The focus shifting from Central Banks back to trade ahead of the g20. President Trumps Administration up in the antiby blacklisting another five chinese tech companies. Yvonne perhaps dampening the prospects of getting any kind of deal at the g20. Seems like when it comes to the oil market this escalation of tensions with iran, it perhaps is offsetting what we saw last week on the markets. A lot of uncertainty on the geopolitical front. David on one hand you have that of grants. Terms great headline here out of bank of america. They released her latest report. G20 plus fmoc equals perhaps a good formula for ef. We are flat on the benchmark. Coming off three weeks of gains for global stocks. Four weeks of gains. Study in the treasury market. Flip the boards and look at where we are on the currency markets. Also on china. Where are we here . I am looking at a lot of the pairs. Dollar is still on the back foot. South korean yuan topping the list earlier. Looks like we will have a mediocre
more surplus food to those in need after a drop off in donations as the cost of living crisis bites. and the british built space rover looking for work after its mission to mars was cancelled. good afternoon. the prime minister has refused to rule out a real terms cut in benefits, despite growing pressure to do so. liz truss faces a fresh battle with some conservative mps who want her to promise welfare payments will rise in line with inflation rather than earnings a lower percentage figure that would save the government billions of pounds. there s already a cabinet split on the issue the leader of the commons, penny morduant, has openly demanded that benefits do go up in line with prices. this morning, the prime minister told the bbc she would still like to see the rate of tax paid by the highest earners to be lower, despite ditching her plan to do just that only yesterday. iain watson reports from the conservative party conference. it s tin hat time for liz truss. she a
i don t even know how they do it the patients, i mean. i don t know how they cope. it was almost like a solitary confinement prisoner. a very basic daily life. i do believe tony was probably the loneliest person living in that hospital. tony will always struggle to cope in a world which often struggles to cope with autism, but from november a specially trained care team will support him in his own home, a short drive from his family. you know, we know it s going to be small wins for tony, and we ll celebrate those little successes. tony loves being here on the beach, going for a walk, and if he continues to do that in his home town, then he ll be happy. authorities admit £11 million has been spent by the nhs keeping tony detained, against his wishes, his parents wishes and, since 2013, the professional opinion of psychiatrists. but community care has to be paid for by local authorities,