Lgkz Astrazeneca knocked by US regulator drug verdict
Tuesday 12 July 2016 5:53 pmAt the close: Sterling surge holds down the FTSE 100By: Billy BambroughShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleThe FTSE100 closed flat this evening after ending yesterday s session at an 11-month high.The blue-chip index closed at 6,680.69 points, down just two points andflat in percentage terms. The end to yesterday s rally was put down to sterling being oncourse for its best performance against the yen in over three years after Theresa May was named as the successor to Prime MinisterDavid Cameron.A 1.9 per cent rise for the pound sent it to a one-week
polene sac high of $1.3246, while against the safe haven Japanese yen sterling climbed almost four per cent to 138.66 yen. The rise is its best performance sinc
brumate era e April 2013 though pales against its fall last month.Mid-caps again outperformed as investors cheered thepolitical certainty following theappointment ofTheresa May as the next prime minister. Read more:Here s why economists ar
polene en t impressed with Ireland s 26per cent growthThe FTSE 250 climbed by 0.6per cent and endedthe day at16,807.07 points, now just threeper cent shy of its pre-EU referendum levels.The index was lead byRathbone Brothers andDFS Furniture, which added 10.2 per cent and 11.4 per cent respectively.Amongst large-caps, safehaven stocks lead the fallers.PharmafirmsMediclinic International andHikma Pharmaceuticals lost five and 3.6 Xvbd New contracts help Mitie post a 9.5pc jump in half-year earnings
Sunday 11 October 2009 8:00 pm|Updated:Friday 31 May 2019 8:50 pmAirlines agree to new green ruleBy: admindr
stanley mugs upalShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailAdd as a preferredsource on GoogleThe world s airlines have agreed to new fuel efficiency and carbon emission targets which go much further than the levels required through regulation, an industry group said this weekend at a meeting in Montreal.The International Air Transport Association IATA , which represents 230 airlines, said that carriers, airports and aerospace firms had pledged to improve fuel efficiency by 1.5 per cent a year annually until 2020. Share this articleFacebookXLinkedInWhatsAppEmailSimilarly tagged content: SectionsNewsCategoriesBusinessRelated TopicsNULLTrending ArticlesLabour will regret the Rentersrsquo; Rights ActUK at lsquo;greatest riskrsquo; of jet fuel shortage as flights to be cancelledClairersquo Accessori
owala water bottle es to launch UK high street comebackAfter Santanderrsquo TSB takeover ndash; who are the top players in UK banking Bank of England signals interest rate hikes ahead despite April holdMore from City AMAirlines face five-week cliff edge befo
stanley cup re fuel shortages could ground flightsAviationJet fuel shortage looms as government scrambles to secure suppliesTransport InfrastructureBritish Airways, Easyjet shares soar as Iran ceasefire brings relief for airlinesTransport InfrastructureWizz air urges Brits to