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OpenAI pulls plug on Stargate UK, leaving Starmer’s AI superpower pitch in tatters
Business

OpenAI pulls plug on Stargate UK, leaving Starmer’s AI superpower pitch in tatters

by April 10, 2026

Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge to forge Britain into an artificial intelligence “superpower” has suffered its most embarrassing setback to date, after OpenAI quietly shelved its flagship Stargate UK data centre project, pointing the finger squarely at ruinous industrial energy prices and a muddled copyright regime.

The ChatGPT developer confirmed on Thursday that it was pausing the scheme, which had been unveiled with considerable fanfare last September during President Trump’s state visit. Stargate UK was meant to be the crown jewel in a £31 billion package of American technology commitments that also included £22 billion from Microsoft and £5 billion from Google. OpenAI, tellingly, never put a figure on its own pledge.

Built in partnership with chip giant Nvidia and London-based Nscale, the project was sold to ministers as a “major step” towards building sovereign British compute capacity, initially deploying some 8,000 graphics processing units in the first quarter of this year and scaling to roughly 31,000 chips thereafter. Sam Altman (pictured), OpenAI’s chief executive, had talked up its potential to turbocharge scientific research, lift productivity and juice economic growth, the very metrics the Labour government has staked its credibility on.

For the hundreds of thousands of small and mid-sized British firms eyeing AI as a route to efficiency and competitiveness, the climbdown is more than symbolic. Without domestic compute power at scale, SMEs risk being pushed further down the queue behind American and European rivals who can plug into cheaper, closer infrastructure.

Sam Richards, chief executive of the pro-infrastructure campaign group Britain Remade, did not mince his words. He described the pause as “a stark warning” that Britain was becoming prohibitively expensive to build in, arguing that no country saddled with some of the developed world’s steepest industrial electricity tariffs could credibly call itself an AI superpower. Investors, he warned, would simply take their chequebooks elsewhere.

An OpenAI spokesman insisted the company remained committed in principle, saying it would press ahead with Stargate UK once “the right conditions” on regulation and energy costs allowed for genuine long-term infrastructure investment. London, the spokesman noted, remained the firm’s largest international research hub, and OpenAI was continuing to expand its local headcount and roll out frontier AI tools within public services.

Behind the diplomatic language, however, lies a more pointed grievance. OpenAI made clear that the government’s U-turn on copyright reform was a significant factor in its decision. The company had been lobbying aggressively for a regime that would have permitted AI developers to hoover up copyrighted material to train their models unless rights holders explicitly opted out. After a fierce backlash from authors, musicians, publishers and much of the wider creative industries, ministers scrapped the proposal and now insist they have “no preferred option” on the way forward.

While the original Stargate announcement pitched the British chip cluster at “specialist use cases” in the public sector, regulated industries such as financial services, academic research and national security, OpenAI pointedly avoided any reference to training models on UK soil. The firm has now conceded it wanted the “freedom and the options” to deploy that local capacity as it saw fit — a euphemism, critics will say, for the very training activity at the heart of the copyright row.

The economics of the decision are, however, harder to spin away. Hyperscale data centres are voracious consumers of electricity, and the United Kingdom continues to lumber large industrial users with some of the highest power prices in the OECD. For a sector in which marginal costs dictate where the next gigawatt of capacity lands, Britain’s energy bill is an increasingly difficult sell in Silicon Valley boardrooms.

A Whitehall spokesman said the government was continuing to work with OpenAI and other leading AI firms “to strengthen UK compute capacity”, though officials privately acknowledge the optics are bruising.

The retreat also dovetails with a broader tightening of focus inside OpenAI itself. Valued at an eye-watering $852 billion at its most recent fundraising, the company is widely expected to press the button on a blockbuster stock-market flotation later this year, and has been busily jettisoning what insiders have dubbed “side quests”. In recent weeks it has pulled the plug on its Sora video-generation app, binned plans for an adult-oriented chatbot and quietly wound down an experiment in e-commerce.

Nscale declined to comment. Nvidia had not responded to a request for comment at the time of writing.

For British business, the message is uncomfortably clear: without urgent action on energy costs and regulatory clarity, the much-vaunted AI gold rush may end up passing these shores by.

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OpenAI pulls plug on Stargate UK, leaving Starmer’s AI superpower pitch in tatters

April 10, 2026
JLR battery plant lands £380m as government unveils £700m EV package
Business

JLR battery plant lands £380m as government unveils £700m EV package

by April 10, 2026

Jaguar Land Rover’s under-construction gigafactory in Somerset has been handed a £380 million taxpayer grant as part of a £700 million package designed to cement Britain’s place in the global race for electric vehicle manufacturing, and, crucially for smaller firms, to pump money into the supply chain that will feed it.

