Rishi Sunak and wife Akshata Murty lose £200m in a year

Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty saw their wealth slide last year, the Sunday Times Rich List shows.
The prime minister and his wife made their Rich List debut in 2022 thanks to the near-1% stake Murty owns in Infosys, the Indian IT giant co-founded by her father.
But this time round, the prime minister and his wife’s wealth is estimated at £201m less than 12 months ago. That works out as an average daily loss of more than £500,000.
Their net worth is estimated at £529m this year, down from £730m in 2022.
This is due to a slide in Infosys’s share price, which fell by over a fifth during 2022, as the boom in tech stocks unravelled.
But Infosys has continued to swell the Sunak-Murty coffers – Akshata will receive nearly £6.7m in dividend payments from the company this summer,
Murty’s lucrative dividends from Infosys over the years far exceed the prime minister’s own earnings, the Sunday Times says, adding;
He published financial statements that showed he earned just under £2 million in 2021/22 — still more than 50 times the average full-time UK salary. It included his MP and ministerial wages as well as returns from his investment portfolio and other unspecified “gains”.
On all this he paid £432,493 of tax, according to information from his wealth adviser released by the government.
Key events
Inflation remains the biggest concern for Britons, followed by the health system.
When asked about the important issues facing the UK today, the Office for National Statistics reports, the most commonly reported issues continue to be the cost of living (91%), the NHS (82%), the economy (73%), and climate change and the environment (59%).
The ONS adds:
Around two-thirds of (67%) adults reported that their cost of living had increased, compared with a month ago.
The most common reasons reported by adults who said their cost of living had increased compared with a month ago were an increase in the price of food shopping (96%), an increase in gas or electricity bills (74%), and an increase in the price of fuel (38%).
When asked about the important issues facing the UK today, the most commonly reported issues continued to be:
▪️ the cost of living (91%) 🏷
▪️ the NHS (82%) 🏥
▪️ the economy (73%) 💰
▪️ climate change and the environment (59%) 🌦 pic.twitter.com/80DyMbx7fx— Office for National Statistics (ONS) (@ONS) May 19, 2023
Nationwide to dish out £340m to members after record financial results

Kalyeena Makortoff
Nationwide will pay £340m directly into customer accounts for the first time, after a jump in deposits and higher interest rates drove annual profits up 40% to record highs.
Britain’s biggest building society has tended to use profits to offer better rates on savings, loans and mortgages for its members but on Friday it launched an inaugural programme that will distribute funds directly to customers, akin to shareholder payouts made by banks.
The payout, which amounts to about 15% of its annual profits, will benefit 3.4 million eligible customers, who will receive about £100 directly into their accounts in June.
The Nationwide chief executive, Debbie Crosbie, said plans for the payout were influenced by the recent rise in living costs:
“We don’t see anyone else doing this, as such, and we think, in the cost of living crisis, it was really important to get people cash where we could, and we think it will have the most impact.”
It comes as Nationwide reported a 40% jump in annual pre-tax profits to £2.2bn, topping its previous record high of £1.6bn a year earlier. The building society benefited from the rise in UK interest rates, which have climbed to 4.5% over the past year and allowed lenders to charge customers more for loans and mortgages.
Britain’s billionaires will be pleased to learn that global shares have hit a one-month high today, amid rising hopes of a deal to lift the US debt ceiling.
MSCI’s broadest index of global shares has gained 0.2% to its highest level since mid-April, and is on course for its biggest weekly gain since late March.
In Europe, Germany’s DAX is on track for a record closing high, up 0.6% this morning.
In London, the FTSE 100 has gained 0.5% or 35 points to 7778 points.
The rally came after Democratic negotiators told President Joe Biden they were making “steady progress” on a deal to lift the U.S. debt ceiling, and avoid a disastrous default by the world’s largest economy.
As covered in the introduction, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy also sounded optimistic last night, saying talks are in “a much better place” than they were a week ago.
