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Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: The Grenfell Tower inquiry, Labour and worker rights and UK arms to Israel

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: The Grenfell Tower inquiry, Labour and worker rights and UK arms to Israel
Political commentator Mike Indian looks at the Grenfell Tower inquiry report which damns governments and the private sector and discusses what has to happen next. Labour's push on workers' rights is, he says, the biggest change in employment law for 40 years. Its ambition is radical but it is a ragbag of measures with no unity of thought behind it. He also considers the part suspension of arms sales of Israel and the complexity of such decisions.
Guest:

Mike Indian


Published:
Motley Fool Money

Motley Fool Money: Dow Loses Chips, Boeing Loses Money (3/9)

Motley Fool Money
Original Broadcast:

Motley Fool Show

Motley Fool Money: Dow Loses Chips, Boeing Loses Money (3/9)
Intel, Southwest, and Boeing, have all had brutal starts to 2024 – can any of them turn it around? Asit Sharma and Dylan Lewis discuss the latest sign of Intel’s struggles – possibly being removed from the Dow – and how it got here, Elliot Management’s increased stake in Southwest, and how the activist investor is planning on improving the airline, and Boeing’s recent analyst downgrade, and why manufacturing issues might lead to financial ones for the company’s aerospace and airline divisions. Also, 16 minutes in, Alison Southwick and Robert Brokamp dig into the mailbag and some questions on asset allocation, retiring early and becoming a financial advisor. Companies discussed: INTC, NVDA, LUV, BA. Host - Dylan Lewis; Guests - Asit Sharma, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp
Guests:

Asit Sharma, Alison Southwick, Robert Brokamp


Published:
Adam Cox

Modern Mindset: Jason Howlett on the Concerns Surrounding Energy Bills & Costs

Adam Cox
Original Broadcast:

Modern Mindset

Modern Mindset: Jason Howlett on the Concerns Surrounding Energy Bills & Costs
Adam Cox is joined by Jason Howlett, the CEO of GivEnergy. They discuss rising energy bills and costs in the UK, as well as some new research that was carried out by GivEnergy which saw some interesting results. https://givenergy.co.uk/
Guest:

Jason Howlett


Published:
Adam Cox

The Hypnotist: Hypnosis to Manifest a Dream Life

Adam Cox
Original Broadcast:

The Hypnotist

The Hypnotist: Hypnosis to Manifest a Dream Life
Doubt and uncertainty can sometimes help fill the void on how to pursue an elusive aim of seeking success in life, however you choose to define that. It can create space for something new and provide space for thinking creatively about the future ...

Published:
Gavin Oldham

Thought for the Week: “I’m 22 years old — where’s my CTF?”

Gavin Oldham
Original Broadcast:

Thought for the Week

Thought for the Week: “I’m 22 years old — where’s my CTF?”
The oldest recipient of a Child Trust Fund turned 22 on Sunday 1st September, but the great majority of those allocated by HMRC (due to no action by the young person's parents by their 1st birthday) are unclaimed. This is the story of Joe, who really needs his money to get started in adult life — but he doesn't know anything about his good fortune. The Share Foundation has already enabled over 60,000 young people to claim their accounts, but that's a drop in the ocean compared to the huge number of accounts lying dormant with account providers. So The Share Foundation is now asking Government to implement its 'Default Withdrawal at 21' proposal for HMRC-allocated accounts. Background music: 'Missing Persons' by Jeremy Blake

Published:
Georgie Frost

This Is Money: Could you get hit by a Labour tax raid?

