FT News Briefing - podcast cover

FT News Briefing

Financial Timesft.com
A rundown of the most important global business stories you need to know for the coming day, from the newsroom of the Financial Times. Available every weekday morning.

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Episodes

Swamp Notes: Greenland, USA

Donald Trump has an aggressive negotiating method: he makes big threats in order to extract concessions. But now that he’s floated the idea of invading Danish and Panamanian territories this week, America’s allies are especially nervous. The FT’s Nordic and Baltic bureau chief Richard Milne and US national editor and columnist Ed Luce join Swamp Notes to discuss Trump’s imperial ambitions. Mentioned in this podcast: Why Donald Trump wants Greenland Trump, Greenland and the rebirth of the Monroe ...

Jan 11, 202515 min

Bond vigilantes target government spending

The EU is preparing for president-elect Donald Trump to roll back his predecessor’s executive orders, bond markets have entered a new era of antagonism with governments, and insurers are bracing for losses of as much as $20bn from wildfires in Los Angeles. Plus, Elon Musk has privately discussed with allies how Sir Keir Starmer could be removed as UK prime minister before the next general election. Mentioned in this podcast: EU fears Trump rolling back Biden-era measures Bond market ‘police’ are...

Jan 10, 202512 min

Crunch time for Citi

EU leaders warn Donald Trump not to meddle with the continent’s territories, and Wall Street analysts are betting Citigroup will miss a critical long-term target next week. Indonesia is maintaining its ban on iPhone 16 sales despite Apple's $1bn investment proposal, and China is signing growing numbers of Taiwanese people up for local IDs in a drive to incorporate them into its society. Mentioned in this podcast: EU leaders warn Donald Trump not to meddle with Europe’s borders Indonesia says $1b...

Jan 09, 202512 min

Canadian politics post-Trudeau

China’s airlines are rapidly expanding into Europe, and we take a look at what’s next for Canada’s Liberal party following Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation. Plus, Meta ends third-party fact-checking and Wall Street bankers gear up for an IPO revival. Mentioned in this podcast: Chinese airlines rush into Europe as western carriers retreat Praised abroad, troubled at home: Canada’s political ‘prince’ bows out Meta ends third-party fact-checking scheme as it prepares for Trump return US ...

Jan 08, 202510 min

China’s central bank overhaul

Justin Trudeau is resigning as Canadian Prime Minister, and Germany’s solar power industry is in trouble. US bankruptcy filings hit their highest rate in 14 years, and the People’s Bank of China has announced a major policy overhaul as pressures on the economy mount. Mentioned in this podcast: US Corporate bankruptcies hit 14 year high Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces resignation German solar sector in distress as glut of panels heaps pressure on industry China’s central bank pla...

Jan 07, 202511 min

What’s next for US Steel?

Eurozone economists warn the European Central Bank has been too slow to cut interest rates, and US Steel faces a bleak outlook after President Biden’s decision to block its sale. UK businesses plan price increases as the Budget drives up costs, and CrowdStrike has more than recovered the $30bn in market value it shed last year. Plus, China’s movie theatres are in crisis. Mentioned in this podcast: ECB has been too slow to cut rates, Eurozone economists warn Joe Biden blocks Nippon Steel’s $15bn ...

Jan 06, 202511 min

Swamp Notes: Where does Musk fit in Maga?

Elon Musk’s first big foray into politics was a success — he used his world-leading fortune and mass media platform to help Donald Trump regain the White House. But now, just weeks before Trump’s inauguration, some Republicans are pushing back against Musk’s influence. The FT’s Washington correspondent Joe Miller and US business and politics correspondent Alex Rogers join this week’s Swamp Notes to discuss how Musk is navigating a future in Washington. Mentioned in this podcast: Top Democrats wa...

Jan 04, 202513 min

Climate change is coming for your Bordeaux

Tesla’s annual vehicle deliveries declined for the first time in more than a decade, and China’s BYD hit a milestone. Crypto chief Do Kwon makes his first US court appearance to face criminal charges. The rerouting of global trade from China to ports elsewhere in Asia is shrinking the size of vessels, and climate change is redrawing Europe’s wine map. Mentioned in this podcast: Ex-crypto chief Do Kwon brought to New York to face fraud charges China’s electric-vehicle leader BYD posts record sale...

Jan 03, 202512 min

Activist investors give Japan a wake-up call

The UK’s financial watchdog has failed to remove illegal crypto adverts, and in Japan, shareholder activists are waking companies up from decades of slumber. Plus, the number of active US venture capital firms has dropped by more than a quarter since 2021, and the FT’s Martin Wolf interviews European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde on the bloc’s economic recovery from Covid-19. Mentioned in this podcast: FCA fails to hit firms after half of banned crypto adverts remain online Activists ...

Jan 02, 202512 min

Biden’s departing gift to Ukraine

US stocks dropped for the second straight trading session, the Biden administration said it will unleash almost $6bn in additional aid to Ukraine, and South Korea plans to inspect all B737-800 Boeing aircraft operated by domestic airlines after a passenger jet crashed. Plus, US asset managers are gobbling up business from their European rivals and the nightclub business is in decline. Mentioned in this podcast: US stocks slip in broad pullback as investors cash in on 2024 gains US to send Ukrain...

Dec 31, 202412 min

Should banks foot the bill for cyber scams?

Defaults on US credit card loans have hit the highest level since the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, and as payment fraud rises, banks and tech companies disagree on who should cover consumer losses. Syria’s caretaker government has said it could take up to four years for the country to hold elections. Plus, how Hitachi’s plan to monetize industrial data has revived its fortunes. Mentioned in this podcast: US credit card defaults jump to highest level since 2010 Who should foot the bill for ...

Dec 30, 202412 min

Swamp Notes: Listener mailbag, the election and 2025

Are the Democrats doomed? Which world leaders are happiest to see Trump back in the White House? And why are investors flooding into American stocks? The FT’s US managing editor Peter Spiegel and global business columnist Rana Foroohar answer all of your questions after a wild year in US politics. Mentioned in this podcast: Trump team aims to bankrupt Iran with new ‘maximum pressure’ plan How ‘the mother of all bubbles’ will pop Sign up for the FT’s Swamp Notes newsletter here Swamp Notes is pro...

Dec 21, 202414 min

Why Microsoft needs nuclear energy

A number of cryptocurrency-focused hedge funds are outpacing their rivals, the Bank of England holds interest rates at 4.75 per cent, and Microsoft has partnered with a utility company to restart a controversial reactor at Three Mile Island. Mentioned in this podcast: Hedge funds cash in on Trump-fuelled crypto boom Bank of England holds interest rates at 4.75% Behind the Money: How the AI boom is reviving Three Mile Island The FT News Briefing is produced by Niamh Rowe, Fiona Symon, Sonja Hutso...

Dec 20, 202411 min

What 2024 taught central bankers

The Federal Reserve cuts interest rates by a quarter-point but signals a slower pace of easing, and we look back at what central banks learned in 2024. The US Supreme Court says it will hear TikTok’s appeal against a divest-or-ban law, and Honda-Nissan talks aim to rescue Japan’s fragmented automotive industry. Mentioned in this podcast: Fed cuts rates by a quarter-point but signals slower pace of easing Five central banking lessons for 2024 US Supreme Court to hear arguments challenging law tha...

Dec 19, 202410 min

Javier Milei scores Argentina economy win

Argentina emerged from a severe recession in the third quarter, Microsoft buys twice as many of Nvidia’s chips as any of its largest rivals, KPMG narrows the gap with the other Big Four firms, and Huawei sets sights on becoming a big supplier to the electric car industry. Plus, pub chains express frustration over shortages of Guinness in the run-up to Christmas. Mentioned in this podcast: Microsoft acquires twice as many Nvidia AI chips as tech rivals Argentina’s economy exits recession in miles...

