PRESS DIGEST - Financial Times - Feb 12
Financial Times
RETAIL DATA TO DAMP PROSPECTS OF RATE CUTS
The British Retail Consortium is set to release an official report indicating high street sales were stronger than expected in January, leading to expectations the Bank of England will think again about embarking on interest rate cuts. Official reports on Monday said the price of goods leaving factories in the UK rose by 5.7 percent in the year to January. Separate trade figures show import price inflation rose by 3.5 percent in December, up from 1.9 percent in November.
TUC ACTS TO THWART US 'UNION BUSTERS'
TUC general secretary Brendan Barber has said British employers have started to hire aggressive US-style "union busting" consultants in an attempt to persuade workers against joining trade unions. The TUC and its US equivalent, the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations, will join forces to halt the efforts of employers on both sides of the Atlantic to demonise trade unions.
GRADUATE JOBS MARKET SHRINKS
A survey by Deloitte indicates the graduate recruitment market is showing signs of slowing, leading to increased competition among graduates, with a 22 percent increase in applications to its own programme. The "Big Four" professional services firm takes on 1,400 graduates and undergraduates every year in the UK, and in the past it has received ten applications for every vacancy. Deloitte opened its graduate process three months earlier than in 2006, and had received 2,400 applications by its October opening date.
FSA PRESSED TO END SECRECY ON CFD HOLDINGS
Various investment institutions in the UK have called for the Financial Services Authority to impose more straightforward rules concerning the disclosure of contracts for difference and other derivatives. These organisations have become concerned about proposals by the FSA to allow some investors safe harbour from fully disclosing their holdings of CFDs. FSA rules demand disclosure of equity stakes of more than three percent. Continued...