Announcing the funding at the Bridgwater site on Wednesday, business secretary Peter Kyle framed the intervention as the clearest signal yet that Whitehall intends to stay on the pitch where previous administrations, in his view, hovered on the sidelines. “In an unstable world,” he said, the government’s industrial strategy was about giving investors “the stability and confidence they need” to plan a decade ahead.

For the SME community watching nervously from the edges of the automotive ecosystem, the more interesting numbers sit beneath the eye-catching JLR headline. Of the remaining £320 million, £100 million has been earmarked for firms in the West Midlands and the North East to retool factories and retrain workers for the EV supply chain, while a further £47 million will flow to smaller battery innovation projects. Additional tranches will support the adoption of AI, robotics and digital manufacturing techniques among smaller engineering businesses, alongside skills funding for sixth forms and further-education colleges.

The headline beneficiary remains Agratas, the Tata-owned battery business and sister company to JLR, whose Bridgwater plant will eventually supply cells for Range Rover and Jaguar models rolling off West Midlands production lines from 2028. The first battery-powered Jaguars are expected on the road next year, using cells produced at Agratas’s existing facility in Gujarat. JLR has pledged to end internal combustion engine production by 2036.

Bridgwater will become Britain’s second gigafactory of meaningful scale, joining Nissan’s operation in Sunderland, which is already supplying cells for the Leaf and is gearing up to produce electrified versions of the Juke and Qashqai. JLR and Nissan, between them the country’s two largest automotive employers, will share a further £90 million ring-fenced for research and development aimed at lowering costs in next-generation EV platforms.

The announcements sit under the umbrella of Drive35, the government’s decarbonisation blueprint launched last year, which commits £4 billion to the sector through to 2035. Ministers claim the programme will ultimately generate 50,000 jobs and unlock £7.5 billion in private investment, figures which, while ambitious, will depend heavily on whether smaller UK suppliers can scale quickly enough to capitalise.

Among the smaller firms to benefit are Birmingham-based HyProMag, which recycles rare-earth magnets used in EV motors, features on the winners list, as does Maeving, the Coventry electric motorcycle manufacturer, and Elm Mobility of Banbury, a specialist in last-mile delivery vehicles. Also named is McMurtry Automotive, the Cotswold-based hypercar maker founded by the late Renishaw co-founder Sir David McMurtry, which is producing electric track cars priced at around £1 million apiece.

Not every recipient, however, is in robust health. Surface Transforms, the Liverpool carbon-ceramic brake disc specialist, was named as a scale-up funding winner despite having called in administrators last month, triggering the cancellation of its Aim listing. A Department for Business and Trade official confirmed the company had been “successful in the application process” but was yet to clear the financial due diligence required to release any money, a detail likely to raise eyebrows in the investment community.

In a departure from standard grant-making, the government has also moved to take a 10 per cent equity stake in listed hydrogen specialist ITM Power, comprising a £40 million cash injection and a £46.5 million grant for the company’s electrolyser development programme. The move marks one of the clearest examples yet of direct state participation in a listed green technology company and may set a template for future interventions.

The timing of the package is no accident. Figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders this week showed March new car sales up 6.6 per cent year on year, the strongest monthly performance since 2019 and evidence, ministers argue, that consumer confidence in the UK automotive market is returning. Set against geopolitical volatility, fragile supply chains and an intensifying global scramble for battery manufacturing capacity, the government’s message to industry — and to the international investors it is courting — is that Britain is open for long-term business.

For the SMEs operating in the slipstream of JLR and Nissan, the question now is execution. Grants and gigafactories make for compelling photo calls; building a resilient, globally competitive domestic supply chain in under a decade is a rather harder proposition. The Bridgwater site alone is expected to generate 4,000 jobs when fully operational. Whether the thousands more promised across the wider ecosystem materialise will depend on whether the smaller firms now being backed by Whitehall can deliver at the pace the transition demands.

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JLR battery plant lands £380m as government unveils £700m EV package

April 10, 2026
Former Liverpool CEO eviscerates FIFA for World Cup ticket pricing
Business

Former Liverpool CEO eviscerates FIFA for World Cup ticket pricing

by April 10, 2026

Peter Moore has called on the governing body to “sort out” their structures ahead of the summer spectacular

Former Liverpool CEO Peter Moore has expressed his disappointment with FIFA’s current ticketing strategy for the 2026 World Cup. Moore is far from the first in the space to voice concerns, as watching football in person becomes increasingly difficult for the average fan.

Moore, who served as Liverpool’s CEO from 2017 to 2020, has called on FIFA to reconsider its ticketing approach, stating that it is “completely detached from the very soul of football.”

Moore has urged FIFA to “sort out” its ticketing strategy before it’s too late. He expressed concern that the current model prioritises revenue over the reality of the average, passionate football supporter. These are the fans who save for years to attend the World Cup, travelling across continents and bringing the spirit, colour, and noise to the games.

Moore, who has attended five World Cups, described them as “life chapters” about culture, connection, and unity through football. He emphasised that the issue of ticket pricing carries significant weight given his extensive experience in the sports and entertainment industries.

During his career, Moore has held senior roles at Reebok, Sega, Microsoft, and Electronic Arts (EA). He recalled standing “shoulder to shoulder” with FIFA during its 2015 controversy when senior officials were charged with bribery, racketeering, and money laundering. Despite many sponsors distancing themselves from FIFA, EA continued to work with them, keeping millions of fans connected to football and the World Cup during a time of low trust in the organisation.

The controversy of dynamic pricing

FIFA’s ticket pricing for the upcoming World Cup has already sparked controversy. The Football Supporters’ Association (FSA) has criticised the ticket pricing policy as excessively expensive and unfair to fans. The introduction of dynamic pricing, a model that the FSA has urged FIFA to abandon, is one of the main reasons behind the increase.

A recent investigation revealed the high costs fans would face, including flights, tickets, and accommodation, to attend the World Cup. Moore echoed the FSA’s sentiments, stating that the current approach feels detached from the essence of football. He argued that football should not be a luxury product reserved for the highest bidder, but rather, it belongs to the people.

The future of FIFA ticket pricing strategy

While public criticism may not be enough to force FIFA to reconsider its pricing model, the results it produces might. FIFA claimed in January to have received half a billion ticket requests for the World Cup.

If a large proportion of tickets are held outside genuine fan demand, there is a risk that stadiums may not be full for many matches. This could pose a significant issue for FIFA, even if revenues reach record levels, especially given its ambition to deliver the biggest and best World Cup in history.

Moore concluded by saying, “The World Cup should unite the world, not divide it by price. Football deserves better. And so do the fans. Come on, FIFA, sort this out… It’s not too late.”

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Former Liverpool CEO eviscerates FIFA for World Cup ticket pricing

April 10, 2026
Mortgage defaults hit two-year high as Iran crisis drives borrowing costs sharply higher
Business

Mortgage defaults hit two-year high as Iran crisis drives borrowing costs sharply higher

by April 10, 2026

Britain’s homeowners and small businesses are facing a fresh squeeze on credit as the fallout from the Iran crisis works its way through the financial system, with the Bank of England reporting the sharpest rise in mortgage defaults in more than a year.

The Bank’s latest Credit Conditions Survey, which gauges lenders’ appetite and the level of demand for new borrowing, showed that defaults on secured loans, chiefly residential mortgages, climbed to 6.2 per cent in the first three months of 2026. That is the highest reading since the final quarter of 2024, when defaults peaked at 7.8 per cent following a succession of interest rate rises by Threadneedle Street.

Unsecured lending told a bleaker story still. Defaults on credit cards, personal loans and overdrafts rose for a fourth consecutive quarter to 18.6 per cent, the highest level since the closing months of 2023, when the figure stood at 25.7 per cent. Taken together, the data suggests that household finances, which had begun to stabilise in the latter half of last year, are once again under serious strain.

According to the Bank’s report, demand for home loans and other forms of credit had remained buoyant in the run-up to the conflict, aided by a steady retreat in borrowing costs. That brief window of optimism has now slammed shut. Since hostilities escalated in the Middle East, lenders have rapidly repriced risk, pushing the average two-year fixed mortgage rate from around 4.8 per cent to beyond 5.5 per cent in a matter of weeks.

For a typical borrower with a £200,000 mortgage, that shift translates into roughly an extra £1,000 a year on repayments, a sum that few stretched households can comfortably absorb on top of stubborn food and energy bills.

Raj Abrol, chief executive of the risk platform Galytix, said the pain was radiating well beyond the front doors of British homeowners. “What started as a conflict in the Middle East is now showing up in borrowing costs right across the economy,” he said, warning that the turmoil had “spooked” the country’s big banks and triggered a surge in mortgage pricing.

Mr Abrol cautioned that defaults were likely to continue creeping upwards for some months yet, with inflation proving sticky and the cost of living crisis grinding on. As lenders retreat behind tighter underwriting standards, he argued, access to credit would become “a bigger challenge for consumers” and for the small firms that depend on them.

The deeper concern, he added, lies beneath the surface of the headline numbers. The cost of short-term corporate borrowing has more than doubled for lower-rated companies since late February, investment-grade credit spreads have widened by 15 basis points, and UK gilt yields briefly touched 5 per cent for the first time since 2008. When wholesale funding becomes dearer, the pain seldom stops with homeowners. It filters through to employers juggling payroll, to SMEs hunting for refinancing, and to consumers whose credit card rates and car finance deals quietly ratchet higher.

With close to a million fixed-rate mortgage deals due to expire by September and inflation drifting back towards 3.5 per cent, Mr Abrol warned that defaults risked moving from “a slow creep to something banks have to take seriously”.

Kenny MacAulay, chief executive of the accounting software platform Acting Office, struck a similar note of caution from the perspective of Britain’s small business community. He said that surging inflation and higher rates, against the backdrop of a stagnating economic outlook, would “heap fresh misery on homeowners and businesses alike” for as long as the Iran crisis rumbled on. In such an environment, he argued, building extra reserves and cash buffers was no longer optional but essential for any owner-manager hoping to keep the wolves from the door.

For SMEs already contending with weaker consumer demand, tighter trade credit and rising wage bills, the Bank’s survey is an unwelcome reminder that geopolitical shocks rarely stay confined to the headlines. They eventually land, with interest, on the balance sheet.

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Mortgage defaults hit two-year high as Iran crisis drives borrowing costs sharply higher

April 10, 2026
Vinted breaks the billion-euro barrier as thrifty shoppers embrace second-hand fashion
Business

Vinted breaks the billion-euro barrier as thrifty shoppers embrace second-hand fashion

by April 9, 2026

The relentless squeeze on household budgets is reshaping how consumers buy clothes, and few businesses are reaping the rewards quite like Vinted.

The Lithuanian-founded online marketplace has reported annual revenues of €1.1 billion, a 38 per cent jump on the previous year, as shoppers increasingly swap the high street for the second-hand rail. Gross merchandise value, the total worth of goods sold through the platform, climbed 47 per cent to €10.8 billion, underscoring the sheer scale of the shift towards pre-owned goods.

Founded in Vilnius in 2008 by Milda Mitkute and Justas Janauskas, Vinted arrived in Britain a decade ago and found its stride during the pandemic. The UK is now the platform’s second-largest market behind France, with more than 16 million registered users, a remarkable footprint for a business that many mainstream consumers had barely heard of five years ago.

Much of that popularity rests on a simple commercial proposition: unlike eBay and Depop, Vinted charges sellers zero commission. That model, which allows sellers to pocket every penny of their sale price, has attracted everyone from celebrity users including Paul Mescal, Ferne McCann and Alexa Chung to ordinary households using the platform as a genuine income stream.

The company has also been busy broadening its offer well beyond wardrobe clear-outs. Buyers can now pick up computer games, books, crockery and vinyl records, while category expansion into sports equipment and collectables has opened fresh revenue streams. A push into new territories, Latvia, Estonia and Slovenia among them, has further widened the top line.

Not everything in the results made for comfortable reading, however. Adjusted earnings before interest, tax and amortisation slipped 5 per cent to €151 million, while net profit fell 19 per cent to €62 million. Vinted attributed the margin pressure to heavy investment in Germany, where it has battled fierce local competition, and to the expansion of Vinted Go, its in-house logistics arm, into Portugal and Spain.

Vinted Go, launched in 2022 with a pilot of parcel lockers around Paris, now operates across five markets and has ambitions that stretch well beyond its parent platform. The division has begun handling deliveries for third-party retailers, positioning Vinted as a would-be player in the broader European logistics market, a bold strategic bet that will take time to prove its worth.

The wider second-hand sector is consolidating rapidly. Depop, the Gen Z vintage fashion favourite, recently changed hands from Etsy to eBay at a notable discount, roughly $1.2 billion against the $1.6 billion Etsy paid in 2021. Vinted, meanwhile, has been on an acquisition spree of its own, snapping up Denmark’s Trendsales, Sweden’s Rebelle and the Netherlands’ United Wardrobe to cement its position as Europe’s dominant resale marketplace.

For Britain’s growing army of second-hand sellers and bargain hunters, the message is clear: the thrift economy is no passing fad. With household finances still under pressure and sustainability concerns adding moral weight to the trend, platforms such as Vinted look well placed to keep growing, provided they can balance expansion costs against the profitability investors will eventually demand.

