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Submit ReviewApple has spent two decades and billions of dollars building a massive supply chain for its products. At the centre of that operation is China. But as Beijing has become more authoritarian and relations with the US sour, it has become harder for Apple to do business there. The company has been signalling recently that it will diversify away from the country, but the FT’s Patrick McGee tells Michela why cutting ties will be extremely difficult.
Clips from Fox News, CGTN, Yahoo, ABC
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For further reading:
How Apple tied its fortunes to China
What it would take for Apple to disentangle itself from China
Tim Cook praises Apple’s ‘symbiotic’ relationship with China
Apple and Foxconn win labour reforms to advance Indian production plans
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On Twitter, follow Patrick McGee (@PatrickMcGee_) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It’s time to hit the books with Behind the Money: Night School. This series will serve as a primer to the biggest economic stories of 2023.
On today’s episode, US Managing Editor Peter Spiegel talks with Derek Brower about energy policy. They discuss how the United States became almost energy independent, President Biden’s about-face on oil and gas, and why the Inflation Reduction Act might just transform America’s economy into a hub of green innovation.
This series is made in collaboration with Blinkist. To hear more conversations like this, check out the Blinkist app.
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Interested in pursuing Masters of Business Administration? Sign up for our newsletter course MBA 101 for your guide to applying and getting into business school.
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
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There’s been a lot of big finance and economics news in 2023. Whether it's stories about rising interest rates, tech industry layoffs or bank runs, it can almost feel like you need an MBA just to make sense of it all. That’s why the Financial Times is launching a bonus series on this feed called Behind the Money: Night School.
Over the next five weeks, this show will help you understand the concepts behind the biggest economic stories of this year. U.S. managing editor Peter Spiegel chats with FT journalists as they unpack the basics around things like energy markets, inflation and the rise of artificial intelligence. This series is supported by Blinkist. If you want to find out more about conversations like this, check out the Blinkist app.
Behind the Money: Night School debuts on Monday, April 17. And, you can find it right here, on the Behind the Money podcast feed.
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This week, we’re revisiting an important episode from last year. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 triggered a global food crisis. Months later, FT correspondents Polina Ivanova, Chris Cook and Laura Pitel found out how Russia aims to profit from this.
Ivanova explains how she and her colleagues used satellite photos, transponder data and a document trail to track a Russian company’s shipment of 2,675 metric tonnes of milling wheat out of the occupied Ukrainian port of Berdyansk, across the Black Sea and over to a port in Turkey.
Clips from CNN, PBS
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For further reading:
How Russia secretly takes grain from occupied Ukraine
Russian exit from Ukraine grain deal ‘catastrophic’ for poor nations
Ships going dark: Russia’s grain smuggling in the Black Sea
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On Twitter, follow Polina Ivanova (@polinaivanovva) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Climate disasters are becoming more and more common, and the countries most vulnerable to them are often the ones emitting the least pollution. That imbalance has sparked a debate on whether rich, polluting nations have a responsibility to contribute more when there are climate catastrophes. In today’s episode, we’re looking at one country that serves as an example: Pakistan. We’ll discuss how it plans to fund its recovery after record-breaking floods – worsened by climate change – submerged much of the south Asian country last year.
Clips from Sky News Australia, Al Jazeera, Channel 4 News
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For further reading:
Rebuilding Pakistan: how much should rich nations help?
‘It’s the fault of climate change’: Pakistan seeks ‘justice’ after floods
Debt burden traps global south in a vicious circle
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On Twitter, follow Ben Parkin (@b_parkyn), Camilla Hodgson (@CamillaHodgson), and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
After the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, markets were anxious, and the prestigious, yet scandal-ridden Credit Suisse looked as if it could be next to fall. But over the span of a single weekend, the Swiss government and Credit Suisse’s crosstown rival, UBS, raced against the clock to avert disaster. The FT’s banking editor Stephen Morris provides a front row look at how the deal came together.
Clips from Bloomberg, CNBC, BBC
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For further reading:
How the Swiss ‘trinity’ forced UBS to save Credit Suisse
Credit Suisse: the rise and fall of the bank that built modern Switzerland
Saudi National Bank chair resigns following Credit Suisse comments
And further listening:
Behind the Money's December 2022 episode, Credit Suisse's last chance
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On Twitter, follow Stephen Morris (@sjhmorris) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Credit Suisse… Silicon Valley Bank… Signature Bank… First Republic… After weeks of breaking headlines about banks in crisis, we are taking a big picture look at the sector with the FT’s chief economics commentator, Martin Wolf. In this episode, he explains why banks fail, and lays out the four paths that banking reform could take in the future.
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For further reading:
Banks are designed to fail — and they do
US capitalism is ‘breaking down before our eyes’, says Ken Griffin
How the Swiss ‘trinity’ forced UBS to save Credit Suisse
Four ways to fix the bank problem
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On Twitter, follow Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank last week raised questions about the strength of the United States’ banking system, and whether we’re headed for another financial crisis. The FT’s US financial commentator Robert Armstrong tells us why he’s not freaking out.
Clips from CBS, NBC, CNN, DW
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For further reading:
SVB was only a little bit insolvent, luckily
SVB’s collapse is not a harbinger of another 2008
The weekend US officials hatched a plan to stave off a banking crisis
Silicon Valley Bank shows the perils of regulators fighting the last war
For further discussion:
Join an FT subscriber-only webinar on SVB’s collapse and the fallout, featuring Robert Armstrong and other FT journalists and guests, on Thursday March 16 1600-1700 GMT (1200-1300 ET). Register here.
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On Twitter, follow Robert Armstrong (@rbrtrmstrng) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Over just a few years, the share price of an obscure company from the United Arab Emirates has jumped 40,000%. But little is known about International Holding Company, which has investments in everything from Elon Musk’s SpaceX to India’s Adani Group. The FT’s Middle East editor travelled to Abu Dhabi to get answers about its rapid growth and its connections to some of the most powerful people in the Gulf.
Clips from MSNBC, CBS
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For further reading:
The UAE business that went from obscurity to a $240bn valuation in 3 years
The sheikh’s empire driving Abu Dhabi’s meteoric stock market rise
The Abu Dhabi royal at the nexus of UAE business and national security
Groovy girls, typing pools and labour camps: the complicated world of IHC
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On Twitter, follow Andrew England (@cornishft) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Recently, flying in the US seems to be more chaotic than calm. And while it may seem like this all started recently, the FT’s Chicago Correspondent Claire Bushey takes us back to a decision that happened in the 1970s that got us to where we are now.
Clips from NBC, PBS, CBS
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For further reading:
How the US fell out of love with flying
Passengers to keep ‘paying the price’ of aviation chaos, says United CEO
Hyper-efficiency is bad business
US airlines: higher fares and (hopefully) better service
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On Twitter, follow Claire Bushey (@Claire_Bushey) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It’s been one year since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. We’re spending this episode talking to FT reporters and Ukrainian entrepreneurs about the costs of this war: How individuals' lives have been uprooted, how the country’s economy has been turned upside down, and how global markets such as food and energy have been transformed.
Clips from CNN, BBC, NBC, PBS, Al Jazeera English
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For further reading:
Conflict with Russia hangs over Ukraine’s recovery
Something for the weekend: the year of Ukraine
Marking a year in the Ukraine war
He wanted an adventure. He ended up in Ukraine’s most brutal war zone
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On Twitter, follow Ben Hall, (@hallbenjamin) Emiko Terazono, (@EmikoTerazono) Tom Wilson (@thomas_m_wilson) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The EU’s executive branch is known for leading the way when it comes to regulating crucial industries, like Big Tech. But for now, one country appears to be further ahead in the race to keep competition alive for European entrepreneurs. The FT’s EU correspondent Javier Espinoza explains who is leading the pack and what it means for everyone else.
