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Tuesday newspaper round-up: Penguin, UK restaurants, Shell

(Sharecast News) - Penguin Random House, the world's largest book publisher, and rival Simon & Schuster have scrapped a $2.2bn deal to merge, Penguin's owner said in a statement on Monday. Bertelsmann, a German media group which owns Penguin, initially said it would appeal a US judge's decision that said its purchase of Simon & Schuster would be illegal because it would hit authors' pay. - Guardian UK restaurants are going bust at a faster rate than during the Covid crisis owing to a "toxic mix" of surging energy costs, staff shortages and falling bookings. Closures in the sector rose by 60%, with 1,567 insolvencies over 2021-22, up from 984 during 2020-21, according to a study by the advisory firm Mazars. The figure includes 453 over the past three months, up from 395 in the previous quarter. - Guardian

Shell is reviewing plans to invest £25bn in Britain's energy system after Jeremy Hunt raided the industry for £55bn in windfall taxes. David Bunch, Shell's UK chairman, said the expanded levy announced in the Chancellor's Autumn Statement is forcing the company to re-examine a slew of projects in the pipeline, from North Sea investments to renewable energy schemes. - Telegraph

Waitrose is putting heat pumps in all its supermarkets as it brings forward net-zero plans in an effort to tackle spiralling energy prices. The company said it was replacing the gas boilers that have been heating its 332 stores with electric heat pumps. These require less electricity to run, and work by extracting heat from the air outside. - Telegraph

The Bank of England has delayed plans to move hundreds of staff from London to Leeds as the wider economic turmoil slows the institution's plans to expand its operations outside the capital. Plans to strengthen Threadneedle Street's northern hub have been delayed by at least a year as the central bank scales back ambitions to increase its presence across the UK. - The Times

Staff at the UK's biggest semiconductor factory said that the government had "cast a dark cloud over South Wales" by ordering its Chinese-backed owners to sell the Newport plant, and declared the ruling was "beyond contempt". In a letter to the business secretary Grant Shapps, the Nexperia Newport Staff Association expressed disbelief at the ruling which, it wrote, put employees' futures "in jeopardy in the run-up to Christmas". - The Times

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Thursday newspaper round-up: Mike Lynch, smart meters, Very Group
(Sharecast News) - San Francisco federal courthouse on Thursday as a key witness in his own criminal fraud trial, which began in March. US authorities have charged the former software tycoon with 16 counts of wire fraud, securities fraud and conspiracy relating to his company's acquisition deal with Hewlett-Packard in 2011. If convicted, Lynch faces up to 25 years in prison. He has pleaded not guilty. - Guardian
Wednesday newspaper round-up: Anglesey power station, electric cars, Eurostar passengers
(Sharecast News) - Ministers have earmarked north Wales as the site of a large-scale nuclear power plant, which is part of plans to resuscitate Britain's nuclear power ambitions. Wylfa on Anglesey (Ynys Môn) has been named as the preferred site for the UK's third major nuclear power plant in a generation, coming after EDF's Hinkley Point C nuclear plant, which is under construction in Somerset, and its Sizewell C nuclear project planned for Suffolk. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: New homes, AI, Mike Ashley
(Sharecast News) - A Labour government would aim to announce the sites for a series of new towns within a year of taking office, with the promise that homes would be built in them by the end of a first term, Angela Rayner is to say in a speech. Giving more detail to a plan first outlined in Keir Starmer's party conference speech in October, Rayner will tell a housing conference that Labour will strongly support private developers who create high-quality and affordable housing. - Guardian
Monday newspaper round-up: Border checks, house prices, apprenticeships
(Sharecast News) - Post-Brexit border checks will cost UK businesses £470m a year, the government's public spending watchdog has said. Plans to bring in border checks on goods coming from the EU faced "significant issues" including critical shortages of inspectors before their introduction last month, the National Audit Office said in a report. - Guardian

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