Friday's market reports:
Telegraph
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
FT
The Guardian
The Independent
This is Money
Britain's economy continued to grow healthily in the second quarter of this year, the Office for National Statistics has confirmed, renewing concerns that the Bank of England may yet be forced to raise interest rates despite the recent credit market turmoil.
Economy growth renews speculation of interest rate rise
Full-year earnings forecasts for Britain's banks are set to be downgraded, analysts warned yesterday, as the sector began to try to make sense of the credit crunch and its long-term effects.
City set to slash full-year forecasts for banking sector
Pension fund trustees are planning legal action against several London hedge funds in a desperate bid to salvage investments threatened by the recent credit crunch. Investors in one London-based hedge fund last week asked lawyers to prepare an injunction against the fund, which has been selling off assets because it cannot borrow any more money.
Pension funds demand money back
London's banking system is clogged up with a growing backlog of short-term loans estimated to stand at some $25bn (12.4bn).
Although an air of calm has descended on equity markets, the short-term money markets remain chaotic say senior bankers, who warn that the market for asset backed commercial paper (ABCP) - loans that typically last between 60 and 90 days - has ground to a halt.
Loans block up London banking
BOB Baer, the former Middle East CIA operative whose first book about his life inspired the oil-and-espionage thriller Syriana, is working on a new book on Iran, but says he was told by senior intelligence officials that he had better get it published in the next couple of months because things could be about to change.
Baer, in an interview with The Weekend Australian, says his contacts in the administration suggest a strategic airstrike on Iran is a real possibility in the months ahead.
US 'poised to strike Iran'