Erdogan, high sultan of nepotism
Well that didn’t take long: Turkish sultan Recep Tayyip Erdogan waited a good two seconds after his election before appointing his son-in-law to head the treasury and Finance Ministry, the FT reports. We wonder what’s next in his plan to re-establish the Ottoman empire — perhaps eunuchs conscripted from refugee camps?
Other random things you should know this morning:
- Striking oil workers in Norway could drive up the price of Brent crude, having already sent the benchmark price up to nearly USD 78.50 / bbl yesterday. (Reuters)
- The number of expat workers in KSA was down 6% in the first three months of this year to 10.2 mn as business slowed and the government hiked fees to employ foreign workers. (Bloomberg)
- Sound familiar? Rolling power outages are a feature of the landscape in the nation’s capital as electricity use soars after temps spike above 40°C. It’s not Cairo, you’re not stuck in a time machine: It’s Tehran. (Bloomberg)
- The dark side to M&A: Lashups between companies with divergent corporate norms and cultures can be really bad news for investors. (Financial Times)