What a deal could mean for the other chip stocks. Power lunch starts right now im Brian Sullivan the markets moving just enough today to give your investment dollars yet another new high, thanks to the saudi news oil is moving up again data is pushing Energy Stocks higher chevron and exxon among the dow leaders. We talked about Semiconductor Companies as well. It is fair to say that lately, it rocks sox at new alltime highs. Michael kors soaring, the fashion retailer beating earnings estimates and raising its outlook. More on that ahead and reports the Pharmaceutical Company may becoming a takeover target thank you very much im tyler mathieson. Welcome to power lunch. Target gearing up for the holiday season, announcing deeper black friday discounts and plans to open 6 00 p. M. To midnight on thanksgiving day i will be asleep staying with retail, amazon cutting prices of Third Party Products in the face of stiffer competition. And the new york fed present William Dudley plans to retire
Prince charles private estate the duchy of cornwall secretly invested in an offshore company in which a close friend was a director. Thats perfectly legal but hes been accused of a conflict of interest because he went on to campaign for International Rule changes that would have benefited the firm. The princes spokesman insists hes never chosen to speak out on a topic simply because of an investment decision. Story the Paradise Papers were shared with the International Consortium of investigativejournalists including the bbcs panorama programme. Richard bilton has this report. For years, Prince Charles has campaigned on environmental issues. This week hes in malaysia, yesterday he spent time in the rainforests of borneo. But panorama has discovered he campaigned on one issue that he secretly stood to profit from. The Paradise Papers show the prince of waless private estate, the duchy of cornwall, had 4 million in tax havens of the Cayman Islands and bermuda. This document shows 1 milli
From theresa mays cabinet. Pressure had been building on priti patel since the emergence last friday of her undisclosed meetings while on holiday in israel. But was some of that pressure imposed in an unwarranted way by the media, particularly the bbc, which broke the story . Yes, according to andy ramsbottom, who asked and keith brown thought the long predicted end came for priti patel after her hastily arranged journey home from africa, monitored at one point by 22,000 people on a flight tracking website, as shown on the bbc news channel. That prompted ian miller to tweet while a user called kubricks lens cap thought when the soon to be ex International Development secretary reached heathrow airport, the coverage switched from flight tracker to helicopter camera, and the complaints continued. Heres roy ramm it was a huge information dump, the leak of over 13 million documents, worked on for a year by almost 100 different media organisations. A lot of work clearly went into the so cal
And more than half of the news at ten was dedicated to the subject, pushing a report of the texas shooting and new allegations against damian green down the running order. On monday, there was another hour long panorama special, watched by neil spellings immediatedly following panorama was the bbc news at ten oclock. This dedicated the first half of the show, so 15 minutes, covering exactly the same topics that had just been shown immediately previous to the news by panorama. I thought it was a strange editorial decision to repeat so much content immediately adjacent to programmes, especially when the news were using the same clips of Richard Bilton doorstepping celebrities outside the studios, and with the same infographics and pretty much everything. It was like a panorama lite for 15 minutes. The Paradise Papers also led bbc one bulletins for a third night on tuesday, ahead of the death of welsh politician carl sargea nt and the ongoing travails of borisjohnson and priti patel. So w
The weekend across the southern half of the uk. Clear and bright conditions spreading from the north. Good morning. First our main story. Millions of people will fall silent today, on Armistice Day, to remember those who have lost their lives while serving in the armed forces. Its the 99th anniversary of the end of the first world war. Alexandra mackenzie is outside westminster abbey. Alexandra, whats happening today . Well, it is a rather soggy start to arms sisters Armistice Day. I am outside westminster abbey, outside the field of remembrance, where many people have brought wooden crosses and poppies, and have laid them there just outside westminster abbey. A temporary garden, where people have been able to come to remember and honour those who have died. Just about a quarter of a mile from here we have be cenotaph, which will be a real focus of the commemorations today and tomorrow. We also saw other commemorations yesterday, a commemoration of the battle of passing bell. Passchend