The When To Travel tool will be launched in Newcastle, before being rolled out across Oxford, Manchester, Norwich, Brighton, Southampton, Crawley, Bournemouth, Salisbury and Plymouth.
Daily Mail Business Articles
AstraZeneca approaches US rival Gilead to discuss merger
AstraZeneca, which is listed on the London Stock Exchange, reached out to Gilead last month to gauge its interest, according to a Bloomberg report, but did not discuss terms.
Shopping malls giant Intu ‘is on critical list’
Intu is at a ‘critical phase’ in negotiations with lenders ahead of a deadline on June 26 that could freeze interest and debt repayments, one property source said.
Richest banker in the world Joseph Safra weighs up bid for Travelex
City sources said an investment firm working for the Safra family is one of the potential bidders to have lodged interest in buying Travelex with advisory group PWC.
Bosch chief declares UK jobs are safe
Steffen Hoffmann, Bosch’s UK president, is committed to keeping jobs in this country, despite furloughing staff at two factories making industrial machinery.
Hotels tycoon Surinder Arora: ‘Quarantine is crazy’
Billionaire Surinder Arora has always seen himself as a ‘Mr Optimistic’, but the Government’s plan to introduce 14-day quarantine rules tomorrow is casting a cloud over his business.
City dealmaker Staveley was pledged fee ‘6 times’
Amanda Staveley, the ex-girlfriend of Prince Andrew, secured £30million for her role in the emergency cash call in 2008. But she later learnt that Qatari investors pocketed £346million.
Boohoo boss braced for £50m bonus row
John Lyttle will receive the huge sum if he increases the company’s value to around £6billion in a five-year period to March 2024.
Seven big firms backed out of state aid
Kevin Hollinrake MP (pictured) said publication had put pressure on large firms to consider whether they should access public money, and reinforced public accountability for taxpayer support.
STOCK WATCH: Will JM’s investors be converted by dividend?
Shareholders of Johnson Matthey have had to wait 10 weeks since the FTSE 100 company’s last update on the impact of the coronavirus crisis on its business.