‘Europe’s Most Feared Investor’ Chris Hohn’s Top 10 Stock Picks
Sir Christopher Anthony Hohn is an English hedge fund manager, philanthropist and billionaire who founded The Children’s Investment Fund Management (TCI), a London-based hedge fund with over $31 billion in managed securities. Hohn ranks 330th in the Forbes’ list of 2020 billionaires and 9th in the Highest-Earning Hedge Fund Managers 2018 Forbes’ list. Hohn took accounting and business economics in college and graduated with first-class honors from the University of Southampton in 1988. Chris Hohn continued his studies and eventually achieved his Master of Business Administration degree at Harvard Business School.
Hohn’s hedge fund is defying the industry trends, returning 14% in 2020 despite the coronavirus crisis, thanks to its profitable bets on Microsoft, Charter and Canadian Pacific.
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The University of Southampton has been recognised as a safe place for hedgehogs to live and thrive. The British Hedgehog Preservation Society has awarded the University a 2020/21 Bronze Hedgehog Friendly Campus Award for taking positive action to provide a nurturing habitat.
Hedgehogs can successfully live in urban and suburban areas, with gardens and parks providing plentiful food supplies and nesting sites. They are well known for acting as gardeners’ allies by eating slugs, snails and other creepy crawlers which damage plants. The small, spiny mammals are also keen ramblers – roaming an average distance of two kilometres in a single night.
Join us at Nursing Times Careers Live in 2021
05 March, 2021
The first Nursing Times Careers Live event in 2021 will be held virtually in March, with eight events planned throughout the year
The year is well under way, spring has just about arrived and we are looking forward to bringing you our first careers fair of 2021. Over the next nine months, we plan to bring you eight of our Nursing Times Careers Live events. Naturally, we had to adapt our careers fair model last year to become almost entirely virtual due to the coronavirus pandemic. Hopefully, you managed to attend one of the virtual fairs using our Swapcard online platform.
With a third lockdown announced in January, students across the country have petitioned for no detriment policies as the pandemic continues to disrupt learning and teaching.
The Russell Group announced it did not think no detriment policies are necessary or appropriate this year. The statement explains universities have taken steps this year to ensure all students are given a fair grade.
Following the statement, 22 Russell Group Students’ Unions, Associations, and Guilds signed a letter addressed to Russell Group Vice-Chancellors, calling on the Russell Group “to recognise that all students continue to be affected by the pandemic” and demanding a no detriment policy.