Friday Briefing: Misinformation will cost the arts dearly

Contained within the news the festival had been “severely compromised” and threatened with “disruption from activists” were quotes from the festival’s chief executive Jenny Niven and chair Allan Little, and one from Baillie Gifford partner Nick Thomas. Each expressed both genuine dismay at the pressure that forced their hands and huge concern over what future this portends for arts funding in the UK. It is no news to anyone that the arts requires benevolent backers if it is to survive as an industry, particularly literary festivals. Take a look at the accounts of almost any arts body …

Blackstone ups Hipgnosis bid to $1.58bn

The revised bid comes following conversations with the SONG board and partly reflects the lower-than-expected adviser fees accompanying the transaction. When converted to GBP, the 105p per share offer (£1.27bn) represents a 49% premium to SONG’s 17 April share price, a 55% premium to the volume-weighted average price for the one-month period to 17 April and a 59% premium to the volume-weighted average price for the three-month period to 17 April. Double counting forces Hipgnosis to further slash portfolio value If approved, SONG shareholders will be able to opt to receive their cas…

The US consumer might finally be pulling back

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Indian markets hit record highs as exit polls forecast landslide Modi victory

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Bunq, the $1.8 billion European neobank, hopes to secure license for UK expansion this year

Bunq, known for its rainbow-colored cards and a focus on so-called “digital nomads,” initially launched in the U.K. in 2019. But the Dutch neobank was forced to exit the country in late 2020 in light of Brexit, which meant EU-based banks could no longer use their own country licenses to operate in the U.K. “I hope we’ll get somewhere by the end of the year, maybe early next year,” Ali Niknam, Bunq’s CEO and founder, told CNBC at the Viva Tech conference in Paris. Dutch digital bank Bunq is plotting re-entry into the U.K. to tap into a “large and underserved” market of some 2.8 million British “digital nomads.” Pavlo Gonchar | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

PARIS — Dutch digital bank Bunq is hoping it will manage to secure a banking license from U.K. financial regulators later this year or early next year, the firm’s CEO and founder Ali Niknam told CNBC.

“I hope we’ll get somewhere by the end of the year, maybe early next year, because the U.K.’s processes may be slightly different to Europe because it’s a different regulatory area,” Niknam said in an interview last week at the Viva Tech conference in Paris.

“I don’t know when they’re going to say yes, but so far I have little reason to believe that we won’t be successful.”

Bunq, known for its rainbow-colored cards and a focus on so-called “digital nomads” not bound by any one country or location, initially launched in the U.K. in 2019. But the bank was forced to exit the country in late 2020 because of Brexit.

The passage of Brexit into law meant that EU-based financial institutions couldn’t rely on their own country authorizations to operate in the U.K. market. Currently, Bunq only holds a banking license with the Dutch central bank.

Challenges of reentering UK market

Now, Bunq is plotting a reentry into the U.K. market. The firm last year submitted an application with the Financial Conduct Authority for an electronic money institution license. It says a U.K. launch would allow it to tap into a “large and underserved” market of some 2.8 million British digital nomads.

That will prove difficult, though. Rival European fintech Revolut, which is based in Britain and currently has an electronic money institution license, has been trying for

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Fresh calls for action on IHT breaks after 68 estates shelter £1.8bn in assets

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Ireland moves closer to relaxing ETF transparency rules, lawyers say

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Ireland’s financial regulator is planning to review its rules on portfolio transparency for exchange traded funds, according to lawyers.

The Central Bank of Ireland, which regulates Europe’s largest domicile of ETF assets, requires the products to disclose their full portfolio holdings daily, but this is seen by many as a barrier to the growth of active ETF investment strategies.

However, Hazel Doyle, partner at K&L Gates, said the CBI has told members of the Irish asset management trade body that it would review the rules later this year.

Brian Higgins, partner at Dillon Eustace and chair of Irish Funds’ ETF working group, confirmed this, saying that the regulator’s review “in itself is a positive”.

This article was previously published by Ignites Europe, a title owned by the FT Group.

Relaxing the rules “will widen the scope for active [ETFs]”, Higgins said.

When asked about its plans, a CBI spokesperson said the regulator was “open to engaging with industry on this issue”, but added that “a change to the current requirements for ETF portfolio disclosures” was not in its “imminent work planning” for 2024.

Ignites Europe previously reported that the CBI was considering reviewing its rules in 2022, amid concerns that active managers were reluctant to disclose their holdings every day — in effect divulging their intellectual property — and run the risk of rival investors front-running their positions.

Europe’s active ETF market has attracted new issuers since then, with existing ETF providers Ark Invest and BNP Paribas among firms to have expanded into active products in the EU earlier this year.

Janus Henderson and Eurizon are also planning to enter the European ETF market with active strategies.

Andrea Murray, vice-president of investor services at Brown Brothers Harriman, said a growing number of European active asset managers “reluctantly” accepted the fully transparent ETF model.

“They can look across the [Atlantic] and see flows flooding transparent active products and less so for semi-transparent ETFs,” Murray said.

Doyle, who was speaking at an ETFGI conference, agreed, saying: “I don’t know if the horse has kind of bolted already [and] everyone is kind of giving their portfolio transparency now.”

However, a loosening of ETF disclosure rules, such as bringing them in line with mutual funds, is likely to boost

GameStop shares surge as ‘Roaring Kitty’ trader posts account showing $116 million position

Dado Ruvic | Reuters

Meme stock GameStop is rallying again on speculation Keith Gill, the man who inspired 2021’s epic short squeeze, could currently have a huge position in the video game retailer.

Gill, who goes by DeepF——Value on Reddit and Roaring Kitty on YouTube and X, reappeared Sunday night, posting a screenshot of what could be his portfolio holding a significant amount of GameStop common shares and call options.

The Reddit trading crowd’s favorite trader holds 5 million shares of GameStop worth $115.7 million as of Friday’s closing price, according to the account snapshot posted on Reddit’s r/SuperStonk forum. The account also showed a position of 120,000 call options in GameStop with a strike price of $20 that expire on June 21st that were purchased for about $5.68 each. GameStop shares closed Friday at $23.14.

The post was not independently verified by CNBC. Notably, he didn’t post on the infamous WallStreetBets chatroom where he posted all of his trade updates at the height of the GameStop mania over three years ago. Though the username is the same one used.

Arrows pointing outwards

Around the same time Sunday night, Gill posted a cryptic picture of a reverse card in the game “Uno” on X, which quickly garnered near 30,000 likes.

Shares of GameStop jumped more than 19% in Robinhood’s 24-hour exchange Sunday evening, which allows for trading of certain stocks continuously. The stock could see a big pop when premarket trading starts at 4:00 a.m. Monday.

Gill’s first return to social media three weeks ago sparked an eye-popping rally in GameStop with shares more than doubling in May alone. At the time, he simply posted a picture of a man in a chair leaning forward, but that was enough to trigger a buying frenzy among amateur traders.

GameStop took advantage of the May rally by raising more than $900 million in a stock sale.

Stock chart icon GameStop, YTD

The investor was a former marketer for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance. In 2021, through YouTube videos and Reddit posts, Gill encouraged a band of retail traders to squeeze out short selling hedge funds in GameStop.

The action got so wild at one point that brokerages including Robinhood had to restrict trading in the stock as it blew up their clearinghouse margin. The mania also

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