Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Majority of UK entrepreneurs say British government is ‘anti-business,’ new survey shows

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

Britain’s reputation as a country full of get-up-and-go seems to have got up and left the kingdom. Much of the blame for that falls on British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his colleagues, who led the left-leaning Labor Party to an epic victory in the middle of last year, but the landslide win hasn’t been good for the British economy.

The truth is that Britain’s primary income deficit — the difference between what the government raises from taxpayers compared to what it spends, excluding debt payments — has deteriorated rapidly over the last few years. In this year’s second quarter, the primary deficit totaled 16.8%, more than double the deficit in the fourth quarter of last year and the worst showing since the second quarter of 2023, according to government dat

"The biggest problem is the current British government is remorselessly negative," said Alan Mendoza, executive director of the Henry Jackson Society, a London-based think tank. "That’s not an environment to encourage investment." READ MORE HERE

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Inspire Creative Retreats 2026

 

Inspire Creative Retreats
2026
Art Retreats in Southern France
Hello!
Just to let you know, following the success of my wife's art retreat earlier this year, she's now offering two retreats in Southern France.
Hosted at a luxurious private villa in the medieval town of Cordes-sur-Ciel. You will be treated to a wonderful week of art, gourmet French food, and wine. Check out the retreats and book here: https://www.inspirecreativeretreats.com/2026-retreats


Friday, November 21, 2025

What Made Warren Buffett's Career So Remarkable who could be next as king or queen of investing?

By SIMON CONSTABLE

Warren Buffett, 95, the so-called Oracle of Omaha, is set to step down by year-end as CEO of investment company Berkshire Hathaway. Over 60 years, he and his deputy, Charlie Munger, who died in 2023 at the age of 99, produced outstanding investment returns that made other investors’ returns pale in comparison.

Look at the numbers: From 1965, the year Buffett took over a struggling textile company, through the end of 2024, Berkshire’s shares rose 5,502,284%. That’s an annual compounded return of 19.9%. Over the same six decades, the S&P 500 index rose just 39,054% or 10.4% annually.

“Buffett is the most legendary investor in the history of investing,” says Adam Patti, CEO of exchange-traded fund company VistaShares. “And he has changed the way people invest.” Read more here.

 

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Thursday, November 20, 2025

CONTINUED Commodities, AI Demand, and UK Political Turmoil reported on market trends

 @BatchelorShow and @RealConstabke reported on market trends among many other things.

LISTEN HERE

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Commodities, AI Demand, and UK Political Turmoil. Guest: @RealConstable

By SIMON CONSTABLE 

 Constable reported on market trends with energy prices significantly down but metals like copper and steel consistently higher, reflecting strong demand particularly for AI data.



Simon Constable reported on market trends with energy prices significantly down, but metals like copper and steel consistently higher, reflecting strong demand particularly for AI data center construction. 

Meanwhile, future chocolate prices are projected to rise due to "transcontinental climate change" linking Amazon deforestation to political instability in major cocoa regions like the DRC. 

And in UK politics, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer faces constant internal revolts and distrust due to policy flip-flops, tax increases, and failure to solve the immigration problem.


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Friday, November 14, 2025

Commodity Markets and UK Political Instability.

 By SIMON CONSTABLE

@RealConstable and @BatchelorShow analyze rare earth markets, noting China’s dominance is achieved through undercutting prices and buying out competitors. Prices for key industrial commodities like copper and aluminum are up. Listen here.


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