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Grosvenor casino owner Rank Group cuts jobs amid gambling tax rise

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Company continues to deal with the fallout of Rachel Reeves’ decision to raise online gambling tax

Grosvenor Casino in  Plymouth

The Grosvenor Casino in Plymouth(Image: Google)

Rank Group, the owner of Grosvenor casino, has cut its workforce in an effort to rein in costs, as the firm continues to grapple with the effects of Rachel Reeves’ online gambling tax increase.

The Chancellor’s move to raise the Remote Gaming Duty (RGD) rate from 21 per cent to 40 per cent in last autumn’s Budget left the group scrambling to absorb the blow and safeguard revenue after it took effect in April.

The firm chose to slash marketing expenditure and supplier costs, alongside making “headcount reductions”, to offset spending and “the impact of the RGD increase”.

It elected to preserve targeted digital advertising and customer incentives, such as bonuses and loyalty rewards, to retain players on its digital gambling platforms despite the heightened levy.

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However, chief executive Richard Harris, who was confirmed as the permanent head of the casino group earlier this week, acknowledged that the increase had triggered “significant cost and taxation headwinds”, as reported by City AM.

Shares rose 8.3 per cent in early trading to 102.3p, with the stock up 5.2 per cent since January.

The Maidenhead-headquartered group also confirmed that it had submitted a regulatory settlement proposal to the Gambling Commission, in a bid to avoid incurring a financial penalty.

The FTSE 250 firm offered to pay the gambling watchdog £5m, following an investigation into the Grosvenor casino licence that uncovered evidence of rule breaches. The regulator confirmed it was “minded to accept the settlement proposal” and is awaiting the formal documentation to proceed.

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The payment is expected to be recorded as a separately disclosed item in a bid to avoid any distortion to reported profits.

The decision to retain targeted advertisements drove like-for-like digital net gaming revenue (NGR) up 12 per cent in the final quarter to £63.9m.

Grosvenor venues also posted a three per cent increase in NGR to £98.3m, despite the “disruption to international travel” triggered by the conflict in the Middle East, underpinned by strong gaming machine performance.

Mecca Bingo halls saw NGR reach £35.4m, while its Enracha venues reported NGR of £11.3m.

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Principality Building Society boss on its branch network, commercial lending and stadium deal

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Iain Mansfield is looking to double the mutual’s commercial lending book to support the delivery of much needed new housing stock

Iain Mansfield.

Chief executive of Principality Building Society Iain Mansfield has outlined plans to double its commercial lending to support much-needed new housing development to more than £2bn, while saying that despite advances in its digital offering, he cannot foresee a time when the mutual does not have a high street branch presence.

Cardiff-born Mr Mansfield, who took up his role at the UK’s sixth biggest mutual last November, succeeding Julie-Ann Haines and having previously been chief financial officer, said its three-year naming rights extension with the WRU for the Principality Stadium will further deepen brand recognition of the mutual and its products.

Mr Mansfield, 50, a chartered accountant who spent 20 years in London across retail banking, consumer financial services and private equity, as well as a two-year stint working at steelmaker Corus before its acquisition by Tata, described Principality as a “Welsh heritage business” but with plans to grow its savings customers and commercial lending clients across the UK.

Principality has assets of £14.1bn and employs 1,100 people. On his role, Mr Mansfield, who is also chairman of business membership body CBI Wales, said: “It’s about providing the services that a modern mutual should to as many people as we possibly can. The amount of people saving in the UK is relatively low and the number of people with just £100 of savings is a frightening statistic. I feel my job of getting people to save to buy their own homes is probably as challenging as it has ever been.

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“So, it is about being open-minded and giving people a reason to save for resilience. Whether that is for a washing machine, a car or a holiday, I don’t really mind, as long as we bring that funding together to ensure that we can create home ownership, or develop new homes, so people can buy them either through a social housing relationship that we have, a mortgage property, or through buy-to-let investments.”

While more than 90% of it lending comes from savings deposits, it does rely on wholesale money markets. Last year it finalised its first covered bond, with the inaugural £500m issuance at the start of this year on a five-year floating rate secured against residential mortgages.

Principality now sees covered bonds as central to its wholesale funding plans and expects to be in the market annually under a more than £4bn programme.

Mr Mansfield, who attended Corpus Christi Catholic High School and St David’s Sixth Form College in Cardiff and first joined the mutual in 2015 as finance director of its secured lending venture Nemo Personal Finance, said: “Our model is acquiring savings through our branch network and evolving and improving our digital franchise.

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“We want to ensure that we have got flexibility in our wholesale markets with our securitisation programme and a covered bond programme which commenced at the beginning of this year. That gives us the ability to go into the market once and get a relatively cost-effective and big chunk of funds that mature five years out. What we’re not saying is that we have to go into wholesale markets to any greater extent.

“We were created to help people save and we would like that percentage (saving deposits to fund its mortgages and commercial lending) to be as high as we possibly can. As the business grows, there is real benefit in having some wholesale funding as it gives us access relatively quickly and effectively to a big chunk of five-year money.”

The mutual holds saving deposits with a value of around £11bn. Mr Mansfield said: “The vast majority of that links to a branch. Last year we opened 175,000 new accounts and two-thirds of that was through a digital route.

“We have half a million savings accounts, but new accounts are different to members, who will have multiple numbers of accounts. We have invested heavily in our website, so the route to be able to get access to our rates has increased, and our expectation is that we will have an app by the end of the year in what will be a big digital shift.”

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Principality has 54 branches, although one in St David’s Shopping Centre in the centre of Cardiff is due to close, and a presence at 16 agencies across Wales and the English borders. That comes with significant fixed costs of maintaining its branch presence.

Has he, the management team and the board appraised a time when it might no longer require a high street presence due to a wider take-up of digital services?

Principality Building Society branch in Bangor

A Principality Building Society branch.(Image: BBC)

Mr Mansfield said: “I think it is highly unlikely that we would be a digital-only business as we have a community and heritage in Wales. There is a broader piece here as well around alignment with what we are trying to do. Of course, more people over time will effectively save through digital routes, but what we don’t want to do is alienate people who want to come into a branch.”

He said the branch “human touch” of the mutual sector provides a point of difference to banks, where there has been a significant reduction in high street branches in recent years.

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He added: “We have the largest branch network in the financial services sector in Wales. We are committed to our communities and I think our branch colleagues also want to bring in digital customers. Our mortgage business and savings franchise is right across the UK from a digital perspective, but longstanding members have historically opened their accounts through a branch.”

He does not like to distinguish between the mutual’s Cardiff city centre head office, Principality House, which houses around 900 hybrid working staff, and its branches and agencies with around 300 employees.

He explained: “We made some operational changes around 18 months ago and put some of the tasks of our head office into those branches. Our amazing branch colleagues have been really receptive to being able to do multiple things, which is to serve our customers who walk in, but also to do some of the work a traditional head office call centre would do. So, we are utilising our branches to do more.”

However, staff numbers remain under review. He said: “As an organisation where the world is changing as quickly as it is, we should be making sure that our model is appropriate and understanding what that looks like into the future.

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“The strategy that we want to build for this organisation is being a highly relevant, customer-focused business fit for the future. We need to invest in our business and it is really important that we have the right mix of skills and level of investment.”

Commercial lending

Mr Mansfield is upbeat on the prospects for the mutual’s commercial lending, which is mainly centred around supporting housing development. He explained: “On commercial lending, we have a lent book of £900m and commitments of £1.1bn, where we have agreed contracts with people but they have not yet drawn down, so there is a big pipeline of opportunity.

“We would like to double the size of the business (commercial lending) to £2bn-plus. Why is this really important? Because it is bang on what we do.

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“We lend around a third of the book, and a growing percentage, to housing associations, which aligns with our strategy and purpose. We provide finance to around 20 of the 30 housing associations in Wales and a handful in England.

“So that side is growing and we are helping housing associations develop new properties so people who are struggling with affordability can get on the housing ladder in some description.

“There is also lending for residential investment and material landlords where they have an estate which provides property into the rental market for those who don’t want to buy. A third, and again growing, is residential development. So how do we support those investors who want to grow and build homes from the ground up? “We have also worked really hard in the last two years to build relationships with councils across Wales and Welsh Government (the Plaid administration has a target of 20,000 new social homes by 2030). We are sitting here ready to work with Welsh Government, councils and whoever else to provide capital.”

In Cardiff, through a joint venture vehicle with Welsh Government, Tirion, Principality’s lending helped to derisk the Mill development, which has delivered around 800 new homes – half for the open market and the rest social housing and mixed tenure – around the former Wiggins Teape paper mill site in Ely. He sees potential for Principality to deploy more commercial lending for similar partnership approaches, which would also have the benefit of putting less strain on Welsh Government’s constrained budget to fund social housing with the option of it providing guarantees.

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He said: “The reason that worked [the Mill], and why it is important to replicate, was getting the right group of stakeholders together for a site that would not have been able to be developed just with a commercial developer, as it was an industrial site that needed remediation. What we were able to do, by getting the right structure in place with Welsh Government, was to write initial loans to be able to do that work, which meant a developer could come in and could see a route to development.