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For further reading:
How Germany became Europe’s leading Big Tech trust buster
Brussels re-energised for Big Tech battles
EU braced for legal challenges to rules designed to tackle Big Tech
Fight breaks out between Ireland and Germany over Big Tech regulation
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On Twitter, follow Javier Espinoza (@JavierespFT) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The dollar dominated last year as the US Federal Reserve raised interest rates quicker than other countries to tame inflation. But the so-called “king dollar” has shifted recently. FT Capital Markets Correspondent Kate Duguid dives into how the greenback has been toppled from its throne and what that means for the rest of the world.
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For further reading:
US dollar hits reverse gear as Fed cedes rate-rise ‘driver’s seat’
Dollar touches 7-month low as Fed rate rise expectations slide
The downturn in the dollar is not just about rates
Emerging market governments raise $40bn in January borrowing binge
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On Twitter, follow Kate Duguid (@kateduguid) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Several Big Tech companies have recently announced job cuts - and they pinned their decisions on a pandemic-induced hiring spree. But is that actually what’s driving the cuts? We sat down with the FT’s US financial commentator Robert Armstrong to get the full picture.
Clips from Reuters, MSNBC, Yahoo Finance
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BTM listeners, we want to know what you think of the show and what you want to hear more of. Visit ft.com/btmsurvey to submit your feedback.
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For further reading:
Bye-bye massages and free food: Big Tech cuts back perks
The shock of mass lay-offs is only the beginning for companies
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On Twitter, follow Robert Armstrong (@rbrtmstrng) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Last year, we talked about China needing to find a mechanism to fix its economy. It looks like it may have found it - by abruptly ending its zero-Covid policies. The FT’s Shanghai correspondent Tom Hale and Global China Editor James Kynge break down what President Xi Jinping’s main goals are and whether it’s enough to jumpstart the country’s economy.
Clips from CNN, BBC
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BTM listeners, we want to know what you think of the show and what you want to hear more of. Visit ft.com/btmsurvey to submit your feedback.
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For further reading:
Xi Jinping’s plan to reset China’s economy and win back friends
China’s economy begins to reopen after 3 years of Covid isolation
China’s Covid generation: the surging inequality behind Xi’s U-turn
I spent 10 days in a secret Chinese Covid detention centre
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On Twitter, follow Tom Hale (@TomHale_), James Kynge (@JKynge) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Electric vehicle giant Tesla took the automotive industry by storm with its innovative technology, but the company’s stock price has slid significantly since last year. And its chief executive Elon Musk has some Tesla fans rethinking their support given Musk’s moves as the new owner of Twitter. But the FT’s Richard Waters says that Tesla faces a challenge much bigger than Musk’s latest tweets.
Clips from CBS, ABC News, NBC, CNBC
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BTM listeners, we want to know what you think of the show and what you want to see more of. Visit ft.com/btmsurvey to submit your feedback.
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For further reading:
Trouble at Tesla: the end of a golden age of growth?
Tesla cuts electric car prices across Europe and US to bolster demand
OK, 2022 was a disaster for Tesla. What next?
Musk/multitasking: the cost of being thinly stretched
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On Twitter, follow Richard Waters (@RichardWaters) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The global economy has been hit hard in the past few years by the Covid-19 pandemic, high inflation and Russia’s war in Ukraine. However, there’s one emerging economy that’s managed to succeed in spite of that - Indonesia. So, what’s its secret? We sat down with the FT’s Mercedes Ruehl to understand how the country got to where it is now, and whether that success will be permanent.
Clips from Associated Press
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For further reading:
Indonesia’s unexpected success story
Indonesia’s president steps on to world stage as G20 host
Bauxite: holding resources hostage will impede Indonesia’s growth
Indonesia’s growth outlook dims as Jokowi begins final term
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On Twitter, follow Mercedes Ruehl (@mjruehl) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Welcome back to a new year with Behind the Money! We’re starting off by paying a visit to the New York Public Library to take a peek into the past. Some 300 years ago parts of Europe were in the middle of a financial revolution that quickly turned into a financial frenzy and then — a fallout. With help from the FT’s US markets editor Jennifer Hughes, we’ll learn more about the Mississippi and South Sea Company Bubbles, and what they tell us about today.
Clips from: NBC, CNBC, CBS News
Music: Georg Philipp Telemann’s Overture-Suite in B-flat Major performed by Tempesta di Mare / The Philadelphia Baroque Orchestra
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Learn how to visit the New York Public Library’s exhibit, Fortune and Folly in 1720.
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Further reading:
Business trends, risks and people to watch in 2023
FT writers’ predictions for the world in 2023
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On Twitter, follow Jennifer Hughes (@JennHughes13) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
It’s our last episode of the year, so that means we’re looking ahead to 2023 with the help of the FT’s chief economics commentator Martin Wolf. He sat down with Michela to discuss some of 2022’s biggest stories — inflation, the war in Ukraine, climate change — and how they might impact events in the new year.
Clips from NBC News, AP, Sky News, Channel 4 News, Al Jazeera, CNN, TRT World, Yahoo!
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For further reading:
How to think about policy in a polycrisis
Delay only makes climate action more urgent
Xi Jinping’s third term is a tragic error
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On Twitter, follow Martin Wolf (@martinwolf_) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
At one time, Credit Suisse was considered to be among the most respected banks in Europe. The FT’s European banking correspondent Owen Walker explains how the Swiss bank is trying to make a comeback after years of scandal and losses — and what might happen if it fails.
Clips from CNBC, DW News, Reuters
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For further reading:
Credit Suisse chair says outflows have reversed since ‘social media storm’
‘Radical surgery’: Will Credit Suisse’s gamble pay off?
Credit Suisse turns to ‘Uli the knife’ to cut bank loose from scandal
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On Twitter, follow Owen Walker (@OwenWalker0) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week, we revisit one of our favourite episodes. After years of mega-deals and mega-money gushing into start-ups, venture capital fundraising hit a record-high last year. Now, the FT’s Richard Waters says the fundraising bonanza is over and helps us explore what that means for the future of start-ups.
Clips from Looney Tunes: ⓒ Warner Bros.
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For further reading:
Venture capital’s silent crash: when the tech boom met reality
Klarna’s valuation crashes to under $7bn in tough funding round
Venture capital’s delayed rendezvous with reality
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On Twitter, follow Richard Waters (@RichardWaters) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Qatar is in the spotlight as the host of this year’s World Cup — and the small, oil-rich nation has had to confront a lengthy human rights record with the world watching. The FT’s Gulf correspondent Simeon Kerr breaks down Qatar’s larger goals due to hosting the tournament, and what changes it has — and hasn’t — made to see those through.
Clips from BBC, AP, PBS NewsHour, France24, The Guardian
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For further reading:
The ethical case for watching this possibly unethical World Cup
Qatar counts down to World Cup kick-off after $200bn soft power bet
How the unlikeliest World Cup ever came to be
Qatar 2022: the weirdest World Cup in history
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On Twitter, follow Simeon Kerr (@simeonkerr) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The crypto exchange FTX was supposed to be among the “credible” players operating in digital finance. But its swift descent into bankruptcy shocked the financial industry. The FT’s asset management correspondent Josh Oliver explains what went wrong, and markets editor Katie Martin tells us what it says about the future of crypto.