While the UK’s billionaires keep getting richer, the rest of the country is facing a new phase in the cost of living squeeze.
The food price shock set to overtake energy bills rise as the biggest cost of living hit to family finances, the Resolution Foundation warn this morning.
We get April’s inflation data next Wednesday, and it’s likely to show a drop in price rises over the last year (as we catch up with the soaring energy costs in 2022).
But food inflation, which jumped over 19% in March, is likely to persist for some time to come.
Resolution say:
As a result, food prices are set to contribute more to overall inflation than energy in the months ahead. Between March and September 2023, food prices are expected to contribute around 2 percentage points to inflation each month, while the contribution of energy prices is set to fall from 3 percentage points to less than 1.
These rising food prices will hit poorer households the most, as Resolution’s CEO Torsten Bell explains here:
The food price shock is overtaking the energy price shock because:
– yes energy prices have risen faster
– but they will fall from July as food prices carry on rising
– and we spend more on food so a smaller % increase can drive a bigger £ hit— Torsten Bell (@TorstenBell) May 19, 2023
This is so bad for lower income household not just because they face higher inflation (about 4% higher for poorest vs richest) but because poorer households can’t respond as easily – if you’re already buying own- brand essentials, you can’t trade down to a cheaper alternative
— Torsten Bell (@TorstenBell) May 19, 2023

Sir Jim Ratcliffe looks to be the biggest riser on this year’s Rich List, as he secured second place with a fortune of £29bn.
Ratcliffe’s wealth swelled by £23bn in the last year, rising from £6.075bn in 2022 (which put him in 29th position).
The Sunday Times explains how the energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine’s benefitted his INEOS group:
The self-made billionaire, part-time mountaineer and beekeeper built his fortune snapping up orphaned petrochemical plants from companies such as BP and ICI and turning them into going concerns.
When energy prices rocketed and Europe shivered at the start of the Ukraine war, he was on hand with a fleet of 20 ocean-going tankers to shuttle shale gas from the US, some from his own fracking wells.
A few years ago, Ratcliffe quit Britain for tax-free Monaco, a move expected to save him billions of pounds in tax.
Despite their wealth dropping (to £529m from £730m), Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty are “better placed than most to weather the cost of living crisis”, says the Sunday Times, with some understatement.
Their main London home is a five-bedroom Kensington mews house worth an estimated £7m. Soon after the row over Murty’s tax status erupted, the family moved out of Downing Street and back into their west London home. The couple also own a flat on Old Brompton Road nearby, usually used for hosting friends and family.
In 2015 they spent £1.5m on a Georgian manor house in the North Yorkshire village of Kirby Sigston to serve as a constituency home. Estate agents estimate that the 12m x 5m indoor swimming pool, gym, yoga studio, hot tub and tennis court added by the couple have pushed the property’s value beyond £2m.
We also have a new breakdown of the wealthiest 35 Brits under the age of 35.
It’s topped by the Duke of Westminster, Hugh Grosvenor, who announced his engagement to Olivia Henson last month. He has a weath of £9.878bn.
Grosvenor, 32, owns more than 300 acres in London’s in Mayfair and Belgravia within a global, family-owned property empire which, luckily for him, is held in trust so avoided inheritance tax.
The Sunday Times has more detail on “Hughie”, as he’s apparently known to friends:
The duke, 32, was educated at the Shropshire private school Ellesmere College and studied real estate management at Newcastle University. After graduating he worked for Bio-bean, the London-based eco-business which has since become the world’s largest recycler of coffee grounds into efficient and sustainable products. His fiancée is a senior account manager for Belazu, a food importer.
These days the duke focuses on overseeing his family’s charitable foundation, which has a focus on the mental health of children, and the property empire that includes 300 acres of Mayfair and Belgravia as well as buildings in more than 40 cities around the world.
Today’s Rich List reports that nepotism helped nine people get on the list, but most made their millions on their own.
It says:
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The majority made millions on their own, but nine were born into money.
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Those who inherited wealth are worth much more. So, 33 out of 38 individuals on this list built their fortunes themselves, a combined total of £5.8 billion; the other five, who owe at least some of their wealth to inheritance, account for £13.1 billion.
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Four of the 35 under 35 were born outside the UK, the others mostly come from London or Worcestershire.
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About half attended state schools, and at least a third didn’t go on to further education.
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Five were friends at the same school, South Bromsgrove High School, including Ben Francis, 30, co-founder of the sportswear brand Gymshark
Hughie Grovesnor is followed on the list by Lady Charlotte Wellesley (£2.167bn), the daughter of the Duke of Wellington, who has married into a South American brewing dynasty, Johnny Boufarhat (£1.714bn) who built the video-conference app Hopin, Ben Francis (£900m), and India Rose James (£758m) the granddaughter of the property magnate and porn publisher Paul Raymond.
James, who founded the art gallery Soho Revue, insists her financial success shouldn’t be put down to nepotism. In an interview published this morning, the ‘Princess of Soho’ says:
At a party recently someone was complaining about “nepo babies” and a few faces turned to me. What can I say? I was left money, which undoubtedly gave me a leg up. But I set up the gallery on my own; I pay a higher percentage to the artists than most galleries because I want to invest in the creative community.
If I inherit some money, does that make me a nepo baby? I don’t think so.
The majority made millions on their own, but nine were born into money.
33 out of 38 individuals on this list built their fortunes themselves; the other five, owe at least some of their wealth to inheritancehttps://t.co/AQDelozFCf
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
Famous names on the 35-under-35 list include Ed Sheeran (£300m), Rory McIlroy (£200m), Adele (£165m), Harry Styles (£150m), Daniel Radcliffe (£92m), Dua Lipa (£75m), Gareth Bale (£70m), Raheem Sterling (£61m), Emma Watson (£60m), Niall Horan (£54m), Louis Tomlinson (£54m), Harry Kane (£51m) and Cara Delevingne (£50m).
Today’s Rich List, which shows Britain’s 171 billionaires collectively own over £683.8bn, shows the urgent need to tackle inequality, the IPPR thinktank say.
Dr George Dibb, head of the centre for economic justice at IPPR, says:
“While a rising number of households on the lowest incomes simply cannot pay their bills, the fact that a few of the UK’s richest people have seen dips in their wealth is outweighed by the growth in combined wealth of the 171 billionaires.
“Sky-high energy bills have fed into record profits for oil firms, who have passed this directly to those lucky enough to be shareholders, funnelling higher bill payments by everyone into the wealth of the richest.
“It’s more urgent than ever to address rising inequality in our economy: income from wealth should be taxed at the same rate as income from work, and we must ensure everyone benefits from a growing economy, not just a lucky few.
“That means aligning rates of income tax, capital gains tax, and tax on dividends. It’s also time for a fair, proportional property tax to replace the regressive system of council tax. And it’s long past time to ditch non-dom status.”
You can see the Rich List online here: The Sunday Times Rich List 2023 revealed.
They’ve tweeted the key points too:
This year’s list features the King, the prime minister, a Catholic priest, two scrap metal dealers, a centenarian, a former tea lady — and the wealthiest Liverpudlian in history (not a Beatle)
But the big news is that the boom time is over https://t.co/KHJkPyA26c
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
This year’s list features the King, the prime minister, a Catholic priest, two scrap metal dealers, a centenarian, a former tea lady — and the wealthiest Liverpudlian in history (not a Beatle)
But the big news is that the boom time is over https://t.co/KHJkPyA26c
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
There are 171 billionaires — down six from 2022.
Wealth shared by UK billionaires climbed to £683.856bn, £30.734 more than in last year’s Rich List.
