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Thursday newspaper round-up: South East Water, Asda, The Arts Club

(Sharecast News) - South East Water could lose its operating licence after residents across Kent and Sussex faced up to a week without water. The environment secretary, Emma Reynolds, has called for the regulator to review the company's operating licence. If it were to lose it, the company would fall into a special administration regime until a new buyer was found. If the regulator, Ofwat, decides the company has breached its licence but decides not to revoke it, penalties include a fine of 10% of the company's annual turnover. Ofwat in 2024 decided Thames Water was in breach of its licence but decided to avoid forcing it into special measures and instead insisted on a turnaround plan. - Guardian Six people have been arrested as part of a £300m fraud investigation into a British social housing landlord set up to provide accommodation for rough sleepers. The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) raided seven sites on Wednesday as part of fresh bribery and fraud enquiries into the past management of Home REIT, which owned 12,000 beds across dozens of properties rented out to homeless charities. - Telegraph

Asda has bowed to union pressure over a sick-pay crackdown after watering down plans for tougher disciplinary rules. The troubled supermarket has told staff it will no longer double the time it takes to reset their absence records after the new rules were deemed "far too harsh" by workers. - Telegraph

Nearly half of carbuyers interested in going electric are rethinking their plans after the government announced a per-mile charging for such cars, research from AutoTrader has revealed. Nathan Coe, the chief executive of the vehicle buying and selling platform, said the decision by Rachel Reeves to bring in a 3p per mile-travelled tax on electric vehicles (EVs) from 2028 was "incoherent and inconsistent" with government policy of promoting EVs. - The Times

A Mayfair club founded by Charles Dickens has swung to a loss of close to £4 million as it struggles with inflationary pressures and a writedown tied to its private health clinic. The Arts Club on Dover Street in central London has reported swinging from a pre-tax profit of £360,540 to a loss before tax of £3.8 million as it booked an impairment charge on a loan issued to the clinic it launched in partnership with Lanserhof, an Austrian luxury wellness group. - The Times

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(Sharecast News) - Amazon announced plans to spend $200bn on artificial intelligence and robotics this year, the latest tech giant to vow fresh enormous investments in the artificial intelligence arms race. The news of the investment comes one day after the Washington Post, owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, announced it was cutting approximately a third of employees. - Guardian
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(Sharecast News) - A government minister has defended long delays to a military spending plan that are also stalling the UK's next-generation Tempest fighter jet programme, but refused to say when it will be complete. The defence investment plan (DIP), originally expected last autumn, has faced repeated postponements amid warnings that the military faces a £28bn funding gap over the next four years. - Guardian
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(Sharecast News) - The UK economy would be 3.6% smaller by 2040 if net migration fell to zero, forcing the government to raise taxes to combat a much bigger budget deficit, a thinktank has predicted. The National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) said falling birthrates in the UK and a sharp decrease in net migration last year had led it to consider what would happen if this trend continued to the end of the decade. - Guardian
Tuesday newspaper round-up: Riverford, US investment, Publicis
(Sharecast News) - Consumers searching for healthy food from trusted sources have fuelled the UK organic market's biggest boom in two decades, according to vegetable box seller Riverford. The delivery business, which sells meat, cheese, cookbooks and recipe boxes alongside vegetables, recorded a 6% increase in sales to £117m in the year to May 2025, as the UK organic food and drink market grew by almost 9% in that year, according to new figures from the Soil Association. The strong growth, significantly outpacing the wider food market, helped the employee-owned business give a £1.1m bonus to workers. - 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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