Clips from CBS, ABC
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For further reading:
How Sam Bankman-Fried seduced blue-chip investors
DD goes forensic on FTX: A deep dive into the crypto collapse that has stunned finance
FTX held less than $1bn in liquid assets against $9bn in liabilities
Hedge fund admits half its capital stuck on FTX exchange
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On Twitter, follow Josh Oliver (@joshckoliver), Katie Martin (@katie_martin_fx) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tech Tonic is back with a new season about climate tech.
As more people fly, aviation is on track to becoming a much bigger problem for climate change. Host Pilita Clark, FT columnist and climate journalist, looks at the potential for a more sustainable aviation industry, a sector that’s struggled to come up with new technology to cut its emissions. Could we end up being forced to cut back on flying altogether? Producer Josh Gabert-Doyon travels to Farnborough Airshow, and we hear from Zero Petroleum’s Paddy Lowe, Boom Supersonic’s Blake Scholl, and executives from Boeing, Airbus, ADS, United and EasyJet.
Follow Tech Tonic to hear the full season here.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine earlier this year triggered a global food crisis. Recently, FT correspondents Polina Ivanova, Chris Cook and Laura Pitel found out how Russia aims to profit from this. Ivanova explains how they used satellite photos, transponder data and a document trail to track a Russian company’s shipment of 2,675 metric tonnes of milling wheat out of the occupied Ukrainian port of Berdyansk, across the Black Sea and over to a port in Turkey.
Clips from CNN, PBS
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For further reading:
How Russia secretly takes grain from occupied Ukraine
Russian exit from Ukraine grain deal ‘catastrophic’ for poor nations
Ships going dark: Russia’s grain smuggling in the Black Sea
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On Twitter, follow Polina Ivanova (@polinaivanovva) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
There’s some internal turmoil at JPMorgan Chase over who should manage the bank’s wealthiest clients. At the centre of the infighting is a top financial adviser who’s managed the accounts of some big names, including retired baseball player-turned-entrepreneur Alex Rodriguez. The FT’s US banking editor Joshua Franklin walks us through what led to this years-long legal battle at one of the world’s biggest banks.
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For further reading:
Glitz and Gladwell: the infighting over prized JPMorgan wealth clients
Baseball star Alex Rodriguez at centre of JPMorgan client poaching row
Asset Management: Growth investors adapt to new paradigm
Take our FT Podcast Listener Survey here.
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On Twitter, follow Joshua Franklin (@FTJFranklin) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
US Republicans are picking a fight with some major financial institutions over ESG, or environmental, social and governance investing. That means considering things such as climate risks, labour issues and board diversity when choosing investment funds. The FT’s corporate governance reporter Patrick Temple-West explains why Republicans are upset and what this backlash might mean for the future of ESG.
Clips from Fox News, CNBC
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For further reading:
US Republicans pull $1bn from BlackRock over ESG investing concerns
BlackRock: ESG tightrope is hard to navigate
Making funding flows fair: Must ESG be bad news for emerging markets?
Greenwashing faces fresh curbs in UK regulator’s crackdown
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On Twitter, follow Patrick Temple-West (@Temple_West) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The spotlight is on China as the Communist party’s 20th National Congress takes place this week. At a critical moment when President Xi Jinping prepares to stay on for an unprecedented third term as leader, there’s an important problem: China’s economy is slowing down. The FT’s China correspondent Edward White explains why this has happened and whether or not it's too late for Xi to make the changes necessary to put the country on a path to strong growth again.
Clip from the South China Morning Post
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For further reading:
Xi Jinping’s last chance to revive the Chinese economy
China’s property crash: ‘a slow-motion financial crisis’
China growth to fall behind rest of Asia for first time since 1990
China delays key GDP data in middle of Communist party congress
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On Twitter, follow Edward White (@edwardwhitenz) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Trevor Milton and his electric vehicle start-up Nikola became Spac darlings in 2020 with his plan to transform the trucking industry. Then it all came crashing down. The FT’s Claire Bushey explains the boom and bust of entrepreneur Trevor Milton’s career and what we can learn from his story.
Clips from Nikola
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For further reading:
Nikola founder Trevor Milton accused of misleading investors at fraud trial
Nikola: the clues in Trevor Milton’s past that investors missed or ignored
US justice department inquires into Nikola fraud claims
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On Twitter, follow Claire Bushey (@Claire_Bushey) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Years of low interest rates sent investors hunting for creative ways to generate returns. One unlikely place they found was inside the song catalogues of some of the top musicians and songwriters of the last few decades. But now, as interest rates rise and the possibility of a global recession looms, the FT’s Anna Nicolaou and Kaye Wiggins explain how one of the hottest recent trends on Wall Street could soon have to face the music.
Clip from Chevrolet
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For further reading:
How Wall Street stormed the music business
Blackstone-backed song rights machine suffers growing pains
Another brick in the Wall Street as Blackstone seeks Pink Floyd catalogue
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On Twitter, follow Anna Nicolaou (@annaknicolaou), Kaye Wiggins (@kayewiggins) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As the rollout of bivalent boosters for Covid-19 continues, experts are concerned that the US isn’t doing enough to support the development of the next wave of vaccines and treatments that the world needs. In this week’s episode, we hear from White House Covid coordinator Ashish Jha, professor of molecular medicine and cardiologist Eric Topol and the FT’s US pharmaceuticals correspondent Jamie Smyth on what the future of Covid vaccines could and should look like.
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For further reading:
Investors ditch vaccine stocks after Joe Biden says ‘pandemic is over’
Joe Biden’s Covid-19 tsar warns millions risk losing access to treatment
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On Twitter, follow Jamie Smyth (@JamieSmythF) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Over the last year, Starbucks baristas across the US banded together to form unions at the stores where they work. And workers at other big name companies like Amazon have joined in to organise their own workplaces, too. But the FT’s labour and equality correspondent Taylor Nicole Rogers explains how these and other new unions around the US are running up against a classic problem in labour. Can they convince their employers to come to the bargaining table to hash out a contract?
Clips from NBC, CBS
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For further reading:
US trade unions: Inside the revival brewing at Starbucks
Joe Biden secures deal to avert US rail strike
Howard Schultz vows Starbucks rebound after coffee chain ‘lost its way’
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On Twitter, follow Taylor Nicole Rogers (@TaylorNRogers) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Construction of a massive oil pipeline in east Africa is underway. For the governments of the countries it will run through, it promises new economic opportunities. But for many others, it could spell trouble. Like the fight over North America’s Keystone Pipeline, this one has become an important battleground for environmental groups around the world. The FT’s Leslie Hook explains the approach activists are taking to fight it.
Clips from UBC Television Uganda
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For further reading:
The oil giants drilling among the giraffes in Uganda
Marsh revealed in oil pipeline project shunned by leading banks and insurers
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On Twitter, follow Leslie Hook (@lesliehook) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Tech Tonic is back with a new season all about crypto!
We wanted to share with you the second episode of the latest season of Tech Tonic. FT columnist and host Jemima Kelly tries to understand why an influential Silicon Valley investment firm thinks that Web3 is a good bet. Will blockchain technology really be the foundation of a new internet era? Is Web3’s promise to decentralise the internet going to pose a challenge to companies such as Facebook and Twitter? The FT’s innovation editor John Thornhill interviews Chris Dixon, head of Andreessen Horowitz’s crypto fund, and Jemima talks to Molly White, author of the Web3 Is Going Just Great blog.
