Fsa

  • NewsMarie-Claire Dorking

    Poached Egg Fans Rejoice: Runny Eggs Are Back On The Menu For Pregnant Women

    Paté, raw meat and blue cheese are all off the menu for the foreseeable and until recently so was raw or super runny eggs. A report from the Advisory Committee on the Microbiological Safety of Food has deemed there is “very low” risk of salmonella from UK eggs produced under the Lion code. Can pregnant women now eat raw or runny eggs?

  • HealthAOL

    Another meat scandal? Are blood and offal secretly mixed in?

    Nottingham Trent University has published a study which has claimed that blood and offal are being mixed into meat products sold by British shops - without making this clear on the label. The researchers tested 57 products from 10 retailers -

  • NewsAOL

    Bank boss takes leave of absence

    A former top City regulator who was brought in to oversee compliance at scandal-hit Barclays has been signed off work until the end of the year after being diagnosed with stress and exhaustion. Sir Hector Sants will take a temporary leave of

  • BusinessAOL

    Homeserve sets aside £6m for fine

    Home emergency business Homeserve has set aside £6 million as it braces itself for a possible fine from City regulators for a mis-selling scandal. The boiler repair company expects the fine from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) on top of the

  • BusinessAOL

    Lamprell handed £2.4m FSA penalty

    An engineering firm has been hit with a £2.4 million fine for failings that kept investors in the dark about its deteriorating financial position. The Financial Services Authority (FSA) said Lamprell was too slow to react to its trading issues

  • BusinessAOL

    3,000 Britons face financial ruin by Caribbean property scheme

    Up to 3,000 Britons could face financial ruin after investing up to £250million into a Caribbean property scheme which is now facing legal action. The Daily Mail reports that several investors were persuaded by pension advisors to invest large

    1-min read
  • BusinessAOL

    100,000 firms 'mis-sold rate swaps'

    Up to 100,000 firms could have been mis-sold interest rate swaps, Business Secretary Vince Cable has said. UK lenders are expected to face a compensation bill of at least £1 billion as a result of the "terrible