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Leading several of Monday’s papers is the growing discontent in China as protesters clash with police over the country’s strict zero-Covid policies. The Financial Times reports that, in the financial hub of Shanghai on Sunday, police struggled to disperse large crowds which had gathered, and anti-government slogans were shouted during the second day of disorder. The FT notes that the backlash poses one of the most explicit challenges to the ruling Chinese Communist party’s authority in decades.

Financial Times Front Page 18th of December 2025

Warner Bros Discovery’s board rejected a $108bn approach from Paramount, calling it “illusory” and urging investors to spurn it. The directors said the bid lacked funding and regulatory certainty and was inferior to an $85bn transaction they are pursuing with Netflix.

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Financial Times Front Page 17th of December 2025

Labour’s workers’ rights overhaul cleared its final parliamentary stage, setting up implementation next year. Plans curb exploitative zero‑hours contracts, give day‑one rights to sick pay and parental leave, strengthen unfair‑dismissal protections and expand flexible working. Business groups warn of costs.

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Financial Times Front Page 16th of December 2025

The FCA plans to relax mortgage affordability rules to widen access and support growth. Lenders could offer larger loans, particularly to first‑time buyers and the self‑employed, and take more risk. Critics warn this could push up prices and raise debt, leaving borrowers exposed if rates rise.

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Financial Times Front Page 15th of December 2025

Investors are hedging against a potential reversal in the AI trade, lifting demand for credit default swaps and prompting caution over new bond deals. Questions over funding costs and cloud profitability at major tech groups, including Meta and Oracle, are adding to unease on Wall Street.

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