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Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: “Looking post-Brexit, the dust has settled” – Alex Lydall of Foenix Partners

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: “Looking post-Brexit, the dust has settled” – Alex Lydall of Foenix Partners
Alex Lydall, Senior 360 FX Dealer at corporate forex broker Foenix Partners, joined Morning Money’s Directors’ Briefing sponsored by Hewlett Packard Enterprise, to discuss retail sales and the post-Brexit impact thus far. Alex also discusses last week’s FOMC Statement and the ongoing outlook of US rate hikes this year.
Guest:

Jeremy Batstone-Carr


Published:

In partnership with

Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: British households remain confident in the value of their homes, even after Brexit

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: British households remain confident in the value of their homes, even after Brexit
British households remain confident in the rising value of their homes, even after the vote to leave the European Union. That's according to Knight Frank's Sentiment Report, which shows 15% of homeowners surveyed by Knight Frank believed the price of their own house had risen last month... more than the ratio who believed house prices had fallen. Grainne Gilmore, head of Knight Frank UK Residential Research joined the team to discuss further.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Grainne Gilmore


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Car companies are hitching a ride to the future of driverless taxis

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Car companies are hitching a ride to the future of driverless taxis
Ford has announced plans to mass-produce a fully autonomous self-driving car by 2021, which will most likely be available to customers as part of an Uber-like ride-sharing service. They're not the first company to head down the ride-sharing road. A series of brands have invested in taxi technology companies with the hope of one day going driverless - Toyota and Uber, VW and Gett, and General Motors and Lyft. So how likely is it that driverless taxis could become reality? Joe Aldridge spoke to David Bailey, Professor of Industry at Aston Business School, to find out.
Guests:

Mike Ingram, Professor David Bailey


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Could satellites offer investors an edge over the competition?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Could satellites offer investors an edge over the competition?
It seems a number of Hedge Funds are investing in "tiny satellites", which have the ability to take high frequency images of "economically sensitive" spots. To find out more, Joe Aldridge has been speaking with Stuart Martin, CEO of independent innovation and technology company, Satellite Applications Catapult.
Guests:

Joe Aldridge, Stuart Martin


Published:

In partnership with

Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Curing Europe’s digital skills gap

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Curing Europe’s digital skills gap
What would it take to retrain people to use computers and the internet more effectively? The UK is currently in the grip of an IT skills crisis with an estimated 12.6 million lacking even the most basic digital skills. Byron Nicolaides, President of the Council of European Professionals Informatics Societies (CEPIS), discussed.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Byron Nicolaides


Published:

In partnership with

Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Executive pay - Why does it keep rising?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Executive pay - Why does it keep rising?
David Pitt-Watson is the former head of the Hermes shareholder activist funds in Europe, and an executive fellow of finance at the London Business School. He's one of the authors of “What They Do With Your Money: How the Financial System Fails Us and How to Fix it”. He spoke to Share Radio about executive pay.
Guest:

David Pitt-Watson


Published:

In partnership with

Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Is a shortage of 1.4 billion bricks to blame for rising house prices?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Is a shortage of 1.4 billion bricks to blame for rising house prices?
Mark Hayward, Managing Director, National Association of Estate Agents (NAEA), joined Nigel Cassidy to talk on 'Brixit'. Is a shortage of bricks a factor in rising house prices and housing deficit post-Brexit?
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Mark Haywood


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Scotland’s public spending deficit has reached almost £15 billion

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 8:00

Morning Money: Scotland’s public spending deficit has reached almost £15 billion
Scotland’s public spending deficit has reached almost £15 billion, more than twice the size of the UK figure, and at 9.5% of GDP its higher than that of Greece at 7.2%. North Sea oil revenues also plunged from £1.8 billion in 2014/15 to just £60 million last year. Our commentator in Scotland, Maurice Smith, discussed.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Maurice Smith


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: What does the UK Public Finances data tell us about the post-Brexit economy

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: What does the UK Public Finances data tell us about the post-Brexit economy
Another piece of post-Brexit economic data may give us a better scope of how Brexit has affected the UK: Public sector borrowing figures may suggest a deterioration of the Government's finances in the months to come. Chris Hare, Economist at Investec, joined the Morning Money team to discuss what this new information means.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Chris Hare


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Why have Scottish wind farms been paid to shut down?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Why have Scottish wind farms been paid to shut down?
This month, Scottish wind farms have received a record £5.5 million to shut down. It’s after hurricane-force gusts produced more electricity than could be consumed. August 7th saw winds blowing as high as 115 miles an hour, while demand for power fell to record lows. But Renewable UK’s Deputy Chief Executive, Maf Smith, told Share Radio's James Brydges that wind farms turning off was actually the least expensive solution.
Guests:

James Brydges, Maf Smith


Published: