Share Sounds from Morning Money at 7:00 presented by Nigel Cassidy

Podcast Directory


Strand: Consuming Issues
Programme: Morning Money at 7:00
Presenter: Nigel Cassidy
Clear Selection

Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money; Jeremy Lange, co-founder and Group Chief Operating Officer of TechFinancials on its six month results

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money; Jeremy Lange, co-founder and Group Chief Operating Officer of TechFinancials on its six month results
Jeremy Lange, co-founder and Group Chief Operating Officer of TechFinancials, a leading technology provider to financial trading brokers, on its six month results.
Guest:

Emma Wall


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: How have SMEs fared since the EU Referendum?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: How have SMEs fared since the EU Referendum?
Shiona Davies, Director of the UK’s largest independent research consultancy BDRC, talks to the Morning Money team on the latest BDRC SME Finance Monitor.
Guests:

Louise Cooper, Shiona Davies


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: £32bn in UK business corporation tax – Is there scope for a reduction for SMEs?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: £32bn in UK business corporation tax – Is there scope for a reduction for SMEs?
Conrad Ford, Chief Executive of online business finance supermarket, Funding Options, discussed the record £32.4 billion that was paid in corporation tax by 'real economy' UK businesses last year. So is there now scope for the government to reduce the corporation tax rate for SMEs?
Guests:

Rachel Winter, Conrad Ford


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Maurice Smith on the changes to BBC iPlayer and the TV licence fee.

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Maurice Smith on the changes to BBC iPlayer and the TV licence fee.
New TV licensing rules are making it illegal to use the BBC iPlayer app to watch the corporation's programmes without paying the licence fee. Up to now, only live content has been covered by the £145.50 annual licence, with online viewers having to confirm they have paid before they can watch a live feed of BBC channels. This policy is being extended to the catch-up service. Media Commentator Maurice Smith joined the show to discuss further.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Maurice Smith


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Morning Money: Brexit caused headwinds for UK airlines - so why is Jet2 creating 1000 new jobs?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Morning Money at 7:00

Morning Money: Brexit caused headwinds for UK airlines - so why is Jet2 creating 1000 new jobs?
There are some new headwinds for UK airlines one way or another. Ryanair boss, Michael O’Leary, has said he expects Brexit to cost the no-frills airline 5 million passengers next year, as he predicted the UK would end up looking “pretty stupid”. Easyjet meanwhile has remained silent on market talk of a possible bid. But bucking the trend, holiday airline Jet2.com has announced plans to create almost 1000 new jobs: hiring in pilots, cabin crew, and engineers starting in September to work from eight regional airports. Is this a a savvy move or a mistake? Matt Cox has been scoping out the airline sector with John Grant, Partner at aviation data and analysis specialists MIDAS Aviation.
Guests:

Chris Bailey, Matt Cox, John Grant


Published:
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: “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: 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: