Business
Midlands Tops UK Regions for Foreign Investment Jobs in 2025
The Midlands has overtaken every other part of Britain outside the capital for foreign direct investment (FDI) employment, creating almost 6,000 jobs last year even as investment into the UK slumped to a ten-year low.
According to the EY 2026 UK Attractiveness Survey, the region generated 5,970 FDI-related jobs in 2025, more than Scotland and Wales combined and equivalent to roughly one in five of all such jobs created across the UK. That makes it the leading location for overseas-backed employment outside London, a notable result in a year when global investors turned cautious.
The region also landed 102 FDI projects, ranking it behind only Greater London and Scotland for the volume of inward investment won. The figure represents 14 per cent of all UK projects, the Midlands’ third-highest share in a decade.
Investor sentiment, meanwhile, is pointing upwards. Among companies planning to invest, the West Midlands is now seen as the third most attractive UK region, and Birmingham ranks as the second most sought-after city outside the capital, despite the reputational knocks the city has absorbed over the past year.
The headline numbers are all the more striking given the wider backdrop. Project numbers across Europe fell by 6.6 per cent in 2025, while the UK recorded a sharper 14.4 per cent decline, securing 730 projects nationally, the lowest tally in ten years.
Only three parts of the UK bucked the trend on project numbers: Greater London, up 5 per cent, Northern Ireland, up 65 per cent, and Wales, up 56 per cent. The South West held flat, and every other region went backwards. The Midlands itself was not immune, with projects down 16.4 per cent year on year and FDI jobs off 29.3 per cent, from the 122 projects and 8,439 jobs it banked in 2024.
Even so, holding on to the top regional spot for jobs and a podium position for projects, while the national market shrank, underlines the region’s pull for international capital. As one recent analysis of regional investment trends has noted, the competition between UK regions for overseas money has intensified, making the Midlands’ staying power more meaningful than the raw decline might suggest.
Business and professional services emerged as the standout sector for the Midlands, drawing 18 projects, a sharp jump from just five in 2024. Transportation manufacturers and suppliers came second with 16 projects, while software and IT services climbed to third with 14, up from nine the year before.
The United States remained the single largest source of investment, accounting for 14.7 per cent of projects. Germany, India and France followed, each delivering 10 projects apiece.
That momentum builds on a longer run of form. The region was recently named the UK’s top regional destination for foreign investment, and has previously been recognised as one of Europe’s strongest performers for inward investment strategy, finishing second in the continent at a major European investment awards.
Richard Parker, Mayor of the West Midlands, said his economic strategy was beginning to bear fruit. “My Growth Plan is clear in targeting international markets to get our economy firing on all cylinders. And it’s an approach that’s working. More jobs are now being created by global companies in the region than in any UK location outside of London,” he said.
“My recent trade missions to India and China, alongside the Prime Minister, have opened even more doors for our businesses, universities and other investors. Getting more deals over the line with some of the world’s biggest players will help deliver my number one priority as Mayor, a stronger economy with more high-quality jobs for local people and more money in their pockets.”
Claire Ward, Mayor of the East Midlands, said the figures reflected confidence in the wider region. “These figures underline the Midlands’ continued strength as a destination for international investment in a highly competitive global market, and demonstrates sustained investor confidence in our people, businesses and places,” she said. “For the East Midlands, international investment creates high-quality jobs, strengthens local supply chains, and expands opportunity in communities across our region.”
Neil Rami, chief executive of the West Midlands Growth Company, struck a more cautionary note on what it will take to keep the momentum going. “Our unmatched scale, connected innovation ecosystem and deep talent pool make the region a compelling proposition for international investors,” he said. “However, in an increasingly competitive global market, investment does not simply follow economic fundamentals. Sustaining growth will require continued targeted intervention, strong international partnerships and a clear, market-led proposition that aligns investor demand with local opportunities.”
The picture is reinforced by separate official data. The Department for Business and Trade’s inward investment results for 2025/26 show the West Midlands attracted more FDI jobs, 18,036, over the past three years than any UK location outside London. The region secured 10 per cent of all UK projects and 18 per cent of projects and jobs created outside the capital, with its 25 per cent fall in projects broadly mirroring a 26 per cent national decline.
Behind the statistics sit a string of concrete wins. Networking and security giant Cisco has chosen STEAMhouse in Birmingham’s Knowledge Quarter, part of the West Midlands Investment Zone, as the home of new office space.
Adele Every, managing director, public sector at Cisco UK and Ireland, said the city’s assets made the decision straightforward. “Top tech talent, world-class innovation infrastructure and a collaborative ecosystem are key to our mission of powering an inclusive future for all. Birmingham’s strengths in these areas were clear to see, making it the obvious location for our new regional hub.”
