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Wednesday newspaper round-up: UK banks, Tesla, KPMG

(Sharecast News) - UK banks are leaving themselves open to "severe, unexpected losses", by failing to properly measure how exposed they are to the $8tn private equity industry, the Bank of England has warned. In a speech on Tuesday, Rebecca Jackson, a senior executive at the central bank, said there was a "creeping sense of complacency" among lenders, who - despite a boom in loans and financing to the sector - had almost no ability to put together data "or even appreciate its crucial importance". - Guardian The Senate voted Tuesday to pass a bill that will either ban TikTok or force a sale of the short-form video app, giving its China-based parent company ByteDance up to one year to divest its crown jewel before facing deletion from US app stores. The vote was a landslide, with 79 senators voting in favor and 18 against. The bill passed in the House on Saturday by a margin of 360 to 58, as part of a foreign aid package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan. It will now make its way to the desk of Joe Biden, who has previously said he would sign the legislation. - Guardian

Tesla is speeding up plans for a range of cheaper cars as Elon Musk's electric vehicle maker attempts to take on a wave of cut-price Chinese manufacturers. The company said it would "accelerate the launch of new models... including more affordable models" with production starting next year. Tesla's shares rose by more than 5pc in after-hours trading despite the company reporting its biggest drop in sales in more than a decade. - Telegraph

KPMG, the Big Four accounting firm, is to start hiring more ex-offenders after a "very positive" two-year trial. The move by one of Britain's largest employers is a major boost for the government, which is trying to encourage more big businesses to recruit prison leavers to help cut reoffending, which costs an estimated £18 billion a year. - The Times

The new chief executive of AG Barr is to receive a £130,000 relocation package to help him buy a property in Scotland. The soft drinks firm said that Euan Sutherland, who is Scottish, would get the lump sum as part of his joining package when he officially takes over on May 1. He and his family live in Surrey but the new role will see him splitting time between London and Scotland. - The Times

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(Sharecast News) - More than 800,000 people in Europe and the US appear to have been duped into sharing card details and other sensitive personal data with a vast network of fake online designer shops apparently operated from China. An international investigation by the Guardian, Die Zeit and Le Monde gives a rare inside look at the mechanics of what the UK's Chartered Trading Standards Institute has described as one of the largest scams of its kind, with 76,000 fake websites created. - Guardian
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(Sharecast News) - Universal Music Group could become the latest company to face an embarrassing shareholder revolt this AGM season, after an influential advisory firm urged investors to reject an "excessive" €139m (£119m) payout for its chief executive, Lucian Grainge. Glass Lewis said it had "severe reservations" about supporting the Dutch-American music company's pay decisions, which included a €92m share-based bonus for its British-born CEO that easily made up for a 51% cut in his salary, to €7.5m. - Guardian
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