Morning all. Market reports:
Telegraph
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
The Independent
The Guardian
This is Money
The American economy faces a painful recession that will be deeper than the downturn at the start of this decade and the most severe since the early Nineties, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is set to predict next week.
IMF to cut prospects for US growth by two-thirds
Confidence at major Japanese manufacturers fell to its lowest in more than four years as the plunging dollar, soaring fuel prices and fears of a US slowdown weighed on the economy.
Japanese confidence dented by plunging dollar and US fears
As Japanese motorists fought for a place in the great petrol rush they could have been forgiven for thinking it was all a huge April Fool's joke a massive overnight plunge in pump prices despite the soaring global cost of crude oil.
Fuel price plunge fuels Japan's tax crisis
Inflation in the UK's manufacturing sector has risen to its highest since 1995, according to the monthly purchasing managers index, produced by the Chartered Institute for Purchasing and Supply (CIPS).
Inflation climbs to a 13-year high in the British manufacturing sector
Corporate profits reached an all-time high in the final quarter of last year as Britain continued to benefit from the booming world economy. Corporations enjoyed profitability of 15.5% in the last quarter of 2007, up from 15.4% in the third quarter, the Office for National Statistics reported yesterday. The figure for 2007, which does not include banks, was a record 15.2%.
Corporate profits surge in last quarter of boom
UBS led a rally in banking stocks around the world after the Swiss banking giant's $19bn (9.6bn) sub-prime writedown was taken as a sign that the worst of the credit crunch may over.
UBS says it is over the worst of losses
Marcel Ospel, UBSs chairman, once fed as the most brilliant banker in Europe, said that he was quitting as he revealed that losses had more than doubled to $37 billion (18.6 billion)
UBS chairman Marcel Ospel goes as US sub-prime losses hit $37bn
Lehman Brothers long-suffering investors received a boost yesterday as the securities firm raised $4 billion (2 billion) of cash, sending its shares up 8.5 per cent.
Lehman Brothers gets $4bn vote of confidence from Wall Street
First Direct has closed its doors to new mortgage customers after receiving five times the usual volume of applications in recent weeks. The internet and telephone bank, owned by HSBC, said that it was receiving an unprecedented level of business after recent moves by rival banks to pull similar mortgage deals because of the high costs of funding as a result of the credit crunch.
First Direct puts halt to new lending as homes gloom grows
The Swiss government has launched a rearguard defence against foreign pressure for an overhaul of the country's banking laws, which make it a crime for a banker to disclose client details.
Swiss vow to keep banking secrecy laws
American lawmakers told top oil executives on Capitol Hill yesterday the laws of supply and demand were an inadequate excuse for rocketing petrol prices, ballooning profits and for slow progress on investment in renewable fuels.
Oil executives taken to task over soaring pump prices
A U.S.-based company that has controversially laid claim to nearly all of the Arctic Ocean's undersea oil said Thursday that new geological data suggests a "potentially vast" petroleum resource of 400 billion barrels.
Vast oil potential in Arctic, new data says