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Two trade deals and a rate cut in one week … are things looking up for UK plc?

about 17 hours ago
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You wait three years for a trade deal and then two come along at once.As of Monday, the UK had not announced a free trade agreement since 2022, when Boris Johnson’s government signed one with New Zealand, ranked 52nd among global economies.By the end of a week foreshortened by the bank holiday, and which began with Donald Trump dropping a tariff bombshell on the British film industry, the government had unveiled a deal with India, as well as a more nebulous framework deal with the US, the fourth-largest and largest economies, respectively.Sandwiched in between the two announcements was an interest rate cut from the Bank of England, making it cheaper for UK businesses to borrow money to invest in the growth that the Labour government is so desperately chasing.Looking forward, opponents of tariff barriers are now crossing their fingers for a thawing of relations between the US and China, which would avert broader ripple effects depressing UK growth.

The US deal also appears to have left the way clear for Starmer to seek stronger economic ties with the EU, another potential lever to boost economic output.Speaking on Thursday, after staging a transatlantic conference call with Trump, the prime minister hailed a “fantastic, historic day”.But have the events of this week really moved the dial for UK plc and the prospects for Britain’s lacklustre economic growth?David Henig, director of UK trade policy at the thinktank European Centre for International Political Economy, was a little more circumspect.“It’s middling,” he said, referring to the combined effect of the week’s trade announcements.“None of this is economically transformational but was anything you could have done ever going to be?”“It’s very Starmerish.

It’s 1-0 to the Arsenal.”Henig’s assessment, via a footballing analogy, is typical of the broader reaction from economists and businesses: positive but muted.The impact on growth is “likely to be very small”, said Ben Caswell, senior economist at the National Institute of Economic and Social Research, but should fuel business confidence.The FTSE 100 offers one bellwether of the mood among those with money riding on it.The Trump-Starmer announcement took place on Thursday as trading on the London market was nearing a close, giving investors relatively little time to digest it.

There were some obvious winners straight away.Shares in the luxury carmaker Aston Martin soared as Trump confirmed that the tariff on UK vehicles, which was scheduled to rise to 27.5%, would instead be set at 10%.That is also a fillip for the UK’s biggest car exporter, Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), whose Solihull plant was apparently chosen as the venue for Starmer’s press conference for that very reason.The UK ambassador to the US, Peter Mandelson, in an interview with CNN on Thursday, suggested the deal had persuaded JLR to change its mind about planned redundancies.

“This deal has saved those jobs,” he said.“That’s a pretty big achievement, in my view, and I’m very pleased that the president has signed it.”The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders hailed the dissipation of a “severe and immediate threat”.However, tariffs on UK cars will still be four times the 2.5% they were before Trump’s “liberation day” tariff frenzy, while the lower rate will only apply to the first 100,000 exports, in effect capping the flow of British marques into the US at just below the 102,000 level achieved last year.

Rolls-Royce was another obvious beneficiary after UK negotiators secured an exemption for its engines, used on Boeing 787 passenger jets.The fragile British steel industry also appears likely to benefit from a cooperation agreement, although details are sketchy at present.Trump also indicated preferential treatment for the UK’s pharmaceutical industry, which exports £8.8bn a year to the US.On Friday morning, after investors had slept on it, firms with a US presence continued to make gains.

“The FTSE 100 top risers’ list was full of UK-listed stocks that do business in the US, such as retailer JD Sports, rat catcher Rentokil and industrial groups Smiths [Group] and Spirax,” said Russ Mould, investment director at the stockbroker AJ Bell.However, more than 280 UK-listed companies have so far issued warnings about the impact of tariffs, according to investment firm Bowmore Wealth.Most of those are still facing up to the reality of a 10% tariff on exports to the US that did not exist just six months ago, or the collateral damage from the wider continuing trade war.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionOf the two agreements with India and the US, only the former is a full trade deal at this stage.Anna Leach, chief economist at the Institute of Directors, said: “The potential from India’s growing demand for consumer goods and services is huge.

”Henig thinks the agreement with India, which ministers said could add £4.8bn to the UK economy by 2040, offers the more reliable boost, albeit a “slow burn”.“It’s a hope in the future that you can build on what’s there.The US deal is stemming the damage of something that was going to happen.”The stock market also offered insight into potential beneficiaries of improved relations with New Delhi.

With tariffs on whisky and gin scheduled to be heavily cut, the spirit-maker Diageo climbed by 1.8% after the India deal was announced, while the Scotch Whisky Association hailed a “transformation” agreement that it said offered the chance to increase whisky exports to India by £1bn over the next five years, creating 1,200 jobs.But the trade body grew a little more sober with every passing minute of the US-UK press conference, as Scotch, which accounts for 2% of UK exports to the US, failed to be mentioned.While the twin trade agreements offered some respite from the turmoil ushered in by Trump’s penchant for tariffs, the pervading atmosphere of uncertainty remains.On Thursday, after a run of disappointing economic data that has only darkened the mood, the Bank of England intervened in an effort to lift the gloom.

Its policymakers have cut interest rates by a quarter point to 4.25% to cushion the UK economy against the impact of rising economic uncertainty.Having already cut forecasts, they warned that the UK economy would slow by a further 0.3% over the next three years and stagnate for the rest of 2025.There are reasons to be cheerful.

The rate cut heralds cheaper borrowing costs for businesses and homeowners, while falling global oil prices mean lower prices at the pump for motorists.On the unfolding trade picture, Liam Byrne, chair of the business select committee, said the US agreement “does not compromise our ability to pursue a big, bold reset with the EU” before a 19 May summit with the trading bloc, the UK’s biggest trading partner.The US and China are also heading for trade talks this weekend, with any rapprochement that cools their escalating tariff war likely to have positive knock-on effects for all large economies.Henig believes the big win from this week is more in the mood music than the nitty-gritty of announcements on beef, steel or cars.“It’s not in the deals, it’s in attracting inward investment by showing the UK as a good place to do business.

“One of the ways you do that is by showing that you have a government able to do deals.All of this is a bit tentative but we were coming from a time of boosterish nonsense saying we’re going to change the world through free trade deals.That was never going to happen.”Leach called on the government to now focus on policy to complement Starmer’s deal-making, highlighting opportunities such as the spending review, industrial strategy and 10-year infrastructure plans.“Removing barriers to growth and investment from excessive regulation – particularly via the planning system – is the big opportunity to get the UK on to a firmer platform for growth and prosperity,” she said.

Tina McKenzie, policy chair of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: “Small business confidence may have edged up this quarter, but it’s still stuck in the deep red.The chancellor must use the autumn budget to reform business rates, while the small business strategy must finally fix the pervasive issue of late payments.”
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UNC says Bill Belichick’s girlfriend still welcome at school despite reports

The University of North Carolina on Friday denied reports that Jordon Hudson, the girlfriend of head football coach Bill Belichick, has been banned from its football facilities.“While Jordon Hudson is not an employee at the University or Carolina Athletics, she is welcome to the Carolina Football facilities,” an athletic department spokesperson said in a statement. “Jordon will continue to manage all activities related to Coach Belichick’s personal brand outside of his responsibilities for Carolina Football and the University.”The statement was released hours after journalist Pablo Torre reported on his podcast that Hudson had been barred from UNC’s football operations. Torre cited 11 sources, including two who claimed Hudson was specifically told she was “no longer allowed in the football building”

about 15 hours ago
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Brains before brawn in modern rugby | Letters

Rugby is clearly in crisis as it attempts to address the escalation of concussion and its consequences in the modern game (World Rugby’s brain health service finds 25% of ex-players ‘at risk’ of problems, 30 April). Unfortunately the crisis will continue unless the regulatory authorities understand, accept and address the brain’s vulnerability to repetitive brain trauma. The human brain is an extremely fragile organ, having the consistency of soft butter, while it functions as a superb supercomputer. It is resilient to a few injuries but when these occur regularly in the fierce modern game over several years, this may lead to cognitive deterioration and dementia.The maintenance of a healthy brain must become a public health priority at every level, while every player at risk should receive regular cognitive assessment

about 15 hours ago
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Competitive Itoje willing to learn from Mount Rushmore of Lions captains

Do you know what really stuck out as Maro Itoje sat chatting in the O2 Arena after the British & Irish Lions squad announcement? His biceps. This year’s Lions jersey is tight enough on the shoulders and sufficiently short on the arms to make their already well-muscled captain look like Popeye on steroids. Say what you like about the Lions squad but they have chosen a strong leader.It has worked for them in the past. Who can forget the pipe‑smoking Willie John McBride and his classic response – “Do you think there will be many of them?” – when an angry hotel manager in South Africa threatened to call the police to arrest a number of 1974 Lions who had been enthusiastically “rearranging” the furniture

about 15 hours ago
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Your Guardian Sport weekend: WSL finale, Lions stars on show and El Clásico

Join Rob Smyth setting up all Saturday’s action, with latest news and buildup from around the grounds. Before Everton travel to Fulham, our Merseyside football correspondent Andy Hunter considers the Everton players out of contract at the end of the season. Our WSL expert Suzanne Wrack will be on hand to guide you through all that’s at stake in Saturday’s final round – email her your questions at matchday.live@theguardian.com

about 15 hours ago
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The IPL is a good barometer in India: its suspension shows us how serious this is

It’s not often that two sets of people find themselves in the same situation on either side of one of the world’s most fractious borders.When Friday dawned, amid swirling rumours of missiles wrecking neighbourhoods and falsehoods about pilots being captured, cricketers in India and Pakistan sensed that something was about to give.The Pakistan Super League acted first, telling all its players, coaches and officials to stay in their hotel rooms, bags packed at the ready. At some point in the day the call would come, they were told, and they should be ready to head to the airport and fly to the United Arab Emirates where the last eight games of that tournament could be held.In India, the first signs of just how precarious the situation had become emerged the previous evening when a match between the Delhi Capitals and the Punjab Kings was interrupted after 10

about 15 hours ago
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Horse racing: East India Dock flies home for Chester Cup glory, plus a Saturday preview

With just 10 runners in total lining up for the two Classic trials at Lingfield on Saturday, the Victoria Cup at Ascot is certainly to attract to the lion’s share of the day’s betting turnover and Gleneagle Bay (2.40) is an interesting runner for Stephen Thorne’s County Dublin stable with Hollie Doyle booked to ride.Gleneagle Bay is lightly raced for a five-year-old, with just six starts in the book thus far, but has already been touched off in two valuable big-field handicaps in Ireland and made a very promising return to action at the Curragh in March. He travelled well until a furlong out before lack of a recent run started to tell, and the drop back to a stiff seven furlongs with Doyle doing the steering could be ideal.Lingfield 1

about 16 hours ago
societySee all
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Plaque and memorial garden to mark scandal of Britain’s forced adoptions

about 22 hours ago
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Hospitals in England reducing staff and services as part of NHS ‘financial reset’

1 day ago
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Eve Thompson obituary

1 day ago
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A cocktail that’s too much of a good thing | Letters

1 day ago
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UK woman who took pills during lockdown cleared of illegal abortion

1 day ago
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At least 216 children died in first high severity US flu season in seven years, CDC says

1 day ago