Profile:
Full name: Margareta Pagano
Area of interest: Business and Finance
Journals/Organisation: The Independent on Sunday | The Independent
Email: m.pagano@independent.co.uk
Personal website:
Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/biography/margareta-pagano
Blog:
Representation:
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Biography:
About: http://www.nctj.com/careers/nctj-alumni/margareta-pagano
Education:
Career: Sunday Correspondent; City editor, 1989/1990; wrote for The Sunday Times and was a founding editor (in 1996) of the City newspaper and online news service Financial News, leaving in 2004; worked freelance for a range of papers, including The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Telegraph, The Guardian, The Times; joined The Independent on Sunday, as business editor, beginning of 2008
Current position/role: Business editor
- also writes/has written for: (regular contributor) The Spectator, the First Post
Other roles/Main role: business consultant
Other activities:
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Video:
Controversy/Criticism:
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Books & Debate:
Latest work:
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Debate:
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The Independent/The Independent on Sunday:
Column name: Wednesdays: Midweek View
Remit/Info: Business and finance
Section:
Role: Business editor
Pen-name:
Email: m.pagano@independent.co.uk
Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/biography/margareta-pagano
Commissioning editor:
Day published: Wednesday & Sunday
Regularity: Weekly
Column format: (usually) one lead item, plus two other
Average length:
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Articles: 2012
- Mr Facebook, who do you think you are? - An astronomical price tag for the social network but, not only does no one seem to know what it may become, it could already be on the way out - 20th May
- What's the recipe to make our teenagers fit for work? - When a top chef dismisses his trainees as 'lazy' and Pret a Manger prefers to employ immigrants, we need to find a way to get the UK's youth into jobs - 13th May
- The Cambridge phenomenon must be harnessed to inspire nation - The difference here is that there is an ecosystem in which ideas get put into practice. Everyone learns from each other - 9th May
- GOD looks odds-on to take King's mantle - The former head of the civil service has the clout in Whitehall and Threadneedle Street to become the next Bank of England Governor - 6th May
- If Hollande takes victory he will need to win Merkel over too - Hollande's first visit as president should be to Berlin to persuade Merkel that austerity alone is not enough - 2nd May
- Did Murdoch give the game away over BSkyB? - The media mogul's evidence to the Leveson inquiry on his move for the TV company showed reform is vital if future takeovers are to get a fair hearing - 29th April
- Play it again, Cam, and help small businesses to grow - TheSquare Mile: The PM needs to reconsider breaking up the banks to stop other UK firms from running into financial trouble like luxury rainwear maker Aquascutum - 22nd April
- Cuba: The second revolution? - For the first time since the 1959 coup, Cubans are able to buy and sell property, set up businesses and farm their own land. Could these new liberties signal a move towards a free-market economy? Don't count on it - 15th April
- Will pay prove to be Barclays' next 'apartheid' row? - Investors mobilise against bank's Diamond deal - 15th April
- Glaxo's £350m factory is worth cheering not jeering - The drugs giant's unveiling of its investment in Cumbria on the back of the Budget's 'patent box' tax rate is a move that should make the Chancellor proud - 25th March
- Brompton Bikes boss shows the way to get Britain moving again - George Osborne must encourage the UK's biggest companies to spend the £75bn squirrelled away on their balance sheets - 21st March
- Goldman has lost power to scare clients into deals - Broadside will hit more than the bank's share price - 18th March
- More women are appearing on boards, but that's not the end of it - What is so bizarre is the way childcare is always seen as a woman's preserve. Surely men at work are fathers too? - 14th March
- It's a shame more don't share the vision of Vince - Cable's right to care about planning for industry - 11th March
- City aims to take the Burberry catwalk to Russia - Can London's regulators tame the Moscow bear? - 26th February
- Is there a Plan B to give Greece a soft landing? - The markets stay calm as tempers flare up again - 19th February
- Banks reluctant to lend but new firms are getting out of this jam - If there's a right time to be lending to SMEs, it's now. Ironically, recessions are always a fertile time for enterprises to get going - 15th February
