypto look like in the next five years? Very different to the playground of the last five, writes Paul Armstrong Crypto is no longer the unruly frontier it …
Don’t rule out another rate cut this year
Many are assuming the Bank of England will hold rates for the rest of the year. But scratch the surface and there is a case for another move before year-end, …
Zilo lands £20m funding round as it eyes global expansion
Zilo has secured £20m in fresh funding as the London fintech gears up for the next phase in its expansion, City AM can reveal. The Canary Wharf-based business, founded in …
Bitcoin to form part of central bank reserves ‘by 2030’
Bitcoin will “coexist with gold” on central bank balance sheets as soon as 2030, one of the world’s largest banks has predicted, as banks’ continued move away from the dollar …
Infrastructure could be rare success story for Labour
The decision to allow a second runway at Gatwick is entirely sensible and most welcome. As the Chancellor said yesterday on her visit to the airport, the development “will mean …
A little patriotism can be a force for good – and a boon for business
When done without alienating others, patriotism can be a force for good and a boon for business, writes Outernet CEO Philip O’Ferrall in today’s Notebook Pride in the UK must …
French bosses round on ‘deadly’ wealth tax plans
Some of France’s most high-profile entrepreneurs have rounded on a wealth tax proposal being touted by a party key to the flailing government’s fortune, warning it would risk “destroying the …
Autumn tax hikes would lead to inflation over five per cent ‘well into next year’
Food inflation will rise and remain above five per cent well into 2026 if the retail industry is hit by further tax rises at the Autumn Budget, a leading lobby …
Londoners paying £42,700 premium to live near Tube and train stations
Home buyers in London are paying as much as a £42,700 premium to live close to a train station. According to research from Nationwide Building Society, there is a stark …
Rachel Reeves told to cut national insurance and raise income tax to gain £6bn
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has been told to cut national insurance for workers by two per cent and raise income tax by the same amount, with economists at a left-leaning think …