“We would like to have more relationships with regional housing developers. That would give us the ability to work on larger projects and help the Welsh Government reach the 20,000 new homes target by the end of the decade.”

Future office requirement

The mutual looked at a number of locations for a possible smaller head office building. Last year it was close to signing a lease to occupy space at the 1 Callaghan Square office building, covering floors released by law firm Eversheds Sutherland after its decision to reduce its footprint in the building. However, that space has now been taken by British Gas.

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There is currently a lack of grade A office space in the city. Any new speculative development, with high construction costs, would require a significant increase in the headline rent for the city and moving closer to the more than £50 per sq ft in Bristol. While no longer actively in themarket for a new head office, it remains a longer-term option for the mutual.

Mr Mansfield said: “Because this is such a great location, you have to be 100% sure it is the right place. We want just a few floors and getting people into one area and having staff working through processes seamlessly.

“My responsibility is that the balance sheet assets of this organisation are protected. So, we have been transparent with colleagues that the long-term strategy is to find an alternative home for this business, but we are not rushing into that.

“My other job is to ensure that we are looking after the assets, and one of the ways to look at this building [Principality House] is to understand the process so we can potentially get planning permission to put us into that position. If you have got that, then you have a potential business case.” Assuming it could find the right property, with a requirement of around 40,000sq ft, what redevelopment options could there be for Principality House?

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Mr Mansfield said: “It has to be something that aligns 100% with the purpose of our business. So, if in the future we get the alchemy of finding a location and an option to do something, we would ensure that, subject to its commercial viability and protecting our members’ interests, there is a sustainability of purpose, so there would be a housing element.”

The mutual also owns a number of buildings around its head office at the Friary. The chief executive said that if Principality House is redeveloped, the mutual would not seek to be the developer, but a funder through its commercial lending arm.

Principality Stadium deal

CARDIFF, WALES – NOVEMBER 07: A view of the Principality Stadium showing the main Entrance off Westgate Street on November 07, 2023 in Cardiff, Wales. The Stadium is due to host games during the 2028 Euro Football tournament but due to Sponsorship of the Tournament the stadium will not be allowed to be called the Principality Stadium when the tournament is on. (Photo by Huw Fairclough/Getty Images)

In 2015, Principality entered into a 10-year naming rights deal with the WRU which renamed the Millennium Stadium the Principality Stadium. The value of the deal was not disclosed, but it is believed to have been around £12.5m with annual payments.

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It was extended by a year due to the pandemic. The value of the extension, to 2030, has also not been disclosed, but provides some uplift on the 2015 deal, although it is pretty much static when accounting for inflation.

Asked if there could be a further extension – assuming there isn’t commercial interest from elsewhere – Mr Mansfield said: “It is way too early to say what the future looks like. The importance of the stadium for us is several-fold.

“Number one, our brand awareness has increased, with awareness in Wales, prompted and unprompted, continuing to be positive on the back of the stadium, which is key for us.

“We have a desire to grow our business, yes in Wales but outside too, so it is a shop window for our ambition. There are a million people a year who walk into or around it. For us, that is a massive opportunity to engage with existing members, but it also gives us visibility across the UK and beyond.”

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On whether there is an element of confusion, as some might think it refers to an outdated and historic reference to Wales being a principality rather than a building society, he said: “We have a real ability to springboard this, and one of the focus areas through our strong relationship with the WRU, is to ensure that in all of our campaigns we get that connection between the Principality Stadium and Principality Building Society.”

On current trading he said: “From February to half year it was very challenging to price because of what has gone on in the Middle East. And that has meant the swap rates and the route through which we price our savings and mortgage business has been hugely volatile.

“Our teams have had to work very hard to continue to price practically and effectively through that period. Irrespective of that, we are not far off the plan that we expected and there is no reason to believe that we will not get to where we need to by the end of the year from a retail mortgage perspective.”

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Form 4 BOK Financial Corporation For: 14 July

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Form 4 BOK Financial Corporation For: 14 July

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Warren Buffett plans to donate entire Berkshire Hathaway stake by 2034

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Warren Buffett plans to donate entire Berkshire Hathaway stake by 2034
Warren Buffett plans to dispose of his entire Berkshire Hathaway stake within about eight years through donations to four charitable foundations, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday. The 95-year-old Berkshire chairman said he hopes his three children will complete the disposal of his shares by December 31, 2034.

Buffett converted 8,000 Class A shares into 12 million Class B shares for donation. The Sherwood Foundation, Howard G Buffett Foundation and NoVo Foundation will each receive 1 million shares, while the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation will receive 9 million shares.

“My goal is to dispose of all of my Berkshire shares within about eight years,” Buffett said. “I have every hope that the three of them are able to carry out the disposal of my shares by December 31, 2034.”

He now owns 188,290 Class A shares and 1,162 Class B shares of Berkshire Hathaway. Buffett said grants to the three foundations managed by his children will increase annually, while donations to the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation will rise at a somewhat faster pace.

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“Of course, mortality is unpredictable, but my remaining shares will be donated to the four foundations one way or the other by December 31, 2034,” he said.


Berkshire Hathaway Class B shares were little changed in pre-market trade after the announcement.
Also Read: Dow Jones| Nasdaq | S&P 500 | US Stock Market Today | Live: S&P 500 and Nasdaq open higher as CPI, bank earnings take focusGreg Abel took over as the CEO of Berkshire Hathaway on January 1 this year. The succession plan, long anticipated by investors, saw Greg Abel assume operational control from January this year. Abel is also expected to lead Berkshire’s next annual shareholder meeting in Omaha, signaling a shift in day-to-day leadership even as Buffett remains an active presence.

Despite the transition, Buffett had earlier indicated he would continue coming to the office, reinforcing his long-standing approach to investing and business. His continued engagement suggests that while Berkshire has entered a new phase structurally, its core investment philosophy shaped by Buffett is unlikely to see any abrupt change.

Abel has now begun putting the company’s record cash pile to work. Berkshire agreed to buy Alphabet shares worth $10 billion in a private placement last month, the Google-parent said.

Berkshire began investing in Alphabet in last year’s third quarter, and owned $16.6 billion of shares as of March 31 this year. Last month’s investment made Alphabet one of Berkshire’s five largest common stock holdings, which are led by iPhone-maker Apple.

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DNB Bank ASA (DNBBY) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

DNB Bank ASA (DNBBY) Q2 2026 Earnings Call July 14, 2026 7:30 AM EDT

Company Participants

Rune Helland – Head of Investor Relations
Kjerstin Braathen – Group Chief Executive Officer
Marianne Wik Sætre
Harald Serck-Hanssen – Group Executive Vice President of Large Corporates & International
Rasmus Aage Figenschou – CFO & EVP of Corporate Market

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Conference Call Participants

Shrey Srivastava – Citigroup Inc., Research Division
Gulnara Saitkulova – Morgan Stanley, Research Division
Namita Samtani – Barclays Bank PLC, Research Division
Markus Sandgren – Kepler Cheuvreux, Research Division
Sofie Caroline Peterzens – Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., Research Division
Johan Ekblom – UBS Investment Bank, Research Division
Riccardo Rovere – Mediobanca – Banca di credito finanziario S.p.A., Research Division
Jacob Kruse – Bernstein Autonomous LLP
Simon Skaland Brun – ABG Sundal Collier Holding ASA, Research Division

Presentation

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Operator

Hello, and welcome to the DNB Q2 conference call. My name is George, and I’ll be your coordinator for today’s event. Please note, this conference is being recorded. [Operator Instructions] I will hand the call over to your host today, Mr. Rune Helland, Head of IR to begin today’s conference.

Please go ahead, sir.

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Rune Helland
Head of Investor Relations

Thank you very much, and hello, everyone, and welcome to DNB’s second quarter analyst call. And here in Oslo to answer all your questions, we have, in addition to Kjerstin and Rasmus, we have Maria Ervik Løvold from Personal Banking, Marianne Wik Sætre, Corporate Banking, Norway; Harald Serck-Hanssen, MCI; Alex Opstad, DNB Carnegie; and Eline Skramstad, Head of the CRO. Before we open up for questions, Kjerstin will give you the highlights for the quarter.

Kjerstin Braathen
Group Chief Executive Officer

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Thank you, Rune, and thank you all for taking the time to be with us today. Just a few highlights on the quarter that we believe is a good quarter, demonstrating high activity across all of the

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Fed’s Warsh vows to ’do my job’ if challenged by Trump

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Fed’s Warsh vows to ’do my job’ if challenged by Trump

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Bridging the gluten-free and GLP-1 trends

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General Mills expands Lӓrabar lineup

Gluten-free pulses and oats provide protein and fiber.

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Warsh says Fed policymakers have ‘no tolerance’ for elevated inflation

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Jerome Powell successor Kevin Warsh clears Senate Banking Committee

Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh on Tuesday told House lawmakers that the central bank’s policymakers have “no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation” in his first testimony as Fed chief.

