15 October 2019
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There is cautious optimism that the path to a Brexit deal could be forming. All parties have been keen to stress that there is a lot of hard work to be done, but the rhetoric from the negotiating table has been more upbeat and contained fewer accusations. Talks yesterday may, according to some reports, have yielded a breakthrough on the Irish backstop issue. There is an EU summit later this week but the possibility of an extraordinary meeting next week has also been mooted.
Meanwhile, Boris Johnson filled yesterday's Queen's Speech with pledges to be tougher on crime and improve the NHS. The programme is widely expected to be defeated in parliament next week but is being seen by many as a potential election manifesto.
Sticking with domestic news, August's employment data disappointed onlookers. UK wage growth was 3.8% in August, which was below expectations, while unemployment ticked up from 3.8% to 3.9%. It was the biggest decline in employed people since 2015.
A sudden decision from Donald Trump to remove US forces from northern Syria, announced last week, has led to a spike in geopolitical tension. Turkey quickly launched an attempt to seize territory from the western-backed Kurdish coalition, which has resulted in Washington imposing sanctions on Turkey and Trump threatening to destroy its economy.
The development of trade talks between China and the US continues to lack material progress, but sentiment in Beijing has become more optimistic since the weekend. Domestically, China's consumer inflation has hit its highest level since 2013, rising 3.0% in September, primary driven by soaring pork prices in the wake of a disease outbreak.
Last week, hopes of international deals being struck pushed global equities higher, as well as global sovereign yields. Sterling finished the week 2.67% higher against the dollar.
The Woodford Equity Income Fund is to be wound up by its administrators, Link Fund Solutions, which has also removed Neil Woodford as its investment manager. The fund has been frozen since June, when it was unable to deal with a surge in redemptions. The sale of its liquid and illiquid assets will be handled separately.
Sophos has accepted a $3.9bn purchase deal from the US private equity group Thoma Bravo, joining a growing list of UK companies taken over by a foreign buyer taking advantage of the pound's weakness. The cyber security software developer is being taken private at a 37% premium to last week's closing price.
Schroders revealed this morning that its assets under management grew to £450.8bn by the end of September, up from £407.2bn at the start of this year, driven by its asset management and wealth management units. Given the performance of equity markets over that time, it suggests modest net inflows.
The We Company, which recently aborted an attempt to list publicly, is considering proposals from Softbank and JP Morgan to provide much-needed cash and improve its fortunes. The value of the company plunged in just a few weeks recently amid concern over the financial information in its prospectus. It now faces giving up a controlling stake to one of the banks.
A third of the world's largest banks have failed to sign up to a climate change initiative backed by the Bank of England. The Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) is an initiative for companies to calculate and disclose their exposure to climate risk. Those yet to support include many from China, as well as Commerzbank and Wells Fargo, amongst others.
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