Sky News
British employers are optimistic about their ability to recruit qualified employees after Britain leaves the EU, despite currently relying on workers from the continent to fill around 30% of available jobs. The poll, carried out by skills organisation City and Guilds, surveyed 500 senior decision-makers from large companies across a range of UK economic sectors.
Sky News
Pensioner households are now earning more than their working age equivalents, according to a new study. Low income growth for working age households has coincided with a new generation of pensioners who tend to still be in work, own a home and receive generous pensions, analysis by the Resolution Foundation for the Intergenerational Commission shows.
The Sunday Times
Jaguar Land Rover has suspended all digital advertising after an investigation by The Times revealed it was unwittingly funding terror organisations. Carmakers are among a number of big brands that have been indirectly paying Islamic extremists, white supremacists and pornographers by advertising on their Web sites and social media channels, such as YouTube.
The Times
The CBI is calling on the government to ensure that exporters can take full advantage of free trade deals after Brexit by maintaining their "Made in Britain" label. Unless existing trade rules are modified, industries such as carmakers could find themselves hamstrung by the "rules of origin" that determine where products are made, the CBI believes.
The Guardian
Spotify's chairman/CEO, Daniel Ek, has been named as the most powerful person in the music industry by the trade magazine Billboard. Ek, 33, tops Billboard's annual "Power 100", rising from No 10 last year. He displaces Lucian Grainge, the chairman and CEO of Universal Music Group.
Campaign
Black Sheep Studios, the video production unit at Bartle Bogle Hegarty, has won a Bafta for a short film about the refugee crisis. Home, which was released in selected cinemas nationwide last June, helped to drive global awareness of the plight of refugees to support the United Nations Human Rights Council's World Refugee Day.
The Guardian
The former Labour leader Ed Miliband is leading a campaign for the media regulator Ofcom to launch a full inquiry into Rupert Murdoch's bid for ownership of the satellite broadcaster Sky. In a letter to Sharon White, the chief executive of Ofcom, Miliband is one of several senior cross-party politicians to demand that the regulator carry out a "fit and proper person" test.
The Mirror UK
Tim Cook, the boss of the most valuable company in the world, reckons the UK will be "just fine" after it parts ways with the European Union. During a visit to London, Cook met with Theresa May to discuss the company's investment in Britain. According to a spokesperson for the prime minister, the meeting was "very positive and a useful discussion."
The Times
Some of the world's biggest brands are unwittingly funding Islamic extremists, white supremacists and pornographers by advertising on their Web sites, "The Times" can reveal. Advertisements for hundreds of large companies, universities and charities, including Mercedes-Benz, Waitrose and Marie Curie, appear on hate sites and YouTube videos created by terrorist groups.
The Drum
A report that some of the world's biggest brands are inadvertently funding extremism and pornography through programmatic ads has prompted Mercedes-Benz to review the platforms and channels it considers safe. Along with the likes of Marie Curie, Thomson Reuters and Halifax, the car giant was named as one of a number of brands to have been advertising on terror sites.