Follow Tech Tonic to hear the full season here.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Buying carbon credits is a way for companies to show they’re serious about fighting climate change. But keeping track of these credits is tricky. Now, advocates of the blockchain - the technology that underpins cryptocurrency - say that its digital ledger could be a possible solution to bring transparency to the market. On today’s episode, the FT’s Camilla Hodgson explores whether this technology could help fight climate change or whether some supporters are just in it for their own benefit.
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For further reading:
Crypto and climate change: can web3 help get us to net zero?
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Early in his tenure the new Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon presented a grand new vision for what the massive bank should become. How has it panned out since? And is there still time for Solomon to make the changes it needs? The FT’s US banking editor Joshua Franklin examines what Solomon has and hasn’t achieved in his four years at the helm.
Clips from CBS
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For further reading:
In era of quick-fire bosses, Wall Street embraces the ‘forever CEO’
The reinvention of Goldman Sachs: what has David Solomon achieved?
Goldman raises profitability target in effort to bridge valuation gap
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On Twitter, follow Joshua Franklin (@FTJFranklin) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The FT’s south Asia correspondent Ben Parkin explains how Afghanistan’s economy has changed in the year since US forces left the country and the Taliban retook control of the government.
Clips from CBS, BBC
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For further reading:
The Taliban’s black gold: militants seize on coal to reboot economy
Life under the Taliban: ‘what matters is that we’re hungry’
The Taliban’s new order: ‘We’ll introduce a system for the world’
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On Twitter, follow Benjamin Parkin (@b_parkyn) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Federal Reserve has spent more than a decade buying up government debt as part of a post-2008 program to support the economy, also known as quantitative easing. Now with inflation reaching record highs, those days are over, and a new era of quantitative tightening is emerging. On this week’s episode, the FT’s markets editor Katie Martin explains how markets expect to grapple with the change.
Clips from ABC, CNBC, CBS
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For further reading:
The mystery of how quantitative tightening will affect markets
Did central bank balance sheets really need to get so big?
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On Twitter, follow Katie Martin (@katie_martin_fx) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Venture capital fundraising hit a record-high last year. There were more deals, and more money poured into startups last year than at any other time in history. Now, the FT’s Richard Waters says the fundraising bonanza is over. On this week’s episode, we explore what that means for the future of startups.
Clips from Looney Tunes: ⓒ Warner Bros.
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For further reading:
Venture capital’s silent crash: when the tech boom met reality
Klarna’s valuation crashes to under $7bn in tough funding round
Venture capital’s delayed rendezvous with reality
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On Twitter, follow Richard Waters (@RichardWaters) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, it’s become more and more difficult for Americans to chart a path toward financial security. Things like buying a house and paying off student loans have become more challenging for young people to do. And that’s given rise to a new generation of investors the FT’s Madison Darbyshire calls “generation moonshot.”
Clips courtesy of NBC News, CNBC, ABC News, CBS
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For further reading:
Generation moonshot: why young investors are not ready to give up on risk
How retail investors can navigate the rough terrain of US equities
A year on, we haven’t absorbed the lessons of the GameStop saga
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On Twitter, follow Madison Darbyshire (@MADarbyshire) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sri Lanka is facing dire fuel and food shortages amid ongoing economic and political crises. In this week’s episode, the FT’s Antoni Slodkowski shares what he’s seen after a week of reporting in Sri Lanka. And then, emerging markets correspondent Jonathan Wheatley explains how the crises in Sri Lanka may impact the rest of the world.
Clips courtesy of Voice of America
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For further reading:
No food, no fuel and no jobs: the economic catastrophe engulfing Sri Lanka
What Sri Lanka reveals about the risks in emerging markets
China reckons with its first overseas debt crisis
Debt sell-off intensifies strains for more than a dozen emerging markets
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On Twitter, follow Jonathan Wheatley (@Jonthn_Wheatley), Antoni Slodkowski (@slodek) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Greedflation. Price gouging. Pandemic profiteering. What happens when turning a profit is considered a bad thing? In this week’s episode, the FT’s US business editor Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson explains how a new message around corporate profits is resonating with the American public and causing headaches for executives.
Clip courtesy of Bloomberg
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For further reading:
US companies face rising battle to fend off vilification over ‘excess’ profits
Joe Biden blasts Chevron chief as ‘sensitive’ after fuel-price criticism
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On Twitter, follow Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson (@Edgecliffe) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
A few years ago a Peruvian farmer filed a lawsuit against a German utility company thousands of miles away. The reason? A glacier is melting near his hometown. If it melts enough, it could cause a flood that may catastrophically damage his city. He says that over years the company's pollution has contributed to climate change, and because of this, it should help pay for protections against the potential flood.
In this week’s episode, we’ll tell the story of a David vs. Goliath battle. How one man is taking on one of the world’s biggest polluters in a landmark case that could one day force companies to pay for damage they’ve done to the environment.
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For further reading:
Who pays for climate change? The Peruvian suing a German utility
The Climate Game: Can you reach net zero by 2050?
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On Twitter, follow Camilla Hodgson (@CamillaHodgson)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Spacs, or special purpose acquisition companies, were all the rage at the start of the pandemic. These shell companies raise cash by listing on the stock market, and then seek a merger with a private company. This created a novel way for companies to list on the stock market without having to go through the traditional initial public offering process.
Now, Spacs are floundering. The FT’s Ortenca Aliaj talks with guest host Jess Smith about how the Spac investment boom collided with rising interest rates and regulatory threats, and ultimately went bust.
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For further reading:
Spac boom dies as wary investors retreat
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On Twitter, follow Ortenca Aliaj (@OrtencaAl)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Late last year Unilever reached a $5 billion deal to sell part of its tea business, including brands like Lipton and PG Tips, to private equity giant CVC Capital. But the tea sector is a complicated one. With roots in colonialism, tea plantations around the world have faced many issues, including accusations of human rights abuses.
In this week’s episode, we’re hearing from one worker whose life was forever changed by violence on her plantation, and exploring how this deal represents a new challenge for PE as investors are increasing their scrutiny into the private equity industry’s ethics.
Clips courtesy of Unilever, Al Jazeera, AP
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For further reading:
How Unilever’s tea business became a test of private equity’s conscience
Bidders for Unilever’s tea business pulled out on plantation concerns
CVC pushes back IPO plans amid market turmoil
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Sign up here to get the Moral Money premium newsletter sent straight to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday.
On Twitter, follow Judith Evans (@JudithREvans), Kaye Wiggins (@kayewiggins) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
When Financial Times reporter Patricia Nilsson started digging into the porn industry, she made a shocking discovery: nobody knew who controlled the biggest porn company in the world. Now, Nilsson and her editor, Alex Barker, reveal who is behind it and much more. This eight-part investigative podcast, published weekly, reveals the secret history of the adult business and the billionaires and financial institutions who shape it.
Subscribe and listen on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Pocket Casts, Stitcher or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Federal Reserve announced its largest interest rate increase since 1994. And it's the equivalent of the US central bank taking a baseball bat to the economy, according to the FT’s US financial commentator Robert Armstrong.
In this week’s episode, Armstrong is helping us to make sense of the Fed’s announcement. He’ll explain what the recent hike means for the economy and for investors, and tell us whether or not we should be freaking out.
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For further reading:
How fast is the US economy slowing?
