Waste company 'bullying clients' - A waste company stands accused of bullying small businesses by using unfair contracts to ramp up charges, the BBC has learned. [BBC Business]
Greece unity talks hit stalemate - The latest attempts to form a Greek government are said to be deadlocked, raising the prospect of fresh elections and more eurozone uncertainty. [BBC Business]
Google brings instant answers to search results - Type in 'Mona Lisa', and a biography appears right on the page (on the right hand side), type in 'Leonardo DiCaprio' and you get a list of his films, and suggested related searches. [Daily Mail IT]
Sixth of cancers due to infection - One in six cancers - two million a year globally - are caused by largely treatable or preventable infections, new estimates suggest. [BBC Health]
New car sales rise 3.3% in April - New car sales in the UK rose to 142,322 in April, up 3.3% from a year earlier, the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders says. [BBC Business]
Rather than lecture European leaders on how they should try to create growth in the eurozone, David Cameron and George Osborne would do better to focus on how they can get things moving in their backyard.
The euro’s inventors argued that scrapping the need for currency markets inside Europe was a great efficiency gain. At enormous cost we have learned that in fact the precise reverse was the case.
Risk analysts are warning that a Greek exit from the single currency would wipe another ten per cent off the value of British banks. At the same time, recovery among manufacturers could be strangled by the crisis.
This combination of economic stagnation and high inflation, coming soon after the first double-dip recession since 1975, would suggest there might be a return to the calamitous performance of the Seventies.
Millions of customers are with the same bank they joined as children even though many are unhappy with their account provider and new rivals are increasing their High Street presence.
The eurozone uncertainty has produced very different views on what lies ahead. Some experts see a bull run, others predict Armageddon. What can you do?
Britons are switching record sums between pounds and euros as fears grow over the future of the single currency and the safety of Continental banks. But many are doing the opposite with a view to buying discounted properties.
The Queen, dressed in turquoise with a large-brimmed hat complete with purple feather, was cheered by thousands of well-wishers in Windsor in scenes reminiscent of last year's Royal Wedding. The crowd roared in excitement as the Red Arrows soared overhead before the event came to an end with a rousing rendition of God Save the Queen