However, at a time of double-digit inflation that 4.5% rise represents a fall in real terms pic.twitter.com/WZjFMjSxH3
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
Rishi Sunak and his wife made their Rich List debut in 2022 thanks to the stake Murty owns in Infosys but its share price is down.
As a result their wealth is estimated at £201 million less than 12 months ago https://t.co/dJ50aqlEUi
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
The 35th Sunday Times Rich List is topped by Gopi Hinduja and family with an estimated record fortune of £35 billion https://t.co/ARaJonvkN2
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
Yet the UK’s wealthiest dynasty, No 1 on the Rich List, has been rocked by a Succession-style power struggle over their vast fortune https://t.co/2tRfDoE9Rx
— The Times and The Sunday Times (@thetimes) May 19, 2023
Other fallers on this year’s UK Rich List include Matt Moulding, the founder of the online retailer THG, and Mike Lynch, who cofounded the cybersecurity firm Darktrace.
Moulding and his wife Jodie have fallen to 254th, from 230th, with their wealth dropping by £70m to £630m.
Shares in THG dropped by over 70% in 2022, as the company failed to meet the expectations set when it floated at a £5.4bn valuation in 2020. Its value has shrunk by almost 90% since.
Darktrace’s float has been volatile too – after an early surge, the stock has dropped back towards its IPO price in 2021.
Lynch, and wife Angela Bacares, together own around 10% of Darktrace. They dropped to 199 on this year’s Rich List, from 179, with their net worth down £136m to £852m.
That’s not Lynch’s only problem, though. Last week he was extradited to the US to face criminal fraud charges, which he denies, of duping the US firm Hewlett-Packard into overpaying when it struck an $11bn deal for his software firm Autonomy in 2011.
Branson slides down Rich List
Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty aren’t along in becoming poorer last year, and are far from the biggest fallers.
The Sunday Times reports:
In 12 months Sir Richard Branson’s fortune has shrunk by 42.6% to £2.41bn. Shares in his satellite venture, Virgin Orbit, have collapsed.
Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, easyJet’s founder, is another high-profile faller. The budget airline’s share price has continued to lose altitude and the other lines in his easy empire have failed to make up for it.
A year ago, Branson and family were 44th on the Rich List, with a fortune of £4.2bn.
This time, they’ve dropped to 77th with a net worth of £2.41bn.
Rishi Sunak and wife Akshata Murty lose £200m in a year

Rishi Sunak and Akshata Murty saw their wealth slide last year, the Sunday Times Rich List shows.
The prime minister and his wife made their Rich List debut in 2022 thanks to the near-1% stake Murty owns in Infosys, the Indian IT giant co-founded by her father.
But this time round, the prime minister and his wife’s wealth is estimated at £201m less than 12 months ago. That works out as an average daily loss of more than £500,000.
Their net worth is estimated at £529m this year, down from £730m in 2022.
This is due to a slide in Infosys’s share price, which fell by over a fifth during 2022, as the boom in tech stocks unravelled.
But Infosys has continued to swell the Sunak-Murty coffers – Akshata will receive nearly £6.7m in dividend payments from the company this summer,
Murty’s lucrative dividends from Infosys over the years far exceed the prime minister’s own earnings, the Sunday Times says, adding;
He published financial statements that showed he earned just under £2 million in 2021/22 — still more than 50 times the average full-time UK salary. It included his MP and ministerial wages as well as returns from his investment portfolio and other unspecified “gains”.
On all this he paid £432,493 of tax, according to information from his wealth adviser released by the government.
Rich List 2023: the top 20
These are the 20 richest people and families in the UK, according to the Sunday Times Rich List, released this morning.
