Morning all. Friday's market reports:
Telegraph
The Times
The Times (Need to know)
FT
The Guardian
The Independent
This is Money
Saturday
CIT Group, one of Americas biggest lenders to small and medium-sized businesses, was today in last-minute talks to find short-term funding in order to avert a bankruptcy filing.
CIT in frantic bid to secure short-term funding
With the El Ni-Southern Oscillation (ENSO) on the horizon and concerns over food shortages, crops are locked in a bull market.
El Nino threat blows commodity prices higher
Martin Hickman, who became hooked on spread betting after retiring, has had some spectacular gains and losses.
Day trading: 'I lost 200,000 in a day'
Sunday
OFFICIAL FIGURES this week for Britains second-quarter gross domestic product will confirm the worst of the recession is over. But a report from the Ernst & Young Item club, using the Treasurys economic model, will warn of a fragile recovery, with the threat of a double dip back into recession.
UK economy heading for fragile recovery
Wall Street and City of London bank chiefs will be targeted this week at the launch of a new transatlantic campaign to reinstate historic usury laws restricting the interest rates charged by loan sharks and credit card companies.
Bring back usury law to control interest rates, campaign urges
For a glimpse of what awaits Britain, Europe, and America as budget deficits spiral to war-time levels, look at what is happening to the Irish welfare state.
Fiscal ruin of the Western world beckons
Cash-rich shell companies hijacked; 375m of forged Brazilian bank deposits; astonishing (and misplaced) expectations of a major oil strike in Greece - the corporate scandals on London's Alternative Investment Market make for ripping yarns, each of them deserving of a movie.
Phantom oil and bogus bonds: Aim's darkest days
Monday
CIT on Sunday night clinched a two-year, $3bn rescue financing with its creditors that will enable the troubled US finance group to avoid bankruptcy.
CIT wins eleventh-hour reprieve
Britain risks sliding into a long deflationary recession if the H1N1 swine flu pandemic develops along lines predicted by the Government, according to the Ernst & Young ITEM Club report today.
Swine flu threatens deflation slump, Ernst & Young ITEM Club report warns
Hopes of the consumer kick-starting the global economy have been dented by a study showing that the world's top retailers expect the current downturn to impact their businesses for up to two years.
Retailers predict years of gloom