Time for strong medicine: How central banks got tough on inflation
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Sign up here to get the Unhedged newsletter sent straight to your inbox every weekday.
On Twitter, follow Robert Armstrong (@rbrtrmstrng)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Johnson & Johnson, one of the world’s largest healthcare companies, is facing thousands of lawsuits from people alleging they got cancer from using one of their oldest products: talc-based baby powder.
To manage the growing liability, J&J recently deployed a controversial new bankruptcy manoeuvre known as the Texas Two-Step.
In this week’s episode, we explore whether J&J’s use of this manoeuvre is setting a new precedent for corporations to evade accountability in America.
Update: A new version of this episode was uploaded on June 21, 2022 to update the number and outcome of trials 3M has faced related to one of its products.
Clip courtesy of NBC News
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For further reading:
Johnson & Johnson’s ‘Texas-two-step’ sparks outcry over US bankruptcy regime
Architects of ‘Texas two-step’ lambast J&J for its use of the manoeuvre
‘Texas two-step’ outcry risks ending fee bonanza for law firm Jones Day
J&J’s Texas two-step waltzes over its liabilities
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On Twitter, follow Jamie Smyth (@JamieSmythF) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Last week authorities raided the offices of Germany’s top asset manager DWS Group and its majority owner Deutsche Bank. The raid was spurred by allegations of greenwashing. That is, that DWS had made misleading claims about how sustainable or “green” some of its financial products were. DWS says it denies those allegations and has cooperated with regulators and authorities, but this move has prompted a larger reckoning throughout the financial industry.
At the centre of much of this is former DWS sustainability officer Desiree Fixler. In this week’s episode we hear from the whistleblower herself, and explore her allegations about her time at DWS. The FT’s Patrick Temple-West also explains what this moment means for the future of environmental, social and governance or ESG investing.
For further reading:
German police raid DWS and Deutsche Bank over greenwashing allegations
DWS chief resigns after police raid over greenwashing claims
Deutsche banker takes over asset manager in the eye of an ESG storm
On Twitter, follow Patrick Temple-West (@Temple_West)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
We’re diving back into the world of stablecoins for part 2 of 2 in our miniseries on crypto. This time, it’s a story filled with troubled companies and a real life fire that sends a business up in smoke. With the help of FT reporters Kadhim Shubber and Siddharth Venkataramakrishnan, we dig into the professional histories of two executives who sit atop two of crypto’s most important businesses: stablecoin issuer Tether and exchange Bitfinex.
Clips courtesy CSPAN
For further reading:
Tether’s CEO: from IT sales to calling the shots in crypto land
Tether: the former plastic surgeon behind the crypto reserve currency
On Twitter, follow FT reporters Kadhim Shubber (@Kadhim), Siddharth Venkataramakrishnan (@SVR13) and Ethan Wu (@EthanYWu)
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Behind the Money is back! Our first episode is part 1 of 2 in a miniseries on crypto. First up, we're wondering: is a crypto vibe shift underway? Bitcoin’s price has been dropping for weeks and earlier this month, a popular stablecoin collapsed. FT reporter Ethan Wu explains how the effects of that rippled into other areas of the crypto universe. Michela and Ethan will talk about what stablecoins are and why they matter — even for people who aren’t crypto investors.
For further reading:
Investors pull $7bn from Tether as stablecoin jitters intensify
Follow Ethan Wu on Twitter @EthanYWu
Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The amount of money flowing into investment funds that claim to invest in sustainable businesses has surged in recent years. More companies than ever have embraced policies with environmental, social and corporate governance criteria as their central plank. But there's a debate over what ESG investing can achieve, particularly when it comes to cutting carbon emissions and addressing climate change.
In the final episode of our five-part series on ESG investing, we hear from two leading FT voices on opposite sides of the argument. Cheering the rise of ESG is Gillian Tett, the FT’s US editor-at-large and co-founder of Moral Money, the FT team that covers sustainable business and finance; and casting a sceptical eye is the FT’s US financial commentator Robert Armstrong, who also writes Unhedged, the FT newsletter on Wall Street.
The ESG investing industry is dangerous
A carbon price should be top of the wish list at the climate talks
The need to elevate developing countries at COP26
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is the podcast about doing work differently. Join host Isabel Berwick every Wednesday for expert analysis and watercooler chat about ahead-of-the-curve workplace trends, the big ideas shaping work today — and the old habits we need to leave behind.
Subscribe on Apple https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/working-it/id1591925469 - On Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/5vNDHxEOc1pI1acJS7He5e Or wherever you get your podcasts.
The wellness industry is a trillion-dollar business, and the pandemic has turbo-charged it. One of the biggest trends has been the rise in employers buying their staff access to meditation and fitness apps. But does this ‘quick fix’ approach work? And are there better ways to boost wellbeing ?
Isabel talks to Lorna Borenstein, chief executive of Grokker, a corporate wellness app about the reasons why she set up the platform and how clients and her own staff use it. It’s all part of a culture of taking care of employees - a topic Lorna has explored more deeply in her book It’s Personal, offering advice to other managers on how to help staff feel better [tl;dr: talk less, listen more].We also speak to FT colleague Emma Jacobs, about the corporate care culture. She is a little more skeptical.
We would love to hear from you - email us at workingit@ft.com. You can also follow @isabelberwick on Twitter and Instagram or reach out via email: isabel.berwick@ft.com">isabel.berwick@ft.com. Thanks.
Mentioned in the podcast and other interesting reading:
Presented by Isabel Berwick. Editorial direction from Renée Kaplan. Assistant producer is Persis Love. Sound design is by Breen Turner, with original music from Metaphor Music. Produced by Novel.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
If you want your investments to match your principles should a threat to divest be part of your long-term strategy?
In the fourth episode of our special five-part series on sustainable or ESG investing, produced in partnership with the FT’s Moral Money team, the story of the California State Teachers' Retirement System, or Calstrs, and why its decision to divest from the US private prisons industry prompted tears and passionate discussion on the board.
Joe Rennison, deputy US markets editor, assesses the long-term impact that divestment can have on companies, while Moral Money’s Patrick Temple-West, Attracta Mooney, the FT’s investment correspondent, and Lindsay Frost, a senior reporter at Agenda, an FT publication about the corporate board space, explain why divestment presents a conundrum for investors and whether passive investment funds are really compatible with ESG investing.
JPMorgan funds invested in CoreCivic debt after vow to stop financing private prisons
Bond funds wrestle with human rights dilemma
media.com/images/marketing/articles/1021_Agenda_Divestment-article.pdf">Divestment Concerns Creep In for More Industries
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Review clips: Calstrs, NBC, Global News, PBS, AP, CBC News, The Guardian, CSPAN
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
If you want your investments to match your principles should a threat to divest be part of your long-term strategy?
In the fourth episode of our special five-part series on sustainable or ESG investing, produced in partnership with the FT’s Moral Money team, the story of the California State Teachers' Retirement System, or Calstrs, and why its decision to divest from the US private prisons industry prompted tears and passionate discussion on the board.
Joe Rennison, deputy US markets editor, assesses the long-term impact that divestment can have on companies, while Moral Money’s Patrick Temple-West, Attracta Mooney, the FT’s investment correspondent, and Lindsay Frost, a senior reporter at Agenda, an FT publication about the corporate board space, explain why divestment presents a conundrum for investors and whether passive investment funds are really compatible with ESG investing.