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Gopi Hinduja and family – £35bn
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Sir Jim Ratcliffe – £29.7bn
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Sir Leonard Blavatnik – £28.6bn
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David and Simon Reuben and family – £24.4bn
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Sir James Dyson and family – £23bn
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Lakshmi Mittal and family – £16bn
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Guy, George, Alannah and Galen Weston and family – £14.5bn
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Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken and Michel de Carvalho – £13.1bn
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Kirsten and Jorn Rausing – £12bn
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Michael Platt – £11.5bn
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The Duke of Westminster and the Grosvenor family – £9.9bn
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Marit, Lisbet, Sigrid and Hans Rausing – £9.3bn
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Andy Currie – £9.2bn
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John Reece – £9.1bn
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Alex Gerko – £9.1bn
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Denise, John and Peter Coates and family – £8.8bn
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Anders Holch Povlsen £8.5bn
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Barnaby and Merlin Swire and family – £8.4bn
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John Fredriksen and family – £8.3bn
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Mikhail Fridman – £8.2bn
UK Rich List shows first falls in billionaires since financial crisis
The billionaire Hinduja family have topped the Sunday Times Rich List again as their fortune jumped by more than £6bn last year.
The annual assessment of the UK’s wealthiest people, just released, found that Gopi Hinduja and his family, which is behind the Indian conglomerate Hinduja Group, are Britain’s richest.
This comes just days after Mr Hinduja’s brother Sri died.
This is the fifth time the Indian-born family have topped the Rich List, making them the UK’s wealthiest dynasty.
The Hindujas were followed by Sir Jim Ratcliffe, the boss of the INEOS chemicals company, who is now bidding to take control of Manchester United.
But for the first time in 14 years, the number of billionaires on the list has fallen, by six to 171.
That’s the first top drop since the 2007-08 financial crisis, after heavy falls in international markets last year.
However, those whose wealth clocked in at at least ten-digits have grown even richer. The amount of wealth shared by UK billionaires climbed to £683.8bn, which is almost £31bn more than last year.
But, with inflation in double digits, that 4.5% rise represents a fall in real terms.
The Sunday Times, which has been weighing the wallets of the wealthy for many years, reports that the boomtime is over:
The Rich List has laid bare a golden era for Britain’s most minted for more than a decade. Each year the billionaire count rose. Each year their fortunes soared ever higher. The question was not whether the boom would end, but when — and what it would mean for the rest of us. That time has come. The party is over and it’s time to sober up.
“Years of cheap, cheap money ramped up the value of our companies and made it easier to expand,” said one anonymous billionaire retailer who has seen his wealth clipped in this year’s Rich List.
“A lot of us did very well out of it. The recession never turned up and I don’t think it will. Time for everyone to get back to work, get their heads down and frankly be a bit more sensible.”
UK’s £1bn semiconductor strategy criticised
The UK has finally announced its strategy to support the semiconductor industry, but the plan has been quickly criticised for being too small.
The 20-year National Semiconductor Strategy will “double down on design, research and advanced chip leadership”, to secure the UK’s position as a global science and technology superpower, the government says.
The package will aim to boost the UK’s strengths and skills in design, R&D and compound semiconductors, and grow UK chip firms.
Semiconductors power our lives ⚡
From phones to ventilators, these microchips have revolutionised the way we live.
We’re launching a National Semiconductor Strategy to boost the UK’s global strengths.
Here’s @scullyp chipping in to tell us more👇https://t.co/Wlv0MpK6Ww pic.twitter.com/fIVTm1poWK
— Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (@SciTechgovuk) May 19, 2023
As the government points out, the semiconductor marketis set to grow to $1 trillion by 2030, which is why other countries have been offering large subsidies to their industries.
And the UK’s package, worth £1bn over the next decade, isn’t enough, according to some experts.
Cambridge-based startup, Paragraf, which claims to be the only company in the world capable of manufacturing graphene to mass-produce semiconductors, said the taxpayer commitment would not cover a basic chip plant. Its founder and chief executive, Simon Thomas, said the content of the strategy revealed so far was “frankly flaccid”.
