Gripping reading from its salacious start to brutal end July 7, 2011 THE News of the World’s brutal axing yesterday was a story the title itself would have been proud to source. From humble beginnings 168 years ago, it earned itself a racy reputation based on sex and scandal-filled stories. Launched as a penny broadsheet on 1 October 1863, it targeted the higher echelons of society but [...]
NotW rivals set for boost July 7, 2011 THE News of the World was arguably the jewel in the crown of Murdoch’s UK newspaper stable. With 2.6m weekly sales generating £135m gross revenue per year, the paper was second only to its sister daily, the Sun, in its success in the UK market. Its advertisers also contributed an estimated £35m per year, according [...]
Gone but not forgotten: tabloid paper lives on July 7, 2011 IT is fitting that Rupert Murdoch should end the News of the World era with such an audacious act. The story of how he bought the newspaper in January 1969 is similarly brazen, not just because he defeated Robert Maxwell in a closely fought bidding war, but because of all that followed. The News of [...]
Twitter plays role in paper’s sudden demise July 7, 2011 FORMER deputy prime minister John Prescott yesterday declared: “It’s Twitter Wot Won It!”, in reference to the famous Sun headline. Campaigners have used the micro blogging site to rally support against the Murdoch empire as the phone hacking scandal unfolded. Yesterday thousands of tweets a minute spread like wildfire the news of the closure of [...]
NEWS OF THE WORLD TO CLOSE July 7, 2011 James Murdoch announced the closure of the News of the World in a statement to employees yesterday (see above). In it he admits that he was wrong to approve out-of-court settlements to victims of phone-hacking and also that the paper made statements to the House of Commons select committee that could have been misleading.
ECB changes rules in a bid to save Lisbon July 7, 2011 The European Central Bank (ECB) threw its rulebook out the window yesterday in a bid to protect Portugal from spreading Eurozone contagion. In a question-and-answer session with journalists, ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet abruptly announced that the Bank will suspend its normal criteria for acceptable collateral in order to keep the taps running for Portuguese banks. [...]
WHAT THE OTHER PAPERS SAY THIS MORNING July 7, 2011 FINANCIAL TIMES STANDARD LIFE COMES UNDER FIRE FOR RAISING FUND FEES Financial advisers have threatened to pull millions of pounds out of Standard Life Investments after the provider took the unusual step of raising fees on some of its funds, bucking the trend for fund managers to cut headline costs for investors. SLI said that [...]
Europe’s rate hike to 1.5pc puts spotlight on the UK July 7, 2011 THE lines were drawn more starkly in the inflation debate yesterday as the Bank of England again refused to raise rates while the European Central Bank (ECB) hiked rates for a second time this year to 1.5 per cent. ECB president Jean-Claude Trichet said: “It is essential that the recent price developments do not contribute [...]
Spencer sells Origin stake to US group July 7, 2011 ORIGIN Asset Management, a boutique fund manager backed by Icap’s Michael Spencer (pictured), was snapped up by US asset manager Principal Financial Group for $66m (£41m) yesterday. Iowa-based Principal has agreed to buy a 74 per cent stake in Origin, which manages £2bn of equity portfolios out of London for institutional clients, while Origin’s partners [...]
ANALYST VIEWS: IS THIS THE END OF MAN GROUP’S TROUBLES? July 7, 2011 JONATHAN JACKSON | KILLIK & CO They’re better placed now than they were before, although if markets remain volatile it’s difficult for their AHL fund to perform in that environment and it’d be hard to say if the worst is over for them. We remain positive on their shares. DAVID MCCANN | NUMIS The momentum [...]