- Take a leaf out of Birgitte's book on quotas, Mr C - More women on UK boards can only boost profits - 12th February
- Government cannot ignore this demand to guide British industry - The Coalition has done far more than its predecessors to put manufacturing at the top of the agenda - 8th February
- The unknighting of Fred Goodwin can only be redeemed by genuine reform - Stripping Goodwin of his honour was contrary to natural justice and the least the coalition can do now is ensure our dysfunctional financial system is fixed - 5th February
- When are Cameron and Osborne going to get real and devise a proper growth policy? - The coalition needs to stop the gimmicks and the phoney war over bankers' bonuses and create a viable economic strategy - 29th January
- Straits stand-off could sink fragile growth in Europe - Midweek view: Saudi Arabia and Israel, for different reasons, hate Iran, while the US hawks want regime change in the country - 25th January
- Stargazer Cox may be the black swan to change life closer to home - The professor, whose TV show transformed our relationship with space in three days, is the inspiration that industry needs to drive more students into science - 22nd January
- It shouldn't be so taxing to bring in share ownership for the workers - Midweek view: If Nick Clegg is serious about encouraging a John Lewis-style economy and not just after a few cheap headlines, the Deputy Prime Minister needs to do a little more homework. Three telephone calls should do it - 18th January
- Tesco must decide: price or quality – or both? - Like any sensible shopper in these tough times, I plotted the Christmas food shopping with the zeal and precision of a general going to war – and 12 people feasting over three days is an expensive battle - 15th January
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Articles: 2011
- Death of the high street? No, it's the birth of the i-street - In the US, Amazon has provoked uproar with a new mobile price comparison app, Price Check, allowing customers to scan products in stores but then buy them online with the bookseller instead - 11th December
- Are we on the brink of a new European era? - All of a sudden, there's a change of mood among Continental leaders, and, maybe, some hope of a solution to the eurozone muddle - 4th December
- Osborne needs to mix magic with psychology – and a dash of anarchy - UK firms have £75bn locked away, but they're too spooked to spend it. So the Chancellor must give them the confidence to invest, or else ... - 27th November
- As Branson rocks the high street – bankers beware! - When I caught up with Sir Richard Branson on Thursday – the day Virgin Money scooped up Northern Rock – he had just stepped off a plane on the East Coast, having flown from Los Angeles where he had been partying at a Rock the Casbah charity gig - 20th November
- Italy needs a Ferrari driver in the hot seat - With talk of reform and ethical duties, Luca Cordero de Montezemolo, the car maker's boss, shows the vision his country needs - 13th November
- Is narcissism the new capitalism? - Sir Martin Sorrell's pompous defence of his £4.2m pay is almost reason enough to ban share incentives - 30th October
- St Paul's protesters should convert Cameron and UK's business leaders - Those at the top are naive if they thought that they could turn a blind eye to the aftermath of the crash and still hope to stay in control - 23rd October
- Why the 'only women in the boardroom' just don't get it - Research shows that, quite apart from 'fairness', having more females on boards boosts productivity. That's why we need fixed quotas – and quickly - 16th October
- Draghi needs a bazooka to fix the eurozone - Sometimes only a huge shock to the system will do - 9th October
- An ethical economy? Now, what says Cameron? - Ed Miliband and David Cameron both want a 'big' society. But at the moment, the PM is trying to work out how to get UK plc to spend its £50bn cash pile - 2nd October
- La recapitalisation? It's time for the French to swallow their pride - Recapitalisation is the same word in French but it's slightly prettier said with a Gallic twist; not in France, though – there it is a dirty word and only uttered with much hissing - 25th September
- Pity UBS. But it could just as easily be RBS - Governments must look again at a full break-up of the banks - 18th September
- Dyson and Portas are not the answer to our problems - Famous talking heads can't fix the economy, we need serious policies - 21st August
- Can the stock market give us the answers? - Who knows which of our business leaders the Chancellor George Osborne listens to as he looks for fresh thinking to boost growth, but he could do worse than have a chat with Xavier Rolet, the head of the London Stock Exchange - 14th August
- How to save the euro... or not - Well, it would help if Europe's leaders jetted back from their holidays to set the markets straight – pronto - 7th August
- By George, he's paralysed all of Middle England - Chancellor George Osborne has a real problem on his hands – the middle classes are not just being squeezed but are in a state of petrified paralysis - 30th July
- Has Frau Merkel become Madame Oui? - Angela Merkel showed nerves of steel at the eurozone summit last week – and earned praise from French and German press alike - 24th July
- The Murdoch cloud that hangs over News Corp - In the US they call it the "Murdoch discount". This is the amount by which US analysts reckon shares in News Corporation are depressed because of the controlling stake held by the Murdoch family - 17th July
- The Murdoch empire strikes back...but will it be enough? - In killing the 'News of the World', James Murdoch has cut off the head of the serpent, but his ruthless move still leaves News Corp's bid for BSkyB in doubt - 10th July
- Eastward ho! Go on LSE, carve out a new silk route - I'm not at all surprised or the least bit disappointed that London Stock Exchange's attempt to buy Canada's TMX stock exchange has fallen through - 3rd July
- Why Osborne rushed to back ring fencing - So why did George Osborne choose his Mansion House speech to back the "ring- fencing" proposals for reforming the banks which have been recommended by the Independent Commission on Banking in its interim report? - 26th June
- Get Sugar off TV and Dyson into our classrooms - It's fantastic news that BMW is investing another £500m to build the next generation of Minis, a move that will protect 5,000 jobs for many years - 12th June
- Merkel is smart to say 'nein danke' to nuclear - What amazes me most about the reception given to Chancellor Angela Merkel's historic decision to abandon nuclear energy is the way so many commentators have mocked the move as "political" - 5th June
- British racing is saved – no thanks to banks - Everyone who is anyone in British motorsport was at the recent opening of the Silverstone Wing - 29th May
- Should we care about all these alpha males? - What a week it's been for alpha males behaving badly - 22nd May
- How does it feel to be Glencore's $10bn man? - The question I just had to ask Ivan Glasenberg, chief executive of Glencore International, when we chatted last week was what it feels like to be worth $10bn – the amount he'll be valued at on paper when the mining giant floats next week - 16th May
- Dudley's fish is on the hook, but can he land it? - An old Russian proverb says any fish is good if it is on the hook - 8th May
- Ready, steady...the online gold rush is set to go - Precious-metals 'shop' expects explosive demand - 24th April
- Bad news for BP signals a good time to buy - BP's latest imbroglio reminds me of a horribly messy divorce in which two head-strong partners fight bitterly over who gets the goods - 17th April
- This is the biggest test yet for the coalition - George Osborne's political antennae are working overtime. Via Budapest, where he is attending the Ecofin meeting, the Chancellor has made it clear that he welcomes the Vickers report on British banking even though the rest of the world will not read it until tomorrow morning - 10th April
- Why winners should not be able to take all - Irene Rosenfeld, chairman and chief executive of Kraft, is being paid a $2.1m (£1.3m) cash award for her work last year. But that's only the icing on the cake: her total pay is a whopping $19.3m - 3rd April
- A good Budget – but is Osborne missing a trick? - Everyone seems to agree that while this was a boring Budget, it is one which will turn out to be a bonanza for business - 27th March
- Is the nuclear industry dead and buried? - Japan's crisis changes the sector for ever - 20th March
- Is confidence being damaged by the BBC? - Every morning last week, the BBC led news programmes on television and radio with stories of more government cuts - 13th March
- Cameron shoots himself in the UK-armed foot - What a surreal week it has been. It began with those pictures of David Cameron striding through Cairo's Tahrir Square flanked by businessmen from his 36-strong caravan with whom he toured the Gulf to promote British trade - 27th February
- Davies: I didn't know women had it so tough - When I met Lord Davies of Abersoch at the Department of Business last week to talk about his plans to get more women to the top of UK companies, I asked what had pleased him most about his six-month inquiry - 20th February
- What are the business ethics of revolution 2.0? - Google backed an employee's role in Egypt's protests, but mobile firms and ISPs simply obeyed government orders to shut down - 12th February
- NB all politicians: Pfizer's closure is an opportunity... - The political capital being made out of Pfizer's decision to close its Sandwich plant, with the loss of 2,400 jobs, is shameful - 6th February
- WH Smith's investors are right to revolt - Whenever I venture into a WH Smith shop, my heart sinks as the assistants are so miserable, their service sloppy and finding even the plainest of envelopes is a chore - 30th January
- Balls will scare Miliband more than the Tories -T he 'light touch' adviser now poses a heavy threat - 23rd January
- Radical reform is the only way to save banking - The last time I met Professor Larry Kotlikoff was over dinner at the London School of Economics nearly a year ago, after he gave his first riveting lecture in Britain explaining why he's so convinced the financial system needs drastic reform - 16th January
- Stop blaming the weather and get your thermals on - The winners and losers on the high street - 9th January
- It's time to bring in the quotas; 20 years on, it's still a man's world - When Kathleen O'Donovan became the first female finance director of a FTSE 100 company nearly 20 years ago, her new job made the front pages - 2nd January
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Articles: 2010
- Fairness is the only way to reform our tax - Something is deeply disturbing about a government which steam-rollers controversial changes to higher education funding through yet shows no inclination to reform regulations which allow British companies to avoid millions in tax - 26th December
- The inconvenient truth about bankers - If the coalition is to find a way to waltz out of the bonus row, it needs somehow to execute a high kick clothed in a soft shoe - 19th December
- The fat banker and his HK$1m bet - Publish and be damned: The Government should make public the FSA's report into the Royal Bank of Scotland collapse - 12th December
- Attack-dog Blanchflower needs leashing - The TV and radio soundbites are too short to give the proper context to Professor David Blanchflower's inflammatory outpourings against Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England - 5th December
- Happiness, Mr Cameron, is a new British Rail - Privatisation produced complication not competition. It let commuters down - 28th November
- Quotas for women! Why their time has come - France's Finance Minister was set against forcing firms to put more females on their boards, but she has changed her mind – and with good reason - 21st November
- How to boost housing? Ask the boy from Bovis - David Ritchie, the chief executive of Bovis Homes, is not sure whether to laugh or cry - 31st October
- If Osborne is clever, he'll spread a little sunshine - The Chancellor's cuts have been broadly well-received by business, but now he must prove he is more than just a slasher and help regions most in need - 24th October
- Mr Osborne: You must heed the danger of division - A 1920s Steiff Harlequin teddy bear – being sold by a disgraced hedge fund manager – was bought for £46,850 at Christie's last Wednesday while the whole teddy collection fetched more than £1m - 17th October
- There's an art to funding science after the cuts - And the Rolls-Royce prize points the way - 10th October
- City has its own good reasons for backing 'Red' Ed - If City bankers had been voting for the Labour leadership, Ed Miliband would have beaten his brother with a proper grown-up majority rather than the tiny 1.3 percentage points he managed - 3rd October
- Cable talks like Robespierre – but he's in danger of turning into Mr Prescott - When the historians come to write up their accounts of the Great Recession, it may be that the events of last week prove to be the most momentous since the financial crash two years ago - 26th September
- Sir Stuart's rosy future will smell as sweet - You know people are really famous when they are known by their first names only - 19th September
- Will Barclays become the Diamond Bank? - Thousands of words have been written about the elevation of Bob Diamond to the top job at Barclays last week, ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous – but I'm not sure any of us are any wiser about its real significance, either to the future of the bank or, indeed, the future of the banking industry - 12th September
- It's guilt for dinner – served up by the jilted young - There's a new and noisy book just out which you must read to discover why the young and the old are shouting at each other over the supper table in a way I've not heard since those great divides over drugs'n'rock'n'roll or even the Iraq invasion - 5th September
- Don't even think about banning the right to strike - Unions and bosses should work together to keep jobs - 8th August
- Just wait till Mervyn gets his cricket bat out - Governor is livid at banks' 'heart-breaking' behaviour - 1st August
- Time for a credit squeeze on big takeover bids - Lend to small businesses, not predators on the prowl - 25th July
- Was I right about the Ocado listing? I was – and how - When is a float not a float? When it's a rights issue by an outfit whose founding investors are fleeing - 18th July
- So, our banking system is in rehab – but will it work? Reforming our high-street highwaymen is no easy task - 11th July
- UK bosses sip champagne with hope in their hearts – but concern in their minds - Industrialists turn out in force for The Spectator's annual bash, but beneath the fun there lurks a more sombre mood - 4th July
- Gold should be like Martini; anytime, anyplace, anywhere - Tricky times mean the precious metal is hard to find - 27th June
- How far do we have to drill to find BP's chairman? - Carl-Henric Svanberg is conspicuous by his absence as his company faces disaster - 6th June
- AIA deal: The Pru can pull it off if the price is right - If Thiam strikes a bargain, he could yet get green light - 30th May
- Merkel needs a new back-up plan to save the euro - Damned if she does, and damned if she doesn't. You can't help but feel sympathy for Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, as she tries to hold together the euro and her voters - 23rd May
- We need Roubini's brains if we want banking reform -The Government should listen to Dr Doom - 16th May
- A hung parliament just might be the best thing all round - After all, most of the world's triple-A rated countries are ruled by coalitions - 9th May
- Merkel is caught on the horns of a Greek dilemma - Chancellor faces an imminent election – and an unpopular bail-out decision - 2nd May
- Politicians need to grow a spine and sort out the banks - Banker-bashing has worked and the exodus has begun - 25th April
- How the Tories' NI plans play at the Dog & Whistle - Labour's 1 per cent rise is seen as a tax on jobs - 11th April
- Three shocks for the world's big carmakers - Two big events last week on opposite sides of the world will shake up the car industry forever, but the way we drive is likely to change most dramatically due to a third, quieter upheaval - 4th April
- No encores for this sourpuss in Boots - Television sting shows how proud Patricia Hewitt is of her lobbying skills. It's time MPs minded their own business - 28th March
- No rider should be heavier than his horse, Darling - Chancellor's Budget must stimulate jobs as well - 21st March
- Why John Lewis's Andy is streets ahead - The best moment in the first part of BBC's new fly-on-the-wall series, Inside John Lewis, shown last week, was hearing the managing director, Andy Street, explain why he didn't mind not being paid the millions he could earn if he were working elsewhere on the high street - 14th March
- Going mutual paid off at Spain's top football clubs - It's not just the brilliance of the footballers at Real Madrid and Barcelona that British clubs should be looking to for inspiration but the way the Spanish teams are run. Both are mutual organisations, owned by their supporters who are responsible for electing management - 7th March
- Condemn the politicians for RBS's bonuses - If you haven't bumped into any bankers at dinner parties recently it's not because they daren't go out but because they have invented new jobs. Some call themselves analysts, others whisper they are in financial research - 28th February
- Big Bang: The unintended consequences - Turning super-rich US lending banks loose in the UK led to catastrophic takeovers – let's return to good old Eighties M&As - 21st February
- Is the Big Beast about to oust Bullingdon Boy? - Latest Westminster rumour gains currency in the City - 14th February
- Stock markets declare war on the politicians - Optimistic investors force governments to act - 7th February
- Scarier than any Stephen King story - Our huckster-driven banking systems will plunge us into a horror of a crisis, warns a US professor – but, he says, he can fix it - 31st January
- Obama's dreams of the future deserve support - Volcker's ideas just need a little more beef - 24th January
- Is it soft-centred to want Cadbury to stay British? - The French would pull up the drawbridge in a flash - 17th January
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Articles: 2009
- Thatcher got it wrong. Blair and Brown did too. Can Cameron get it right? - The problem was Britain's plunge into industrial chaos in the 1970s, which then prime minister Thatcher thought was due to bolshy trade unions and rigid work practices - 20th December
- Should they stay or should they go? - Chancellor Alistair Darling's punitive PBR has provoked a fightback by the Square Mile and could even lead to a new brain drain - 13th December
- Does the brand maketh the sportsman? - Shareholders are starting to ask if the superstars they fund so lavishly are really good for business - 6th December
- No one should feel sorry for the Dubai speculators - The celebrities broke the first principle of investing - 29th November
- Is our shareholder democracy all it's cracked up to be? - The Kraft-Cadbury takeover battle raises questions - 22nd November
- It's been a long haul for BA and Iberia, but now they must avoid a crash landing at the altar - Before the Anglo-Spanish wedding, Walsh faces a £3bn-plus pension deficit, hostile unions and a quandary – what will the new airline be like - 15th November
- Even at an Aldi discount, Lloyds is still a gamble - It's hard to believe our banks were the envy of Europe - 8th November
- £7,000 for a banker's wife's frock? Oh, please - WAG-chat in a Kensington café shows what's so wrong with banks and bonuses - 25th October
- Raise the school age to six to boost British literacy - Business chiefs are right to whip up schools debate - 18th October
- The money men have already priced in a Tory victory - The City's big hitters are happy with the more mature George Osborne, but to win a big majority his party will have to address small business and manufacturing - 11th October
- We need clean exporters: BAE should do a deal - Serious Fraud Office is right to pursue arms company - 4th October
- Obama's 'snub' shows Britain is now Continental - One thing is clear – Europe needs to hear the UK - 27th September
- Gird your loins, Dave – or face a real EU car crash - Tory leader should brace up and read Booker contender 'Wolf Hall' for a lesson on how not to deal with Europe - 20th September
- Lehman's legacy is not just about money, it's also about character - It's taken a TV account to show us that, as the world teetered on the edge, it came down to a bare-knuckle fight between egomaniacs - 13th September
- G20 spin? Ignore it, the real story is in a small Swiss town - It's the FSB in Basel that has the clout on bankers' pay - 6th September
- To nationalise or not – that's a tricky question - Banks just won't lend, so what's a Chancellor to do? - 23rd August
- Obama's nod to the new global superpower - 'Please be nice to us' was the subtext of the President's words as China begins to challenge the West's domination of the world - 2nd August
- Sex and sexism in the City? Let's hear what the men, as well as the women, have to say - Are women wimps? Are men misogynists? The Treasury hearings will decide, or we could just ask Sweaty Betty, Hosepipe and Anne Boleyn - 26th July
- A century on and Macmillan could inspire a route to bridge the capital gap - How about this for Groundhog day: "By the end of World War 1 successive merger waves had produced an oligopolistic, tightly cartelized, English banking system - 26th July
- Dear Sir David ... the only code our boardrooms need is a code of honour - Britain's boardrooms will soon have as many codes to break as GCHQ - 19th July
- This Pi man is no square, and he's livid over EU rules - 'Parts of UK financial industry could be decimated' - 12th July
- Is Bullingdon Man the perfect City reformer? - The other day I had lunch (okay, a sandwich) with someone who was close to Gordon Brown and Tony Blair at the beginning of their reign, and she remembers that even then they would discuss their future after politics - 5th July
- So what does BP's choice of chief say about us Brits? - Svanberg highlights a sad dearth of home talent - 28th June
- King kicks like Le Tissier, but will he score a goal? - In the end – and thank goodness – it is the historians, not the professional commentariat, the lobby-fed hacks, the passing-through politicians, the careerist civil servants or some of the clowns masquerading as experts, who will get to decide the heroes and the villains of the 2009 financial crisis - 21st June
- Our brilliant City financiers? They're all tarts at heart - One of the City's most blue-blooded stockbrokers once told me there is a simple reason why London has been the hub of global finance for more than 300 years – British financiers are brilliant hustlers - 14th June
- Why has Sir Alan been hired as 'enterprise tsar'? - My list of business people to advise companies would not include Sugar - 8th June
- More balls, please, at the Treasury - With the economy in such a shocking state, Labour's only hope is a sharp U-turn on public spending – but does it dare? - 7th June
- Broken and broken-up – GM may need more than a loan - We have coughed up for the banks, so why not for our auto industry? - 1st June
- Corporate Britain is just as bad as Westminster - Executives' bonuses, MPs' expenses – same thing - 31st May
- Our votes are the only way to make Europe work for us - Politicians need to catch up with cross-border firms - 17th May
- Harman's call for more women at the top is bang-on - They're talented and represent half the population. Is there a better reason for putting them on the board? - 10th May
- Hedgies don't deserve to be hunted to death - Once again, the Brussels bureaucrats have got the wrong enemy with their latest attack on the hedge fund and private equity industries - 3rd May
- Now's the time for Cameron to set the battle lines - Tories need to take on Brown the class warrior - 26th April
- McBride and friends are why I could not stand as an MP - The people I talk to aren’t apathetic about politics – they are apoplectic - 13th April
- Move over, Darling - here's your Budget - With just 10 days to go, and after intensive discussions with my local newsagent and other top industrialists, please accept my advice - 12th April
- Tidjane Thiam: Pru's international man of finance - It doesn't matter if he's black or white, the insurer's new – and French-educated – boss joins a cosmopolitan club of FTSE 100 chiefs - 22nd March
- A recession made for Sir Alan Sugar - Tougher times bring out the pioneer in people - 18th March
- Memo to Sants - don't unleash a mad-dog regulator - FSA should focus on putting principles into practice - 15th March
- Fraud Office probe is the only way to rebuild confidence - We can't rely on anyone else to sort out the banks - 1st March
- Wall Street must wait for the Messiah to speak - Markets look for a miracle from Obama's government - 22nd February
- Blame Brown: Revenge of the whistleblower - A former HBOS executive says he has documents that prove the Prime Minister must take responsibility for the mess in the markets - 15th February (with Jane Merrick)
- The new reality and the nuclear option for banks - Dabbling in investment and broking has to stop - 15th February
- This time we must listen to the black swan - Nassim Nicholas Taleb is making ripples again. The brilliant author of The Black Swan has set up a petition on his Facebook page calling on the US government to force bankers to give back their bonuses - 8th February
- Obama is the one to lead us out of this mess - British leaders should follow the US President's example - 1st February
- Is the IMF the only answer for a bankrupt Britain? - Was David Cameron being mischievous when he warned that Britain may have to go to the International Monetary Fund to rescue the economy or is it a real possibility? - 25th January
- Europe will not allow a modern Greek tragedy - The richer EU states will bail out their southern peer - 18th January
- This is not just an excuse - it's an M&S excuse - Rose is unlikely to be the only boss to use the recession to hide poor management decisions - 11th January
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Articles: 2008
- The super-rich still rule our economy - In this season of grand and gloomy forecasts, retail experts are unusually united in predicting carnage on the high street but they are slower to agree about the future of shopping for the super rich - 29th December 2008
- From rollercoaster to helter-skelter - Stock markets set to tumble again, sterling braced for a battering, but it's not – quite – all doom and gloom - 28th December 2008
- The age of greed embodied by Madoff's victims - 21st December 2008 (Summary of Bernard Madoff news articles here)
- Old King Coal deserves a new coronation - Arthur Scargill may have been a dinosaur when it came to restructuring his industry but he was a trailblazer in recognising the importance of coal to the economy - 14th December 2008
- Why Gordon Brown will eat his wife's hat - Essex and HSBC show alternative microcredit ideas - 7th December 2008
- We need equity to become equitable - People who buy shares are taxed more than if they go to the dogs - 1st December 2008
- Male egos, move over, women are retail's best hope - Female chiefs show they're in touch with shoppers - 30th November 2008
- Help small firms. Tax cuts won't even be a short-term fix - The Government must boost the real economy - 23rd November 2008
- We could come out of this crisis in much better shape - 16th November 2008
- No ifs or butts: Obama has to stick to his guns - 9th November 2008
- The Bank can do its job. What about the rest of them? - We should focus on lending and the national debt - 26th October 2008
- Let's beef up the Old Lady. The FSA is a lightweight - Tory proposals for a renewed Bank of England role in City regulation are a good starting point for change - 19th October 2008
- These bankers don't deserve to keep their jobs - 12th October 2008
- Will China tip the US 'balance of financial terror'? - Ultimately, it is the Chinese and Middle Eastern governments – and their taxpayers, which will decide the fate of the biggest financial rescue plan in history - 5th October 2008
- It's hero to zero as Paulson's own stock takes a dive - Critics let rip over Treasury Secretary's handling of money meltdown as Congress mulls $700bn rescue - 28th September 2008 (see also Paulson and Bernanke savaged over bailout plan)
- Has Sir Victor's deal of a lifetime given the markets a lifeline? - Now the Lloyds chairman must make the HBOS takeover work - 21st September 2008
- The last thing our housing market needs is to be propped up - Mervyn King should be congratulated for refusing to bail out lenders - 14th September 2008
- You're not 'super rich' on £100,000, but the TUC has a point on tax - 7th September 2008
- The battering taken by BAA is enough to give any chairman air rage - The Competition Commission's report is ill timed and ill conceived, blaming the airports authority for a situation beyond its control - 24th August 2008
- His holiday's cancelled. But Zapatero has more important things to do - Spanish PM hopes tax breaks and housing loans will prevent recession - 17th August 2008
- If Jobs is a genius, why isn't he talking about Apple's succession? - The group's shares are too vulnerable to fears for the founder's health - 27th July 2008
- Hank the Hammer - the superhero who saved the US from meltdown - It's Paulson to the rescue again, averting the Freddie and Fannie crisis - 20th July 2008
- A capital crunch is coming if cash calls aren't speeded up - The Treasury must grasp the nettle if the City is to keep its reputation - 13th July 2008
- Financial experts are eating humble pie – as well as cheap risotto - 6th July 2008
- Qatar is the new Venice and London has missed the boat - After losing out on a partnership deal, the LSE could fall prey to the ambitious emirate - 29th June 2008
- Swap the Deutschmark for the euro and it feels like 1987 all over again - A rate rise in Europe could soon trigger the next Black Monday - 22nd June 2008
- Yes, it’s a crisis – but liquid gold will also oil the wheels of invention - Whatever the price of a barrel, the car industry is set to change for ever - 15th June 2008
- The English gentlemen failed at B&B. But can the Texans succeed? - It beggars belief that management didn't realise how bad things were - 8th June 2008
- Eco-warriors couldn't do it, but the black stuff might consign the car to history - The combustion engine won't be economic if people can't afford petrol - 25th May 2008
- It's musical chairs on the exchanges and Clara Furse must be the conductor - 18th May 2008
- Carphone Warehouse's US connections ring all the right bells for Dunstone - Best Buy deal to 'revolutionise' European electronics retailing - 11th May 2008
- New Beowulf takesa swipe at the City'sover-paid dragons - Mervyn King, the Governor of the Bank of England, is in danger of becoming a hero, a Beowulf for our times - 4th May 2008
- All that glisters in the deep gloom of the global markets is gold - 27th April 2008
- Arrogance got Sir Fred into this mess. The herd instinct could get him out - The RBS boss's decision to raise the final dividend to shareholders beggars belief. But he still might be able to salvage his reputation - 20th April 2008
- The runners in the race for the White House should stop and listen to Soros - The financier's proposals for sorting out the credit crisis and staving off meltdown in the housing market need to be taken seriously - 13th April 2008
- Besmirched by sub-prime, UBS is in no position to ignore Luqman's letter - As a former chief executive of the Swiss bank, the Olivant financier is well qualified to put together a rescue plan – and his timing is perfect - 6th April 2008
- Can the Nicky Clarke of Threadneedle Street snip his way out of this credit crisis? - It's gridlock in the lending market and Mervyn King wants to get things moving. One option is for the Bank of England to do some 'haircutting' - 30th March 2008
- A long weekend off is just what the markets need - 23rd March 2008
- Like an angst-filled arthouse movie. But the banks could give us a happy ending - Maybe shocks to the system are needed to get confidence going again - 16th March 2008
- Let them eat scallops - the Tories find they're guests of honour in the City - Square Mile warms to Conservatives as Darling courts cold shoulder - 9th March 2008
- Would Gordon Brown have taxed Einstein too? - 24th February 2008
- There's no gain, just pain – you can bank on it - 3rd Febuary 2008
- Savage for SocGen and a slap in the Fed's face - 27th January 2008
- For Labour's sake, it must try to sell the Rock - 20th January 2008
- Osborne's chance to scrap our Soviet rules - 13th January 2008
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