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Vinted breaks the billion-euro barrier as thrifty shoppers embrace second-hand fashion

April 9, 2026
Oil price surges towards $100 as Middle East ceasefire begins to unravel
Business

Oil price surges towards $100 as Middle East ceasefire begins to unravel

by April 9, 2026

The brief sigh of relief across global markets lasted barely a day. Brent crude climbed sharply back towards $100 a barrel on Thursday after Iran moved to close the Strait of Hormuz, sending a clear signal that the fragile Middle East ceasefire was already fracturing.

The benchmark was trading at $98.61 a barrel in early afternoon dealing, a rise of 4 per cent, having fallen as much as 16 per cent the previous day to below $91 on optimism that a two-week pause in hostilities might pave the way for a lasting peace. That optimism now looks badly misplaced.

Iran’s decision to shut the strait, through which roughly a fifth of the world’s oil and gas passes, came in direct response to Israeli airstrikes on Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, which Tehran condemned as a breach of the ceasefire agreement. It is a move that strikes at the heart of global energy security and one that will alarm policymakers and business leaders in equal measure.

Sultan Al Jaber, chief executive of Abu Dhabi’s state oil company Adnoc, did not mince his words. He made clear that Iran was using passage through the waterway as a tool of political leverage rather than respecting freedom of navigation, a distinction that matters enormously for businesses dependent on uninterrupted supply chains.

Nigel Green, chief executive of the financial advisory group deVere, echoed those concerns, pointing out that a fifth of the world’s oil supply continues to move through a corridor effectively controlled by one of the belligerents. For SMEs already grappling with elevated energy costs, it is a deeply uncomfortable position.

Stock markets reflected the souring mood. The FTSE 100, which had enjoyed its strongest single session since April 2025 with a 2.5 per cent gain on Wednesday, gave back 0.2 per cent to trade at 10,585. On the continent, Germany’s DAX shed 1.4 per cent and France’s CAC 40 fell 0.7 per cent. Across Asia, Japan’s Nikkei, South Korea’s Kospi and China’s SSE Composite all closed lower.

Wall Street, which had rallied sharply overnight with the S&P 500 up 2.5 per cent and the Dow Jones gaining nearly 3 per cent, was expected to open in the red.

President Trump weighed in on social media, confirming that American forces would remain deployed in the Gulf until an agreement was both reached and honoured, warning of severe consequences should it not be.

Meanwhile, Israel intensified its military campaign in Lebanon with its heaviest strikes since the conflict with the Iran-backed Hezbollah militia escalated last month, with more than 250 reported killed.

For British businesses, particularly those in manufacturing, logistics and any sector exposed to energy pricing, the message is stark. The ceasefire may have offered a momentary respite, but the underlying volatility in the Middle East, and its direct bearing on the cost of doing business, is far from resolved. With Brent hovering just shy of triple figures, boardrooms across the country will be revisiting their hedging strategies and bracing for what could be a prolonged period of uncertainty.

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Oil price surges towards $100 as Middle East ceasefire begins to unravel

April 9, 2026
The UK’s Overlooked £2 Billion Market: Why Home Hardware Replacement Is Booming
Business

The UK’s Overlooked £2 Billion Market: Why Home Hardware Replacement Is Booming

by April 9, 2026

There is a market in the UK that rarely makes headlines, never attracts venture capital, and is almost entirely invisible to the business press.

It is worth an estimated two billion pounds annually, it is growing year on year, and it is being driven by a convergence of factors that show no sign of reversing.

The market is home hardware replacement — door handles, locks, window fittings, letterboxes, hinges, and the hundreds of small components that keep the UK’s thirty million homes functioning. It is not new construction. It is not a renovation. It is the quiet, unglamorous business of replacing the parts that wear out.

The Scale Nobody Talks About

The UK housing stock is ageing. The uPVC door and window installation boom of the 1990s and 2000s means that between fifteen and twenty million UK homes are now running on door and window hardware that is fifteen to twenty-five years old. Springs have weakened. Finishes have deteriorated. Lock mechanisms have worn to the point where they no longer meet current security standards.

Every one of those homes will need replacement hardware at some point — many of them within the next five years. A single front door requires a handle, a euro cylinder lock, a multipoint gearbox mechanism, a letterbox, hinges, and weatherseals. A typical three-bedroom house has eight to twelve windows, each with a handle and a pair of hinges. The average hardware replacement spend per property, when multiple components are addressed at once, runs between seventy-five and two hundred pounds.

Multiply that by the millions of properties approaching the replacement window, and the market opportunity is substantial. Yet it remains largely served by small specialist retailers rather than major chains.

Why the Big Retailers Cannot Win This Market

The structural challenge for large DIY retailers in this market is specificity. Home hardware replacement is not a category where one size fits all. A customer replacing a door handle needs a product that matches the exact PZ distance, backplate length, spindle type, and fixing configuration of their existing door. A customer replacing a euro cylinder needs the exact length to match their door thickness. A customer replacing window hinges needs the correct stack height and hinge length for their window type.