JPMorgan funds invested in CoreCivic debt after vow to stop financing private prisons
Bond funds wrestle with human rights dilemma
media.com/images/marketing/articles/1021_Agenda_Divestment-article.pdf">Divestment Concerns Creep In for More Industries
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Review clips: Calstrs, NBC, Global News, PBS, AP, CBC News, The Guardian, CSPAN
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The story of how a tiny, unknown hedge fund took on a giant of corporate America over climate change - and won. Charlie Penner of Engine No 1 talks about the very public proxy campaign he launched against Exxon Mobil, forcing the oil major to prepare for a future free of fossil fuels.
In the third episode of our special five-part series on sustainable or ESG investing, produced in partnership with the FT’s Moral Money team, Derek Brower, US energy editor, and Attracta Mooney, the FT’s investment correspondent, reflect on whether the battle between Engine No 1 and Exxon marks the beginning of a new kind of activist investor.
Engine No 1, the giant-killing hedge fund, has big plans
DWS probes spark fears of greenwashing claims across investment industry
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Review clips: The Sun, Channel 4 News, Euronews, PBS Newshour, GMA, CNN, CNBC, ExxonMobil
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Milton Friedman, the renowned American economist and spiritual mentor of many entrepreneurs, argued that the social responsibility of business was to increase profits. This has been the gospel since the early 1970s, but companies and investors are beginning to rethink the purpose of business. Has the sun really set on the Miltonian era?
In the second episode of our special five-part series produced in partnership with the Moral Money team, Leila Abboud, the FT’s Paris correspondent, and Gillian Tett, the FT’s US editor-at-large, tell the story of Emmanuel Faber, the former CEO of Danone who embraced environmental, social and governance (ESG) causes - and then was ousted eight years later. Turns out there was more to the story than first meets the eye.
The fall from favour of Danone’s purpose-driven chief
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Review clips: CNBC, Danone, British Pathé, IMAGINE, France 24
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
When Tariq Fancy joined BlackRock as its first chief investment officer for sustainable investing in 2018, he was convinced that with companies around the world, including the world’s biggest asset manager, embracing environmental, social and governance (ESG) causes, the stage was set to reform capitalism. As a former Wall Street banker, he’d been hired by Blackrock after setting up his own digital learning non-profit group in Canada. But just two years after joining Blackrock, he left his job. So what went wrong?
In the first episode of our special five-part series produced in partnership with the FT’s Moral Money team, Gillian Tett, the FT’s US editor-at-large, and Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson, the FT’s US business editor, explore the idea that the trillions of dollars that have flowed into ESG investments represent a once-in-a generation shift in the business consensus. Can it be true that ESG investing can address some of the world’s most-pressing problems, including climate change and inequality?
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
Review clips: AP, KPIX CBS, CNBC, CNN, The Telegraph, PayPal
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Behind the Money presents a special 5-part series produced in partnership with the FT’s Moral Money team that goes inside the colossal sums flowing into sustainable investing.
Trillions have flooded into funds that have made environmental, social and governance issues, or ESG, central to their investment strategies. As the world begins slowly to recover from the multiple shocks of the pandemic, we take listeners to the center of a loaded debate: Will a shift to more sustainable investments actually help create a more resilient and equitable future - or is ESG just a powerful marketing ploy?
Check out stories and up-to-the-minute news from the Moral Money team on the whole world of socially responsible business, sustainable finance, and ESG trends here.
Get 30 days of the premium Moral Money newsletter free, together with complimentary access to FT.com for the same period, visit www.ft.com/insideesg
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Introducing the FT Tech Tonic podcast. You can subscribe and listen to the rest of the series here.
From picking the best stocks to listening in on earnings calls, AI-powered systems are changing finance. But how big are the rewards, really? And what are the risks? In this episode Robin Wigglesworth tells us how AI has been used in investing, what happens when programs must adapt to new risks and what the robots could learn from watching children play.
Alice Fordham is senior producer. Josh Gabert Doyon is assistant producer. Oluwakemi Aladesuyi and Liam Nolan are the development producers. Sound design and mixing by Breen Turner. Cheryl Brumley is the executive producer for this series. Original scoring composed by Metaphor Music.
Review clips: Alphabet, Netflix, Amazon, Man Group.
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The City of London is home to some of the world’s biggest banks and busiest exchanges but the UK is just weeks away from leaving the EU single market and many questions about access to the bloc are still unresolved. Philip Stafford, editor of FT Trading Room, and Stephen Morris, the FT’s banking editor, take a look at the future of financial services after Brexit.
Review clips: BBC News, CNBC, EU 27
Read more on the FT’s coverage of Brexit here:
Brexit trade talks: the three big sticking points explained
Europe’s finance sector hits ‘peak uncertainty’ over Brexit
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The Boston-based biotech eschewed a traditional approach to vaccine development, instead pitching its use of mRNA technology to investors. That pitch paid off this year as the company stands to be one of the first to bring a Covid-19 vaccine to market. Hannah Kuchler, the FT’s US pharma and biotech correspondent, reports on Moderna’s race to find an immunisation for the novel coronavirus.
The FT is making key coronavirus coverage free to read for everyone. Go to ft.com/coronavirusfree to read the latest.
Read more here: Moderna’s Covid vaccine offers vindication of its unconventional approach
Review clips: Yahoo Finance, CNBC
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As protests following the killing of George Floyd in the US reverberated around the world this summer, Belgium, like many other countries, experienced its own reckoning: with a brutal colonial past, with the systemic racism that inhibits its black citizens today and with the question of what exactly it owes to the Democratic Republic of Congo, which it exploited for 75 years. The FT's Neil Munshi reports on the company at the heart of Belgium's colonial pursuit, the Union Minière.
Read Neil's FT Magazine story here: https://www.ft.com/content/a17b87ec-207d-4aa7-a839-8e17153bcf51.
Special thanks to Heleen Debeuckelaere, Elli Fernandes, Mohamed Barrie and Jeroen Laporte.
Review clips: Deutsche Welle, CBS News, France 24, NBC News, Reuters, Al Jazeera English, Getty Images, British Pathé.
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The IPO of Jack Ma's Ant Group would have been the largest in history: it was expected to raise $37bn at a valuation of $316bn. But just days before the stock market listing, China called it off. The FT's Ryan McMorrow and Hudson Lockett report on what led to Beijing pulling the plug, and what it means for China's private sector. Further reading: 'The party is pushing back': why Beijing reined in Jack Ma and Ant.
Review clips: Reuters, World Economic Forum, CNA, Bloomberg, Yahoo Finance.
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Tensions between Washington and Beijing are beginning to resemble a new cold war. Could the complex supply chains built up over a generation that produce Apple's iPhone and other electronics soon be untangled? In this episode Kathrin Hille, the FT’s greater China correspondent, and Richard Waters, the FT’s west coast editor, tell the story of how technology supply chains in the US and China became intertwined and the forces that are pulling them apart.
Review Clips: CNBC, CSPAN, Washington Post, The Guardian, Reuters, Dallas Morning News, ZDF “Looking for Freedom” WMG (1989)
Read more from Kathrin Hille
The great uncoupling: one supply chain for China, one for everywhere else
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There is no episode of Behind the Money this week. Here is a preview of what we are working on for next week.
Review Clips: C-SPAN, CNBC, Dallas Morning News
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The pandemic docked Carnival’s cruise ships and grounded Bombardier’s planes. But when the companies were in need of cash, one went to the bond market and the other to a direct lender. Robert Smith, FT capital market correspondent and Nikou Asgari, FT corporate finance reporter, tell the story of the billion dollar private debt deals shaping who has the capital to weather the crisis.
