In the latest in the ESG Investment Influencers series, editor-in-chief Katrina Lloyd speaks to Scott Spencer, investment manager in the BMO Global Asset Management Multi-Manager Solutions team.
They discuss why all good fund managers should be doing some form of ESG analysis, the team s ESG scoring system for funds, product gaps in the market and how boutiques are embracing ESG.
Spencer is a member of the 10-strong BMO Global Asset Management Multi-Manager team and has more than 20 years experience in researching funds.
Prior to joining the group in July 2014, he was a senior investment manager at Aberdeen Asset Management, where he was responsible for a number of retail and institutional multi-manager portfolios. Before that, he was a member of the Credit Suisse Asset Management multi-manager team.
Meet the 11 young business leaders leading East Midlands Chambersâ Generation Next network group
Generation Next supports young professionals and future business leaders in Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire
03:00, 4 MAY 2021
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A new East Midlands Chamber network for young professionals has launched a board of âchampionsâ to help shape its offer.
The group of 11 individuals will take a key role in developing the Generation Next networkâs activity and profile.
Asymptomatic Covid testing programme could start again at Djanogly Leisure Centre
Rapid testing results come back in 30 minutes
15:18, 4 MAY 2021
Updated
The Djanogly Community Leisure Centre (Image: Nottingham City Council)
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Mass testing could start back up again at a city leisure centre site to see if people without any symptoms have coronavirus.
A criminology student who suffered excruciating second degree burns on her leg has warned of the dangers of filling hot water bottles from the kettle after one split open on her lap.
Cara Wilson, 21, from Martlesham Heath, near Ipswich in Suffolk, said the burns left her in such agony that she was given gas and air in hospital - a drug usually reserved for women in labour.
She had been at her boyfriend s house in Suffolk during Nottingham Trent University s Easter holiday when he passed her a hot water bottle filled with boiling water.
She said she put it underneath the blanket on her lap and immediately felt a burning sensation.
Home > Press > World s first fiber-optic ultrasonic imaging probe for future nanoscale disease diagnostics
Concept art showing the 3D mapping of microscopic objects by the phonon probe system. The optical fibre contains a metal layer on its tip and projects red laser light into the specimen
CREDIT
Dr Salvatore La Cavera
Abstract:
Scientists at the University of Nottingham have developed an ultrasonic imaging system, which can be deployed on the tip of a hair-thin optical fibre, and will be insertable into the human body to visualise cell abnormalities in 3D.
World s first fiber-optic ultrasonic imaging probe for future nanoscale disease diagnostics