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The Financial Times also features the latest on the crackdown against protesters in China on its front page. But it leads with reports the European Central Bank (ECB) is not done with raising interest rates despite signs that inflation is easing, according to comments made by its president Christine Lagarde. That is despite a sharp fall in European wholesale energy prices, combined with an easing of supply chain bottlenecks, encouraging hopes that eurozone inflation is slowing, the paper says. But Lagarde says inflation “still has a way to go” – her comments indicating that the ECB is not ready to slow interest rate rises, the paper reports.

Financial Times Front Page 2nd of February 2026

Emails reveal Peter Mandelson advised Jeffrey Epstein that JPMorgan should pressure the UK over the 2009 bankers’ bonus tax, urging contact with the chancellor. He says he sought to protect jobs and investment. Labour is under pressure to address the revelations.

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Financial Times Front Page 31st of January 2026

Donald Trump nominated Kevin Warsh to lead the Fed, signalling a firmer stance on inflation. Markets backed the dollar and trimmed expectations of rapid rate cuts. US yields rose while gold fell as investors priced in steadier policy and renewed questions over central bank independence.

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Financial Times Front Page 30th of January 2026

US immigration agencies under the Trump administration have awarded about $22bn in contracts since July, with Palantir and Deloitte among winners. ICE’s spending has doubled, and donor-linked Fisher Sand & Gravel has gained about $6bn. Deals cover tech, detention and logistics services.

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