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Monday newspaper round-up: Clean energy, Evri, UK manufacturing

(Sharecast News) - The chief executive of Vodafone has said Labour will fail to achieve its promise of nationwide access to 5G, which is essential for next-generation technology such as artificial intelligence, by 2030 if the telecom company's £15bn merger with the rival Three UK is blocked. In its election manifesto, the government said nationwide coverage was needed by the end of the decade because the UK was falling behind other countries in terms of the investment and rollout of advanced mobile networks. - Guardian Labour's clean energy targets may already be in jeopardy just weeks after the party came to power with the promise to quadruple Britain's offshore wind power, according to senior industry executives. The offshore wind industry has said there will not be enough time to develop the projects needed to create a net zero electricity system by the end of the decade unless ministers increase the ambition and funding of the government's upcoming "make or break" subsidy auctions. - Guardian

The parcel delivery business Evri is to hire 9,000 extra workers in a race to take on Royal Mail, just days after agreeing to be taken over by a giant buyout fund. Evri said it planned to take on 8,000 more delivery drivers and 1,000 more workers amid exploding demand for online shopping. Last week, the US private equity giant Apollo reached a deal to buy Evri for £2.7bn after outbidding rivals in an auction. It pledged to further invest in expansion amid an online delivery arms race. - Telegraph

Optimism among senior executives at some of Britain's biggest businesses has increased after Labour's landslide general election victory this month. Risk appetite is up, fears about uncertainty have retreated sharply and revenue growth predictions are rising, according to Deloitte's latest survey of chief financial officers. - The Times

The UK has fallen out of the world's top ten leading nations for manufacturing for the first time amid a "redrawing of the contours" of the global economy. In the most recent rankings, for 2022, Britain dropped to 12th place. That was down from eighth the year before, according to an analysis by Make UK. - The Times

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Friday newspaper round-up: High speed rail line, Boeing, Grangemouth
(Sharecast News) - A plan for a new high-speed rail line linking Birmingham and Manchester has been unveiled, claiming to deliver most of the benefits of the scrapped northern leg of HS2 at significantly cheaper cost and with only slightly longer journey times. The 50-mile track would run from where the HS2 line is now due to end in Staffordshire to join a planned Northern Powerhouse Rail line west of Manchester airport, under a plan unveiled by the mayors of Greater Manchester and the West Midlands. - Guardian
Wednesday newspaper round-up: Telegraph, flexible working, Ford
(Sharecast News) - The owner of the New York Sun has emerged as the latest bidder aiming to take control of the Daily and Sunday Telegraph. British-born Dovid Efune, who took control of the assets of the former newspaper the New York Sun three years ago, is understood to be in the running to lodge an offer before the deadline set for second-round bidders on 27 September. - Guardian
Wednesday newspaper round-up: Port Talbot, Amazon, Tripadvisor
(Sharecast News) - The British steel industry is braced for 2,500 job cuts at the Port Talbot steelworks, with thousands more jobs at risk in the UK, as the government prepares a taxpayer-backed deal for the south Wales plant. The business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, is expected to outline on Wednesday details of a rescue deal which will see the government hand the historic Welsh plant's owners, Tata Steel, £500m to build a new electric furnace - but at the cost of huge redundancies from the closure of its last remaining blast furnace. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: Water bills, iPhones, council tax, Audi factory
(Sharecast News) - Rachel Reeves is being urged by a left-of-centre thinktank to announce changes to capital gains tax, inheritance tax and national insurance in next month's budget that would raise more than £20bn a year for the Treasury. With the chancellor looking for ways to plug a £22bn hole that she has identified in the public finances, the Resolution Foundation said it was a time-honoured tradition that taxes were raised in the first budget after an election. - Guardian

Important information: This information is not a personal recommendation for any particular investment. If you are unsure about the suitability of an investment you should speak to one of Fidelity’s advisers or an authorised financial adviser of your choice. When you are thinking about investing in shares, it’s generally a good idea to consider holding them alongside other investments in a diversified portfolio of assets. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.

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