Other arrivals span fintech, fashion and software. Islamic property finance provider Offa has invested in new offices in Solihull, where executive chairman Sultan Choudhury said the firm’s team had doubled in size over the past year. Australian fashion brand Hello Molly has opened an e-commerce warehouse in Dudley, with operations director Ena Eaton praising the region’s “excellent transport and logistics infrastructure”. Software provider Target Integration has set up in Coventry through the West Midlands Global Growth Programme, with chief executive Rohit Thakral citing the city’s proximity to the West Midlands tech sector and the University of Warwick Science Park.
The Growth Programme, which offers tailored support to help international businesses navigate the UK investment process, is now accepting applications for 2026.
Business
China’s version of Instagram is gearing up to go public.
Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote, is a Chinese social media app currently testing the waters on public offerings amid the nation’s tech sentiment. The platform aims to go public, reflecting its growth and the country’s evolving attitude towards technology companies amid regulatory and market shifts.
China’s Instagram seems poised to make its public debut, capturing attention across the digital landscape. Although Instagram itself is blocked in mainland China, a new platform resembling its core features is reportedly gearing up for a major launch. This new app aims to capture the popularity of visual social media, appealing to young users eager to share photos and videos. Industry insiders suggest that Chinese tech giants are behind this development, seeking to create a domestically controlled alternative to Instagram’s global presence.
The move reflects China’s broader efforts to develop homegrown social media platforms that comply with local regulations. By introducing a familiar interface and features similar to Instagram, the platform hopes to attract users already familiar with visual content sharing. The launch is expected to bolster China’s digital economy and provide a new avenue for influencers and brands to connect with audiences.
As the platform prepares to go public, analysts anticipate significant competition with existing Chinese social media giants like WeChat and Douyin. If successful, this new Instagram-style app could reshape China’s social media landscape, offering users a fresh space for creative expression while aligning with national policies on information control. The upcoming release signals a dynamic shift in China’s digital ecosystem, emphasizing innovation within regulatory boundaries.
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Business
Southern Copper: Strong, But Priced Assuming Everything Goes Right (NYSE:SCCO)
Hello, my name is Daniel Bell, and I have been investing my personal accounts since college. I remember my first big “play”; it was with only $2,000, but this was right after the COVID lockdown hit and the market tanked. I used the Robinhood account I had to search out companies according to three parameters that I thought made sense: 1. Had the largest dips after lockdown, 2. Were growing beforehand, and 3. Had high caps. This way, I was able to find several well-run companies that had been very highly affected by the lockdown, but were unlikely to go completely bust before recovering. I was able to make about $1,000, or 50%, in just about 6 months. This is what really got me into value investing. Ever since, I have been an active investor. I have lived in Texas for nearly five years now, and in my personal financial life, I have begun looking into opportunities in medium-scale investing in Central African countries, chiefly Rwanda, but also Burundi, Kenya, the DRC, etc. Aside from this, I am excited to contribute to the Seeking Alpha community!
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
Business
Sends CEO Alona Shevtsova to lead industry discussion on AI, Risk & Blockchain at The Blockchain Show Riyadh
Alona Shevtsova, CEO of Sends, will lead an industry discussion at The Blockchain Show Riyadh, bringing together experts from cybersecurity, banking, blockchain infrastructure, and digital asset innovation to explore how artificial intelligence, risk management frameworks, and distributed ledger technologies are shaping the future of digital banking.
The panel, titled “AI, Risk & Blockchain: Building the Next Generation of Digital Banking,” will examine the opportunities and challenges facing financial institutions as emerging technologies become increasingly integrated into global financial infrastructure.
The discussion will focus on four key themes: the foundations of secure and resilient digital banking; the role of blockchain in financial infrastructure and digital trust; responsible AI governance and innovation; and the future of digital finance across the Middle East and global markets.
As moderator, Alona Shevtsova will guide the conversation around one of the most pressing questions facing the financial sector today: how financial institutions can continue to innovate while maintaining trust, security, transparency, and regulatory compliance in an increasingly digital environment.
Commenting ahead of the event, Alona Shevtsova, CEO of Sends, said: “The future of banking will be defined by the ability to balance innovation with trust. AI, blockchain and digital infrastructure are creating new opportunities for financial institutions, but long-term success will depend on building secure, transparent and resilient systems that inspire confidence among customers, businesses and regulators alike.”
The panel is also expected to explore the growing role of blockchain technology in institutional finance, the evolution of digital assets and decentralised financial systems, and the opportunities emerging from the convergence of AI, digital identity, and automated decision-making.
Particular attention will be given to developments across the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia’s growing position as a regional hub for digital innovation, financial technology, and blockchain adoption.