Warsh said in his prepared testimony for the House Financial Services Committee that concerns about inflation influenced the Fed’s decision to hold the benchmark federal funds rate steady at a range of 3.5% to 3.75% at the Fed’s June meeting.

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“The Fed’s number one objective is to get monetary policy right – or as near to it as we possibly can. That is our clear and constant aim, the star we steer by,” he said. “And if we get policy right – and we will – the inflation surge of the last five years will be a thing of the past.”

“My colleagues and I recognize that high inflation has been an undue burden on American households and businesses. While monthly price fluctuations are inevitable – especially in an unsettled world – underlying inflation over longer time horizons is determined largely by monetary policy,” Warsh said.

“The members of our Committee have no tolerance for persistently elevated inflation. And we share a resolute commitment to restoring price stability,” he added.

FED POLICYMAKERS’ INFLATION WORRIES WEIGHED ON RATE CUT OUTLOOK AT WARSH’S FIRST MEETING

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Kevin Warsh at his confirmation hearing

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh told the House Financial Services Committee that the central bank won’t tolerate persistently elevated inflation. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Warsh was asked about how he would respond if President Donald Trump targeted him or other policymakers in an effort to influence interest rate policy, and the chairman emphasized the Fed is an independent central bank – which the Supreme Court recently affirmed.

“The Supreme Court said that the Federal Reserve and the conduct of monetary policy is independent. To the extent there were questions about it, the Court answered those questions,” Warsh said, adding he would continue to do his job if the president were to attempt to fire him.

Warsh went on to say that his goal for the Fed “is for there to be no politics. To the extent there’s politics there, we’re going to get rid of them.” 

The Federal Reserve is tasked by Congress with pursuing a dual mandate of fostering full employment and price stability in line with a long-run 2% inflation target. Warsh said the Fed will be attentive to both sides of the mandate, though he noted the inflation portion of the mandate is further from the goal at this time.

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“In my view, the two parts of the mandate are not in conflict. This is not an either or proposition. The more we can do to deliver low and stable prices, the more we can get it such that people aren’t worried about inflation, the more employers are going to want to hire more workers,” he explained.

“You gave us a remit, we take both parts of it seriously,” Warsh said. “As we look out the window now, the labor markets look to be in pretty good balance. We’ve got some work to do on the inflation front.”

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates on Warsh’s testimony.

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Woman’s Hour – ADHD and hormones, When co-habiting couples separate, God of War

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Woman's Hour - SEND reforms: A Woman's Hour and SEND in the Spotlight special

Available for over a year

What impact do hormones have on women with ADHD? A first of its kind study by Kings College and Queen Mary University in London is putting the link to the test, by asking 50 women who have ADHD and are taking medication for it to track their menstrual cycle. They will log the impact it has on their ADHD symptoms, and daily life more broadly. Report academic Dr Jessica Agnew-Blais and Laura Mears-Reynolds from the charity ADHDAF+ join presenter Nuala McGovern to discuss.

We hear about the current government consultation aiming to give added financial security to more than 3.5 million unmarried couples when they separate. It’s hoped the overdue reforms will help protect women and better meet the needs of modern relationships. Nuala discusses this with Mandip Ghai, a lawyer from the legal charity Rights of Women, who have campaigned for new laws, and Jenny Allen who is feeling the long-term impact of her separation on her finances now she is semi-retired.

Parents of school-age children will know that this is the time of year when thoughts turns to a present for their teacher. But collections can be divisive when so many families are feeling financial pressure. The question of how much to give, who should be included or whether to contribute at all can be fraught. Author and comedian Helen Thorne from the Scummy Mummies comedy duo shares her thoughts on the hot topic dominating many school whatsapp groups.

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Video game God of War will have a female protagonist for the first time in the form of Laufey, both a powerful woman and a mother. Nuala is joined by player and journalist Vicky Jessop and The Guardian’s games editor Keza Macdonald to discuss the significance and online backlash.

Presented by: Nuala McGovern
Produced by: Sarah Jane Griffiths

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Court: Schwebel Baking in talks with ‘potential buyer’

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Schwebel Baking set to shut down

Lawsuit put on hold as company in talks to sell business.

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Destec, Steve Wyatt admit contempt of court in MinRes IP stoush

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Destec, Steve Wyatt admit contempt of court in MinRes IP stoush

Steve Wyatt and his company Destec will be penalised for contempt of court over videos published online, as part of an ongoing spat with Mineral Resources.

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