Morning all. Friday's market reports:
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
FT
The Guardian
The Independent
This is Money
Saturday
The depth of the downturn in Japan, the world's second-largest economy, emerged yesterday with industrial production showing a record 9.6 per cent decline last month and unemployment up by 0.5 per cent to a three-year high of 4.4per cent.
Record 9.6% fall in output sparks fear for Japan's future
Morgan Stanley's Jocahcim Fels and Spyros Andreopoulos look at the possibility of hyperinflation hitting the western shores of the UK, Europe and the US in their latest note. Their conclusion is a little scary.
Hyperinflation is a possibility, say Morgan Stanley
The International Monetary Fund is finalizing a $100 billion loan from Japan and is considering issuing bonds for the first time in its history, as part of an effort to double the financial resources it has to fight the deepening global recession.
The IMF runs out of cash
Financial markets are forcing banks to restrict lending, and thus making the recession more acute than it would otherwise be, according to the president of the European Central Bank.
Banks are forced to hoard capital, says ECB chief
Lending to companies slowed sharply in December, highlighting the threat of a worsening credit squeeze on businesses that would increase the impact of the recession.
Slowdown in lending threatens new squeeze on companies
The 8p-a-month mortgage is set to become a reality for thousands of borrowers next week because of over-generous loan terms offered by banks and building societies in the benign era just before the credit crunch hit.
Thousands poised for 8p-a-month mortgages as lenders caught out by base rate cuts
Sunday
President Barack Obama's fledgling administration was last night putting the finishing touches to a comprehensive financial recovery plan.
White House finalises financial rescue plan
A group of Cambridge entrepreneurs and businessmen are so outraged by the behaviour of the banks that they are setting up their own.
Entrepreneurs seek to set up new bank to bypass crisis
Rio Tinto is close to agreeing a capital injection worth up to $15bn (10.3bn) with the Chinese government as part of an ambitious plan to reduce its debt burden.
Rio close to 10bn Chinese capital injection
BARCLAYS has been reported to the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) over allegations connected to breaches of South Africas foreign-exchange controls.
Barclays in South Africa currency probe
Monday
The Bank of England's rate-setting committee will sit down this week to deliberate on interest rates, knowing that now it has an additional weapon in the armoury of tools it uses to target inflation.
Rates head for zero as Bank of England set to cut to 1%
In barely a year, Spain has gone from creating a third of Europe's new jobs to losing 40,000 a week as its decade-long housing bonanza collapsed at the same time as the global credit crisis
Few jobs and little hope as Spain faces growing crisis