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An Eli Lilly & Co. Zepbound injection pen arranged in the Brooklyn borough of New York on March 28, 2024. LONDON — U.S. pharmaceutical giant Eli Lilly is exploring whether obesity drugs could be used to curb joblessness after signing a major investment deal with the U.K. The use cases for obesity drugs have been growing over recent months, with several drug regulators expanding GLP-1 drug labels for use in treating obesity-related comorbidities and other illnesses. Speaking to CNBC last week, Citi pharmaceuticals analyst Peter Verdault said the body of evidence to support increased use of weight-loss drugs "keeps coming." The company said it anticipates making an additional £279 million of new investment into the U.K. over the coming years.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Zepbound, Rachel Batterham, Lilly, Wes Streeting, Covid, Streeting, Peter Verdault, Dolly van Tulleken, Eli Lilly's Organizations: LONDON, U.K, Department of Health, Social, Department for Science, Innovation, Technology, Labour government's, Investment, National Health Services, Health Innovation, International Medical, Social Care, CNBC, Citi, MRC, University of Cambridge, BBC Radio, Lilly Locations: Brooklyn, New York, Europe
We want clarity and certainty to invest in the UK, BNY CEO says
  + stars: | 2024-10-15 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe want clarity and certainty to invest in the UK, BNY CEO saysRobin Vince, the CEO of BNY, discusses investment opportunities at the U.K. International Investment Summit.
Persons: Robin Vince Organizations: International Investment Summit
LONDON — The U.K. Labour government is hoping to woo foreign capital to the country on Monday, as it hosts its inaugural International Investment Summit in London. Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Finance Minister Rachel Reeves and Business Minister Jonathan Reynolds will lead the one-day event at London's Guildhall, which is expected to be attended by around 200 executives from the U.K. and overseas. Former Google chair Eric Schmidt, Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon and GSK CEO Emma Walmsley are among the named guests. Newly appointed Investment Minister Poppy Gustafsson, co-founder of British cybersecurity firm Darktrace, will also be on hand to promote the U.K. as a place to do business. The date was determined by Labour's pre-election pledge to hold a business summit within its first 100 days in office.
Persons: Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, Jonathan Reynolds, Eric Schmidt, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Emma Walmsley, Poppy Gustafsson, Dr, Bruce Morley, Labour's, Reeves Organizations: Labour, International Investment Summit, Business, London's Guildhall, British, CNBC, University of Bath, National Insurance, Capital, Guardian, Treasury Locations: London
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech on stage during the International Investment Summit, held at The Guildhall, in central London, on October 14, 2024. LONDON — U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday vowed to slash regulatory red tape to boost anemic investment in the country. The prime minister restated that growth was the "No. Starmer also outlined stability, strategy, regulation and improving Britain's global standing as "four crucial areas" in his pitch for Britain. "Private sector investment is the way we rebuild our country and pay our way in the world," Starmer said.
Persons: Keir Starmer, We've, Starmer, Brexit, Jonathan Reynolds Organizations: Britain's, International Investment Summit, Guildhall, LONDON, Investment Summit, London's, Britain, Labour, Business, Sunday Locations: London
LONDON — The U.K.'s business minister said Monday that securing trade deals with India and Gulf nations remains "the priority" for the Labour government, with talks between Britain and the Gulf Corporation Council expected to resume as soon as next week. U.K. Business and Trade Minister Jonathan Reynolds told CNBC that negotiations with a six-strong group of Gulf countries would reconvene "very soon — maybe as soon as next week," while talks with India also remain a priority. U.K. free trade deals were touted as a key benefit of Brexit, with former Prime Minister and Brexiteer Boris Johnson vowing to secure one with India "by Diwali" 2022. The trade minister has also previously said that the government was pursuing trade talks with Israel, South Korea, Switzerland and Turkey. "It's important to recognize, whilst we don't do foreign policy through trade deals, British engagement commercially – country to country, business to business – is in itself a good thing," he said.
Persons: of Trade Jonathan Reynolds, Jonathan Reynolds, Reynolds, Boris Johnson, It's, Sunil Barthwal Organizations: State, Business, Trade, of Trade, Labour, Gulf Corporation, CNBC, Investment, London's, Conservative, GCC, United, United Arab Emirates Locations: London, United Kingdom, India, Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab, Israel, South Korea, Switzerland, Turkey
Beyond local business expansion, ServiceNow also said it would invest the cash into localizing the processing of data for its large language models (LLMs), AI models that rely on vast quantities of training data to be able to understand and generate text like a human. The firm said that it would bring Nvidia GPUs (graphics processing units) to its data centers based in London and the Welsh city of Newport to support processing of data on its LLMs within the U.K. This will help support "domain specific LLMs" for U.K. clients and governments, ServiceNow said. ServiceNow isn't the only tech giant betting big on the U.K. as a global destination for AI innovation. The AI center forms part of a $4 billion investment Salesforce committed to making in the U.K. over five years in June last year.
Persons: Bill McDermott, ServiceNow, Keir Starmer, hasn't, Salesforce Organizations: Nvidia, International Investment Summit Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Britain, London, Welsh, Newport, Europe, United Kingdom
The 465-foot superyacht "Nord", owned by the sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov is seen docked, in Hong Kong, China October 7, 2022. REUTERS/Tyrone SiuHONG KONG, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Hong Kong leader John Lee said on Tuesday there was "no legal basis" for the city to act on Western sanctions, when asked about a Russian yacht berthed in the financial centre that belongs to a sanctioned Russian oligarch. Hong Kong authorities were criticised by the U.S. State Department for allowing a luxury yacht belonging to sanctioned Russian oligarch Alexey Mordashov to dock in Hong Kong waters last week. Instead, Lee said Hong Kong would only abide by United Nations sanctions. Officials in Hong Kong do what is right to protect the interests of the country and the interests of Hong Kong.
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