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Georgie Frost

This Is Money Christmas Food Special with Simon Lambert, Lee Boyce and Rich Browning

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Morning

This Is Money Christmas Food Special with Simon Lambert, Lee Boyce and Rich Browning
Joining Georgie Frost in the studio for the third annual taste test is Editor Simon Lambert, Consumer Affairs editor Lee Boyce and special guest development editor Rich Browning from the Financial Website of the Year. The team attempt to talk money matters - such as shared appreciation mortgages, a holiday Brexit tax and supermarket price wars - as they munch their way through a veritable feast of festive favourites. Who among Waitrose, Tesco, Lidl and our wildcard, will win out on taste and price, in our completely unscientific, pointless bit of seasonal fun?!
Guests:

Simon Lambert, Lee Boyce, Rich Brow, Richard Browning


Published:
Georgie Frost

Share Radio’s Senior Analyst Ed Bowsher on The News Review 16/12/16

Georgie Frost
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Morning

Share Radio’s Senior Analyst Ed Bowsher on The News Review 16/12/16
Georgie Frost is joined in the studio by Share Radio’s Senior Analyst Ed Bowsher. Today on the agenda, they discuss even more strikes, now by cleaners on Great Western Railway. Plus money wiring scams. All these stories and more on The News Review.
Guest:

Ed Bowsher


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

“We do have inflation - globally inflation has been hard to come by" - Helen Thomas

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

“We do have inflation - globally inflation has been hard to come by" - Helen Thomas
Helen Thomas, Managing Director of BlondeMoney, joined Share Radio Breakfast to offer her regular market round-up. This week, Helen discussed the Fed after the decision to raise interest rates. This before a Trump presidency, so how will the Fed operate once The Donald is in power? And do we need to get used to higher interest rates from here onwards?
Guest:

Helen Thomas


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Could the UK face a bill of £50 billion to leave the EU?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

Could the UK face a bill of £50 billion to leave the EU?
Ryan Heath, Senior EU Correspondent and Associate Editor at POLITICO Europe, joined Share Radio Breakfast to talk politics. The Daily Telegraph leads with news the UK could face a bill of £50 billion to leave the EU. Meanwhile the Financial Times says Brussels is preparing rule changes which would deprive London of one of its flagship financial businesses.
Guest:

Ryan Heath


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

November's retail sales figures - what do the numbers show?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

November's retail sales figures - what do the numbers show?
The latest retail sales data for November is in and, as widely expected, Black Friday and other retail sales days boosted the numbers. The figures are nearly 6% higher than the same period last year. But do the figures tell the whole story of what’s going on in retail, especially in light of Brexit, and with sterling in flux? Matt Cox found out more from Mintel’s Retail Analyst, Richard Perks.
Guests:

Matt Cox, Richard Perks


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

SMEs hopeful over revenue and hiring growth in 2017

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

SMEs hopeful over revenue and hiring growth in 2017
A study of how small and medium sized businesses are feeling about the future suggests revenue and hiring will accelerate in the next 12 months. That’s been revealed in an SME Growth tracker by Capital Economics. Zamir Cajee, an Amazon Marketplace user and online retailer, was involved in the survey and he joined to discuss the findings.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Zamir Cajee


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

“Rents have grown significantly above average around Crossrail 2 & HS2 stations”

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

“Rents have grown significantly above average around Crossrail 2 & HS2 stations”
There has been remarkable growth in property rental prices around the proposed new stations for HS2 and Crossrail 2. Otherwise, national rental growth has slowed. This has been revealed in Landbay's monthly Rental Index, which provides analysis of national rental growth. For more on this, the CEO and Co-Founder of Landbay, John Goodall, joined Share Radio Breakfast.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, John Goodall


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Money for local services, but no changes to tax bands – the Scottish Budget unravelled

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

Money for local services, but no changes to tax bands – the Scottish Budget unravelled
Scotland's Finance Secretary Derek Mackay has pledged a funding increase of £240m for local services as he set out his draft budget. Mr Mackay also confirmed he will not change income tax rates or bands. Those were two of the headlines from the Scottish Budget, and to bring us up to date with this, Share Radio’s Scotland Correspondent Maurice Smith joined Nigel Cassidy and Sara Sjölin.
Guests:

Sara Sjölin, Maurice


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

Does the future of green energy lie in the hands of billionaire private investors?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

Does the future of green energy lie in the hands of billionaire private investors?
High profile executives, including Microsoft's Bill Gates and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, are investing one billion dollars in a fund for clean energy tech and addressing climate change. They're being joined by others such as Amazon's Jeff Bezos and Alibaba chairman Jack Ma. They hope to increase financing to emerging energy research, and help hit emissions goals set in the Paris Summit. Dr. Charles Donovan is Director of Imperial College London's Centre for Climate Finance, and he joined Share Radio Breakfast to discuss.
Guests:

Matt Cox, Dr Charles Donovan


Published:
Nigel Cassidy

What are the consequences for Yahoo after its latest hacking revelations?

Nigel Cassidy
Original Broadcast:

Share Radio Breakfast

What are the consequences for Yahoo after its latest hacking revelations?
Internet giant Yahoo has revealed more than one billion user accounts may be affected by a hacking attack. This marks the biggest cyber hack to date, with the attack dating back to 2013. It’s separate from a data loss in 2014 when 500 million accounts were accessed. The news comes at a critical juncture for Yahoo, who is trying to sell its core businesses to the telecoms and media company Verizon. Matt Cox spoke to Peter Church, Counsel specialising in data privacy at law firm Linklaters, to find out the consequences.
Guests:

Matt Cox, Peter Church


Published: