mar

Automation is the future of futures markets

CME orders executed in one-tenth of a second are on the rise as robots power trades




mar

GKN bid row reveals UK doubts about open markets

Britain is haunted by past industrial decline and the buccaneering raids of the 1980s




mar

Time marches on for Smith of Derby

Founded in 1856, the company is the survivor of British horology, having absorbed several rivals




mar

Start-ups advance to test overseas markets

The city exports more goods and services per job than any other in Britain




mar

The Kingmaker — up close with Imelda Marcos, spendthrift superdiva

Lauren Greenfield’s documentary about the Philippines’ former First Lady is comic as well as horrific




mar

Vatican may ordain married priests in remote areas

Reform continues under Pope Francis with South American summit tackling shortage of clergy




mar

Neiman Marcus files second big US retail bankruptcy of lockdown

Upscale US department store follows J Crew as latest debt-burdened chain felled by pandemic




mar

Mark Ruffalo plays diverging twins in I Know This Much Is True

Six-part series adapts Wally Lamb’s novel about family, loss and mental illness




mar

Dubai steps up efforts to revive property market

Emirate seeks to get grip on sector after prices fall 40% from their 2014 peak




mar

Brazil’s booming credit markets fan hopes of ‘revolution’

New York listing of XP highlights transition to a new world of lower interest rates




mar

Eight days that shook the oil market — and the world

How a squabble between Saudi Arabia and Russia led to ‘the nuclear version of a price war’




mar

Reflections on the stock market downturn

My portfolio is down about 35 per cent, but I’m sticking with my small-cap heroes 




mar

Domination dies hard in technology markets

Microsoft lost its antitrust suit, blew big chances yet grows on




mar

The triumphant restoration of the gardens at Marble Hill

The Twickenham house and garden played a part in 18th-century life and literature




mar

Brussels woos world leaders for pandemic fundraising marathon

EU hosts online pledging event but €7.5bn target for vaccines, testing and treatment will only be first step




mar

Smart hirers mix social media and old-school jobs boards

Resist the temptation to rely on networks. Plus: practical tips for recruiters




mar

Recruiter Hays hit by slowdown in German market

Profits also dented by strikes in France, UK election and Australian bushfires




mar

Global shipping market reels from coronavirus

China shutdown leaves crews stuck at sea, shipyards deserted and shipowners hunting for work




mar

Virgin Media to dominate market connecting 5G after contract win

Cable company added Three as a new customer for so-called ‘backhaul’ network




mar

Bang on a Can Marathon — six hours of music from the boundary-breaking group

The annual parade of work by living composers went online, performed from living rooms




mar

Mark Lanegan: Straight Songs of Sorrow

The singer’s sandblasted baritone relates his dark autobiography with irresistible swagger




mar

Sports clubs get smarter in their search for top management

The recruitment process in the industry is slowly starting to turn more professional




mar

UK mortgage market, Indian banks and UBS leadership

Patrick Jenkins and guests discuss the outlook for the UK mortgage market, the reform of India's state-owned banks and leadership changes at UBS. With special guest Darren Cook, Mortgage Analytics Manager at Moneyfacts.


Contributors: Patrick Jenkins, financial editor, Nicholas Megaw, retail banking correspondent, Benjamin Parkin, Mumbai correspondent, Alice Ross, wealth correspondent, and Stephen Morris, European banking correspondent. Producer: Fiona Symon

 

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mar

Mary Portas: The cull of retail businesses spells the end for mediocre malls

Too many big brands have been coasting for too long




mar

Margin Call and the financial thriller

Margin Call, the latest in a line of films on the crash of 2008, depicts a Wall Street investment bank’s last ditch attempts to save itself from impending disaster. Written and directed by first time feature director J.C.Chandor – and starring Kevin Spacey, Demi Moore and Jeremy Irons – The New Yorker called it “the best Wall Street movie ever made”. It’s been marketed as a thriller – but how do you create excitement when the action consists of men in suits peering at computer screens and talking on Blackberries? Does Margin Call have anything new to say on the much-debated causes of the collapse? Andrew Hill, FT management editor, puts these questions to Alex Preston, ex-City trader and author of This Bleeding City; Peter Aspden, FT arts writer; and Leo Robson, film and television critic. Produced by Griselda Murray Brown  


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mar

Marxist melodies: Laura Battle on music from the left

A developing theme in new music sees artists navigating the fine line between criticism and complicity - and revelling in the contradictions.  


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mar

To boldly go: Peter Aspden on Sajid Javid and Mark Cousins

The UK’s culture secretary is a ‘Star Trek’ fan who wants the arts to be ‘accessible to everyone’ - while the filmmakers of the defiantly highbrow ‘Life May Be’ remind us that there are merits in other ambitions.  


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mar

Loan goal: Peter Aspden on the Elgin Marbles

In lending one of its Parthenon sculptures to Russia, the British Museum has provoked Greece and exposed the hollowness of so-called ‘cultural diplomacy’  


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mar

The life of a song: St James Infirmary

David Honigmann on the Louis Armstrong blues song that inspired a poem by WH Auden and recordings by Bob Dylan, Van Morrison and others.  


