Business

  • Call for information: Peter Jerrari crime partner

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, an accomplice of career criminal Peter Jerrari has been seen.

    Any information relating to this individual must be passed to a relevant public body. It will be used to build an accurate case, if one exists.

  • Trump bets big on boss politik

    Yesterday, President Trump revealed new tariff’s for America’s trading partners. It’s an effort to match – at a discount – high rates on American goods around the world.

    Two boards of new tariff’s

    Trump feels his country is shortchanged, in spite of its booming innovation industries, because it lacks material clout. This changes the stakes worldwide.

  • Caught: Scottish Power criminal

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a criminal alleged to train suicide bombers is now linked to an increasing body of evidence against energy giant Scottish Power.

    He’s alleged to give oral training to bombers. He’s guilty of war crimes across the Middle East. He’s hired by Scottish Power to intimidate law firms.

  • Business Leader: Hargreaves Lansdown

    Origin

    The startup of an investment firm from a house isn’t an ordinary origins story for a UK-based company, but it’s the truth behind the successful rise of Hargreaves Lansdown.

    Present Day

    The hard work ethic of Peter Hargreaves and Stephen Lansdown paid off, and their initial supply of investment mailings turned itself into the UK’s largest digital platform.

    The founders – Hargreaves Lansdown

    Distinctives

    Their popular online accounts offer access to ISA’s, stocks and shares, and investment funds. It’s publicly listed as Hargreaves Lansdown (HL). It’s based in Bristol.

  • Canada looks to build back better

    The triumph of Donald Trump has pulled Canada into close quarters and into a new sort of limelight. He keeps mentioning it as a 51st state. It’s an awkard request for a country that knows it still owes itself to the Crown. Yet the overtures are flattering in a time when being noticed gets you to places anyway.

    However, it’s the sort of popularity that puts some people on edge. If a rebound from Canada is on the cards it might do it for Trump too. It has already started to make sure plans. The stepping down of Justin Trudeau has come at a shaky time. If a rocky start is ahead for a new incumbent it will include outreach.

    It looks like Canada already has a new drive behind it that’s epitomised in part by a bunch of business people getting together. The new Apprentice-looking type of formation, called ‘Build Canada’, is an enterprising initiative with an optimistic goal in mind: to make it the richest country in the world.

    It’s led by a top team. It’s worth taking a look if you’re Canadian. The rest of us will have to wait. They’ve got a lot of experience. It’s also a Canada-first project that draws swords early. The priorities listed so far are in the trending category of popular culture. If it can pack a punch in a competitive arena isn’t yet clear.

  • Enron gets a new lease of life

    The once-giant energy powerhouse Enron is back. Its forlorn status as the bankrupt black sheep of Wall Street is no more. In its resurrected form it’s an energy company serving Texas first and then the rest of America following in 2026.

    It seems a serious effort to supply power to American homes and businesses is behind a bold, novel approach to branding and its quirky presentational setup.

  • Royal Mail now owned by Czech citizen

    The long and storied history of Royal Mail has another page in its books. A new owner, Daniel Křetínsky, has signed a deal to take over the delivery group it’s part of.

    The centuries of frequenting our streets is now a Czech’s business, and the road ahead is steep. His task is to modernise it in a dynamic, fast-changing market.

  • ARM beats off competition

    ARM, a UK-based technology design company, provides blueprints for the way digital devices function. It’s risen in value in recent years, having joined the club of major innovators shaking up consumer and professional uses of technology across the world.

    However, it’s in a crowded market, with American-based Nvidia riding high on a wave of a $3 trillion valuation, as well as plenty of buzz among obsessives and hawks of industries such as AI, online gaming, and smart and mobile devices that we now all use.

    The difficulty in getting set up and making yourself marketable is a story ARM heads will know well by now. It’s lore how Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, for example, had to do much the same thing. It’s a different way of working that kicks off “tech” revolutions.

    However, recent drivers of change have found it’s more reliable to start with an office and see where they get to. ARM was founded in 1990 and is still at home in Cambridge, itself a hub for innovation. It’s not a new breed which started out in the cold, on its own.

    Its conventional way of being straightforward, financially motivated, and innovative to the core is one that’s got a track record. It’s not seen as much economic success before as it has of late. As much as the prize is beyond reach, there’s still a lot of road left for it.

  • N. Ireland ups business incorporations

    In Northern Ireland the number of businesses incorporated is up by 2,195, or 2.41%, as of the end of September. The stats, released by Companies House, are positive for the region.

    In other news, the level of incorporations in England and Wales (+0.28%), and Scotland (+0.66%), is lower proportionately to that of Northern Ireland during the same period.

  • Caught: “Instigator”

    In a stunning exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, an “instigator” so-called who impersonates a business professional has been spotted in central London today.

    He’s suspected of posing as a regulator, regulation analyst, and regulation specialist in the areas of business, and high finance.

  • The memification of Musk

    It’s becoming a truth in the election in America that one man is worthy of attention above anyone else. It’s not Donald Trump, by chance, but Elon Musk.

    Musk’s crime is to get rich by real, credible work. It’s a far cry from the real left, who get their money by making other people share since it’s allegedly fairer.

    Any statements about his innovations fall off the side of the earth only because the left are so used to saying wealth is a flaw than a result of industry.

  • Business unfriendly UK?

    It’s worth asking what the situation is regarding business, because we expect our political parties to also reach out and connect appropriately with businesses in the UK. They’re our source of jobs, income, and goods and services, if not the breadwinners of the country.

    The advantages of our two largest parties is not clear. According to a YouGov poll, both Labour and Conservatives poll equally with people who don’t know as to who are the most business-friendly. It separates public opinion from their respective activities.

  • London’s business rates

    The reality of London is that it’s a manager’s crisis and not just a staffing issue.

    The sight of half-empty (not half-full) skyscrapers is disconcerting. It’s evidence of a trend of overselling understaffed businesses and lacklustre offices. The employees just don’t care.

    It’s not a get rich quick scheme we need but those who can manage nine to five.

    The slick look of a business mogul is a false impression on a bleak outlook.

    There’s so little news emerging from the City it’s over to hubs overseas that have their own struggles to lead the way in the business world. Our leaders just don’t get it anymore.

    The sight of skyscrapers rising up in other parts of the UK is also a drain on our overall resources.