“Shell CEO warns the firm may ditch ‘undervalued’ London listing – reports”

Apr 13, 2024 | Companies

An independent (financial adviser’s) view

The amount held in UK shares by most managed portfolios, which seek to provide an international spread of investments (as they should), has reduced pretty significantly in recent years. What has kept it at even its current-reduced levels is the number of truly global companies which are still trade their shares on the London stock exchange; and the exposure they give our FTSE 100 to world markets. Of those, for better or worse, Shell is the largest, followed by other household names such as AstraZeneca, HSBC, Unilever, BP with (see below) SJP propping them up at number 100. Were Shell to move to the US, which it, or at least its boss is threatening to do, this may indeed be an acceleration of an already slippery slope towards financial backwater-dom. The post-Brexit talk of making the City a ‘Singapore on Thames’ (giving big companies and others tax breaks to stay or base themselves here) seems to have disappeared into the ether. And while, yes, we are still a great country, the country of Harry Potter, David Beckham’s left foot, etc., we can no longer rely on past financial and other glories to stay that way. I’d say.

Read more here

“Cash ISA allowance could be cut this month”

“Cash ISA allowance could be cut this month”

Our mantra has long been ’straightforward advice that you can understand’. That can mean trying to simplify the many complex products and options with which the world of finance tries to befuddle its target audience.

“Will the Bank of England Cut UK Interest Rates Again in 2025?”

“Will the Bank of England Cut UK Interest Rates Again in 2025?”

It’s easy to forget that five years ago the Bank of England Base Rate was at an all-time low of 0.1%, and only rose above 1% with the arrival of Liz Truss later in 2022. Something of which we often have to remind those who, when looking at how their investments have fared over the same period after yet another Trump Tweet has pushed markets in one direction or another, tell us ‘we could have been getting 4% a year if we’d left it all in the bank’.