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mar

The Life of a Song: Lady Marmalade

"Lady Marmalade" began life as a sleazy soul anthem by Bob Crewe and Kenny Nolan before being funked up by Labelle, given an R&B twist by Sheila E and overlaid with cheesy rap for the film "Moulin Rouge". Ian McCann charts its evolution. Credit: Epic, 20th Century Records, Fania, Warner Bros., Polydor Associated Labels  


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mar

Ethiopia postpones landmark national elections due to coronavirus

Social distancing curbs mean August vote cannot be held, says electoral commission




mar

The $1.6tn US student debt nightmare 

Student debt in the US is crippling millions of Americans. Last year the amount students owed came to a total of $1.6tn - that's 8 per cent of the country's national income. This week we hear from one of the 45m students paying back debts to the government. FT Money Show presenter Lucy Warwick-Ching talks to FT reporter Alice Kantor about why university is so expensive in the US compared to the UK and whether there is anything that can be done about it.

 

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mar

Campaign for clear pension charges, how the coronavirus has hit stock markets and coal fires

Join our campaign for clear pension charges - FT Money has been exploring the impossibility of comparing the costs of drawdown plans. The FT is calling on the pensions and advise industry to be transparent about charges to help people to shop around. In this week's show, FT Money Show presenter Claer Barrett interviews o the FT's pensions expert about our campaign. Next up, the spread of the coronavirus has given world stock markets a nasty turn - FT Moneys' new investment reporter, Madison Darbyshire, talks about how investors are reacting. And finally, to cheer listeners up a bit - James Max, our Rich People's Problems columnist is here to discuss a burning issue - the government's proposed ban on coal fires. 

 

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mar

UK Budget, coronavirus planning and crashing stockmarkets

It's been a week of shock and awe for UK investors. Wednesday started with an emergency interest rate cut from the BoE. New chancellor Rishi Sunak then delivered a Budget full of emergency "first aid" measures to help workers, the self employed and small businesses survive the crisis - and some very unexpected news for wealthy pension savers. And in the meantime - stock markets around the world continue to experience deep falls as central banks work out how to respond to the coronavirus.

 

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mar

Meghan Markle loses first round of legal battle

High Court rules some allegations against Associated Newspapers should be struck out




mar

Could Alexa, Siri and Google make us smarter savers?

Smart speakers don’t yet have the skills to




mar

Chinese buyers consider return to international property markets

Global property portals report big increases in Chinese inquiries




mar

Argentina turmoil batters big names in bond market

Franklin Templeton funds have lost $1.2bn on biggest Argentine positions




mar

Argentina’s central bank chief warns on market outlook

Guido Sandleris says it is ‘too soon’ to declare that stability has returned to peso




mar

Argentine assets hit after Macri stumbles in primary vote

Peso tumbles and cost to hedge against debt default surges




mar

Argentina’s black market money changers expect resurgence in business

Reimposition of currency controls is admission of defeat by president




mar

Amundi and Janus Henderson suffer market-induced asset falls

Despite 8% drop in assets, French fund manager reports stronger performance than listed rivals




mar

Denmark and Norway announce further loosening of lockdown

Cafés, restaurants and secondary schools to reopen in phased easing of restrictions




mar

Neiman Marcus and the demise of the US department store

The coronavirus outbreak has accelerated the decline of America’s favourite shopping institution




mar

What the Sotheby's sale means for art market transparency

Sotheby’s has gone under the hammer for $3.7bn ending 31 years of public ownership, with the venerable auction house sold to Patrick Drahi, billionaire founder of the European telecoms group Altice. Arash Massoudi discusses the sale and what it means for the art market with Harriet Agnew and Melanie Gerlis.


Contributors: Suzanne Blumsom, executive editor, Arash Massoudi, corporate finance and deals editor, Harriet Agnew, FT Paris correspondent, and Melanie Gerlis, FT art market columnist. Producer: Fiona Symon

 

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mar

Martin Wolf's economics reading list

This selection of economics must-reads from the last six months take on capitalism, inequality, trade, AI, the law and more. Martin Wolf tells Frederick Studemann about the books we should all be reading this winter.


Watch a video of the conversation here.


Contributors: Frederick Studemann, literary editor and Martin Wolf, chief economics commentator. Producer: Persis Love



Photo credits: Viking, Penguin Books, The Centre for International Governance Innovation, John Murray Press, Harvard University Press,Harvard University Asia Center, Transworld Publishers Ltd, Princeton University Press 

 

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mar

UK parties are missing the mark on climate change

As the UK general election approaches, all parties are stepping up their rhetoric on climate change. What are their manifesto pledges and are they even realistic? Jim Pickard and Nick Butler talk to Leslie Hook about what a new government could spell for the environment and the need for an international approach to tackling the climate crisis.


Contributors: Leslie Hook, environment and clean energy correspondent, Jim Pickard, chief political correspondent and Nick Butler, energy commentator. Producer: Persis Love

 

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mar

World on lockdown, markets melt, hospitals suffer

The FT News Briefing is a rundown of the global business stories you need to know for the coming day, from the newsroom of the Financial Times. If you enjoy it, subscribe to the FT News Briefing wherever you get your podcasts, or listen at FT.com/newsbriefing.


Tuesday, March 17

Governments in all large western economies took drastic measures to limit public movement on Monday in an urgent effort to arrest the spreading coronavirus pandemic while US stocks plunged despite a set of emergency measures laid out by the Federal Reserve on Sunday. Plus, an analysis by the Financial Times finds that the UK and the US have key weaknesses in their healthcare systems which could trigger a collapse if put to the test by the outbreak. 

 

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mar

Martín Guzmán: Argentina cannot afford to pay creditors more

Even before Covid-19 struck, the country’s debt trajectory was out of control




mar

What will the UK property market look like after lockdown?

Join our live discussion with buying agent Henry Pryor on Friday May 8 at 12 and 5pm UK time