Thomas said:
“The strategy continues the trend of this Conservative administration proclaiming superlatives like ‘becoming a technology superpower’ without defining what ‘superpower’ actually means or delivering a plan of how we will even begin to reach this objective.”
UK consumer confidence recovery continues
Confidence among UK consumers is recovering, as people grow more optimistic over their personal financial situation and the economic outlook.
GfK’s Consumer Confidence Index, released overnight, has risen by three points this month to -27 – the fourth monthly increase in a row.
Although still negative, the outlook has improved since January when the index clocked in at -45.

Confidence in personal finances over the coming 12 months jumped by five points, to -8, which is 17 points higher than this time last year.
Joe Staton, client strategy director at GfK, says:
“The cost-of-living crisis has been part of our daily financial reality for a long time, with double-digit inflation and record-high food prices. But despite those pressures, May sees an encouraging three-point uptick in consumer confidence.
This is the fourth monthly increase in a row from January’s score of -45. While Brits have little control over the general economy, it’s good to see further improvement in how people view their personal finances in the next 12 months with a robust five-point jump to -8. This measure most keenly reflects our hopes and fears for the coming year, and it underpins our ability to spend on goods and services that drive our economy.
Of course, confidence is still far from the ‘sunny uplands’ territory, Staton adds:
However, the overall trajectory this year is positive and might reflect a stronger underlying financial picture across the UK than many would think. But everybody must hold on tight as it could still be a rocky ride out of these tough times.”

Introduction: Nikkei hits 33-year high
Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.
Japan’s blue-chip stock index has climbed to a 33-year high today, lifted by optimism over the US debt ceiling deadlock.
The Nikkei climbed by another 0.77% today to close at 30,808.35 today. That’s its highest level since August 1990, when Japan’s stock market bubble was bursting.
Today’s rally came amid rising hopes that US politicians will hammer out a deal on the debt ceiling to avoid a catastrophic default.
Last night, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy struck an optimistic tone about reaching a deal with President Biden to raise the debt ceiling in time to avoid a default.
McCarthy told reporters that “We’re not there,” adding:
“But I see the path that we can come to an agreement, and I think we have a structure now.”
McCarthy, who met with the president and other congressional leaders earlier this week, said talks are in “a much better place” than they were a week ago.
“I know and I can see where a deal can come together, and I think that’s important.”
McCarthy’s Republicans had been demanding hefty spending cuts in return for approving a lifting of the debt ceiling.
US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen has repeatedly warned that the consequences of not increasing the debt limit could be disastrous. Yesterday, Yellen told bank CEOs that failing to raise or suspend the debt limit would be “catastrophic” for the financial system, families and businesses.
So far this year, the Nikkei has gained around 19%, outpacing other major markets – which are also looking calmer today.
Hopes of a debt ceiling deal have fuelled big rallies on equities. All time highs on DAX, 33 year highs on the Nikkei.
All amid higher yields and a stronger USD on major forex. Overbought conditions suggest something has to give.
Markets looking a bit more settled overnight. pic.twitter.com/1ntj5XSGp1— Richard Perry (@RPMarketAnalyst) May 19, 2023
Reuters points out that a series of strong corporate results, an economy that is showing signs of a revival and a renewed interest from foreign investors in the wake of increased investment by Warrant Buffett has also boosted the Nikkei.
But despite the recent rally, the Nikkei is still below its alltime peak over 36,000 set in 1989.
If you follow indices/equities and have been impressed with the Nasdaq 100’s climb, keep tabs on Japan’s Nikkei 225 which opens in a few hours. $NKY has surged the past five days and is now on the cusp of fresh 33 year highs pic.twitter.com/TEBeaFxg3e
— John Kicklighter (@JohnKicklighter) May 18, 2023
The agenda
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7am BST: German PPI index of producer prices in April
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11am BST: Spanish consumer confidence for April
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4pm BST: US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks on a ‘Perspectives on Monetary Policy’ panel