Financial Times
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Editors | Roula Khalaf |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
First issue date | 1888 |
Political alignment | Economic liberalism |
Circulation | 168,958 (Print); 740,000 (Digital) (as of October 2019) |
Owners | Financial Times Group |
Nikkei Inc. | |
Music groups | The Wall Street Journal |
The Guardian | |
ft. com | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 3037586 |
About Financial Times
The Financial Times is an English-language international daily newspaper owned by Japanese company Nikkei, Inc. , headquartered in London, with a special emphasis on business and economic news.
More Palestinian teens freed amid hopes hostage deal can be extended
... Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman told the Financial Times that the group would need to locate dozens of hostages held in Gaza by other groups in order to secure an extension...
Booker Prize 2023 shortlist: Who are the six authors hoping to win tonight?
... The Financial Times described The Bee Sting as " generous, immersive, sharp-witted and devastating; the sort of novel that becomes a friend for life"...
Sam Altman in talks to rejoin OpenAI board, say reports
... According to reports by Bloomberg and the Financial Times, the artificial intelligence company is exploring various options, including bringing Mr Altman back in his former position or as a board director...
Apple to bridge message divide - but keeps green bubbles
... The Financial Times in early November that Google and other firms had written to the European Commission, urging it to declare Apple s iMessage a core service that should be interoperable with rivals like WhatsApp...
What could be in the 2023 King's Speech?
... The Financial Times that a planned bill to overhaul the UK s audit and corporate governance regimes won t feature in the speech...
Home Secretary Suella Braverman wants to restrict use of tents by homeless
... " According to the Financial Times, The paper reported that sources had said the plans being considered are for two clauses to be inserted in the new criminal justice bill, which applies to England and Wales...
What China wants from Israel-Hamas war
... US officials apparently pressed Mr Wang to " urge calm" with the Iranians, reported the Financial Times...
Rachel Reeves denies claims of plagiarism in new book
... The Financial Times said its reporters had spotted more than 20 examples of apparent plagiarism in the book, including entire sentences and paragraphs...
Headlines: "end of Rhodes' as fears grow over shut schools
The Guardian leads with The News that Oriel has voted College, Oxford, his statue of colonialist Cecil Rhodes , after the calls for his removal by The Black lives matter demonstrations were rekindled. An independent investigation "in the main topics related to it" will also be Set Up . The Paper quoted a college spokeswoman says It Comes after "a thoughtful time of the debate". It is the "end of Rhodes," explains the Daily Mail and added that Oxford had to have dons "give up". In his title story, the article reports, there is an "urgent review" into the use of Vitamin D as a "coronavirus life-saver". It says studies indicate those who contract The Virus "to die far sooner", if you are "missing" in the vitamin. A photo of a Premier League player kneels in support of The Black Lives Matter movement dominated Times " on the first page. The Paper 's lead story, however, focuses on an open letter from the children's doctors, the government on demand, "publish a clear plan for all children in the school". Empty chairs and empty tables dominate the Daily Mirror 's Front Page . The Paper calls on the government to "urgent measures to all children in the school". There are thousands says ruined the "face of education", if you go back in to in September. The "Daily Telegraph" features a rainy scene in which workers in face masks, uncovering a statue of Sir Winston Churchill , who was attacked during anti-racism protests. Its Top Story is A Warning of The Prince of Wales of the "potentially devastating" impact of the pandemic on Young People . Prince Charles says that the problems that are facing children today is worse than in the mid-1970s, reported The Paper . The Financial Times says it has seen a letter from the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Steve Mnuchin suspension of talks with European countries on "a global tax environment for technology companies". Mr Mnuchin, says discussions have reached a "dead end", says the FT. The Letter "paves The Way for a summer of TRANS-Atlantic tensions," The Paper says. It's "fury" at the idea of the government "axing" The Pension lock triple on the Front Page of the Daily Express . The Paper says pensioners "could be £1,900 will lose a year". The Lock is "in danger", according to the I newspaper. Its title page quotes Tory backbencher Steve Baker says: "We can't afford it. The public finances are in a catastrophic State . "And the Daily Star reports that "gossip has been banned" in hair salons, while the stylists "have to work In Silence ", in an effort, in the fight against the spread of the coronavirus. Finally, the U-Bahn leads to The News that Boris Johnson 's convoy was involved in a minor collision outside of Parliament. The Paper images a protester surrounded by Police .
Source of news: bbc.com