Thursday newspaper round-up: Huawei CFO, Facebook, KMPG, Capita

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Sharecast News | 06 Dec, 2018

Canada has arrested Huawei’s global chief financial officer in Vancouver, where she is facing extradition to the US in a move likely to exacerbate tensions between the US and China. Meng Wanzhou, one of the vice-chairs on the Chinese technology company’s board and the daughter of the company founder Ren Zhengfei, was arrested on 1 December and a court hearing has been set for Friday, according to Canada’s department of justice. The arrest is reportedly related to violations of US sanctions. – Guardian

Facebook staff in 2012 discussed selling access to user data to major advertisers, before ultimately deciding to restrict such access two years later, according to a tranche of internal emails released by the UK parliament. The internal emails were obtained by the House of Commons digital, culture, media and sport (DCMS) committee last month after they had been disclosed, under seal, by Facebook as part of a lawsuit against it by the American software developer, Six4Three. – Guardian

KPMG has rounded off a year of "unprecedented scrutiny" following the collapse of Carillion by unveiling a surge in UK profits and partner pay. The Big Four auditor, which earlier this year was accused of being “complicit” in client Carillion's “questionable” accounting practices, posted a 53pc jump in pre-tax profits for the year to September 30. – Telegraph

Britain’s most important trading artery to the EU could be clogged up for years by restrictive planning rules under a no-deal Brexit, the Chancellor has warned. Dover would require significant new physical infrastructure if the UK left the EU without a deal and instead moved to a World Trade Organisation model of trade with the continent, Philip Hammond said. This includes new lorry parks, buildings and equipment for staff checking new paperwork. – Telegraph

Capita has invited 70,000 employees to apply to join its board as non-executive directors, becoming the first FTSE company since the 1980s to appoint workers to its board. The two successful employees, who must have worked for Capita for at least two years, will be paid an additional £64,500 on top of their existing salary. They will take on full boardroom non-executive duties as well as keeping their day job. – The Times

Remember the scare stories? Many bankers, politicians and analysts predicted that Brexit would prompt an exodus of financial services jobs and businesses, weakening the City’s dominance as a global financial centre. Yet with less than four months to go before Britain is set to leave the EU, banks and financial services companies are looking for more new office space in the City than at any time since 2015, according to JLL, the property services company. – The Times

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