Large retailers optimize for the most popular specifications and ignore the long tail. The result is that a customer visiting a major DIY chain to replace a door handle has perhaps a thirty percent chance of finding the exact product they need. The remaining seventy percent leave empty-handed or buy something that does not fit, generating a return and a second trip.

Specialist online retailers have inverted this model. By focusing exclusively on door and window hardware, they carry the full specification range — every PZ distance, every cylinder length, every hinge type. A specialist selling replacement uPVC door handles stocks forty or fifty models where a general retailer stocks five. The conversion rate difference is dramatic.

The Content Advantage

The most successful businesses in this space have recognised that the customer’s primary challenge is not finding a cheap product — it is identifying which product they need. A homeowner staring at a broken door handle does not know what PZ distance means. They do not know whether they have an espagnolette or a cockspur window handle. They cannot tell a multipoint from a mortice lock.

Specialist retailers that invest in educational content — measuring guides, identification tools, fitting instructions, video walkthroughs — solve this knowledge gap and capture the customer at the moment of highest purchase intent. The customer searches for how to identify their door handle, finds a comprehensive guide on the specialist retailer’s website, identifies their product, and purchases it in the same session.

This content-led acquisition model generates organic traffic at effectively zero marginal cost, in contrast to the paid advertising that general retailers rely on for the same customer. Over time, the specialist builds a library of authoritative content that compounds in search visibility, creating a widening competitive moat.

The DIY Shift

A decade ago, most home hardware replacement was handled by locksmiths and general handymen. The homeowner called a professional, paid a callout fee of sixty to one hundred and fifty pounds, and had the work done for them. The professional sourced the parts through trade suppliers and marked them up accordingly.

That model is changing rapidly. The combination of cost-of-living pressure, widely available fitting guides, and the simplicity of most hardware replacement tasks has shifted a significant proportion of the market to DIY. Replacing a door handle is a ten-minute job with a screwdriver. Changing a euro cylinder takes five minutes. Fitting new window hinges requires twenty minutes and basic tools.

The customer who previously paid a locksmith one hundred and fifty pounds for a cylinder replacement now watches a two-minute video guide, orders a thirty-pound cylinder online, and fits it themselves. The locksmith loses the job. The specialist retailer gains a direct-to-consumer sale with full margin.

This shift has been accelerating since the pandemic, when homeowners became more comfortable with DIY and less willing to pay for services they could perform themselves. The trend shows no sign of reversing.

Insurance and Regulation as Growth Drivers

Home insurance policies have become increasingly specific about door and window security requirements. Policies that once required simply “adequate locks” now specify TS007 3-Star euro cylinders, British Standard multipoint locks, and key-operated window fittings on ground-floor windows.

A homeowner who discovers at policy renewal — or worse, at the point of a burglary claim — that their existing hardware is non-compliant has a strong financial incentive to upgrade immediately. The cost of a rejected insurance claim dwarfs the thirty to fifty pounds required for compliant replacement hardware.

This regulatory tightening has created a recurring upgrade cycle that did not exist a decade ago. As standards evolve, properties that met previous requirements fall below the new threshold and require hardware replacement regardless of whether the existing hardware has physically failed.

The Energy Efficiency Angle

Building energy performance standards are tightening across the UK, with particular focus on rental properties. Landlords are increasingly required to demonstrate minimum energy efficiency standards, and external doors and windows are a significant factor in thermal performance assessments.

Worn draught seals, letterboxes with failed springs, and handles that do not compress the door tightly against the frame all contribute to measurable heat loss. Replacing these components is one of the cheapest ways to improve a property’s thermal performance — and for landlords facing minimum EPC requirements, it is often the most cost-effective first step before investing in more expensive measures.

The Business Opportunity

For entrepreneurs and small business owners considering this market, the barriers to entry are relatively low but the barriers to excellence are significant. Setting up an online shop selling door handles is straightforward. Building the product knowledge, identification guides, fitting support, and full-specification inventory that creates a competitive advantage against both general retailers and other specialists requires genuine expertise and sustained investment.

The businesses that are winning in this space share common characteristics: deep product knowledge that translates into authoritative content, comprehensive inventory that covers the long tail of specifications, and customer service that can identify the correct product from a description or photograph. These are not capabilities that can be bought off the shelf or replicated by a competitor overnight.

For investors and analysts tracking the home improvement sector, the hardware replacement segment deserves more attention than it currently receives. It is counter-cyclical — hardware fails regardless of economic conditions. It is recurring — every replacement creates a future replacement need. And it is structurally shifting toward direct-to-consumer channels that favour specialists over generalists.

