This paper round is a daily selection of topics reflecting what financial‑market headlines are focusing on today. These are selected subjects rather than actual news reports.
Financial Times
- UK government bond markets steadied after ministers voiced support for the prime minister.
- AstraZeneca lifted long term expectations after strong cancer drug sales.
- Barclays reported higher quarterly profits and outlined plans to return more capital to investors.
Reuters
- UK retailers saw a firm start to the year as food sales and store traffic improved.
- Barclays raised performance targets while pushing efficiency and AI driven cost reductions.
- Coca Cola HBC projected earnings growth for 2026 on steady demand for non alcoholic drinks.
Bloomberg
- Gold and silver saw sharp swings as speculative trading remained heavy.
- Japanese equities extended gains on expectations of supportive government policies.
- Big tech stocks rebounded and helped lift major US indices.
The Times – Business
- NatWest agreed to acquire Evelyn Partners in a multibillion-pound deal that shifts capital away from buybacks.
- UK borrowing costs rose as investors reassessed political risk.
- Analysts debated whether Nvidia can sustain momentum after a strong run in AI linked demand.
The Telegraph – Business
- BP paused a major shareholder payout after weaker oil prices and leadership changes.
- Investors reacted to a shift in BP’s strategy as the company prepared for new leadership.
- BP reported a quarterly loss and outlined cost focused adjustments.
CNBC
- US markets advanced as tech stocks recovered and lifted the S&P 500 and Nasdaq.
- Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed again on expectations of supportive economic policies.
- Oil prices slipped as traders weighed geopolitical developments and supply signals.
Nikkei Asia
- Japanese equities set fresh records following the prime minister’s election victory.
- Asian markets strengthened with tech shares leading regional gains.
- Currency moves reflected a softer US dollar as investors reassessed global rate expectations.
South China Morning Post – Business
- Hong Kong added hundreds of new family offices as wealthy investors shifted focus from the US.
- China’s cruise sector reached a key milestone as authorities promoted new consumption areas.
- Investors reassessed regional holdings after political tensions around port operations.
