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The Huawei story leads the Financial Times as well, with the paper focusing on the UK government’s decision creating “fury in Beijing”. The paper says the delay will cost £2bn but has also been criticised by Conservative MPs as firms will have until 2027 to strip the Chinese company’s technology out of their systems.

Financial Times Front Page 8th of November 2025

Big tech shares linked to AI shed about $1.2tn as investors questioned lofty valuations amid signs of a US slowdown. The Nasdaq fell 4.6%, putting Wall St on course for its worst week since April. Declines were led by Nvidia, Microsoft and Apple, with sentiment turning against richly priced growth stocks.

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Financial Times Front Page 7th of November 2025

The BoE kept Bank Rate at 4% after a narrow MPC split, citing easing inflation but sticky services costs. It hinted a cut as soon as next month if data allow, aiming to support a weak economy while keeping price growth on track to target. Markets priced in earlier easing.

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Financial Times Front Page 6th of November 2025

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang says China is poised to overtake the US in AI, citing cheaper energy, quicker permitting and looser rules. He warns western cynicism and high power costs are slowing data centre expansion, urging major investment in computing to stay competitive.

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Financial Times Front Page 5th of November 2025

Rachel Reeves signalled she may drop the pledge not to raise income tax, citing rising debt costs. She told MPs the “broadest shoulders” should pay more, preparing ground for Budget moves likely to target higher earners and reliefs to help stabilise the public finances.

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