Review Clips: CNBC, Reuters, ABC News
Read more from Nikou, Rob and the rest of the corporate finance team
Covid-linked debt rush ignites direct lending market
Asset managers in $300bn drive to build private lending funds
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The market volatility of the past few months has been a boon for the trading divisions of many Wall Street banks, including Morgan Stanley. Laura Noonan, the FT’s US banking editor, explains how success in trading, and a focus on wealth management has positioned Morgan Stanley to make gains during the pandemic - and whether this trend is likely to last.
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Review clips: CNBC, PBS, Federal Reserve
Read more on Laura’s Noonan reporting on Morgan Stanley - https://www.ft.com/content/22d7c870-870d-4423-bd6f-6e384961f997
Find out what the latest polls say about U.S. voter sentiment towards the economy with FT Washington correspondent Lauren Fedor, Peter Spiegel, the FT’s US managing editor and Michael Peterson of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation. The event takes place Monday, October 26 at 12 pm ET. Register here - https://nerpreelectioneconomy.live.ft.com/?segmentId=8f3615ce-4cbc-7122-a54d-8ed636f79675
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Bernard Arnault built a €210bn luxury empire through an unflinching acquisition strategy that earned him the “wolf in cashmere” moniker. Tiffany, famous for its robin-egg blue boxes and diamond engagement rings, was meant to be the jewel atop his LVMH luxury group. The takeover would have been the largest-ever in the luxury sector, until the pandemic hit. The FT’s Leila Abboud, Arash Massoudi and James Fontanella-Khan unwind the saga of how the $16.6bn deal has hit rocky ground and how the pandemic and the forthcoming legal battle could change the terms of M&A engagement globally.
Review clips: CNBC, PBS, Viva Technology
Read more from Leila, Arash and James - https://www.ft.com/content/72af09b4-12a4-45ad-86ca-919d38e279e8
Find the FT’s Due Diligence newsletter - https://www.ft.com/due-diligence
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While reporting on the coronavirus crisis in northern Italy this year, Rome correspondent Miles Johnson discovered an equally concerning story in the country’s south. Italy’s most powerful organised crime group, the ‘Ndrangheta, had infiltrated local hospitals and packaged millions of plundered euros into global investment funds and portfolios. In the first episode of Behind the Money’s fourth season, Miles follows the money trail in a cautionary tale for the era of ultra-low interest rates.
Read Miles’ full investigation here: https://www.ft.com/content/8850581c-176e-4c5c-8b38-debb26b35c14.
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In September 2014, the FT’s Dan McCrum received a tip about a fast-growing German fintech group, Wirecard. Over the next couple of years Dan and his colleagues uncovered the secret behind the payment company’s meteoric growth: many of the customers listed in company documents did not exist. In this episode Dan tells the story of the whistleblowers, shoe-leather reporting, hacking, suspected surveillance and legal threats that led to Wirecard’s downfall.
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Review clips: CNBC, Deutsche Welle
Further reading:
The double life of Wirecard’s Jan Marsalek https://www.ft.com/content/511ecf86-ab40-486c-8f76-b8ebda4cc669
Inside Wirecard
Dan’s 2015 story for Alphaville
https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2015/04/27/2127427/the-house-of-wirecard/
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When a Minneapolis police officer killed George Floyd, it was as if a fire was ignited. His death, along with the killings of Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery have sparked the most widespread protests in the US since 1968. Hundreds of thousands of people have marched under banners such as “Black Lives Matter”, “No Justice, No Peace” and “Say Their Names”. Now, the voices of activists are converging around a call to “defund the police”. In this episode, we hear from Rachel Harmon, a professor of law at the University of Virginia, and Vesla M Weaver, a professor of political science and sociology at Johns Hopkins University, about the role the federal government, and federal funding, have played in transforming policing in the US.
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To get free access to the FT’s Coronavirus Business Update newsletter for 30 days, visit ft.com/behindthemoneycovid or https://www.ft.com/newsletter-signup/coronavirus?segmentId=12f1abd6-6f16-e2df-e4ff-7aaa9346f98e.
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Last December executives at the Carlyle Group worked into the night to sign what they imagined would be one of the private equity firm’s most enduring deals. In 2020, however, there may be no such thing as a stable business. Carlyle is now trying to walk away from a deal with American Express Global Business Travel before any money has changed hands. Our US private capital correspondent, Mark Vandevelde, reports on the ensuing legal row, and what it could mean for dealmaking during the pandemic.
To get free access to the FT’s Coronavirus Business Update newsletter for 30 days, visit ft.com/behindthemoneycovid or https://www.ft.com/newsletter-signup/coronavirus?segmentId=12f1abd6-6f16-e2df-e4ff-7aaa9346f98e.
A few stories for further reading:
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This was supposed to be a record year for the US meat industry. But when coronavirus hit the meat-packing plants, it exposed a vulnerable link in the supply chain. We take a look at how our meat gets from the farm to the supermarket, and ask what the fall in production could mean for the US-China trade truce. With the FT’s Gregory Meyer.
To get free access to the FT’s Coronavirus Business Update newsletter for 30 days, visit ft.com/behindthemoneycovid.
Further reading:
Coronavirus: return to work divides US meat industry (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/f6e2b4ad-4a62-4c6f-8348-38704e3e81f6
Tyson Foods warns of sales declines and rising costs (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/f0b4f894-cd46-44f2-b7b0-10707de449db
John Tyson laments breakdown of meat system his family pioneered (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/82c2f5fa-1070-4388-853b-a2ed430fbf04
Pandemic accelerates shift to meat substitutes (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/0127984a-6def-4040-9bca-002b6ffd4e0a
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On 12-14 May, the Financial Times, in partnership with TNW, will gather the most senior global decision makers and leading minds in policy, business, tech and finance for three days of online conversations with top FT journalists, analysing the impact of the pandemic across global economies, industries and markets, and outlining what is required to shape the optimal conditions for recovery at this most challenging of times. Register at globalboardroom.ft.com.
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The Trump administration’s small business bailout programme has been plagued by problems from the start, with complaints that large companies crowded out the kinds of small enterprises and independent contractors it was designed to help. With a fresh round of funding on offer from Washington, we hear from several business owners trying to get their share, as well as the FT’s Laura Noonan who has been reporting on the programme since it launched.
To get free access to the FT’s Coronavirus Business Update newsletter for 30 days, visit ft.com/behindthemoneycovid.
A few stories for further reading:
US small business rescue fund strained by rush of claims
https://www.ft.com/content/0467d0e1-6814-4cc4-ad4b-e25c80169466
Can Congress save US small businesses? FT reporters answer your questions
https://www.ft.com/content/55b0f191-5ea2-4762-bf8c-13d6a11e61ed
‘Where is my loan?’ Small businesses miss out on US rescue funds
https://www.ft.com/content/e6a06f94-5d2f-43a0-8aac-c7adddca0b0e
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You might also be interested in a three-day digital conference hosted by the Financial Times. On 12-14 May, the FT, in partnership with TNW, will gather the most senior global decision makers and leading minds in policy, business, tech and finance for three days of online conversations with top FT journalists, analysing the impact of the pandemic across global economies, industries and markets, and outlining what is required to shape the optimal conditions for recovery at this most challenging of times. Register at globalboardroom.ft.com.
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Mauren Pereira's drapery business was on track for its most financially successful year to date. That was until the coronavirus outbreak reached Virginia. Behind the Money reports on how one small business owner is navigating the current economic crisis. With Brendan Greeley, US economics editor for the Financial Times.
