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Tuesday newspaper round-up: Rachel Reeves, electric cars, Marks & Spencer

(Sharecast News) - Rachel Reeves will claim that cutting red tape for City firms will have trickle-down benefits for households across Britain, as she tries to drum up support for a new financial services strategy. A raft of regulatory reforms are due to be announced by the chancellor on Tuesday, in what the Treasury says will be the "biggest financial regulation reforms in a decade". It will come before her Mansion House address to City bosses during a dinner at Guildhall in London on Tuesday evening. - Guardian Buyers of new electric cars priced at less than £37,000 will be able to get a discount of up to 10% under a new UK government scheme, a move that may benefit some cheaper Chinese models but leave Tesla fans still having to pay the full price. The Department for Transport has reintroduced a grant, which had been scrapped in June 2022, to encourage more drivers to switch from petrol and diesel to electric vehicles. - Guardian

Rachel Reeves will pave the way for a new era of risky lending in a push for growth that watchdogs fear could end in more people losing their homes. As part of her Mansion House announcement, the Chancellor will hail the biggest mortgage shake-up in a decade to boost homeownership and cut red tape. - Telegraph

Marks & Spencer is taking its famously dependable underwear down under with the launch of its first international wholesale fashion deal. The British retailer has agreed to sell a selection of its bestselling lingerie, womenswear and menswear in 24 David Jones department stores across Australia, including Sydney and Melbourne, as well as online. - The Times

A Bradford-based stairlift company has paid its tycoon founder a near £45 million dividend, bringing total payouts to £300 million over a little more than a decade. Acorn Mobility Services, which is based at a business park near the West Yorkshire city, was founded by John Jakes in the early 1990s and has been lifted by a rise in sales to the elderly and the immobile from an ageing population in Britain, as well as expansion overseas. - The Times

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Monday newspaper round-up: Tech companies, Pennon, David Lloyd gyms
(Sharecast News) - Leave-voting areas have seen faster relative growth in foreign workers since the Brexit referendum, a Guardian investigation has found. Data analysis suggests that the decade since the Brexit vote may not have matched the expectations of many Leave supporters, showing their local areas have also become relatively more deprived over the same period. - Guardian
Friday newspaper round-up: Fujitsu, Telegram, Grenson
(Sharecast News) - The Japanese tech company at the centre of the Post Office IT scandal is facing calls from a parliamentary committee to make an "immediate" payment towards the compensation bill for victims. Fujitsu supplied the faulty Horizon software to the UK Post Office, which led to branch operators being wrongly prosecuted over discrepancies in their business accounts. - Guardian
Thursday newspaper round-up: Brexit, HMRC, new homes
(Sharecast News) - Brexit has depressed UK exports to the EU by 12%, and rejoining the customs union would undo only a fraction of the damage, research shared with the Guardian shows. With the UK's future relationship with the bloc likely to feature prominently in a potential Labour leadership contest, the economists John Springford and Anton Spisak, of the Centre for European Reform, provide fresh evidence of the damage caused by exiting. - Guardian
Wednesday newspaper round-up: John Lewis, British American Tobacco, Shein/Temu
(Sharecast News) - John Lewis is to spend £20m on a revamp of its Glasgow store in the city centre's Buchanan Galleries in a vote of confidence in the shopping mall not long ago scheduled for demolition. It is the largest cash injection within a wider plan to spend £50m this financial year on refreshing its shops, with department stores in Reading, Cambridge, Leicester and Liverpool all earmarked for an upgrade. - Guardian

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