The market may not be glamorous. But it is large, it is growing, and it is being won by businesses that understand their products better than anyone else.

Read more:
The UK’s Overlooked £2 Billion Market: Why Home Hardware Replacement Is Booming

April 9, 2026
Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll
Business

Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll

by April 9, 2026

The iconic property arm of the Knightsbridge department store has closed its last remaining office after a perfect storm of stamp duty hikes, the scrapping of non-dom tax status and a shift in tastes among ultra-wealthy buyers left it fatally exposed.

For the best part of 130 years, Harrods Estates occupied a rarefied corner of the London property market. Founded in 1897 on the ground floor of the famous Knightsbridge department store, it spent decades connecting British aristocrats and wealthy international buyers with some of the capital’s most desirable addresses. Princess Diana’s stepmother, Countess Raine Spencer, served as a director for a decade, lending the brand a touch of genuine celebrity cachet.

Now, however, the final chapter has been written. The agency has confirmed what it called a “very difficult” decision to close its last remaining office on Brompton Road, bringing an end to operations that once stretched from the Home Counties to Monte Carlo.

Shaun Drummond, Harrods Estates’ residential director, said the closure was part of a broader group strategy to refocus on luxury retail. Service will continue for existing tenants, landlords and those with sales already under way, but even these arrangements will wind down in phases, ceasing entirely by March next year.

The demise of such a storied name is being attributed to a confluence of forces that have battered the top end of the London market. Chief among them is the government’s decision to abolish non-dom tax status, a move that has proved a significant disincentive for wealthy overseas buyers considering a move to the capital. Coupled with stamp duty surcharges of up to 19 per cent for foreign purchasers, the effect has been stark: Savills calculates that average prices for homes valued at £4.5 million and above fell by 4.8 per cent last year.

The geographical dynamics of prime central London have shifted, too. Knightsbridge, once the undisputed pinnacle of luxury living in the capital, has been overtaken in the affections of wealthy buyers by Mayfair, Belgravia and Notting Hill. According to Rosy Khalastchy, a director at Beauchamp Estates, a younger generation of Middle Eastern purchasers no longer shares the desire of their parents and grandparents to live within walking distance of the Harrods store.

Then there is the shadow cast by the late Mohamed Al Fayed, who owned Harrods until selling it to the Qatar Investment Authority for £1.5 billion in 2010. Allegations of historical sexual abuse against Al Fayed, who died in 2023, have caused reputational damage that some industry figures believe drove clients towards rival agencies.

Others point to strategic confusion under Qatari ownership. The property arm is said to have become overly dependent on a narrow pool of international buyers and sellers whose preferences can shift rapidly. One telling anecdote emerged in the summer of 2024, when a visiting lawyer found a large section of the Knightsbridge store given over to a pop-up exhibition advertising luxury homes in Saudi Arabia — a curious choice given the well-documented rivalry between Qatar and Saudi Arabia.

For those who remember the agency’s heyday under managing director Mark Collins, who built an enviable client roster of high-net-worth individuals and opened four London offices, the closure will feel like the end of an era. As Khalastchy recalled, there was a time when every serious seller in prime central London wanted to list with Harrods Estates, and Countess Spencer’s presence at property launches added genuine star power.

The brand’s website now carries a stark banner in capital letters confirming it is no longer accepting new enquiries. A Harrods spokesman said the wind-down followed the natural end of the office lease and that plans were in place to ensure no disruption for remaining clients.

For the wider London luxury property sector, the closure of Harrods Estates serves as a cautionary tale. A brand name alone, however illustrious, offers little protection when the tax environment turns hostile, buyer demographics shift and the competition is hungry. The era of wealthy foreigners beating a path to Knightsbridge simply because the Harrods name was above the door appears to be well and truly over.

Read more:
Harrods Estates shuts up shop after 130 years as tax raids on wealthy overseas buyers take their toll

April 9, 2026
Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm
Business

Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm

by April 9, 2026

Britain’s solar sector delivered a statement of intent this week, smashing generation records on back-to-back days as ministers gave the green light to the country’s biggest solar installation.

Solar farms across England, Wales and Scotland produced 14.1GW of electricity at midday on Monday, eclipsing the previous benchmark of 14GW set last July. That mark lasted barely 24 hours before Tuesday afternoon’s output pushed the bar to 14.4GW.

The milestones landed on the same day the government confirmed approval for Springwell, a vast solar farm in Lincolnshire expected to generate enough power for roughly 180,000 homes at peak capacity. Energy minister Michael Shanks framed the decision as central to shielding consumers and businesses from volatile international fossil fuel markets, calling solar “one of the cheapest forms of power available.”

Springwell follows the approval of Tillbridge, another large-scale Lincolnshire installation backed six months earlier,  a notable doubling down in a county where Reform UK’s anti-renewables stance has been gaining traction. Together with 23 other major clean energy projects approved since Labour took office in 2024, the pipeline could supply the equivalent of up to 12.5 million homes.

The solar records come barely a fortnight after wind generation hit its own new peak of 23.9GW, pushing gas-fired output to a two-year low and providing a dry run for the government’s ambition of a virtually carbon-free grid by 2030. The electricity system operator is understood to be preparing to run the network without any gas generation for short spells as early as this summer.

For the thousands of smaller firms watching their energy costs with understandable anxiety, the direction of travel matters. The government has streamlined planning for so-called plug-in solar installations and updated building standards to require solar panels on all new homes from 2028, measures that should, in time, ease the burden on businesses operating from newer commercial and mixed-use premises.

Whether the pace of deployment proves fast enough to deliver the bill reductions ministers are promising remains the critical question. But with records tumbling and consents flowing, the trajectory is difficult to argue with.

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Britain smashes solar records as ministers greenlight country’s largest solar farm

April 9, 2026
John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership
Business

John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership

by April 9, 2026

There is never an easy way to announce a hefty pay rise at the top while headcount is falling on the shop floor, and the John Lewis Partnership’s latest annual report lays that tension bare.

Jason Tarry (pictured), who took the chair of the employee-owned retailer in September 2024, saw his basic salary lifted from £990,000 to £1.2m for the year to January, a rise of just over a fifth. Factor in a modest annual bonus worth 2 per cent of pay, plus other benefits, and his total package nudged close to £1.26m.

The partnership justified the increase by pointing out that Tarry now combines the roles of chairman and chief executive, following the departure of Nish Kankiwala, whose position was scrapped. His predecessor Sharon White was on the same base salary of £990,000 throughout her tenure and took home a total of £1.12m in each of her last two full years, during which no bonus was paid at all.

For context, Tarry’s remuneration remains some way below the £1.53m peak reached by former chairman Charlie Mayfield in 2015, and well short of the nearly £2m paid to the Co-op Group’s former chief last year. A reduction in the number of senior roles also meant the total bill for key management, including directors, held steady at £8m.

Yet it is the workforce numbers that will attract closer scrutiny. The partnership now employs 65,700 people, down from 69,000 a year earlier, with Waitrose losing roughly 1,800 full-time positions and John Lewis shedding around 1,500. A spokesperson said the vast majority of departures reflected natural attrition, with fewer than 0.5 per cent of partners leaving through redundancy.

The trajectory, however, tells a starker story. The group had 76,400 staff on its books in 2023, and has now cut some 10,700 roles in the space of three years — broadly in line with earlier reports that it was considering the removal of up to 11,000 positions by 2029. In March the business signalled it would continue to pursue efficiencies, including greater use of electronic shelf labels and artificial intelligence, though it declined to say whether further reductions were on the cards.

There are brighter notes in the report. The partnership paid an annual bonus to all staff in March for the first time in four years, after underlying profits rose 6 per cent. Every employee, the chairman included, received the equivalent of 2 per cent of their salary.

Tarry’s first 18 months have been defined by a return to retail fundamentals: better stores, improved product availability and higher pay for frontline workers. The group is investing £800m across its estate and has already refurbished 23 Waitrose branches and five John Lewis stores over the past year. The department store chain has drawn queues with the high-street revival of Topshop and seen renewed footfall thanks to the return of its famous “never knowingly undersold” pledge.

While 16 John Lewis department stores have closed in recent years, the chain remains the largest of its kind in Britain, buoyed by the collapse of former rivals Debenhams and Beales and the radical downsizing of House of Fraser.

It has not all been smooth sailing under Tarry, however. The partnership faced criticism after letting go an autistic man who had volunteered as an unpaid shelf stacker at a Waitrose branch for years. More recently, the dismissal of a 17-year employee who intervened to stop a shoplifter stealing Lindt gold bunny Easter eggs attracted widespread attention, and a prompt job offer from rival grocer Iceland.

For a business built on the principle that every worker is a partner, squaring executive pay rises with a shrinking workforce will remain one of the defining challenges of Tarry’s leadership. The numbers may add up on paper, but the optics require careful handling in a retailer whose brand is inseparable from the people who run it.

Read more:
John Lewis chairman’s pay climbs 21% to £1.2m as 3,300 roles disappear across the partnership

April 9, 2026
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