Morning all. Friday's market reports:
Telegraph
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
FT
The Guardian
The Independent
This is Money
Saturday
The price of British-made goods fell at the sharpest pace since 2001 in June as manufacturers endured dwindling demand. Factory gate prices fell by 1.2 per cent in the year to June four times larger than the 0.3 per cent decline recorded for May, suggesting that inflation is set to tumble further.
Lower factory prices point to new fall in inflation
Global demand for oil is poised to rebound sharply next year, led by booming consumption in developing countries including China, India and Indonesia, the International Energy Agency (IEA) said today.
Global oil demand to rebound sharply in 2010
We need more not fewer oil traders. The economic disruption caused by oil's volatility has been so vexing that the Obama Administration believes it can stabilize prices by regulating speculators out of the market. It can't.
Why There Should Be More Oil Speculation, Not Less
This news story contains many very important sub-plots: trading espionage, the necessity for a trading firm to have sophisticated security systems built around its technology, the requirements for risk management, and even the potential for proprietary trading software to be targeted on a wider scale for terrorist activity; but more than anything else it highlights the critical role played by high frequency prop trading in this new market.
The Cold War in high frequency trading turns hot
Sunday
In calculations that will spark further criticism over the state of the public finances, an IMF paper presented to world's leaders has laid bare how the UK's indebtedness has left it unable to provide the vital stimulus the economy could need over the next 18 months.
UK can't afford another fiscal rescue, warns IMF
Britain's economic crisis is still with us and is going to worsen. Some unpleasant medicine will have to be taken.
Britons will be poorer in coming decades
Vital sections of society could be paralysed if swine flu reaches epidemic proportions as expected, the government has been warned.
Swine flu could bring UK to a halt, Whitehall told
Pirc, the investor action group that last week tried to force the early resignation of the Marks & Spencer's chairman, has formed 100 subsidiaries to launch assaults on other quoted groups. Each vehicle will own a single share in the target groups, giving the necessary base to plant resolutions at annual shareholder meetings.
Pirc rears 100 Trojan horses to upset AGMs
Monday
UK Financial Investments (UKFI), the body that controls the Government's banking stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and Lloyds Banking Group, is expected to say that there will be no quick exit for the taxpayer.
UKFI to publish strategy for banks
The European Central Bank preens as the last guardian of virtue in a sinful world, yet its actions are devastating the public finances of almost every country under its care.
Europe digs its economic grave while the ECB answers to no one
The Chinese president Hu Jintao personally endorsed the investigation into Rio Tinto that led to the arrest of the mining giant's Australian iron ore executive, according to Australian media reports.
China president endorsed Rio Tinto probe