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Strike action by thousands of Spanish and Portuguese truckers produced ominous knock-on effects on food supplies, aviation and industry yesterday, as Lisbon airport ran out of fuel, car factories shut down and petrol stations and supermarkets reported shortages. In a worrying sign for other European countries that face rising discontent at the spiralling cost of diesel, a third day of strikes generated widespread mayhem and the mood turned ugly after the first casualties of the standoff: two strikers died in clashes on picket lines.
Factories close, supermarkets empty and jets run out of fuel as truckers' strike bites
US banking stocks hit a five-year low yesterday, as the financial markets remained jittery following Lehman Brothers news on Monday that it needs fresh capital. The market was also reacting to rumours that Goldman Sachs would report a hefty second-quarter writedown on its portfolio of mortgage-related investments on Tuesday.
US bank stocks driven down to five-year lows
Inbev, the maker of Stella Artois, has launched an audacious $46.9bn (23.9bn) takeover bid for the USs biggest brewer and Budweiser owner Anheuser-Busch.
Inbev in $46bn bid for Budweiser owner Anheuser-Busch
The world is not running out of oil and can continue to produce hydrocarbons for the next 40 years provided restrictions on where companies can operate are lifted, the head of BP said yesterday.
Production decline does not mean oil is running out, says BP
It was not clear precisely what pushed HBOS shares under water yesterday but rumours of a large hedge fund collapse were circulating. All UK bank stocks were hit by a sudden sell-off two hours before the market closed, raising speculation that a hedge fund had had to liquidate its positions.
HBOS golden boy Andy Hornby under pressure over rights issue
Morgan Stanley and Dresdner Kleinwort are facing a 4bn bill for underwriting HBOS's rights issue after shares in the Halifax owner collapsed below the price of the planned cash call yesterday.
Banks face 4bn bill after HBOS shares dive
Thousands of people will lose their jobs over the next two years as the deepening economic downturn forces more companies to cut staff, City experts said yesterday.
Fears of widespread job losses grow as unemployed figures rise sharply
High street retailers were battered yesterday as City analysts, worried that the economy is heading for recession, slashed their profit and price targets.
Gloom hovers over high street as shoppers feel the pinch
The main City watchdog yesterday signalled its concern that a third day of heavy selling of shares in Britain's housebuilders was a deliberate attempt to undermine the sector.
City watchdog to scrutinise housebuilders after third day of heavy share selling
Britain's housebuilders will soon be required to declare buyers' incentives to ensure that lenders are able to offer mortgages that reflect the true value of a property.
Housebuilders must disclose buyers' incentives
Brussels has launched disciplinary action against Britain for a deliberate breach of the EU's rules on public spending, saying the budget deficit will surge far above Maastricht Treaty limits this year. In a blistering attack on UK public accounts, the European Commission said that large liabilities are being kept off the books and warned that it was far from clear whether Gordon Brown's fiscal blitz "will actually lead to a real improvement in the efficiency of public spending".
European Commission in crackdown on 'overspending' Britain