Dec 18, 202410 min

AI investors look beyond chips

Japan’s SoftBank unveils $100bn US investment plans, fervour around Nvidia cools as investors look to AI’s next winners, and Europe launches its most ambitious space programme in a decade. Plus, in Syria, Kurdish groups fear they may be worse off under a rebel-led government. Mentioned in this podcast: Japan’s SoftBank pledges $100bn investment in US After Nvidia’s boom, what’s next for AI-related stocks? Europe signs €10.6bn Iris² satellite deal in bid to rival Elon Musk’s Starlink Syria’s Kurd...

Dec 17, 202411 min

Arm and Qualcomm head to court

Germany’s Olaf Scholz is expected to lose a confidence vote in parliament on Monday, and Arm and Qualcomm’s bitter legal feud over chip design licensing is heading to trial. The London Stock Exchange is on course for its worst year for departures since the financial crisis. Plus, investors’ appetite for juicy returns has triggered a big boom on Wall Street in complex financial products. Mentioned in this podcast: Olaf Scholz faces confidence vote — and hopes to lose it Wall Street’s complex debt...

Dec 16, 202411 min

Swamp Notes: Europe in the age of America First

Europe has been able to predictably lean on the US for decades. But Donald Trump used tariffs and other economic threats to test those assumptions in his first term, and he looks set to do so again. The FT’s EU correspondent Andy Bounds and US climate correspondent Aime Williams join to discuss how the EU is preparing (again) for a more confrontational America. Mentioned in this podcast: EU strikes blockbuster trade deal with Mercosur EU commissioner pitches ‘Europe first’ in response to Donald ...

Dec 14, 202416 min

The dangers of investor groupthink

HSBC is reviewing its retail banking operations outside the UK and Hong Kong, and the European Central Bank cut interest rates by a quarter-point to 3 per cent. The FT’s markets columnist Katie Martin provides a few insights for investing in 2025. Plus, human referees are set to be increasingly phased out as machines become more efficient at making critical decisions in sport. Mentioned in this podcast: HSBC reviews retail banking outside UK and Hong Kong Donald Trump election win sparks trading...

Dec 13, 202413 min

Microsoft bets on AI healthcare

European Nato members are holding talks about increasing the alliance’s target for defence spending, Microsoft’s artificial intelligence head Mustafa Suleyman is building a team focused on consumer health, and US inflation ticked up to 2.7 per cent last month. Plus, new regulations on human rights are forcing global companies to address concerns about modern slavery and tackle problems in their supply chains. Mentioned in this podcast: Nato’s European members discuss 3% target for defence spendi...

Dec 12, 202413 min

Can big oil escape the ‘valley of death’?

Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund prepares for a petrodollar windfall, while oil majors scale back their $18bn power generation push. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu begins testifying in a corruption trial, and public pension schemes and sovereign wealth funds plan to pour more money into private markets over the coming year. Mentioned in this podcast: Qatar’s $500bn wealth fund targets bigger deals as LNG windfall looms BP and Shell rein in electricity ambitions to escape ‘valley of death...

Dec 11, 202411 min

Vanguard doubles down on wealth management

Hiring has fallen more sharply in the UK than in other big economies over the past year, Vanguard will break its advisory business into a separate unit, and Israel has taken more Syrian territory. Plus, we take a look inside Japan’s audacious bid to become a semiconductor superpower. Mentioned in this podcast: Hiring falling more sharply in UK than in other major economies Israel draws furious reaction from Egypt after taking more Syrian territory Vanguard to accelerate wealth management drive i...