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

This is Money

This Is Money: Could you get hit by a Labour tax raid?
A bad news Budget looks to be on the cards after Labour continued to pour cold water on optimism following its election victory. Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivered a gloomy speech saying the Budget was going to be painful, hot on the heels of Chancellor Rachel Reeves' own gloom-mongering. But having made a promise not to raise the rates of income tax, national insurance, VAT and corporation tax, where will the Government try to raise cash? Starmer said tax rises would target those with the 'broadest shoulders' but who are they — and are there really enough of the very wealthy to target or will the burden be more likely to fall once again on those in the rich middle? We look at what taxes could rise and what a capital gains tax, pension, inheritance or other raid could mean for people. Plus, Britain's biggest mortgage lender Halifax is upping what it will lend first-time buyers, Crane goes on the case of an Evri bungle and asks: shouldn't you be within your rights to expect a parcel to arrive? And finally, with the Oasis ticket scramble in full effect and ticket prices sky high, can you protect against a potential Gallagher brother blow up or anything else that would stop you going? (If, that is, you can get tickets in the first place, of course!).
Guest:

Helen Crane


Published:
Motley Fool Money

Motley Fool Money: Missing Piece of the AI Spend Puzzle (30/8)

Motley Fool Money
Original Broadcast:

Motley Fool Show

Motley Fool Money: Missing Piece of the AI Spend Puzzle (30/8)
Nvidia continues its streak of triple-digit growth, but we shouldn’t be so surprised. Jason Moser and Bill Mann discuss Nvidia’s killer quarter, and why the market yawned over the results, the global IT outage’s impact on Crowdstrike’s past quarter and outlook for the rest of the year, and Chewy’s continued turnaround, Dollar General’s merchandising woes, and the new-look mature Salesforce. Then, 28 minutes in, film critic and corporate governance expert Nell Minow weights in on the summer box office and recent moves from Disney and Starbucks’ leadership teams. Finally, 49 minutes in, Jason and Bill break down two stocks on their radar: Birkenstock and Alimentation Couche-Tard. Stocks discussed: NVDA, CRWD, CHWY, DG, CRM, BIRK, ANCTF. Host - Dylan Lewis; Guests - Bill Mann, Jason Moser, Nell Minow
Guests:

Bill Mann, Jason Moser, Nell Minow


Published:
Motley Fool Money

Motley Fool Money: Meet the Fool — Tim Beyers (25/8)

Motley Fool Money
Original Broadcast:

Motley Fool Show

Motley Fool Money: Meet the Fool — Tim Beyers (25/8)
To become an expert, you may not always need expertise. You may just need to start asking better questions. Tim Beyers is a lead analyst at The Motley Fool and a frequent guest on Motley Fool Money. He’s also the host of This Week in Tech, a weekly show on our premium livestream. In today’s show, Tim talks with Mary Long about what convinced him to buy Amazon for the first time (and why he sold 2 years later), unit economics, and one company that excels at it, and the relationship between enthusiasm and education. Members of any Motley Fool Service can watch “This Week in Tech” at 10:00 am ET on Fridays, or any time at the Fool Live replay hub: to become a Motley Fool member, head to www.fool.com/signup. Have an analyst you want us to feature on an upcoming “Meet the Fool” episode? Want to share your own investing journey with us? Send a note (or a voice recording!) to [email protected]. Host - Mary Long; Guest - Tim Beyers
Guest:

Tim Beyers


Published:
Adam Cox

The Hypnotist: The Rebellious Non-Smoker

Adam Cox
Original Broadcast:

The Hypnotist

The Hypnotist: The Rebellious Non-Smoker
Smoking can start in feeling part of a rebellious group of teenagers, but often turns from something that supports that bond-building sense of solidarity to a burden that has not delivered its early promise. Like so many things that promise one thing and turn out very different, it can feel like deceit. The ultimate rebellious behaviour may therefore be to reject that deceit, and the smoking that came with it.

Published:
Simon Rose

The Bigger Picture: Starmer's downbeat tone, the Tory leadership & the de-growth movement

Simon Rose
Original Broadcast:

The Bigger Picture

The Bigger Picture: Starmer's downbeat tone, the Tory leadership & the de-growth movement
Professor Tim Evans of Middlesex University considers the pessimistic tone adopted by Keir Starmer in his Downing Street garden speech. Will things get better after they get worse or is there something fundamentally wrong with the UK economy? With the right disunited and the Conservatives badly bruised, Tim considers the Tory leadership race and who is supporting each candidate. And he looks at the ideas behind the de-growth movement which suggests that we should abandon GDP as a measure of society's wellbeing.
Guest:

Professor Tim Evans


Published: