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Spring Statement 2026: Reeves downgraded growth as business leaders demand urgent action
Business

Spring Statement 2026: Reeves downgraded growth as business leaders demand urgent action

by March 3, 2026

Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered her Spring Statement to the House of Commons under the shadow of escalating conflict in the Middle East and mounting fears of a renewed inflation shock driven by surging energy prices.

In a speech lasting just over 20 minutes, Reeves stressed the importance of “stability in an increasingly uncertain world”, pointing to falling inflation and previous interest rate cuts as evidence that the cost-of-living squeeze on households is easing. However, beyond presenting updated forecasts from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) and criticising opposition parties, she unveiled no new tax or spending measures.

The Chancellor has pledged to hold only one fiscal event each year, the autumn Budget, meaning the Spring Statement was positioned as a forecast update rather than a policy platform.

Growth downgraded for 2026

The OBR has revised down its forecast for UK economic growth in 2026 to 1.1 per cent, weaker than the 1.4 per cent predicted in November. Reeves insisted that the longer-term outlook remains resilient, with growth forecast to reach 1.6 per cent in both 2027 and 2028, slightly stronger than previously projected, before settling at 1.5 per cent in 2029 and 2030.

The downgrade comes amid soft domestic demand, geopolitical instability and renewed energy market volatility following military escalation in the Gulf region. Rising oil and gas prices threaten to complicate the inflation trajectory, particularly if disruption to global supply chains persists.

Unemployment to rise before falling

Unemployment is forecast to peak at 5.3 per cent later this year as weaker labour demand feeds through the economy. The rate is then expected to decline steadily, ending the parliamentary term at 4.1 per cent, lower than at the start.

The Chancellor framed this as evidence that the labour market remains fundamentally strong despite short-term headwinds. However, youth unemployment and business hiring caution remain key concerns across several sectors.

Borrowing falls and headroom improves

The OBR forecasts that borrowing will be nearly £18 billion lower than anticipated in the autumn. Public sector net borrowing is projected to decline from 4.3 per cent of GDP this year to 1.8 per cent by 2030.

Reeves highlighted that fiscal “headroom” against her self-imposed rules has increased from £21.7 billion in November to £23.6 billion. The buffer is designed to reassure financial markets and protect against unexpected shocks.

She also confirmed plans to meet North Sea energy industry leaders to discuss the implications of Middle East tensions on domestic production and energy security.

Night-time economy: “Stability rhetoric won’t save us”

Despite the Chancellor’s emphasis on stability, business leaders were quick to challenge what they described as a disconnect between Westminster messaging and frontline reality.

Michael Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association (NTIA), said the statement failed to recognise the acute pressures facing hospitality and leisure businesses.

“Across the UK, major brands and corporates are collapsing at pace. Confidence is fragile. Margins are exhausted,” he said.

Kill warned that escalating energy costs, higher National Insurance contributions and ongoing business rates burdens are placing “compounding pressure” on the sector. He called for a VAT cut for hospitality, arguing that targeted intervention would stimulate demand, protect jobs and restore confidence.

With youth unemployment rising, the NTIA stressed that the night-time economy has traditionally provided entry-level employment for young people, and warned that increased employment costs are making it harder to sustain those roles.

Business confidence remains fragile

Separate research from the Zoho Digital Health Study 2026 underscores the cautious mood across UK businesses. Twenty-one per cent of business leaders cited high inflation, recession risk and rising interest rates as their biggest external challenge.

Half of firms reported rising costs per employee over the past year, ahead of a further 4.1 per cent rise in the National Living Wage due in April 2026.

Sachin Agrawal, managing director at Zoho UK, said leaders are prioritising productivity and automation over expansion.

“Businesses want to grow, but they’re doing so more selectively by investing in technologies that deliver clear efficiency gains,” he said.

AI platform Photoroom also urged the government to match pro-entrepreneur rhetoric with tangible digital support for SMEs, arguing that access to AI tools can significantly reduce overheads and increase productivity.

Thames transport: a missed green opportunity

Uber Boat by Thames Clippers said the Spring Statement missed an opportunity to accelerate London’s transition to greener river transport.

Geoff Symonds, chief operating officer at Uber Boat by Thames Clippers, said regulatory reform and green fuel incentives could be implemented at minimal cost.

“Low-key budgets don’t have to mean low ambition for the environment,” he said, calling for parity in green incentives between river transport and land-based networks.

A cautious tone in uncertain times

The Spring Statement was deliberately restrained. Reeves’ strategy is to project fiscal discipline and market stability while preserving room for manoeuvre ahead of the autumn Budget.

However, with energy prices climbing, geopolitical tensions rising and consumer confidence fragile, the path ahead is far from settled. The coming months will test whether stability alone is sufficient, or whether targeted intervention becomes unavoidable.

For now, the Chancellor’s message is clear: hold the line, protect fiscal credibility and hope that inflation continues to fall despite global turbulence. Whether businesses and households feel that stability in practice remains an open question.

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Spring Statement 2026: Reeves downgraded growth as business leaders demand urgent action

March 3, 2026
Bank of England rate cuts at risk in 2026 as Middle East conflict sparks inflation fears
Business

Bank of England rate cuts at risk in 2026 as Middle East conflict sparks inflation fears

by March 3, 2026

Expectations of further Bank of England base rate cuts this year have been thrown into doubt after escalating conflict in the Middle East triggered sharp rises in energy prices and government bond yields, raising fears of a fresh inflationary shock.

Only a week ago, markets were confident that the Bank of England would cut rates again at its March meeting, with traders pricing in an 86 per cent probability of a 0.25 percentage point reduction. Now, following military escalation involving the US and Iran and renewed instability across the Gulf region, those expectations have collapsed. Markets are currently assigning less than a 5 per cent chance of a rate cut this month and less than a 50 per cent probability of a move in April.

The Bank’s base rate currently stands at 3.75 per cent, having been reduced four times in 2025 as inflation fell to 3 per cent. Governor Andrew Bailey had previously suggested that a return to the 2 per cent target was “baked in”. However, the geopolitical shock has materially altered that outlook.

UK wholesale gas prices have surged by around 40 per cent in recent days, while oil prices have approached $80 per barrel. Two-year gilt yields have risen to their highest levels since December as markets reassess the inflationary impact of higher energy costs.

The risk, analysts say, is that sustained disruption to global energy supplies, particularly through the Strait of Hormuz, could keep inflation elevated for longer, forcing the Bank of England to pause or even reverse its easing cycle.

Tony Redondo, founder of Cosmos Currency Exchange, said the shift in expectations had been dramatic.

“With 2-year gilt yields hitting December highs due to a 40 per cent surge in UK gas prices and oil nearing $80, the Bank of England faces a significant inflationary shock,” he said. “High-street banks are no longer competing on price but are instead protecting margins against rising swap rates. Buyers may see ‘best-buy’ deals pulled with only a few hours’ notice as lenders move to price in the geopolitical risk premium.”

Swap rates, which underpin fixed-rate mortgage pricing, have risen sharply in response to higher gilt yields. Lenders typically price mortgage products several days in advance, meaning further volatility could quickly feed through into the housing market.

Riz Malik, director at R3 Wealth, warned that the situation could resemble the market turmoil seen in 2022 following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the UK’s mini-Budget crisis.

“Last week, the outlook was promising for the 1.8 million mortgages up for renewal in 2026,” he said. “Today, we could see major volatility in the mortgage market with the outlook for further cuts disappearing by the second. If you have a mortgage renewal in the next six months, I would strongly suggest you look at your options and don’t hold off.”

Justin Moy, managing director at EHF Mortgages, said the duration of the conflict would be critical.

“In the short term, any talk of base rate cuts will be null and void,” he said. “If the conflict resolves within weeks, this may be temporary. But if it continues beyond Easter, inflation and base rate expectations will be adversely affected, putting the brakes on rate cuts and pushing deals higher.”

Aaron Strutt, product and communications director at Trinity Financial, said uncertainty was the defining feature of the current environment.

“We do not know what is going to happen yet. Rates could go up, the war might stop and rates drop again as previously forecast. Either way, it makes sense to secure a mortgage rate if you are coming up to remortgage soon.”

Some advisers believe the situation, while serious, differs structurally from the disorderly repricing seen in autumn 2022.

Nouran Moustafa, practice principal at Roxton Wealth, said lenders are better prepared than during the Truss-era turmoil.

“Markets have moved quickly, but mortgage pricing reacts to sustained trends, not single sessions,” she said. “Back in 2022, funding costs moved disorderly and fast. Today’s move looks more like volatility driven by inflation expectations.”

She added that the key question is whether elevated yields persist. “If yields stay elevated for several days, we could see short-notice repricing or selective withdrawals. If this retraces, lenders will prioritise stability.”

The Bank of England now faces a delicate balancing act. While inflation had been easing and economic growth remains fragile, an externally driven energy shock risks reintroducing cost pressures just as policymakers were preparing to loosen monetary conditions further.

If wholesale gas prices remain elevated and oil continues to climb, rate-setters may judge it prudent to delay cuts to prevent inflation expectations becoming unanchored. That would prolong pressure on households and businesses already grappling with high borrowing costs.

For now, the direction of travel depends less on domestic economic data and more on developments in the Middle East. Should tensions subside and energy prices retreat, the easing cycle could resume. But if the conflict deepens or spreads, expectations of multiple rate cuts in 2026 may quickly evaporate.

In the meantime, borrowers and investors alike are being reminded that global geopolitical events can reshape monetary policy forecasts in a matter of days.

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Bank of England rate cuts at risk in 2026 as Middle East conflict sparks inflation fears

March 3, 2026
CMA investigates Hilton, IHG and Marriott over alleged hotel data sharing via STR
Business

CMA investigates Hilton, IHG and Marriott over alleged hotel data sharing via STR

by March 3, 2026

The UK’s competition watchdog has launched a formal investigation into three of the world’s largest hotel groups, Hilton, InterContinental Hotels Group and Marriott International, over concerns they may have shared “competitively sensitive” information through a third-party data analytics platform.

The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) said it is examining whether the hotel operators exchanged commercially sensitive data using STR, a widely used industry benchmarking tool owned by CoStar Group.

Together, the three hotel groups operate more than 25,000 hotels globally, giving the probe significant weight in the international hospitality sector.

Hotel chains routinely use analytics platforms such as STR to track industry metrics including occupancy rates, average daily room prices and revenue per available room (RevPAR). Such tools can help operators adjust pricing in response to demand and competition.

However, the CMA warned that where rival businesses share competitively sensitive information, even indirectly through a third-party provider, it may reduce uncertainty between competitors and risk softening competition.

“When rival businesses share competitively sensitive information, including through a third-party data analytics provider, this reduces the uncertainty competing businesses normally have about how each other will act,” the regulator said.

“This can affect how strongly companies compete because it makes it easier for them to predict what each other will do and coordinate their behaviour.”

The watchdog will now spend up to six months gathering evidence before deciding whether to issue a formal statement of objections.

At this stage, the CMA stressed that no conclusion has been reached and no assumptions should be made about whether competition law has been breached.

Shares in London-listed IHG fell by as much as 5 per cent in early trading on Monday, although the wider travel sector was also under pressure due to geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

In the US, Hilton and Marriott shares each fell around 3 per cent, while CoStar, which has a market value of more than $18 billion, dropped approximately 2 per cent.

IHG and Hilton both confirmed they were cooperating fully with the CMA’s investigation. CoStar said it was surprised by the regulator’s interest in what it described as a “longstanding hotel data analytics and benchmarking platform” that has been used by companies and government bodies for decades.

Marriott did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

If the CMA concludes that competition rules have been breached, it has the power to impose fines of up to 10 per cent of a company’s global annual turnover.

The regulator can also offer immunity or reduced penalties to companies that report cartel activity early and cooperate with investigations.

The probe forms part of the CMA’s broader scrutiny of how digital tools and algorithms are used in pricing decisions across sectors.

The watchdog has increasingly focused on the intersection of competition law and technology, warning that algorithmic pricing systems, while potentially efficiency-enhancing, must not facilitate anti-competitive coordination.

The hospitality investigation comes amid a series of high-profile competition cases in recent years.

In November, the CMA opened investigations into eight companies over online pricing practices. Last year, seven major UK housebuilders agreed to contribute £100 million to affordable housing initiatives after the regulator found evidence of information sharing that may have affected competition.

The latest case underscores growing regulatory concern that data-sharing arrangements, even when mediated through analytics providers, could blur the line between legitimate benchmarking and unlawful coordination.

For the hotel sector, the outcome of the investigation could have significant implications for how pricing data is shared, analysed and used across the industry.

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CMA investigates Hilton, IHG and Marriott over alleged hotel data sharing via STR

March 3, 2026
Energy bills could hit £2,500 as Iran conflict threatens global gas supplies
Business

Energy bills could hit £2,500 as Iran conflict threatens global gas supplies

by March 3, 2026

Household energy bills could climb back towards crisis-era levels if disruption to Middle Eastern gas supplies continues, after wholesale prices surged in the wake of military escalation involving Iran, Israel and the United States.

Analysts warned that annual bills could rise to around £2,500 if global gas markets face prolonged instability, undoing recent relief for consumers and reviving memories of the energy shock that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Britain’s benchmark wholesale gas price, NBP, jumped by as much as 54 per cent to 122p per therm after QatarEnergy halted liquefied natural gas (LNG) production following attacks on its facilities at Ras Laffan and Mesaieed. Brent crude oil also rose sharply, trading about 9 per cent higher at $79.40 a barrel.

Qatar is the world’s second-largest LNG exporter after the United States and, along with the United Arab Emirates, accounts for roughly a fifth of global LNG supply. Much of that gas passes through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow but critical shipping channel connecting the Gulf to global markets.

Shipping through the strait has largely stalled after Iran reportedly attacked tankers in retaliation for US and Israeli strikes that killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s supreme leader. The strait is a vital chokepoint not only for LNG but also for oil, and any sustained closure risks triggering a broader energy supply crisis.

Although most Qatari LNG cargoes head east to major buyers such as China and India, disruption there would intensify global competition for alternative supplies, driving up prices in Europe and the UK. European and British gas markets tend to move in tandem because they are linked by pipeline infrastructure.

Tom Marzec-Manser, director for European gas and LNG at consultancy Wood Mackenzie, said the scale of potential disruption explains the market reaction. “The prospect of around 20 per cent of the world’s LNG being cut off from the market has unsurprisingly led to a sharp rise in prices. The key question now is how long the Strait remains closed. The longer it takes to reopen, the higher prices are likely to go.”

Europe relies on LNG for roughly a quarter of its gas consumption and entered the current period with lower-than-usual stockpiles after a cold winter. Analysts at Stifel warned that, if Qatari and Emirati supplies were curtailed for an extended period, gas prices in Europe could triple, potentially returning to levels above €100 per megawatt hour. In the UK, that could equate to wholesale prices of around 250p per therm.

Chris Wheaton, an analyst at Stifel, said such a scenario would mirror 2022’s price spike. “If LNG production from Qatar and the UAE were disrupted for more than six weeks, or if efforts to keep shipping lanes open failed, we could see prices triple from pre-attack levels.”

Under those conditions, the UK’s energy price cap could rise sharply when Ofgem next updates it. The current cap stands at £1,641 a year for a typical household. A sustained wholesale gas price of 250p per therm could push the cap to about £2,500 annually, according to Stifel’s estimates.

That would more than erase the £117 reduction in average household energy bills due to take effect in April following changes announced in the Chancellor’s Budget.

Dr Craig Lowrey, principal consultant at Cornwall Insight, said the UK remains exposed to global market volatility. “The UK’s dependence on international gas markets means wholesale movements feed directly into domestic bills. The April to June cap is already set, so there is no immediate impact. However, the July to September cap is calculated using average wholesale prices over a three-month period. If prices remain elevated, consumers will feel the effect later in the year.”

The situation has raised concerns that recent forecasts of easing inflation may prove optimistic. Higher energy costs feed into broader price pressures, potentially complicating decisions at the Bank of England, which had been expected to consider further interest rate cuts.

For now, the trajectory of household bills hinges on how long tensions in the Middle East persist and whether energy infrastructure or shipping routes face sustained disruption. Markets remain highly sensitive to developments, with traders closely watching the Strait of Hormuz as the next critical indicator of how severe, and how long-lasting, the energy shock could become.

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Energy bills could hit £2,500 as Iran conflict threatens global gas supplies

March 3, 2026
Avalara acquires Manchester startup Versori in AI-driven integration deal
Business

Avalara acquires Manchester startup Versori in AI-driven integration deal

by March 3, 2026

US technology group Avalara has acquired Manchester-based integration startup Versori in a deal that underscores the growing international appeal of the UK’s regional tech sector.

The value of the transaction has not been disclosed, but it includes Versori’s proprietary technology platform and its 23-strong team. Co-founders Sean Brown and Daniel Jones will remain with the business, which will operate under the name “Versori, by Avalara”.

Founded in 2022, Versori specialises in next-generation integration technology, enabling companies to connect complex systems such as ERPs, ecommerce platforms, marketplaces and financial applications with greater speed and automation. The company raised $10.5 million in prior funding and graduated from the prestigious Y Combinator accelerator programme in March 2023.

Sean Brown said the acquisition aligns closely with Versori’s founding vision.

“We want Versori to connect the world’s systems. That was the mission statement from day one,” he said. “As we were going through a period of growth we were facing doing another investment round, but Avalara were already a customer and the strategic fit was very strong.”

Avalara describes itself as an “agentic” tax and compliance leader, providing automated tax calculation, reporting and compliance solutions to more than 200,000 customers across 75 countries. Its long-term ambition is to embed real-time, always-on compliance into global commerce systems.

Scott McFarlane, chief executive and co-founder of Avalara, said the acquisition would significantly accelerate that ambition.

“Compliance at global scale depends on seamless, reliable integration,” he said. “Versori’s technology and team significantly accelerate our ability to connect into the world’s commerce systems quickly, at scale, using intelligent, AI-driven automation that meets the reliability and accuracy standards global compliance demands.”

The move strengthens Avalara’s unified platform strategy, particularly as regulatory complexity increases worldwide and multinational businesses seek automated, audit-ready compliance solutions embedded directly into transactional workflows.

Versori’s platform uses automation-first architecture to reduce the time and engineering resources required to build and maintain integrations. By leveraging artificial intelligence, the system can simplify deployment and ongoing maintenance, making it attractive to enterprises operating across multiple jurisdictions and platforms.

Since its launch, Versori has worked with high-profile organisations including Frasers Group, Macy’s and the UK Ministry of Defence. Its growth trajectory has made it one of Manchester’s fastest-rising enterprise software startups.

Brown said the acquisition demonstrates that Manchester can produce globally competitive technology businesses.

“It’s proof that Manchester can grow companies like Versori,” he said. “Hopefully it will bring more investment into Manchester and more talent. I’ve never done it for the rewards. I love building things and I’m looking forward to keeping building things with Versori. I’ve got a lot of unfinished business.”

The deal also reflects continued US interest in UK AI and enterprise software firms, particularly those outside London. Manchester’s tech ecosystem has grown rapidly in recent years, supported by university spinouts, venture capital inflows and accelerator programmes.

For Avalara, the acquisition adds advanced AI-enabled integration capabilities at a time when global tax and compliance requirements are becoming increasingly digitised and complex. The company has spent more than two decades building one of the most extensive libraries of tax content and system integrations in the industry. Integrating Versori’s automation technology is expected to enhance speed, scalability and reliability across that network.

Both companies indicated that integration work is already under way, with Versori’s technology forming a key part of Avalara’s push towards AI-native compliance systems that operate continuously and autonomously within global commerce infrastructure.

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Avalara acquires Manchester startup Versori in AI-driven integration deal

March 3, 2026
UK shop price inflation slows to 1.1% in February as retailers cut prices
Business

UK shop price inflation slows to 1.1% in February as retailers cut prices

by March 3, 2026

Shop price inflation slowed more than expected in February, offering households tentative relief from cost-of-living pressures as retailers stepped up discounting and global food prices eased.

New data from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and NielsenIQ showed shop prices rose 1.1 per cent year-on-year in February, down from 1.5 per cent in January. The deceleration reflects intensified competition across both food and non-food sectors, with retailers cutting prices to stimulate demand amid weak consumer confidence.

The figures come ahead of the spring statement, when the Office for Budget Responsibility is due to update its outlook on growth and public finances. They add to recent signs that inflationary pressures are moderating, after official data showed UK consumer price inflation fell sharply to 3 per cent in January, moving closer to the Bank of England’s 2 per cent target.

Food prices remain elevated but are increasing at a slower pace. Annual food inflation eased to 3.5 per cent in February from 3.9 per cent the previous month. Fresh food inflation edged lower, while ambient food inflation, covering products such as coffee, pasta, canned goods and other cupboard staples, fell to 2.3 per cent, its lowest level in four years.

The BRC said lower global commodity costs were filtering through supply chains, helping to stabilise grocery prices. However, it emphasised that competitive dynamics were playing a crucial role, particularly in discretionary categories such as fashion, health and beauty.

Prices for non-food items, including clothing, electronics and household goods, declined by 0.1 per cent year-on-year, compared with 0.3 per cent growth in January. Heavy promotional activity in fashion and personal care, coupled with softer demand due to unseasonal weather and fragile sentiment, contributed to the decline.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, described the slowdown as a “welcome relief” but warned that pressures had not disappeared. She noted that while the pace of price rises is moderating, many households continue to feel strain from higher cumulative costs over the past three years.

Mike Watkins, head of retailer and business insight at NielsenIQ, said pricing behaviour had shifted notably since the start of the year. “Competitive pricing across both food and non-food is helping to bring down inflation,” he said, though he cautioned that demand remains unpredictable as shoppers continue to prioritise essentials and trade down to value options.

The easing in shop price inflation follows a mixed economic backdrop. The government recently reported a record £30.4 billion budget surplus in January, driven by strong tax receipts and lower debt interest payments. Retail sales also surprised on the upside. However, unemployment has climbed to a five-year high and economic growth remains sluggish, tempering optimism.

Retailers have also flagged potential future cost pressures. The upcoming implementation of the Employment Rights Act and higher employment costs could increase operating expenses later this year. Industry leaders warn that if secondary legislation raises labour or compliance costs significantly, businesses may be forced to pass some of those increases on to consumers.

For now, the slowdown in shop price inflation suggests that competitive retail markets and easing global input costs are helping to cushion households. Whether that trend continues will depend on energy prices, wage dynamics and the broader economic outlook in the months ahead.

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UK shop price inflation slows to 1.1% in February as retailers cut prices

March 3, 2026
Bindbridge raises $3.8m to fight herbicide resistance with AI-designed crop protection
Business

Bindbridge raises $3.8m to fight herbicide resistance with AI-designed crop protection

by March 3, 2026

A Cambridge ag-biotech start-up aiming to reinvent crop protection has secured $3.8 million in early-stage funding to accelerate the development of next-generation herbicides and pest control products using artificial intelligence.

Bindbridge, founded in 2025 by a trio of Cambridge University scientists, is building what it describes as a category-defining platform for agriculture: an AI-driven system capable of designing “molecular glues” to target and degrade specific proteins in weeds and pests. The company believes its approach could help tackle the mounting crisis of herbicide resistance, which is estimated to cost farmers tens of billions of dollars each year.

The funding round was led by Speedinvest and Nucleus Capital, two investors focused on deeptech and climate innovation. The backing will allow Bindbridge to expand its eight-person team, advance its proprietary AI platform and begin laboratory testing of its first agricultural molecular glue candidates within the next 12 months.

The scale of the opportunity is considerable. According to United Nations data, around 40 per cent of global crops are lost to plant pests annually, while plant diseases cost the global economy more than $220 billion each year. Herbicide-resistant weeds alone are estimated to destroy crops worth $70 billion annually. At the same time, regulators are tightening rules on chemical persistence and environmental impact, putting pressure on the traditional agrochemical model.

The global ag-chem industry currently spends up to $9 billion a year on research and development, yet it can take as long as 12 years to bring a new active ingredient to market. Bindbridge argues that the sector’s conventional discovery methods are slow, expensive and increasingly constrained by resistance and regulatory hurdles.

At the core of the company’s strategy is its AI platform, known as BRIDGE. The system uses computational models to design molecular glues, small molecules that trigger the targeted degradation of specific proteins inside plants or pests. By leveraging the plant’s own intracellular protein control systems, Bindbridge aims to create more precise, potent and environmentally responsible crop protection agents.

Beyond herbicides, the company sees applications for insecticides, fungicides and even sprayable plant traits designed to improve nutrient efficiency, enhance heat tolerance or support carbon sequestration.

George Crane, co-founder and chief executive of Bindbridge, said the agricultural sector is facing “significant performance and sustainability challenges” that demand a fundamentally new approach to product development.

“There’s currently no affordable, rational or systematic way to discover molecular glues at scale for agriculture,” he said. “We’re using AI to rapidly and accurately derive new molecules that can change farming’s future.”

The investment will also support co-development discussions with major agrochemical companies. Bindbridge says it is already in late-stage talks with industry players to collaborate on targeted protein degradation projects.

Speedinvest investor Namratha Kothapalli said the company was applying modern AI techniques to one of the world’s most consequential industries. “They’re unlocking entirely new chemical space that the industry simply couldn’t reach before,” she said.

Nucleus Capital general partner Dr Isabella Fandrych described the platform as a potential breakthrough in tackling herbicide resistance and strengthening global food systems. “Their computational approach lays the groundwork for a new era of sustainable agriculture,” she said.

Bindbridge’s founding team, Dr George Crane, Dr Alex Campbell and Dr Simeon Spasov, bring experience spanning machine learning engineering, plant biology, chemistry and venture building. With the new capital, the company aims to position itself as a disruptive force in agricultural R&D, combining deep science with scalable AI to address one of the most pressing challenges in global food security.

Read more:
Bindbridge raises $3.8m to fight herbicide resistance with AI-designed crop protection

March 3, 2026
9 Ways to Split Up Big Documents into Smaller, Shareable Files
Business

9 Ways to Split Up Big Documents into Smaller, Shareable Files

by March 2, 2026

Have you ever tried to send a huge document by email only to get the annoying “file too large” error? Or maybe you only needed to translimit one chapter from a 200-page report, but you sent the whole thing?

You’re not the only one. Professionals, students, and anyone who works with digital files on a regular basis sometimes have trouble with big documents. The good news is? It’s easier than you might think to break up big papers into smaller, more manageable bits that can be shared.

Let’s look at nine useful ways to help you partition, organize, and share your papers more easily and without losing your mind or ruining the layout.

9 Simple Ways to Split Big Documents into Organized and Shareable Files

1. Use online tools to split PDFs

There are PDFs everywhere: contracts, reports, ebooks, and research papers, and they can get too big to handle.

Using specialized web tools like QuillBot’s Split PDF is the quickest way to divide up a PDF. You can extract certain pages, set custom page ranges, or split big PDFs into smaller ones without having to install any software on these platforms.

This is how it usually goes:

Put your PDF file in the tool
Choose the pages or ranges you want to take out
Get your files that are now distinct.
One good thing about online PDF splitters is that they are easy to use. You may work from any device, whether you’re at home or on the go. Most tools keep the original formatting and quality, so your documents look professional.

Pro Tip: Use unambiguous naming rules when you separate PDFs for work. Try using more specific names like “Q4_Expense_Details.pdf” or “Q4_Financial_Summary.pdf” instead of “Document_1.pdf.” This will save you time in the future.

2. Use the built-in PDF preview features (for Mac users)

Preview is a wonderful tool that many people don’t know about if they use a Mac.

In addition to letting you look at PDFs, Preview also lets you take pages out by clicking on them in the sidebar and dragging them to your desktop or a folder. Every page turns into its own PDF right away.

Choose the pages you want to include in the new PDF, then go to File > Print and save it as a PDF. It’s easy and safe, doesn’t need an internet connection, and your private data stay private.

3. Use the Document Splitting Features in Microsoft Word

Are you working with long Word documents? You don’t need special software to split them up.

When you copy and paste parts of a document by hand, it’s easier to utilize Word’s navigation window to see how the document is set up. Choose whole parts based on their headings, copy them into other documents, and save them separately.

This strategy lets you fully determine how to organize texts with explicit chapter or section splits. You can even make different versions, like one with appendices and one without.

Before separating, make sure that the styles of your headings are all the same. If you are in charge of several connected documents, this makes it easier to find your way around and keeps your table of contents correct.

4. Break up big spreadsheets into smaller ones

When an Excel file has a lot of worksheets with a lot of data, it can get very big. It’s not a good idea to share the whole worksheet when you only require one tab.

To get a worksheet out of a workbook, right-click on its tab, choose “Move or Copy,” choose “new book” as the destination, and check “Create a copy.” Give this new workbook a name that describes it well.

This method works well when you need to share certain data sets with multiple teams.

If the people you send the files to don’t need Excel formatting, you may also export individual worksheets as CSV files. CSV files are smaller and operate with a lot of other programs.

5. Get Slides Out of PowerPoint Presentations

PowerPoint makes it possible to share only some slides from a big presentation.

To save your presentation as a PDF, open it and go to File > Save As. Click “Options” to choose which slides to include. You can choose a custom range, specific slides, or just the current slide.

You might also make a new presentation and copy and paste the slides you need. This lets you change or reorder content before you share it.

This strategy is quite helpful for teachers who want to share parts of their lectures or salespeople who want to customize their pitch decks.

6. Use the smart sharing features of cloud storage

You don’t always need to split; you just need to share better.

You can share links that take others to specific pages or sections without making separate files on platforms like Google Drive, Dropbox, and OneDrive. You may add bookmarks and share links in Google Docs that take you right to particular parts, for example.

To send someone directly to a page of a PDF on Google Drive, add “#page=X” (where X is the page number) to the sharing URL.

This keeps your original document safe and lets you quickly get to the information you need, which is great for papers that are changed often.

7. Before you split, compress

Here’s a tip that many people forget: sometimes your document doesn’t need to be split; it needs to be compressed.

Try making the file smaller before you break it up into sections. Get rid of any high-resolution photographs that aren’t needed, compress any media that is embedded, and delete any hidden data or old versions.

A lot of online PDF compressors can make files 50% to 70% smaller without losing quality. You can make Word documents smaller by compressing images (choose an image, then Format > Compress Pictures) and getting rid of embedded fonts.

Your “large” document might fit under email or upload constraints once it has been compressed, so you won’t have to break it up.

8. Add hyperlinks to the sections of your document

If your document needs to stay entire but is hard to navigate, you might want to make a master document with linked sections.

This is a good way to write training manuals, policy handbooks, or all-in-one instructions. Make a detailed table of contents with links to each part, but don’t change the main document. You can also make “quick reference” documents that go back to certain pages in the master file.

Add links to headings or bookmarks in Word. You can put links to specific pages inside a PDF.

This mixed method gives consumers the best of both worlds: they can get full access when they need it and move around quickly without having to browse through a lot of pages.

9. Use scripts and batch processing to automate

Automation is quite helpful if you often split papers, process reports every week, or run big libraries.

Adobe Acrobat Pro lets you split many PDFs at once based on parameters you set (such as every X pages, file size, or bookmarks). Python modules like PyPDF2 can do more complicated jobs automatically.

Macros in Word can break up documents based on the style of the headings or the page breaks. Setting things up at first takes time, but it’s worth it when you have to deal with a lot of documents on a regular basis.

This method is extremely helpful for publishing groups, HR departments, or legal teams who have to deal with a lot of files.

Why It’s Important to Break Up Big Documents

Let’s talk about why this is crucial before we go into the how-to.

Big files cause problems. They fill up people’s email inboxes, slow down uploads, and make it hard for people who only need a certain part to get it. Dividing papers into smaller files makes it easier for people to work together, share information more quickly, and access it more easily.

Would you rather get a 500-page guidebook or simply the 10 pages that are important to your project? That’s right.

Also, it’s easier to organize, save, and manage fewer files on many platforms and devices. If you know how to split PDFs, Word documents, or presentations in a smart way, you’ll save time and get less frustrated.

Choosing the Best Method for Your Needs

How do you choose from nine different options?

Think about these things:

File type: There are better ways to split PDFs, Word documents, and spreadsheets.
Frequency: Simple methods work for one-time splits, but recurring splitting needs automation.
Collaboration: If more than one person needs access, smart sharing on the cloud might be better.
Security: You might need to use offline tools instead of uploading sensitive data to third-party sites.
Technical comfort: Pick approaches that are easy for you to use. It’s okay to use simple instruments that perform the job.

Make Document Management Work for You

It’s not only about knowing how to do it when you break up big papers into smaller, shareable files. It’s about being smarter at work.

Strategic dividing makes it easier to talk to each other, cuts down on confusion, and makes information easier to find. It also saves time, bandwidth, and storage space, which are all things that add up rapidly when you have to deal with a lot of data.

Find the strategies that fit your work style best. You might be a Mac user who uses Preview to quickly extract PDFs. You can be in charge of a team and need to share files on the cloud. Or maybe you need automation to process a lot of documents at once.

Start with the easiest option that works for you, and then add more as your needs change. You don’t have to learn all nine strategies; only the ones that work for you.

Are you ready to take charge?

These tips can help you work better and share better, whether you’re dividing up a single PDF or completely changing the way your team manages files.

Your papers should help you, not hurt you. You now have the tools to make that happen.

Questions that are often asked

1. How can I split a PDF without losing its quality?

The tool affects the quality. Online splitters like Split PDF keep the original quality by taking pages out instead of re-rendering them. Don’t use “print to PDF” methods because they can lower the quality and make text unselectable.

2. Is it possible to separate PDFs that are password-protected?

Yes, however, you have to enter the password to access the PDF first. Never try to divide up files that you don’t have permission to see.

3. How big may a file be before I can split it?

It depends on the instrument. Most free online splitters can handle files up to 100 MB. Premium versions can handle bigger files. For really big files, you should use desktop software like Adobe Acrobat Pro or QuillBot Split PDF.

4. Is it possible to put separated PDFs back together?

Yes, most software that divides PDFs also lets you combine them. You can put files back together in any sequence and move pieces around as needed.

Author Bio

Nimisha Sureka is a SaaS content writer at Anchorial, a link-building agency. With extensive experience writing for SaaS brands from early-stage startups to established platforms, she specializes in turning complex products into clear, compelling narratives that rank, resonate, and convert.

Read more:
9 Ways to Split Up Big Documents into Smaller, Shareable Files

March 2, 2026
Don Carlos Lee Gibson Jr.: Leading with Discipline and Drive
Business

Don Carlos Lee Gibson Jr.: Leading with Discipline and Drive

by March 2, 2026

What does it take to lead in two very different industries — automotive operations and golf management — and succeed in both?

For Don Carlos Lee Gibson Jr., the answer is simple: structure, discipline, and people-first leadership.

“I’ve always believed leadership starts with responsibility,” Don says. “If you take care of your people and your systems, the results follow.”

His career tells that story.

Early Life and Education: Where Discipline Began

Don’s foundation started at home.

His mother, Linda Bradshaw, was a multi-sport athlete at Sullivan South High School. She played baseball, basketball, and ran track. Her work ethic shaped his mindset early on.

“I grew up watching my mom compete,” Don says. “She showed me that effort matters. You show up. You work. You don’t quit.”

Don graduated from Sullivan South High School and later earned a Bachelor of Science in Business Management from Virginia College. But business was only part of his plan.

Golf was the other.

He attended the Golf Academy of America and earned two associate degrees — one in Golf Operations and Turf Management, and another in Teaching and Player Development.

“I didn’t just want to play golf,” he says. “I wanted to understand the business behind it.”

That decision would shape the next phase of his career.

Military Intelligence Analyst: Learning to Think Strategically

Before stepping fully into business leadership, Don served as a Military Intelligence Analyst in the United States Army.

The experience sharpened his analytical thinking.

“In the Army, you learn how to assess risk fast,” he explains. “You look at the data. You look at the environment. Then you make a decision and stand by it.”

That mindset still guides him today.

Military intelligence taught him structure. It taught him how to operate under pressure. It also taught him accountability.

“You don’t guess,” he says. “You prepare.”

Golf Management Career: From Head Pro to Operations Leader

Don’s early career in golf blended teaching with leadership.

He served as General Manager and Head Golf Professional at the Golf Club of South Carolina at Crickentree. He also worked as Senior Director of Operations, Resort Operations Manager, and Head Pro with National Golf Management Group.

These were not small roles. They required oversight of staff, budgets, player development programs, and daily operations.

“Golf is a service business,” Don says. “You’re managing expectations every single day.”

He focused on player development while keeping operations tight. He looked at scheduling, staffing, and cost control. He paid attention to turf management and customer experience.

“When you run a club, every detail matters,” he explains. “From the condition of the greens to how your team greets guests.”

His leadership style was direct. Clear systems. Clear standards.

“If your team knows the goal, they can execute,” he says

Automotive Leadership: General Manager at Marietta Motors

Today, Don serves as General Manager at Marietta Motors and Westfall Towing.

The industry is different. The leadership principles are not.

Automotive operations require financial oversight, contract negotiation, risk assessment, and team leadership. It’s fast-paced and detail-driven.

“In automotive, margins matter,” Don says. “You have to know your numbers. You have to control your processes.”

He approaches the business the same way he approached golf operations — with structure and accountability.

He focuses on operational efficiency. He strengthens vendor relationships. He builds internal systems that reduce waste and improve response time.

“Every dollar has a job,” he says. “If you don’t manage it, it manages you.”

His OSHA 30 certification and FEMA Disaster and Recovery certification add another layer to his leadership. Safety and preparedness are not afterthoughts.

“You can’t run a strong operation without planning for risk,” he says

What Makes an Effective Director of Golf or General Manager?

Across industries, Don Carlos Lee Gibson, Jr. sees patterns.

Whether leading a country club or an automotive operation, he believes strong management comes down to three things: clarity, discipline, and mentorship.

“People want direction,” he says. “They want to know what winning looks like.”

He also believes in developing others. His work with the First Tee Golf Program reflects that mindset. He has served as an advisor and instructor, helping young players grow in both skill and character.

“Golf teaches integrity,” Don says. “You call penalties on yourself. That matters in business too.”

Community Involvement and Faith-Based Leadership

Don’s leadership extends beyond business.

He volunteers with Celebrate Recovery. He mentors through the TCC Drug Mentor Program. He serves as an advisor and instructor for the Foundation of Christian Faith at Elkton Prison. He also volunteers as a prayer pastor with KLOVE Radio.

“Leadership doesn’t stop at the office,” he says. “If you have knowledge, you share it.”

His faith and church involvement remain central to his life. Singing and golf are personal passions. Service is a priority.

“You measure success by impact,” he explains. “Titles change. Influence lasts.”

The Common Thread: Structured Leadership

From military intelligence to golf management to automotive operations, Don Carlos Lee Gibson Jr.’s career follows a clear path.

He studies systems.
He builds teams.
He manages risk.
He executes.

“I’m not the loudest person in the room,” he says. “I just believe in doing the work.”

In industries where details drive results, that mindset has defined his leadership journey.

And if there’s one lesson that connects every chapter of his career, it’s this:

“Discipline creates freedom,” Don says. “When your foundation is strong, growth becomes possible.

Read more:
Don Carlos Lee Gibson Jr.: Leading with Discipline and Drive

March 2, 2026
Regulations for installing a new front door in a conservation area
Business

Regulations for installing a new front door in a conservation area

by March 2, 2026

The UK can be a very beautiful place. This nation is laden with spots and locations with historical, architectural and aesthetic value, many of which fall under the category of conservation areas.

These are areas that local planning authorities determine to be of a certain interest and value, and then take careful steps to preserve them in terms of character. There are over 10,000 conservation areas in the UK, as designated by the Civic Amenities Act, and those living in them have to be conscious of specific building regulations.

Homeowners should make sure that they are comprehensively aware of any rules before they get to work on their home. For those trying to liven up their entryways, there are some essential regulations for installing a new front door in a conservation area. This article will explore these regulations, so you can feel more confident knowing what to do if you’re interested in some new contemporary front doors.

Understanding Article 4

Conservation area regulations aren’t on the same level as those for Listed Buildings; however, they are still much stricter than in the average home. The most common legal consideration to make is understanding Article 4 Directions. Article 4 can essentially strip away your “Permitted Development” rights, meaning you need full blown planning permission, even for minor changes, like front doors (even as granularly as a paint job).

Without Article 4 in place, you can generally replace a door without specified permission, as long as you don’t change the style too significantly.

Solution. Check with your local council on their website for an “Article 4 map” or appraisal tool.

Standard new front door building regulations for all homeowners

Every front door needs to meet the minimum standards set in the country, whether your home is impacted by the Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 or not. It’s always good practice to make sure that your door meets standards for:

Thermal performance. Replacement doors need to hit a minimum U-value of 1.4W/m²K in 2026.

Safety glass. Low glass panels on doors (below 1500mm) need to be made from toughened glass.

Accessibility. Homes built after 1999 cannot replace level, flat entry thresholds with stepped ones as it restricts disabled access (not generally relevant to conservation areas).

Outside of conservation area building regulations, there are plenty of considerations all homeowners should keep in mind.

Materials & design considerations for conservation areas

A lot of the charm and appeal of a building in a conservation area comes from the materials and designs used on the property. Generally, you should follow the golden rule of “like-for-like”, meaning the front of the house should use doors with the same materials as before.

Composite and uPVC doors are often prohibited from the front of the home.

It’s also important to match any stained glass or leaded patterns on the original doors.

High-gloss modern glazing is likely to be rejected in favour of “heritage” glass with a more slimline profile.

Modern hardware and shiny chrome elements might be discouraged, with era-suitable brass and iron often more compliant with conservation.

Consulting with your council

If you’re sitting wondering “Is my home in a conservation area?” or “Can I get around Article 4?”, you should get in touch with your council. They should be able to provide you with all the essential information you need about your property and your rights to it, ensuring you maintain a standard of character in the area while still upgrading your home.

Staying in the know is essential if you are curious about conservation areas, as a wrong move could end up with you in conflict with the local area.

Read more:
Regulations for installing a new front door in a conservation area

March 2, 2026
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