Dec 10, 202412 min

Syrian rebels topple Assad regime

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has resigned and fled the country and South Korean prosecutors have opened an investigation into the country’s president, Yoon Suk Yeol, on charges of treason and abuse of power. The EU and four South American countries have struck a blockbuster trade deal, and a US appeals court upheld a law requiring TikTok’s owner ByteDance to sell the platform or face a ban next year. Mentioned in this podcast: Assad flees Syria as rebels seize Damascus Syrian rebels seize Da...

Dec 09, 202411 min

The geopolitics of chips: Chips in the USA

The next superpower will be a tech superpower, and to be that superpower you need to have some control over the semiconductor industry which is driving the AI revolution. But almost all advanced semiconductors are made in Taiwan — and it is under constant threat of a Chinese invasion. President Joe Biden’s Chips Act promises lavish subsidies to companies working to bring semiconductor manufacturing back to US soil. Will those subsidies survive once Donald Trump, the president-elect, is in the Wh...

Dec 08, 202427 min

Swamp Notes: America’s first ‘Bitcoin president’

Donald Trump once called cryptocurrencies a “scam”. He’s long since changed his tune, and now, crypto enthusiasts are hoping he’ll catapult the industry into the financial mainstream. The FT’s digital markets correspondent Nikou Asgari and US legal and enforcement correspondent Stefania Palma join this week’s Swamp Notes to discuss what the industry could look like under a second Trump administration. Mentioned in this podcast: Crypto advocate Paul Atkins picked as SEC chair by Donald Trump Bitc...

Dec 07, 202417 min

The never-ending Trump effect on US stocks

Large companies rushed to assess whether top employees have sufficient protection after the murder of a US insurance executive, investors have pumped almost $140bn into US equity funds since last month’s election, and oil producer group Opec+ significantly scaled back its plans for production in 2025. In Mexico, new president Claudia Sheinbaum is doubling down on a radical agenda in the face of tough US tariffs. Plus, Notre-Dame reopens this weekend. Mentioned in this podcast: Shooting of United...

Dec 06, 202412 min

UK uncovers criminal crypto network

Donald Trump has nominated cryptocurrency advocate Paul Atkins to chair the US Securities and Exchange Commission, and a dramatic attempt to impose martial law in South Korea by its president has backfired. The French parliament voted to oust Prime Minister Michel Barnier and a UK-led operation has uncovered a multibillion-dollar money laundering scheme. Plus, Google DeepMind has unveiled an artificial intelligence weather prediction model that outperforms traditional methods. Mentioned in this ...

Dec 05, 202412 min

French prime minister faces no-confidence vote

The French government will face a no-confidence vote on Wednesday, South Korea’s president said he will lift his martial law order, and cryptocurrency ‘memecoins’ are having a moment. Plus, deaths in Africa’s Sahel region have risen since military juntas took over pledging to bring security in face of jihadi violence. Mentioned in this podcast: Michel Barnier ‘method’ at risk in raucous French parliament South Korea’s Yoon says he will lift martial law order Military juntas in Africa’s ‘coup bel...

Dec 04, 202413 min

OpenAI explores advertising

Chief executives at Intel and Stellantis stepped down, OpenAI is considering including advertising in its artificial intelligence products and the US unveiled new export controls in an effort to curtail China’s semiconductor industry. Plus, how Shanghai’s ambition to be the ‘future of finance’ fell apart. Mentioned in this podcast: Intel chief Pat Gelsinger quits with US chipmaker in crisis Why Stellantis’ chief executive Carlos Tavares was axed OpenAI explores advertising as it steps up revenue...

Dec 03, 202411 min

Where does the ceasefire leave Hizbollah?

US government lawyers are clamouring for jobs at corporate law firms ahead of Donald Trump taking office, and Hizbollah declares victory against Israel despite undergoing the most devastating battering in its history. Russian and Syrian warplanes intensify attacks on rebels, and Airbus struggles to capitalise on rival Boeing’s difficulties. Plus, in Ireland, the incumbent Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael appear on track to form a fresh coalition. Mentioned in this podcast: Government lawyers flock to c...

Dec 02, 202412 min
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