Andrews Gwynne blasts “irresponsible” bulls
A bullish mood towards equities is “beyond irresponsible” according to Andrews Gwynne, which also claims investors are burying their heads in the sand over economic woes.
A bullish mood towards equities is “beyond irresponsible” according to Andrews Gwynne, which also claims investors are burying their heads in the sand over economic woes.
As the unfolding political drama in the eurozone takes centre stage after the Brexit vote and the US election, has sterling begun its road to recovery?
Donald Trump’s win may inspire further surprise political outcomes in Europe, according to Franklin Templeton.
The FTSE 100 Index mirrored Monday morning’s rally and was up 0.8% at 6807 even after constituents Land Securities and Vodafone reported H1 losses and easyJet delivered lower profits Tuesday morning.
Taylor Wimpey was among the top ten FTSE 100 risers Monday morning after it put out a trading update, rising by 3.7% to 151p per share.
Ever get the feeling you’ve been cheated? As I write, the masses are rebelling against a momentous decision that has thrown the free world off its axis… and that’s just the changing shape of the Toblerone.
There is an aspirational timbre to the slogan “Make America great again” that belies its dog-whistle like nature.
As the British government struggles to trigger an exit from the European Union, fund distribution heads at some of the biggest names in the industry share their thoughts on the implications for their UK and European operations.
Sterling weakness lifted Schroders’ assets under management by close to 30% during the first nine months of the year in the face of diminished inflows.
In a blow to the government’s ‘Brexit means Brexit’ rhetoric, the UK high court has ruled that Parliament must vote on whether or not to Trigger Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty.
Edinburgh-based wealth managers Simon Lloyd of Murray Asset Management and Charlotte Square Investment Managers’ William Forsythe have very different ideas about investment prospects in the United Kingdom and European Union post-Brexit, but neither think it will rival the shock of the 2008/2009 financial crisis.
Former MPC member, Professor Danny Blanchflower discusses why the UK government should move away from austerity.