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Tuesday newspaper round-up: Household spending, BuzzFeed, Grant Thornton

(Sharecast News) - Households cut back on their spending in April at the fastest pace in 18 months, as the conflict in the Middle East provoked fears of another cost of living crisis, a report from one of the UK's biggest banks has suggested. Barclays, which processes nearly 40% of the UK's credit and debit card transactions, said its data showed there had been a 0.1% fall in card spending last month compared with a year earlier. This was the first year-on-year fall since November 2024. - Guardian BuzzFeed, the digital media pioneer that was once valued as high as $1.7bn amid a private equity-funded wave of interest in websites that generated massive amounts of online traffic in the 2010s, has finally changed hands for $120m. On Monday, the company announced that a controlling stake in the company has been sold to media entrepreneur Byron Allen. Allen, who often makes large, sometimes unsolicited bids for media companies, is also an on-screen personality in addition to controlling his Allen Media Group conglomerate, which owns networks including The Weather Channel. Allen's show, Comics Unleashed, will replace the Late Show with Stephen Colbert on CBS's schedule starting later this month. - Guardian

An alleged fraudster has been accused of buying a fleet of supercars with money stolen from a British "shadow bank" he founded that collapsed. Paresh Raja stands accused of buying "a vast number of cars", including three Aston Martins, two Mercedes, six Ferraris and three Rolls-Royces, using funds taken from Market Financial Solutions (MFS) before it collapsed this year. - Telegraph

The UK's largest chicken supplier put up prices by £70m to cushion the blow from Labour's tax raids on businesses. 2Sisters, which supplies poultry to Tesco, Sainsbury's and M&S, said it had been hit by Rachel Reeves's move to raise National Insurance contributions for employers and minimum wages last year. The company, which was founded by the so-called "chicken king" Ranjit Boparan, said it offset the extra £70m in labour costs by pushing up prices for customers. - Telegraph

Profits at Grant Thornton UK fell by almost 80 per cent in the accounting group's first year under private equity ownership. One-off bonus awards linked to Cinven's buy-out just over a year ago, plus fees related to the deal and an enduring slowdown in the consulting market all ate into Grant Thornton's profits last year. - The Times

Sales of used pure electric cars reached a record high in the first three months of the year, according to new figures. Some 86,943 electric vehicles changed hands between the start of January and the end of March, the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders said, marking a 32 per cent increase on the same period last year and the best for any quarter on record. Pure electrics also touched a new high in market share at 4.3 per cent. - The Times

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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
Tuesday newspaper round-up: EVs, Aviva, Doncasters Group
(Sharecast News) - Motorists in the UK and EU should not expect a sharp drop in the cost of electric vehicles despite increased competition among Chinese manufacturers, one of the country's biggest electric carmakers has said. Brian Gu, the vice-chair of the manufacturer Xpeng, said that Chinese carmakers could compete on quality to win customers in the EU and UK, rather than unleashing a brutal price war as they have in China. - Guardian
Monday newspaper round-up: EV targets, Anthropic, Johnson & Johnson
(Sharecast News) - Britain's industrial sector is at risk of collapse as thousands of companies warn that they could face bankruptcy within the next year because of high energy prices, according to an industry survey. The manufacturers' body Make UK said the latest feedback from its members found that many would not be able to cope for much longer with energy costs that were twice the average in continental Europe and four times higher than in the US. - Guardian
Friday newspaper round-up: Elon Musk, Blackstone boss, Ardmore Construction
(Sharecast News) - The World Cup will be the most lucrative sports event ITV has ever aired, the broadcaster has said, with bosses calling the tournament a "six-week summer Super Bowl moment" for TV advertising. The channel is airing 51 of the 104 matches across the men's tournament, co-hosted by the US, Mexico and Canada, which is the biggest yet after an expansion from 32 to 48 teams. - Guardian

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