Could be under threat. Let us know, do you buy fair trade goods to do good or really just to feel good . Just use the hashtag bbcbizlive. Hello and welcome to Business Live. The Japanese Company behind the biggest recall in Car Making History has filed for bankruptcy. Takatas airbags were first found to be faulty in 200a. They were used by 13 of the worlds biggest car makers who have all agreed to Bankruptcy Proceedings in courts in both tokyo and the us. This ceo ta kata this ceo takata said this morning he would step down. Worldwide more than 100 million takata airbags, which can rupture with deadly force and spray shrapnel at passengers, have been recalled. The faulty airbags have been linked to at least 17 deaths and more than 100 injuries worldwide. Its all been an expensive saga. 9 billion is the estimated cost according to japans nikkei newspaper. The firm key Safety Systems has now bought all of takatas assets except those relating to the faulty airbags for almost 1. 6 billion.
Shark in majorca sends out of the sea. Good morning. Its monday 26th june. Im joanna gosling. Welcome to bbc Newsroom Live. A deal between the conservatives and the Democratic Unionist Party to support theresa mays Minority Government in parliament is expected to be announced very shortly. The Prime Minister is meeting senior dup figures inside Downing Street now, to finalise the details for a so called Confidence And Supply arrangement under which the dups ten mps will vote with the 317 conservatives to form a majority in the House Of Commons. We will bring you the latest on those talks. Lets go to chris mason in Downing Street. What are you expecting . Well, they arrived, the dup, around 15 or 20 minutes ago, greeted by the Prime Minister on the steps of Downing Street. Lots of beaming smiles on the expectation is that we should get details pretty soon, that we should get details pretty 0011, once that we should get details pretty soon, once that meeting breaks up, as do the exact na
The Pound New Zealand Dollar (GBP/NZD) exchange rate traded broadly higher last week, despite hawkish commentary from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ), as UK inflation printed above expectations.