The Blockchain Show Riyadh brings together industry leaders, innovators, regulators, and technology experts to discuss the trends and technologies shaping the future of digital finance and blockchain adoption worldwide.
Earlier this month, Alona Shevtsova was shortlisted for the 2026 Great British Entrepreneur Awards in the Established Business of the Year category. Her team is also preparing for the Fintech Connect conference in London later this year. Sends will be a leading sponsor of this event.
In July 2025, Alona Shevtsova announced the first stage of the project in collaboration with Sends Messenger. Teams plan to integrate payment functionality directly into the messaging app. The initiative, developed in partnership with Sends Messenger, aims to redefine how users across the UK, Europe, Ukraine, and beyond interact with digital payments in everyday conversations.
During the Q1 2026, Sends introduced customisable digital cards for personal accounts available in Apple Wallet and Google Wallet. Giving customers more flexibility and available control over their experience with Sends is one of teams priority.
In June 2026, Sends announced the launch of Samsung Pay as a supported payment method, giving merchants access to millions of Samsung users.
With over 15 years of experience in payments and financial and technology Alona Shevtsova drives Sends’ growth into the scalable, secure, and globally, accessible financial platform.
*Sends is a trade name of SMARTFLOW PAYMENTS LIMITED, registered in England and Wales (Company No.11070048). For more information, visit sends.co .
Business
Corinthia Group’s Expansion Story Faces Scrutiny Amid Mounting Debt
A recent article in The Shift placed renewed scrutiny on International Hotel Investments (IHI), owner of the Corinthia Hotels brand, after it revealed the scale of debt now carried by one of Malta’s best-known hospitality groups.
The Maltese investigative outlet reported on 11 June that IHI had returned to the bond market while holding almost €790 million in debt. That’s a significant debt burden for any company, but for a hotel group that has spent a decade struggling to turn expansion into consistent profits, it is a clear warning sign.
These figures contradict Corinthia Group’s expansion story. Despite the company’s best efforts to maintain the appearance of continued international growth and present positive numbers in its annual financial reports, recent figures point to severe financial difficulties that cast doubt on the company’s financial health.
Corinthia’s financial annual reports: a closer examination
A closer reading of Corinthia’s public accounts suggests that the nearly €800 million debt reported on the Shift is just the tip of the iceberg. The company has reported net losses every year since at least 2014. By 2024, accumulated losses had reached €46 million. Persistent losses weaken a company’s ability to fund growth from its own operations and make it increasingly reliant on lenders, investors, and refinancing.
Corinthia’s own actions suggest those pressures were understood internally. Dividends have not been paid since 2019, an apparent recognition of the company’s financial struggles. Then in 2022, Corinthia underwent bruising cuts to staffing when the Board instructed a deliberate reduction to staffing targeted at keeping headcount at least 15% below 2019 levels.
In spite of the apparent financial reality, Corinthia’s expansion continued. New Corinthia-branded projects have been promoted all the way from Rome in Europe, through Asia, and most notably entered the market in the Middle East’s tourism capital – Dubai. Corinthia’s international expansion story is difficult to reconcile with its clear financial difficulties, raising serious questions over the financial prudence of the company’s expansion strategy.
In fact, Corinthia’s latest financial annual report shows that net debt was more than 11 times EBITDA, a level widely regarded as high by international lending standards. Put simply, the company’s borrowings appear far larger than the earnings available to support them.
Borrowing can be sensible when it funds growth that later pays for itself. But when a company is already facing consistent financial losses, every new refinancing begins to look less like confidence and more like survival. As of 2024, interest costs consumed much of the operating profit needed to service the debt, leaving Corinthia with less room for error and even fewer ways to absorb another shock.
Auditing Corinthia’s finances: cause for concern?
has previously reported that PwC’s auditors’ report does not appear to flag the near ~€800 million debt or the latest bond market return as a specific audit concern, leaving open whether investors were alerted to the scale of the risk.
The picture is therefore not simply of an ambitious hotel group temporarily carrying high debt. It is of a company that has spent years losing money, cutting dividends and staff, borrowing to keep expanding, and relying on asset revaluations to help its financial reports stay afloat. With more bonds due in 2026 and debt forecast to approach €880 million, the question is no longer whether Corinthia is expanding. It is how much longer can its financial model withstand the weight of deception
Business
Terra ingredients introduces new fonio products

In collaboration with flaxseed producer Premium Gold.
Business
10 Cybersecurity Companies Leading the Fight Against Modern Threats
Cyber attacks used to feel distant. They were something that happened to big banks or government agencies. Not anymore. Ransomware hits hospitals. Phishing emails slip into small business inboxes. Even home networks are vulnerable.
