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Presenter: Nigel Cassidy
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Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: “There’s a chronic undersupply of housing” - The FMB's Brian Berry offers a solution

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: “There’s a chronic undersupply of housing” - The FMB's Brian Berry offers a solution
Westminster is piling the pressure on Britain’s biggest housebuilders to raise their construction output to meet an acute shortage of homes, that's according to The FT. Brian Berry, Chief Executive at the Federation of Master Builders, has his take on the problem: he wants to see a fast track planning process for house building. He joins Share Radio Morning Money to discuss.
Guests:

Louise Cooper, Brian Berry


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: 60% of IoD members plan to vote to remain in the EU

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 8:00

Morning Money: 60% of IoD members plan to vote to remain in the EU
Andy Silvester, Head of Campaigns at the Institute of Directors, talks about the new IoD survey which shows that the majority of its members are set to vote to remain in the European Union. Six in ten business leaders plan to vote to remain according to the snap poll and Andy discusses this with Nigel Cassidy and Louise Cooper.
Guests:

Louise Cooper, Andy Silvester


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Are there any new signs of a house price meltdown?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 8:00

Morning Money: Are there any new signs of a house price meltdown?
Grainne Gilmore, Head of Knight Frank UK Residential Research, talks about the Knight Frank monthly house price sentiment report. Some analysts have been calling time on the property market for months, notably in London. Yet it seems that households in all UK regions saw increases in the value of their homes. So what is the overall picture? And is the rate of growth slowing? Grainne explains.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Grainne Gilmore


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Brexit, G20 and migration discussed by Politico's Francesco Guerrera

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 8:00

Morning Money: Brexit, G20 and migration discussed by Politico's Francesco Guerrera
Francesco Guerrera, Associate Editor, Chief Financial Correspondent at Politico, joins Share Radio to talk on the biggest stories in the political world. Francesco talks more on Brexit, discusses the G20 meeting of financial ministers, looks further into the issue of migration and also touches upon bank stress tests.
Guest:

Francesco Guerrera


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Chris Bailey assesses the RBS results after announcing a £1.9bn annual loss

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Chris Bailey assesses the RBS results after announcing a £1.9bn annual loss
The Royal Bank of Scotland has reported an annual loss attributable to shareholders of £1.9 billion. That is in line with the bank's guidance from last month and is a smaller loss than last year, but it’s the bank’s eight consecutive annual loss. Chris Bailey, Founder of financialorbit.com, joins Share Radio to look at the ins and outs of the numbers.
Guest:

Chris Bailey


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: David Buik on the implications of an EU deal for the City

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: David Buik on the implications of an EU deal for the City
David Buik, Market Commentator at Panmure Gordon, talks about the Brexit referendum and the implications of an EU deal for the City. The Institute of Directors has found that 60% of its directors plan to vote to remain, and an open letter signed by half of the FTSE100 chairmen and chief executives say that leaving the EU “would put the economy at risk”.
Guests:

Louise Cooper, David Buik


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: David Kuo of The Motley Fool Singapore looks at the market reaction to G20

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: David Kuo of The Motley Fool Singapore looks at the market reaction to G20
The concluding statement issued by finance ministers and central bank governors on Saturday was strong on rhetoric. But the meeting will disappoint the many who called for the G20 to be more active in addressing economic vulnerabilities and risks. So how did it all go down on the markets? David Kuo, CEO of The Motley Fool Singapore, joins Nigel Cassidy and Chris Bailey, Founder of financialorbit.com, to look at the reaction.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, David Kuo


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Francesco Guerrera of Politico on the EU Summit waiting game

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 6:00

Morning Money: Francesco Guerrera of Politico on the EU Summit waiting game
Francesco Guerrera, Associate Editor and Chief Financial Correspondent at Politico Europe, joined Nigel Cassidy and Sara Sjölin after the first EU Council session ended in the early hours of Friday morning with no agreement on several key issues. Before negotiations reconvened, Francesco looked at what stage the talks were at.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Francesco Guerrera


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Gareth Mann of Digital Contact on social media and Brexit

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Gareth Mann of Digital Contact on social media and Brexit
Gareth Mann, CEO of big data products company, Digital Contact, joins Nigel Cassidy and Paul Sedgwick to look at how social media analysis can correctly predict the Brexit referendum result, in light of UK Fin Tech Week. As the EU Referendum approaches, can small and innovative data companies make the right predictions?
Guests:

Paul Sedgwick, Gareth Mann


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Ofcom releases Openreach report & Dave Millett of Equinox talks about the ruling

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 8:00

Morning Money: Ofcom releases Openreach report & Dave Millett of Equinox talks about the ruling
Dave Millett, Founder and Managing Director of telecoms broker, Equinox, talks about Ofcom’s report ruling on whether BT can keep its Openreach broadband arm. BT seems to have escaped the immediate threat of selling off its wholesale arm, but it faces a stricter regulatory straitjacket under wide-ranging proposals which would allow other operators to lay fibre optic lines alongside its network. Dave discusses the decision.
Guests:

Paul Sedgwick, Dave Millett


Published: