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Monday newspaper round-up: Tate & Lyle, economic growth, Network Rail, United Utilities, EU

Mon, 26th Apr 2021 07:26

(Sharecast News) - Tate & Lyle is in talks over the sale of its industrial ingredients business as the 160-year-old British food manufacturing group mulls a sweeping overhaul. The FTSE 250 company has confirmed that it has begun discussions with "potential new partners" interested in acquiring a controlling stake in its American-focused primary products division, paving the way for a separation of its sprawling empire. - The Times

Britain's economy is forecast to grow at the fastest rate since the second world war this year after businesses adapted better to coronavirus restrictions and consumer spending booms as lockdown measures are relaxed. With businesses and households preparing for looser controls this spring, the EY Item Club said it had upgraded its growth forecasts for 2021 after a stronger start to the year than expected and as rapid progress with the vaccine programme enables a swift return to relative normality. - Guardian

Ministers have launched a £1bn auction for thousands of miles of phone lines running alongside Britain's railways, in a move they hope will improve train services while boosting broadband speeds for millions of homes. Private sector bidders will have the chance to upgrade 10,000 miles of cables, while also building 250 new mobile phone masts close to train lines. The investment could help the Government meet its commitments to drastically improve rural broadband and eradicate so-called 5G "notspots". - Telegraph

Investors are expecting higher dividends and a wave of share buybacks as companies which successfully shored up their profits during the pandemic prepare to share the spoils. Payouts have declined at their slowest pace since the onset of the Covid-19 crisis while Britain's economy emerges from lockdown, signalling a brighter outlook for shareholders after boardrooms battened down the hatches last spring. - The Times

Solar projects commissioned by the Ministry of Defence, the government's Coal Authority, United Utilities and some of the UK's biggest renewable energy developers are using panels made by Chinese solar companies accused of exploiting forced labour camps in Xinjiang province, a Guardian investigation has found. Confidential industry data suggests that up to 40% of the UK's solar farms were built using panels manufactured by China's biggest solar panel companies, including Jinko Solar, JA Solar and Trina Solar. - Guardian

The European Union will climb down and agree a post-Brexit deal on financial services because the bloc "needs London", PwC has predicted. John Garvey, global head of financial services at the consulting firm, said that although any agreement is unlikely to happen in the short term, there will come a point when the EU realises a deal is in its own interests. - Telegraph

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