Published: October 2, 2025 at 3:19 pm
eBay has launched a £3 million programme developed with OpenAI to give 10,000 UK small businesses free access to AI tools and training.
AI Activate participants will receive up to 12 months of ChatGPT Enterprise, alongside tailored support to help automate admin, create campaigns and improve product listings.
The US giants have teamed up in the hopes that the scheme will boost productivity and give small sellers the same AI advantages as large retailers.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 3:01 pm
Australian FinTech Zeller is set to launch in the UK, its first move outside its home market and the beginning of a global expansion strategy.
The company will establish a base in London and grow a team of more than 40 over the next three years to support technology, operations and market rollout.
Targeting the UK’s 5.5 million businesses that process over £1.3 trillion in payments each year, Zeller will offer an integrated platform combining payments, banking, expense management and financial reporting.
The expansion builds on its growth in Australia, where it has attracted more than 100,000 business customers since its founding in 2020.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 2:40 pm
An AI-powered operating system for veterinary clinics, has secured a $20 million (£14.9m) Series A round to accelerate international growth, expand its AI agent suite and launch the world’s first veterinary AI lab.
Founded in 2023 by former BCG and Meta executives, London-based Lupa replaces multiple disconnected tools with a single platform that is said to save vets an hour a day and deliver double the ROI of traditional setups.
The company has already signed partnerships across the UK and Europe and gained backing from investors including Singular and Firstminute Capital.
It raised a £3.3m seed round in January and has since seen 50x revenue growth.

Published: October 2, 2025 at 2:24 pm
Crowdcube has announced a landmark partnership with the London Stock Exchange in an attempt to give hundreds of thousands of individual investors the chance to invest in later-stage, high-growth private companies on the same terms as institutional investors.
The partnership uses the London Stock Exchange’s new Private Securities Market and Crowdcube’s platform to give investors the chance to buy shares in fast-growing private companies – opportunities that were once only available after an IPO.
Private companies are remaining private for longer, with many raising multiple late-stage rounds before listing publicly.
That trend has meant some of Europe’s most innovative firms were only accessible to venture capital and institutional backers, but this new partnership seeks to change that dynamic.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 1:36 pm
North East-founded HealthTech Daiser has moved into new premises at Hale House, a purpose-built HealthTech hub in London’s Harley Street district.
Founded in 2024 by UK clinical expert Professor Mike Trenell and New York entrepreneur Adam Wootton, the company has developed a platform that allows innovators to build digital health services and AI tools without coding, while supporting healthcare providers in managing them.
The move positions Daiser at the centre of Europe’s healthcare innovation cluster as it pursues growth across the UK, Europe and beyond.
Despite being little more than a year old, the company has already joined Google’s AI in Healthcare Accelerator, taken part in the ABHI US trade mission and secured partnerships with major UK health and research organisations.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 1:33 pm
A new initiative at Selhurst Park is giving visually impaired supporters the chance to follow live football in much greater detail.
FA Cup winners Crystal Palace have become the first Premier League club to offer GiveVision headsets, which are powered by a private 5G network installed at the stadium by Shared Access.
The system works by capturing live broadcast footage, enhancing it and projecting the images directly onto the working part of the user’s retina.
It is designed to help those with sight loss see action on the pitch and the atmosphere in the stands more clearly.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 11:06 am
Creator Fund has secured an initial close of $41 million (£30.4m) for its first European institutional fund, more than double the size of its 2022 UK vehicle, with a final close expected in early 2026.
Anchored by Equation Capital and Denmark’s Export and Investment Fund (EIFO), the fund has drawn backing from more than 60 limited partners.
The Kensington-based pre-seed VC specialises in turning university research into startups and now operates across 24 universities in eight countries, using a model that recruits students on campus to help identify promising founders.
Over the past five years it has backed 55 companies that went on to raise more than $250m in follow-on funding, including two exits such as the sale of neural rendering startup Loci to Epic Games.
