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Nils Pratley

Estable9 noticias2 fuentesÚltima actualización: 12.05.2026

Últimas noticias

GameStop hits the limits of credibility with $56bn eBay bid | Nils Pratley
NOTICIA
12.05.2026

GameStop hits the limits of credibility with $56bn eBay bid | Nils Pratley

The ‘meme stock’ company is remembered for Reddit traders sending its share price into orbit but its move on the auction site looks less likely to take off“Neither credible nor attractive.” No, not a line from a junior minister’s resignation letter on Tuesday. It was eBay’s succinct appraisal of the bizarre $55.5bn (£41bn) takeover offer from video games retailer GameStop, an affair that offers light distraction from the sight of UK 10-year gilt yields at 5%-plus.To recap: GameStop is the “meme stock” company that became famous a few years ago when amateur traders on a Reddit forum piled in furiously in an attempt to burn the short-sellers who were betting on the struggling retailer’s demise. Surprisingly, the Redditers succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. The squeeze drove up GameStop’s share price hundredfold, inflicting hell on serious hedge funds and making the company’s chief executive, Ryan Cohen, an anti-establishment hero. Continue reading...

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Guardian Business
British Steel nationalisation: what went wrong, and what happens now?
NOTICIA
12.05.2026

British Steel nationalisation: what went wrong, and what happens now?

Keir Starmer’s plan for full state ownership marks latest chapter in Scunthorpe plant’s troubled historyFull nationalisation of British Steel expected in king’s speechNils Pratley: More questions than answers on the futureFour queens – blast furnaces named after Anne, Bess (Elizabeth), Victoria and Mary – loom over the British Steel works at Scunthorpe. Within days the queens could be under public ownership, after Keir Starmer on Monday promised legislation to nationalise the plant.“Strong nations in a world like this need to make steel,” Starmer said on Monday in a speech. The prime minister was hoping decisive action would fend off challenges to his leadership. Continue reading...

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Guardian Business
British Steel: more questions than answers on the future | Nils Pratley
NOTICIA
11.05.2026

British Steel: more questions than answers on the future | Nils Pratley

Hard decisions over a possible sale and future subsidies loom now full nationalisation is on the cardsExplainer: how did we get here, and what about the future?Full nationalisation of British Steel expected in king’s speech“One of the proudest things we have done in government,” said Keir Starmer in Monday’s big speech about the decision a year ago to recall parliament in order to take control of British Steel at Scunthorpe.It was an odd boast because last year’s action was merely an emergency exercise in saving the patient, as opposed to getting British Steel on its feet and out of the hospital. Taking control meant the Chinese owner, Jingye, could not turn off the two blast furnaces but meant the government was on the hook for operational losses, which will be £615m and counting by next month according to the National Audit Office (NAO). Continue reading...

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Guardian Business
UK Launches £50m Campaign Featuring CGI Squirrel to Encourage Stock Market Investing
En desarrollo
Business·23.04.2026Resumen IA

UK Launches £50m Campaign Featuring CGI Squirrel to Encourage Stock Market Investing

The UK government has launched a £50m retail investment campaign featuring an animated red squirrel named 'Savvy' to encourage the nation's cautious savers to move money from cash into stock market investments. The three-to-five-year campaign, backed by 20 City firms including Barclays, Aviva and Schroders, aims to target the seven million UK adults holding over £10,000 in cash savings, amid concerns that risk-averse behaviour is stymying UK economic growth.

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Guardian UK
UK Launches £50m Campaign Featuring CGI Squirrel 'Savvy' to Encourage Investing
En desarrollo
Business·23.04.2026Resumen IA

UK Launches £50m Campaign Featuring CGI Squirrel 'Savvy' to Encourage Investing

The UK government has launched a £50m retail investment campaign featuring an animated CGI squirrel named Savvy to encourage the nation's cautious savers to move cash into financial markets. Backed by 20 City firms including Barclays, Aviva and Robinhood UK, the 3-5 year campaign targets seven million adults holding over £10,000 in cash savings, who the Investment Association say are losing out as cash erodes in real terms.

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Guardian Business
Yes, retail investment needs a boost – but the squirrel looks too tame | Nils Pratley
NOTICIA
22.04.2026

Yes, retail investment needs a boost – but the squirrel looks too tame | Nils Pratley

Ambition behind investing campaign is laudable, yet cutting stamp duty on share purchases, for example, would be much more savvyCity firms bank on ‘savvy’ ad campaign to push Brits towards investingRed squirrel characters have a history in the public information game. Older UK readers may recall Tufty, who taught children about road safety in the 1970s. His chum, Willy Weasel, regularly got knocked down by passing cars but clever Tufty always remembered to look both ways.Now comes Savvy Squirrel, who, with backing from the chancellor and a multi-year lump of advertising spend from the financial services industry, will try “to drive a step-change in how investing is understood, discussed and adopted”, as the blurb puts it. In translation: don’t squirrel everything away in a boring cash Isa but try taking an investment risk or two if you value your long-term financial health. Continue reading...

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Guardian Business
UK launches £50m 'Savvy the Squirrel' campaign to lure savers into markets
NOTICIA
22.04.2026Resumen IA

UK launches £50m 'Savvy the Squirrel' campaign to lure savers into markets

The UK government has launched a £50m advertising campaign featuring an animated CGI squirrel named 'Savvy' to encourage the nation's cautious savers to move their money from cash into financial markets. Backed by 20 major City firms including Barclays, Aviva and Schroders, the three-to-five-year campaign targets the seven million UK adults holding over £10,000 in cash savings, who campaigners say are losing out due to inflation. The Investment Association warns that £10,000 in a cash ISA a decade ago would be worth £8,400 today versus £19,700 in a global equity fund.

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Guardian Business
Letter: North Sea gas expansion cannot be justified when climate risks are factored in
NOTICIA
22.04.2026Resumen IA

Letter: North Sea gas expansion cannot be justified when climate risks are factored in

Letter writer responds to Nils Pratley's column on North Sea gas, arguing that expansion cannot be justified when climate and nature risks are considered. Citing Uplift analysis showing 14 years of new licensing delivered only one month's gas demand, the author warns that further expansion poses systemic risks to food security, economic stability and national security.

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Guardian Business
Back biomethane to cut UK import dependence and support rural economies, says Chris Huhne
NOTICIA
21.04.2026Resumen IA

Back biomethane to cut UK import dependence and support rural economies, says Chris Huhne

Chris Huhne responds to Nils Pratley's article on UK gas policy, arguing that biomethane represents a third overlooked option between expanding North Sea drilling and increasing LNG imports. He highlights that biomethane is domestic, low carbon, storable and dispatchable, citing the IEA's 2025 Renewables report and examples from Denmark (meeting 40% of gas demand from green gas) and France (20%+ annual growth since 2022). The letter argues the UK lacks political will to scale these alternatives.

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Guardian Business