flights were disrupted at Gatwick Airport on Sunday due to “Nats staff shortages”.
The Ryanair chief declared:
“UK Nats staff shortages caused multiple flight delays and cancellations at Gatwick Airport yesterday, Sunday September 8.
“This is the latest in a long line of cock-ups by UK Nats, which has yet again disrupted multiple flights and thousands of passengers at Gatwick. Airlines and passengers deserve better.
“Ryanair again calls on UK Nats chief executive Martin Rolfe to step down and allow someone competent to run an efficient UK ATC service, which airlines and passengers are entitled to expect.
“If he won’t go, then (new Transport Secretary) Louise Haigh should sack him.”
Nats was hit by criticism last year, when a single piece of rogue data in a flight plan caused thousands of flights to be cancelled, and when staff illness forced flights to be grounded at Gatwick:
told the BBC:
“It’s still tough out there for millions of families but inflationary pressures are easing for some.
“For others, it’ll be a decision not to use hospitality but to celebrate at home instead.”
Aldi is to open a further 23 stores this year after profits more than doubled last year to almost £537m.
The supermarket has just announced it would invest £800m in the UK market through the rest of this year including opening 23 more stores, and had signed a £750m deal with Kent-based grower AC Goatham & Son including establishing the first ever ‘Aldi Orchard’ on a 200-acre plot on New Green Farm in Gravesend dedicated to growing fruit for the chain.
The supermarket – which opened about 30 stores last year – said sales increased 16% to £17.9bn in 2023, its highest ever period of sales growth.
However, since then sales growth has slowed as all the traditional grocers, including Tesco and Sainsbury’s, have introduced schemes to price match Aldi on key items. The group will open about 30 stores again this year in total, down from about 50 per annum in the years before 2023.
The retailer, which currently has over 1,000 stores, has previously announced plans to scale to 1,500 stores across the UK.
The retailer, which aims to be the cheapest in the UK, said it had invested almost £100m in over 300 price cuts in the last three months on items including fish goujons, chicken breasts, potatoes and basmati rice.
Giles Hurley, the chief executive of Aldi UK and Ireland, said:
“For every £1 of profit generated last year, we’re investing £2 this year – opening more stores and building the supply infrastructure to bring high-quality, affordable groceries to millions more families the length and breadth of Britain.”
Chinese producers continue to slash their prices, new data today shows, in a sign of weak demand.
China’s producer price index (PPI) – which tracks prices at the factory gate – fell by 1.8% in August compared with a year earlier.
That’s the largest fall in four months, and a bigger decline than expected – which will add to concerns over the health of the global economy.
Junyu Tan, North Asia Economist at Coface, explains:
“The ongoing deflationary pressures boil down into a broader problem of production surplus, which is still outstripping demand.”
However, this did not immediately feed through to consumers’ pockets. China’s headline CPI inflation rate rose to 0.6% in the year to August, up from 0.5% in July.
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets, and the world economy.
Here we go again (again). Investors are experiencing another bout of angst over the health of the US economy, creating a chilly feel in the markets.
Spirits are low after Friday’s disappointing US employment report, which showed that fewer jobs were created last month than hoped.
Non-farm payrolls rose by just 142,000 in August, while the payrolls for June and July were slashed, leaving traders fretting that the US jobs market – and the wider economy – was cooling.
In better news, the unemployment rate dipped to 4.2% – but the report overall has left investors baffled as to how the US Federal Reserve will react. An interest rate cut later this month feels inked in – but will it be a gentle quarter-percentage point (25 basis points) reduction, or a dramatic half-point cut?
Instinctively, investors would like a larger cut in borrowing costs – except, if that happens, it implies the Fed has serious concerns over the health of the US economy.
Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, explains:
For traders, this means more of the Fed’s favourite guessing game. The report wasn’t bad enough to scream “panic mode,” but indeed not good enough to keep the 50 bp rate cut whispers at bay.
The problem? This delicate balancing act leaves everyone wondering: will the Fed take a cautious 25 bps step, or does a bigger 50 bps cut suddenly feel more necessary?
One thing’s for sure: whatever the Fed does, the markets are left doing the one thing they hate most—waiting in uncertainty.
And we can see the impact of this in the markets. On Friday, the US S&P 500 share index fell by 1.7%, while the tech-focused Nasdaq Composite tumbled by 2.5%.
This has knocked Asia-Pacific markets today, where China’s main stock indices are down over 1%, the Hong Kong Hang Seng is down almost 2%, and the South Korean Kospi index is off 0.7%.
Disappointing economic growth figures from Japan have added to the gloom; Japan’s Q2 GDP growth rate has been revised down to an annualised rate of 2.9% for April-June, down from a preliminary estimate of 3.1%.
Japan’s Nikkei share index began the session with a 3% drop, but actually managed to claw its way back to finish 0.5% lower.
European markets, which fell on Friday, are set for a slightly higher open:
The agenda
Source: theguardian.com