The first investments from the new fund include Ovo Labs, focused on fertility science, and Sphotonix, which develops laser-engraved glass data storage.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 10:56 am
Risers:
Morgan Sindall Group PLC – +10.86%
Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holding – +4.60%
Tesco PLC – +4.17%
Wizz Air PLC – +3.57%
ICG PLC – +3.16%
Fallers:
Experian PLC – -6.31%
Tate & Lyle PLC – -3.33%
Greggs PLC – -3.17%
CMC Markets PLC – -2.33%
Johnson Service Group PLC – -2.27%
Published: October 2, 2025 at 10:41 am
RM Technology has partnered with Sky Business Wholesale to boost digital connectivity in schools across the UK.
The deal will give schools access to a fibre-first, 100GB-ready network with built-in resilience features such as network-to-network interface handoff and shadow VLANs.
With Sky’s presence in more than 2,800 exchanges, the partnership is aiming to enhance RM’s ability to deliver fast, secure broadband nationwide.
The move is looking to support the growing use of digital tools like Microsoft Teams, Google Classroom and RM Unify.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 10:35 am
BT and Infobip have expanded their partnership to deliver AI-powered communication services to multinational businesses worldwide.
Building on a UK collaboration launched in 2022, the deal combines BT’s global voice and inbound contact services with Infobip’s cloud communications platform, including WhatsApp, RCS and SMS.
The arrangement will see the London firm become an authorised reseller of BT’s international contact services, while BT customers gain access to Infobip’s messaging suite.
The companies say enterprises will now be able to offer more seamless, scalable customer engagement across more than 180 countries.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 10:27 am
UK-based AI infrastructure company Nscale has closed a $433 million (£320m) pre-Series C SAFE, only days after raising $1.1 billion in what was described as the largest Series B round in European history.
The funding brings in support from investors including Blue Owl Managed Funds, Dell, NVIDIA and Nokia, alongside other backers from the earlier round.
The London-based business, which operates more than 50 data centres and manages one of the world’s largest GPU pipelines, says the additional capital will reinforce its ability to deliver vertically integrated compute, networking, storage and AI services at scale.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 9:48 am
FinTech Tribe Payments has opened a new office in Dubai as part of its expansion into the Middle East.
Founded in London in 2018, the company now employs more than 200 people globally, with hubs in Lithuania and Singapore.
The Dubai International Financial Centre base will be led by payments veteran Aurangzaib Khan, who brings experience from Amazon Payments Services, Mastercard and Visa.
Tribe is the only European processor connected to all six major international card schemes and says the move will strengthen its ability to support banks and fintechs with scalable, cloud-based payments technology.

Published: October 2, 2025 at 9:34 am
London-based AI health coaching app Simple Life, has raised £26 million in a Series B round led by Hartbeat Ventures, the fund founded by entrepreneur and Hollywood actor Kevin Hart, alongside Liquidity.
The HealthTech will use the funds to accelerate the development of its digital weight-loss platform.
The raise comes after a strong year for the company, which posted $100m in revenue in 2024, grew 64% year-on-year and reached operating profitability.
To date, the app has been downloaded more than 20m times, with users collectively losing more than 17.5m pounds.

Published: October 2, 2025 at 9:15 am
Diversified Energy has announced plans to move its primary stock market listing from London to New York in another blow for the LSE.
The Alabama-headquartered firm says that move will boost liquidity and align more closely with its US-focused operations.
Founded in 2001, it has built its business by acquiring long-life natural gas and liquids assets and investing in operational improvements and environmental performance until safe retirement.
It first joined the London Stock Exchange in 2017 but now intends to shift its main listing to the New York Stock Exchange, while retaining a secondary UK listing.
Diversified said the decision reflects the fact it is now ‘substantially a US business’, with its executive management team and headquarters based in Alabama, its entire workforce located in the US, and all assets and profits derived from its US operations.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 8:44 am
JPMorgan Global Growth & Income (JGGI) has released its results for the year to 30 June 2025, showing a +1.0% net asset value (NAV) total return, compared with +7.2% from its benchmark.
The trust reported £46.3 million in investment income and a £34m profit after tax, while paying out a dividend of 22.8p per share – up more than 24% per year since 2016.
Despite a challenging year, the business has still delivered a +102.8% NAV return over five years and +245.7% over ten years, both comfortably ahead of the benchmark.
