London’s transport authority could declare bankruptcy in a matter of days if the government fails to provide continued financial support, The Guardian reported. Transport for London (TfL) saw its income severely reduced during the Covid-19 pandemic because of the sudden lack of passengers traveling on the network. The government bolstered the public body, which relies on fare revenue to fund its operations, with a series of short-term funding deals. However, the latest ran out at midnight on Friday, and an extension is yet to be agreed.
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The Commercial Court in Zagreb has opened the pre-bankruptcy proceedings of Marijo Mendek's company Selection MM, known as the most famous Croatian luxury food importer and premium wines, Total-Croatia-News.com reported. The move was initiated at Mendek's own request due to "threats of insolvency" as well as blocked accounts and an established debt of about 219,000 kuna. In his own proposal, Mendek also listed the assets owned by MM Selection, which also includes the MM building in Ilica in Zagreb's Kustosija, three Citroen delivery vehicles and a mini cooper one.
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Pressure is piling up on Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves to unwind the central bank’s ultra-loose policy as Sweden’s tight labor market and rising energy prices starts to translate into broader inflation, Bloomberg News reported. The Nordic nation has recovered briskly from the pandemic and its economy is showing signs of overheating, prompting critics within the bank as well as externally to push for withdrawing stimulus.
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Italy’s government approved almost 8 billion euros ($9 billion) in aid to shield consumers and companies from soaring energy prices that are weighing on the economic outlook, Bloomberg News reported. Some 6 billion euros were allocated for energy aid, while other funds will support industries including the automotive sector, Prime Minister Mario Draghi told reporters on Friday. Draghi’s administration had already allotted more than 10 billion euros to offset the energy price spike for consumers.
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A former employee of investment bank Lazard was sentenced on Friday to an 18-month suspended jail term by a German court after being found guilty of insider trading, a court spokesperson said, Reuters reported. The ruling by the Frankfurt regional court came after the ex-employee was charged in 2021 for passing on tips about upcoming takeovers of listed firms to the former head of an insurance company for almost two years.
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Air France-KLM is exploring new ways to raise funds to pay back a government pandemic bailout, while cautiously ramping up capacity as the latest coronavirus wave fades, Bloomberg News reported. The shares fell as much as 6.3% in Paris on Thursday after the struggling airline laid out options to raise capital of as much as 4 billion euros ($4.5 billion). Selling more equity would help the group lower debt and free itself from the conditions of state aid, but would also dilute existing owners.
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High numbers of bosses are “cashing out” of their businesses by liquidating companies when they are still solvent, business recovery experts have said, the Daily Echo reported. Portland Leonard Curtis paid out more than £26million in 2021 through members’ voluntary liquidations (MVL) of 76 businesses, including local firms and national brands.
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L’Écocirque features all the awe-inspiring acts that audiences have come to expect under the big top—aerialists walking a tight rope, a juggler deftly keeping multiple pins in motion, and a burly man displaying incredible feats of strength. What makes it distinct is the innovative way it includes wild animals, despite widespread bans on their use in the circus. The trick? Instead of live animals, l’Écocirque employs holograms, Bloomberg Businessweek reported.
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British consumer prices rose at the fastest annual pace in nearly 30 years last month, intensifying the squeeze on households and reinforcing the chances that the Bank of England will raise interest rates for a third meeting in a row, Reuters reported. The annual rate of consumer price inflation rose to 5.5% in January, the highest since March 1992, when Britain was emerging from a long period of inflation-feeding high wage deals. This was above most economists' forecasts in a Reuters poll for it to hold at December's 5.4% rate.
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The property market is a "key vulnerability" for euro zone banks as the rise of remote working since the pandemic dents demand for offices and households take on more debt to buy expensive homes, the European Central Bank said on Wednesday, Reuters reported. Central bankers have been ringing alarm bells about the euro zone's booming property market that has a decade of ultra-low interest rates and light-touch prudential regulation have helped create.
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