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Friday newspaper round-up: Selfridges, EG Group, Credit Suisse

(Sharecast News) - The Treasury is working on a menu of options to counter Britain's cost of living crisis in readiness for an emergency mini-budget due to take place within two weeks if Liz Truss replaces Boris Johnson as prime minister. With opinion polls and bookmakers' odds showing Truss the clear favourite to move into 10 Downing Street next week, officials are drawing up plans that would allow the new government to move quickly over bills and longer-term reforms of the energy market. - Guardian Selfridges is aiming for almost half its interactions with customers to be based on resale, repair, rental or refills by 2030 as the upmarket department store responds to increasing demand for more sustainable shopping. The retailer said it wanted to step up action after increasing sales of secondhand items by 240% to 17,771 pieces last year and facilitating 28,000 repairs, more than a third of which were pairs of trainers, in its effort to trade in a more environmentally sustainable way. It also rented out more than 2,000 items to customers and sold more than 8,000 refills. - Guardian

Households are paying up to £250 per year too much for electricity under outdated clean energy rules, industry leaders have signalled, as they throw their weight behind reforms aimed at bringing bills down. Under historic arrangements, wind and solar farms built before 2014 can sell electricity at the market rate and benefit from government subsidies. This has allowed some generators to reap huge windfalls as prices have surged this year. Costs have not risen in line with electricity prices as wind and solar do not buy fuel to generate power. - Telegraph

One of Britain's biggest operators of petrol forecourts has denied profiteering from rising fuel prices, despite a rise in earnings as prices at the pump headed towards £2 a litre. Gross fuel profits at EG Group, run by the billionaire Issa brothers, who also own Asda, increased by more than 14 per cent to $545 million in the three months to the end of June and by $1 billion for the first six months of this year, a 17 per cent jump throughout its global forecourts business. - The Times

Speculation was growing last night that Credit Suisse is preparing to cut thousands of jobs in a cull that could affect London-based staff. Reports yesterday suggested that bosses at Switzerland's second biggest lender were considering plans to shed about 5,000 roles across the bank, out of a total workforce of 51,000. - The Times

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Wednesday newspaper round-up: Aviva Investors, HSBC, car finance
(Sharecast News) - One of the UK's biggest pension funds has lost more than £350m on a series of "calamitous" investments in incinerator power plants that are expected to go bust in the coming days. The Guardian understands that Aviva Investors will put three incinerators into administration this week after pouring millions of pounds into what has been described as the country's "dirtiest form of power generation". - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: Starling Bank, Asos, Morrisons
(Sharecast News) - Staff have resigned at Starling Bank after its new chief executive demanded thousands of workers attend its offices more regularly, despite lacking enough space to host them. In his first major policy change since taking over from the UK digital bank's founder, Anne Boden, in March, Raman Bhatia has ordered all hybrid staff - many of whom were in the office only one or two days a week, or on an ad-hoc basis - to travel to work for a minimum of 10 days each month. - Guardian
Monday newspaper round-up: Energy bills, Black Friday, Lloyds Bank, Sephora
(Sharecast News) - Household energy bills across Great Britain are set to rise at the start of next year, analysts predict, putting more pressure on household finances. Officially, the price cap for January-March 2025 will be set on Friday morning by regulator Ofgem, limiting what energy providers can charge in England, Scotland and Wales. - Guardian
Sunday newspaper round-up: Kursk, AstraZeneca, BAE Systems
(Sharecast News) - America's President has authorised Ukraine to employ long-range ATACMS supplied by the US to strike targets inside Russia. More specifically, Kyiv will now be allowed to strike targets within the Kursk region, the New York Times reported. Speculation may increase that permission from Britain, the US and France to do the same with Storm Shadow missiles could follow. Joe Biden's decision is said to have been triggered by the appearance of North Korean troops in the Kursk region. - The Sunday Telegraph

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