• I was in charge of The Sun website on the day that Amy Winehouse died. Driving in Hertfordshire when the call came through from the newsdesk, I was told: "The body of a woman has been found at a house in Camden, but we do not know if it is Amy or not."    
  • LONDON (Reuters) - The European Commission expects to complete a review by October of ways to help Europe's struggling aluminium industry, looking at policies such as on import duties and long-term power contracts.
  • BAGNAIA, Italy (Reuters) - The crisis that has hit Italy's third-largest lender Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena might not be an isolated case, Monte Paschi Chairman Alessandro Profumo said on Friday.
  • As more people do their banking and investing online, the lack of a paper trail poses a problem for business partners, executors and heirs.    
  • Wall Street was lower in early trading despite a positive report on durable goods orders, while global markets stabilized after a day of falling indexes.    
  • Herbert Steptic, the chief executive of Raiffeisen Bank International, is facing scrutiny of his personal investments in Asian real estate.    
  • The airline with the greatest number of Boeing’s new Dreamliner jets will be the first to resume commercial flights with it on Sunday, four months after the 787 jet was grounded over safety fears.    
  • One of the City’s best-known fund managers has joined Ukip as the business world continues to pick sides over Europe.     
  • The Apprentice star Lord Sugar has sold a Mayfair office block for almost £50 million more than he bought it for just five years ago.    
  • If you’re going to stay in for an evening of cheesy pop, camp presenters and political voting à la Eurovision, you  may as well munch on the continent’s finest cuisine.    
  • Britain will have to wait for the boom times to return despite “some signs of a pick-up” in the economy, Bank of England rate-setter Paul Fisher declared today.    
  • It has been a turbulent week on the world's stock markets, with investor confidence shaken amid fears that central banks may ease their stimulus plans.
  • RBS has apologised for the second time in two months after customers were unable to login to their accounts through their mobile phone app.
  • BERLIN (Reuters) - Germany's economy will recover from a bout of winter weakness but fall well short of the dynamic growth rates of previous years as euro zone recession and global slowdown stunt exports and investment.
  • Fan fiction authors will be able to publish and sell some titles in the US via new e-book platform Kindle Worlds.
  • Fashion house Hermes says that despite hostile takeover attempts, its will remain a family-run business.
  • London's leading shares lose further ground in Friday morning trading, extending Thursday's global sell-off.
  • Manchester United has struck a new loan deal to cut the amount of interest it pays on its huge debts.
  • Manchester United has struck a new loan deal to cut the amount of interest it pays on its huge debts.
  • Manchester United have cut their interest bill by £10million a year after a major refinancing through Bank of America.    
  • In an internal email, Lord Hall, the BBC’s recently appointed director-general, says it is better to close it now than waste more money
  • TV and technology are learning to live together

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