Business
AstraZeneca pauses £200m expansion in Cambridge
British drug giant AstraZeneca has paused a planned £200 million expansion of its research site in Cambridge, the company said.
It comes after the pharmaceutical firm abandoned plans to invest £450 million in a vaccine plant in Merseyside earlier this year in a blow to the Government as it seeks to stress its commitment to growing the economy and making the country more attractive to international investors.
An AstraZeneca spokesperson said on Friday: “We constantly reassess the investment needs of our company and can confirm our expansion in Cambridge is paused.
“We have no further comment to make.”
In February, AstraZeneca chief executive Pascal Soriot said he was “very disappointed” in the move to scrap the Merseyside site but that the company “couldn’t make the investment economically viable”.
Mr Soriot denied any rift with the Government over the decision and said Labour had failed to match the previous government’s offer of support.
The cancelling of the plant reversed an announcement made by then-chancellor Jeremy Hunt at last year’s March budget that would have seen the pharmaceutical company expand its existing facility in Speke.
Last month, AstraZeneca announced plans to invest 50 billion dollars (£37 billion) in the US over the next five years amid the looming threat of President Donald Trump’s trade tariffs.
The firm said the investment will fund a new “state-of-the-art” manufacturing facility in Virginia – set to be its largest single manufacturing investment in the world.
It will also expand research and development (R&D) and cell therapy manufacturing in Maryland, Massachusetts, California, Indiana and Texas.
Business
Airlines spent 56.4% more on jet fuel in month after Iran war started, U.S. government says
A technician prepares to refuel a Delta Airlines aircraft at the Austin-Bergrstrom International Airport on April 10, 2026 in Austin, Texas.
Brandon Bell | Getty Images
U.S. airlines spent 56.4% more on jet fuel in March, the month after the U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran began, than they did in February, U.S. government data released Wednesday shows.
U.S. carriers spent $5.06 billion on fuel in March, up from $3.23 billion in February. It was 30% more than what they paid in March 2025, according to the Department of Transportation.
Airlines have lowered or scrapped their 2026 forecasts altogether because of the spike in fuel, their biggest expense after labor. Some carriers have scaled back growth plans to cut costs and avoid having too much expensive capacity in the markets.
The spike in jet fuel was even sharper and topped $4 a gallon in some markets in April as the war continued and the Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed.
Spirit Airlines collapsed over the weekend, and the carrier said the surge in jet fuel costs foiled its plans to emerge from bankruptcy midyear.
Other major carriers told Wall Street as they reported earnings last month that they expect customers to cover the higher jet fuel costs by early 2027, if not the end of this year.
So far, booking trends show consumers are still traveling, In March, travel agency ticket sales rose 12% from a year ago to $10.4 billion, with the number of domestic trips up 5% and international up 1%, according to the Airlines Reporting Corp.
Business
Novo Nordisk CEO says the drugmaker is more active than ever in seeking out deals
Novo Nordisk is looking for deals more than ever before, the CEO of the Danish drugmaker said in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday.
“If our ambition is to help hundreds of millions of patients out there, then we need not just the best, but the broadest pipeline in the world,” said Novo Nordisk CEO Mike Doustdar. “So let’s go and see who else basically has assets that are complementary to what we have. And we are quite active with those [business development] talks and acquisitions, and you’ll see more of those as well going forward.”
Novo created the market for GLP-1 weight loss drugs with its weekly shots Ozempic and Wegovy. More recently, the company has faced concerns from analysts about whether Novo’s pipeline is robust enough for it to remain a leader in the increasingly competitive obesity drug space.
Mike Doustdar, chief executive officer of Novo Nordisk A/S, during an interview in New York, US, on Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026.
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images
Rival Eli Lilly has already overtaken Novo in market share for weekly GLP-1 shots, though Novo has taken an early lead in the new category of GLP-1 pills for weight loss.
Doustdar said he disagrees with the concerns about Novo’s upcoming treatments, arguing the drugmaker has “one of the best pipelines in the industry.” He pointed to Novo’s CagriSema, a drug candidate that targets GLP-1 and amylin, that Novo hopes will be approved at the end of this year, and an experimental amylin-targeting drug called zenagamtide that Novo has accelerated development of, among other assets.
“Of course, there’s a lot of things in my pipeline that right now I have the privy to look into and get excited (about) but not have shared it yet with the world,” he said. “So I am incredibly excited about our pipeline, and I would just say to the investors who are a little bit skeptical, wait and see.”
Doustdar spoke to CNBC after the company said its Wegovy pill performed better than expected in the first quarter, and it raised its full-year profit guidance.
Business
Up to 150 former WHSmith high street stores to close
The stores were purchased by Modella Capital last year, and then rebranded under the name TGJones.
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