MARKET REPORT: B&Q owner Kingfisher enjoys a 44% profits rise as 18 to 34-year-olds join in the lockdown DIY craze By Francesca Washtell For The Daily Mail Published: 17:51 EDT, 22 March 2021 | Updated: 17:51 EDT, 22 March 2021 The DIY
The founder of online fashion firm In The Style said he was ‘totally overwhelmed’ after his ‘little baby’ made its debut on the stock market in London. Shares in the company, which was set up by entrepreneur Adam Frisby in 2013, and
QC James Hamilton’s independent report concluded that Nicola Sturgeon did not break the ministerial code. Ms Sturgeon addressed the release of the report and spoke to journalists who quizzed the First Minister on the result. She insisted that others should take comfort
An investigation by James Hamilton QC has ruled the First Minister did not breach the code after allegations she failed to record meetings with Mr Salmond and others in 2018. Ms Sturgeon referred herself for investigation after questions were raised about her
The Scottish Government received the report from James Hamilton QC, its independent adviser on the ministerial code, on Monday morning. Ms Sturgeon referred herself after being accused of misleading Parliament over when she knew of the complaints against Mr Salmond. She previously
The pandemic has produced a litany of winners and losers on the stock market. Among those to have suffered most is shopping centre operator Hammerson – at least until now. Shares in the firm, whose sites include the Bullring in Birmingham, Brent
Investors snapped up BT shares after it spent far less than expected on buying new 5G airwaves. Analysts thought the telecoms giant would have to splash out £820million or even £1billion to buy the additional spectrum, which enables smartphone to download data
MARKET REPORT: Lockdowns take the fizz out of Fevertree shares after pub and restaurant closures see sales fall flat By Francesca Washtell For The Daily Mail Published: 18:00 EDT, 18 March 2021 | Updated: 18:12 EDT, 18 March 2021 Shares in Fevertree
A little optimism can go a long way these days – particularly for hard-hit companies. This was the case for Tui, whose shares leapt after boss Fritz Joussen told a German newspaper that he expects ‘a largely normal summer’ for the company