Ryanair warns refunds to take up to six months as it axes jobs
The airline also says it needs to cut a “minimum” of 3,000 jobs as it tries to cope with the pandemic.
The airline also says it needs to cut a “minimum” of 3,000 jobs as it tries to cope with the pandemic.
Like many other business practices, Covid-19 has changed how businesses hire new staff.
Car brands are looking to tap into the country’s heightened health concerns to help kick-start flagging sales.
People living with abuse will be able to use the pharmacy’s consultation rooms to contact helplines.
Families say they have been trying for six weeks to secure a lockdown car finance payment holiday.
Self-employed women say they are missing out on government support as they’ve recently taken leave.
Scientists are working on better solar cells that will turn more of the sun’s rays into electricity.
While iPhone sales fell due to the lockdown in China, sales of streaming services jumped.
Amazon’s sales surged 26%, but costs are also up due to spending on safety precautions and wages.
Increased anxiety and no chance of socialising mean there is less demand for condoms.
The airline has told staff that it cannot rule out keeping the operation closed indefinitely.
Victims’ vulnerability may be missed by banks’ tick-box procedures when a fraud is reported, a review finds.
Fewer coronavirus loans were agreed in the week to Tuesday, leaving half of businesses still waiting.
Single currency nations see a sharp fall in GDP during the first quarter of the year.
AstraZeneca will make and distribute Oxford University’s coronavirus vaccine if it proves effective.
Royal Dutch Shell slashes its quarterly dividend by two-thirds amid the global oil price shock.
Customers of the rental agency, Sykes Holiday Cottages, are unhappy that virus-hit holidays are not refunded.
Firms refusing refunds for cancelled holiday accommodation and weddings are under investigation.
The supermarket says socially-distanced queues are likely to remain “for the foreseeable future”.
The US government places some of the online shopping giant’s websites on its “notorious markets” list.
Investors are betting that an experimental anti-viral drug could help countries emerge from lockdowns.
Thermal cameras can spot people with a temperature. Will they help to end the lockdown?
“No-one wants to buy clothes to sit at home in,” as Next’s chief executive Simon Wolfson puts it.
When passenger planes start flying again, the world of air travel will be very different.
The electric car company said forced shutdowns and limits on deliveries had clouded its forecast.
The pub chain’s boss Tim Martin will take a 50% pay cut and the firm is considering taking out a loan.
The bank’s chairman tells shareholders that UK ministers and the bank have other priorities at the moment.
The head of America’s central bank warns the economy will need more support.
The fried chicken chain has already opened the doors to 20 of its outlets which are doing delivery only.
Another 55,000 machines in UK homes should stop being used and need repairing or replacing.