Wednesday newspaper round-up: UK inflation, retail, Issa brothers, Russia, investors

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Published Aug 16, 2023 08:32

Wednesday newspaper round-up: UK inflation, retail, Issa brothers, Russia, investors

Sharecast - Oxford Street’s decline risks becoming the blueprint for Britain’s high streets if ministers fail to support regeneration efforts, retail chiefs have warned. A report authored by the Retail Sector Council, whose members include the chief executives of Sainsbury’s, Boots and Primark, urged ministers to support the industry by reforming competition law and levelling the playing field between online retailers and bricks-and-mortar stores. - Telegraph

Profits at Harrods rose almost 10-fold last year as big-spending tourists returned to London after the pandemic. The Knightsbridge department store, which is owned by the investment arm of Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund, saw profits hit £171.6m and sales increased 52% to £994m in the year to January 2023, according to accounts filed at Companies House. - Guardian

Top investors are increasingly abandoning the safe haven of cash and returning to the markets as fears start to ease that the global economy will slide into recession, according to a closely watched survey of big global fund managers. Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) said its monthly poll of investors had found that the mood in the international markets was the least bearish since February last year with optimism about the health of the economy starting to increase. - The Times

The billionaire owners of Asda and petrol station giant EG Group are selling off a swathe of convenience stores in the US as they race to pay down billions of pounds of debt. Mohsin and Zuber Issa have offloaded 63 EG Group-owned shops in Kentucky and Tennessee to the American chain Casey’s General Stores for an undisclosed sum. - Telegraph

Russia’s central bank has hiked interest rates by 3.5 percentage points in an emergency move aimed at halting the rouble’s recent slide, after it fell to its weakest point in almost 17 months. The decision to raise the key rate from 8.5% to 12% was announced after an extraordinary meeting of the bank’s board of directors, called after the rouble plunged past the psychologically key level of 100 to the dollar on Monday morning. - Guardian

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