We want to hear from you. Please go to ft.com/behindthemoneysurvey and fill out our survey for a chance to win a pair of Bose QuietComfort Noise Cancelling headphones.
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When credit markets seized up earlier in March, more than 130 companies rushed to their lenders to draw down at least $124bn of emergency credit lines to shore up cash, with Ford and General Motors drawing the largest amounts. We look at how the auto industry is preparing for the economic uncertainty that lies ahead. With the FT's Peter Campbell and Gillian Tett.
We want to hear from you. Please go to ft.com/behindthemoneysurvey and fill out our survey for a chance to win a pair of Bose QuietComfort Noise Cancelling headphones.
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A costly investigation into the conduct of senior UK bankers during the financial crisis has raised questions about what it means to prosecute allegations of corporate crime, and whether Britain’s fraud laws need overhauling. With the FT’s Caroline Binham and Jane Croft.
We want to hear from you. Please go to ft.com/behindthemoneysurvey and fill out our survey for a chance to win a pair of Bose QuietComfort Noise Cancelling headphones.
Read more from Jane and Caroline here:
Barclays: the legal fight over a company’s ‘controlling mind’
https://www.ft.com/content/f666b592-5a4b-11ea-abe5-8e03987b7b20 (paywall)
Review clip: Sky News
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More than 10 years on from the early days of the US shale boom, bankruptcy risks are rising across the sector. The FT's US energy editor, Derek Brower, reports on what weak oil prices and tightening access to credit are doing to the outlook for some producers.
Further reading:
Bankruptcy risks rise for US shale (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/76c15898-52a2-11ea-90ad-25e377c0ee1f
US energy sector, shunned by investors, has ‘Pearl Harbor’ moment (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/254bf634-5677-11ea-abe5-8e03987b7b20
Chesapeake Energy raises doubt over its ability to survive (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/46ffa4fc-ffe6-11e9-be59-e49b2a136b8d
The US shale revolution (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/2ded7416-e930-11e4-a71a-00144feab7de
The clip of Aubrey McClendon is credited to the Switch Energy Alliance.
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Nearly one year after the grounding of Boeing's 737 Max jet, more than 700 of these planes remain on the ground, with costs to the US manufacturing giant estimated to reach nearly $20bn. The FT's Claire Bushey reports on how the crisis unfolded, and what it will take for the aerospace company to return business as usual.
Further reading:
Boeing tightens its belt as Max crisis drains cash (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/949eea64-3e44-11ea-a01a-bae547046735
Boeing faces Max hurdle as pilot confidence crumbles (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/2c0419cc-3983-11ea-a6d3-9a26f8c3cba4
Aviation: Boeing parks its 737 aspirations (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/ad45dd3e-2314-11ea-92da-f0c92e957a96
Grounding a global fleet: Boeing faces its greatest challenge (paywall)
https://www.ft.com/content/53b2142a-4711-11e9-b168-96a37d002cd3
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Earlier this year, Facebook announced its digital currency project, Libra, to great fanfare. Just a few months later, the project has stalled amid pressure from regulators and lawmakers around the world. With the FT's Hannah Murphy and Kiran Stacey.
Further reading:
Where it all went wrong for Facebook’s Libra: https://www.ft.com/content/6e29a1f0-ef1e-11e9-ad1e-4367d8281195
Zuckerberg warns blocking Libra will be boon to China tech: https://www.ft.com/content/28c600de-f5a1-11e9-9ef3-eca8fc8f2d65
Federal Reserve sets out regulatory challenges facing Facebook’s Libra: https://www.ft.com/content/ef650f9a-f052-11e9-ad1e-4367d8281195
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A key short term lending market came under strain in September, raising concerns that the Federal Reserve's attempt to unwind post-financial crisis intervention may have gone too far. The FT's Joe Rennison explains what has been going on in the repo market.
Further reading:
How the Federal Reserve could fix the repo market:
https://www.ft.com/content/33674380-e4f4-11e9-9743-db5a370481bc
Fed wrestles with role of regulation in repo squeeze:
https://www.ft.com/content/45a9c196-e231-11e9-9743-db5a370481bc
New York Fed rejects Wall St criticism of response to repo turmoil:
https://www.ft.com/content/c267a2f4-dd3e-11e9-9743-db5a370481bc
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WeWork was long considered one of the most anticipated IPOs of 2019. For SoftBank, WeWork’s biggest outside investor, the listing would be the moment it made a return on the nearly $11bn it poured into the shared-office provider. Now, as WeWork struggles to take the company public, the spotlight is on SoftBank’s Masa Son and his billion-dollar bets.
Further FT reading:
SoftBank investors brace for Vision Fund writedowns
https://www.ft.com/content/ccdaa9c6-d60d-11e9-8367-807ebd53ab77
WeWork postpones IPO after chilly response from investors
https://www.ft.com/content/b869bc42-d8d9-11e9-8f9b-77216ebe1f17
WeWork: the ‘hypothetical’ company at the heart of the property market
https://www.ft.com/content/0e426c90-8c45-11e9-a1c1-51bf8f989972
SoftBank: inside the ‘Wild West’ $100bn fund shaking up the tech world
https://www.ft.com/content/71ad7cda-6ef4-11e8-92d3-6c13e5c92914
Some of Aimee’s favourite FT reads:
Warren Buffett: ‘I’m having more fun than any 88-year-old int he world’
https://www.ft.com/content/40b9b356-661e-11e9-a79d-04f350474d62
The trillion-dollar taboo: why it’s time to stop ignoring mental health at work
https://www.ft.com/content/1e8293f4-a1db-11e9-974c-ad1c6ab5efd1
Finding my Armenia, a century after the genocide
https://www.ft.com/content/2e2f38b0-e7a1-11e8-8a85-04b8afea6ea3
How Purdue’s ‘one-two’ punch fuelled the market for opioids
https://www.ft.com/content/8e64ec9c-b133-11e8-8d14-6f049d06439c
Angola 3 inmate: from solitary cell to centre of the community
https://www.ft.com/content/72a0983a-9f7d-11e7-8cd4-932067fbf946
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The purpose of the US corporation has evolved over time, from Henry Ford's mission to benefit the carmaker's employees to Milton Friedman's essay on shareholder primacy. The FT's US business editor, Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson, reports on the latest thinking, this time from America's largest business lobby, the Business Roundtable.
Read more on the idea of sustainable investing at ft.com/moralmoney
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Investors poured $17bn into agricultural food and technology startups in 2018, fuelled by threats to the world's food supply, including climate change and a growing global population. We visit one such startup, Indigo Ag, which is working with farmers to trial its microbial products for healthier crops. Indigo Ag provides microbial seed treatments to farmers for free in exchange for data. The company also sells the seed treatments through its standard commercial model.
With guests Emiko Terazono, FT commodities correspondent, Ben Riensche, owner and manager, Blue Diamond Farming Company and Geoffrey von Maltzahn, co-founder and chief innovation officer, Indigo Ag.
Read more from Emiko on agricultural food and technology at FT.com:
https://www.ft.com/content/ee6fb294-edc3-11e8-8180-9cf212677a57 (paywall)
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How did Denmark’s Danske Bank find itself at the centre of one of the largest money-laundering scandals the world has ever seen? The FT’s Richard Milne explains. This episode was originally published on October 30, 2018.
Read the latest on the Nordic money-laundering scandal at FT.com.
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