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Important information: The value of investments can go down as well as up so you may get back less than you invest. Investors should note that the views expressed may no longer be current and may have already been acted upon. This is a third-party news feed and may not reflect Fidelity’s views.

Tuesday newspaper round-up: UK steel, Google, BT

(Sharecast News) - The companies running Britain's four remaining steel blastfurnaces have been offered £600m in government support to help fund the switch from coal and invest in lower-emissions technology. The chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, is expected to confirm £300m each for British Steel and Tata Steel in an announcement as soon as this week, although the timing will depend on them accepting the offers. The BBC first reported the government offer to both companies. - Guardian Google staff are overpaid and the tech giant must cut thousands more jobs, a British activist investor has said. Sir Chris Hohn, who previously donated to Extinction Rebellion, wrote in a letter dated January 20 that Google's 12,000 layoffs did not cut deep enough to reduce bloat at the tech giant. The billionaire founder of The Children's Investment Fund Management (TCI) , who holds a $6bn stake in Google-parent company Alphabet, wrote to chief executive Sundar Pichai, warning: "Ultimately management will need to go further." - Telegraph

BT is facing a fresh investigation into whether it obscured inflation-busting price rises in its contracts, as customers brace for a sharp increase in their bills. Ofcom said it will examine whether the telecoms giant had failed to provide clear warning of upcoming price increases to customers of its broadband subsidiary Plusnet. - Telegraph

The government's strategy for Britain's £94 billion life sciences sector is at risk of failing unless ministers act to stem a loss of manufacturing investment, jobs and exports to international rivals. In a report, the Medicines Manufacturing Industry Partnership warns that there has been a significant loss of traditional medicines manufacturing capacity over the past 25 years and that the global proportion of capital investment has fallen "dramatically". - The Times

The Bank of England's staff pension scheme assets lost £1.5 billion in value in six months as part of its liability-driven investment policy. In response to a freedom of information request, the central bank disclosed that the fund's investments in gilts, bonds and derivatives had dropped from £5 billion to £3.5 billion in the half-year to September 30 as the mini-budget of Liz Truss and Kwasi Kwarteng triggered panic in the gilts market. - The Times

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Monday newspaper round-up: Investment bankers, energy price cap, Raspberry Pi
(Sharecast News) - London's investment bankers are expected to rake in bigger bonuses this financial year, as the City begins to recover from a two-year slump in deals caused by surging interest rates. Demand for investment banking services - such as facilitating mergers and acquisitions, advising companies and governments on fundraising, and underwriting new stock and bonds - was hit by a sharp increase in borrowing rates after the pandemic, as central banks acted to tame runaway inflation. Jobs and pay were cut as investment banks sought to reduce costs. - Guardian
Sunday share tips: Eco Animal Health, Intertek
(Sharecast News) - The Financial Mail on Sunday's Midas column tipped shares of Eco Animal Health to its readers, touting the company's animal drug pipeline.
Sunday newspaper round-up: Britvic, Prices of UK homes, BT Group
(Sharecast News) - Aviva, one of the ten largest shareholders in Britvic, thinks that Carlsberg needs to raise its takeover offer. During the preceding week, Britvic had let it be known that it had already rebuffed two acquisition offers from the Danish brewer, the highest of which had been for £3.1bn. In particular, Aviva said that Carlsberg was not taking sufficiently into account how Britvic's finances were expected to improve over the next few years. - The Financial Mail on Sunday
Friday newspaper round-up: Port Talbot, Elon Musk, Amazon
(Sharecast News) - Tata Steel has told workers it could to cease operations at its steel plant in Port Talbot months earlier than planned because of a strike. The company had been planning to shut down one of the blast furnaces by the end of June and the second one by September. But workers at the south Wales site have been told that Tata plans to cease operations at both furnaces no later than 7 July because of the strike by members of Unite, which starts the following day. - Guardian

Important information: This information is not a personal recommendation for any particular investment. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment you should speak to one of Fidelity’s advisers or an authorised financial adviser of your choice. When you are thinking about investing in shares, it’s generally a good idea to consider holding them alongside other investments in a diversified portfolio of assets. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.

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