The board has signalled confidence with a small dividend increase to 23p for FY2026, as the trust continues to balance cyclical and defensive holdings while maintaining exposure to growth themes like AI.
Its shares have risen by 3p to 576p since trading opened today and its market cap currently sits at £3.31 billion.

Published: October 2, 2025 at 8:36 am
Texas-based Fermi America has completed a $13.8 billion (£10.2bn) dual listing on the London Stock Exchange and Nasdaq – the first simultaneous listing this century and one of the biggest in LSE history.
The offering, which includes a $682.5 million (£505.6m) equity fundraising, has been hailed as a sign of growing momentum in London’s capital markets after a period of uncertainty, with major businesses such as Indivior, Hargreaves Lansdown, Deliveroo and Wise all delisting.
It is a major milestone for the company which was only founded in January 2025.
Former US Energy Secretary Rick Perry and CEO Toby Neugebauer co-founded the business which is aiming to transform AI infrastructure by building the power systems to fuel its future.
Its flagship Project Matador in Amarillo, Texas, spans 5,236 acres and is designed to deliver up to 11 gigawatts of low-carbon power through its HyperGrid energy infrastructure.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 7:26 am
Tesco has reported robust performance in the first half of its 2025/26 financial year, with like-for-like sales up 5.1% across the group.
UK sales rose 5.3%, helping the retailer increase market share to 28%. Online performed strongly, up 11.4%.
Adjusted operating profit was up 1.5% at £1.67m.
Tesco said it now expects to report adjusted operating profit of £2.9-3.1 billion, up from previous full-year guidance of £2.7-3bn.
The supermarket has so far completed £891 million of its £1.45 billion share buyback programme, due by April 2026.
Published: October 2, 2025 at 7:14 am
European delivery giant Just Eat Takeaway is set to be acquired by Dutch technology investor Prosus in a deal worth €4.1 billion.
The present firm was created by a merger between Just Eat and Takeaway.com in 2020.
Earlier this week, shortly after announcing plans to embrace AI, Just Eat Takeaway said it would cut around 450 jobs across multiple countries and functions after a review of its business strategy.
Published: October 1, 2025 at 5:30 pm
Did Keir Starmer’s speech at the Labour Party conference move the dial for the under-fire Prime Minister?
PR agency Be Broadcast’s Mission Control tool analysed the past 24 hours of coverage for Starmer and Nigel Farage and found that the PM had 16,952 mentions compared to the Reform UK leader’s 5,499.
“That’s a clear dominance which shows just how much his Labour conference speech has cut through,” said founder Josh Wheeler.
“Broadcasters repeatedly described the Prime Minister as clear, strong, determined, confident, and positive – signs of a leader trying to reassert authority and reset his premiership. But the coverage wasn’t without caveats: he was also called flat, weak, angry, even patronising. In other words, he may have delivered power and punch, but doubts remain about whether it’s enough to shift opinion outside the conference hall.
“Farage, meanwhile, is framed very differently. He’s less the statesman, more the combative disrupter. Discussions see him as serious, clear and strong, but also angry, divisive and inciting. He commands influence, but here it is reactive – defined by the outrage he provokes, rather than by offering a vision of the future.
“What we’re seeing in the data is a political battle of contrasts: Starmer the embattled Prime Minister fighting for clarity and control, versus Farage the insurgent voice channelling disruption.
“In the last 24 hours, Starmer has won the airtime – but the real question is whether that dominance translates into public trust.”
Published: October 1, 2025 at 5:18 pm
A University of Nottingham spinout that has developed a novel gene-editing tool has raised £2m from the Midlands Engine Investment Fund II, through its appointed fund manager, Mercia Ventures.
The investment will enable Forge Genetics to expand its commercial work developing bacteria strains for pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies, and adapt its tool for use with human and animal cells.
Forge’s technology offers some key advantages over CRISPR, a widely-used tool that enables scientists to modify genes by inserting or removing sections of DNA. Because it is more precisely targeted, it enables more bacterial cells to survive the editing process, and can be used with a much wider range of bacterial strains. It may also provide a safer way to modify human cells. Unlike CRISPR, it can detect unwanted DNA mutations resulting from the editing process and filter out the damaged cells.
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