Behind the scenes, a handful of companies spend their days (and nights) trying to stay one step ahead. Here are ten cybersecurity firms that are shaping how we defend ourselves against modern threats.
1. Check Point Software Technologies
Check Point has been a leader in security for many years. That experience shows. Its firewalls and threat prevention tools sit quietly in the background of many large networks, just doing the work.
What makes Check Point different is its focus on deep, layered protection. It brings together network security, cloud security, and endpoint tools under a single management roof. That helps security teams see patterns they would otherwise miss. If you had to pick one cyber security company that understands long‑term, policy‑driven defense, Check Point would be high on the list.
2. Palo Alto Networks
Palo Alto is the name you keep hearing in serious security discussions. They helped push the idea that firewalls should understand applications and users, not just ports and IP addresses.
Today, their reach goes far beyond the data center. Cloud security, secure access for remote workers, automated response—it’s all there. Many teams like Palo Alto because its tools don’t just alert. They try to reduce noise and highlight what really matters in a messy environment.
3. CrowdStrike
If you talk to incident responders, CrowdStrike comes up quickly. Its Falcon platform lives on endpoints, laptops, servers, and cloud workloads and watches for signs of attack in real time.
CrowdStrike’s strength lies in speed. It’s built to see suspicious behavior early and shut it down fast. The company also invests heavily in threat intelligence. That research often shapes how the rest of the industry talks about new attack groups and campaigns.
4. Fortinet
Fortinet is known for blending strong security features with serious performance. Its FortiGate firewalls use custom hardware to push a lot of traffic, even when deep inspection and SSL decryption are switched on.
But Fortinet does more than perimeter firewalls. The “security fabric” idea ties together switches, access points, endpoints, and more. For organizations that want one vendor to cover a big chunk of their stack, Fortinet is a regular contender.
5. Cisco Secure
Cisco may be famous for routers and switches, but its security arm is big in its own right. Firewalls, email security, DNS protection, zero trust access—these all contribute.
The real win for Cisco customers is integration. If your network is already Cisco, the security tools can plug into the same identity and policy sources. That can make complex things like segmentation and access control a bit less painful. Not easy. Just less painful.
6. Microsoft (Defender and beyond)
For a long time, people laughed at the idea of Microsoft as a security leader. That’s changed. Completely.
Microsoft has quietly turned Windows Defender into a serious endpoint platform. It pairs that with identity protection in Entra, cloud security in Defender for Cloud, and a huge amount of telemetry from Office, Azure, and more. Because attackers often exploit Microsoft services, having the vendor itself monitoring for patterns at that scale is significant.
7. SentinelOne
SentinelOne is one of the newer endpoint security players. It focuses on using behavior and automation rather than just signatures and static rules.
The charm here is autonomy. The agent is built to make quick decisions on the device itself, even if it’s offline. It can roll back changes, isolate systems, and block processes in seconds. For understaffed teams, that kind of automation can be the difference between a small incident and a disastrous week.
8. Zscaler
Zscaler came at security from a different angle. Instead of defending a central office, it assumes people work from anywhere. Rather than pushing all traffic back to a head office, Zscaler runs a huge cloud service that sits between users and the internet.
In practice, that means secure web gateways, zero trust access to internal apps, and strong inspection without the old “VPN hairpin” headaches. As more companies go hybrid or fully remote, this model looks less like an experiment and more like the default.
9. Okta
Okta doesn’t scan packets or endpoints. Its job is identity. Who are you, and what should you be allowed to touch?
In a world full of SaaS apps, cloud consoles, and remote sign‑ins, identity has become the new perimeter. Okta’s single sign‑on and multi‑factor authentication tools help companies tighten that perimeter without tormenting users too much. When attackers steal passwords or try to move laterally inside a network, a strong identity layer makes life harder for them.
10. Cloudflare
Most people know Cloudflare for speeding up websites. It also plays a major role in security.
Cloudflare runs one of the largest global networks on the planet. It uses that to absorb DDoS attacks, filter malicious traffic, and provide secure access to internal apps without clunky VPNs. It also offers DNS filtering and email security. Because so much web traffic already flows through Cloudflare, it has a broad view of emerging attacks in the wild.
Final Words
Modern threats don’t stay still. Ransomware groups rebrand. Phishing lures get sharper. Attackers learn from each other. The companies above are in a constant race to keep up and sometimes to get ahead.
No single vendor can solve every problem. But the right mix of tools, backed by knowledgeable people, can improve your chances. In the end, that’s what matters: making it just hard enough and expensive enough that attackers decide to move on to an easier target.
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Caspian Sunrise delays 2025 results, faces trading suspension

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