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US and Mexico launch review of trade deal with Canada

15 articles | Updated 8h ago | Created 5d ago
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The United States, in coordination with its southern neighbor, has officially initiated a comprehensive examination into the implementation status of their bilateral free-trade agreement. This joint effort aims to assess compliance mechanisms following recent disputes regarding Canadian export restrictions on certain agricultural products that have strained diplomatic relations between Washington and Ottawa.

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    Britain is urging increased vigilance against sabotage risks from hostile states.
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    Interest rates are causing significant concern and prompting calls for hawkish central bank rhetoric.
Mar 20, 18:36 Britain must be vigilant against sabotage by hostile states

Britain must be more vigilant regarding the risk of sabotage by hostile states.

— [Mar 21, 05:00] Britain must be more vigilant to the risk of sabotage by hostile states (Ft)

Interest rates are taking fright due to market concerns and uncertainty in economic conditions.

— [Mar 20, 06:30] Interest rates take fright (Ft)
Britain must be more vigilant to the risk of sabotage by hostile states

The provided text is an advertisement promoting various subscription tiers of The Financial Times, including digital plans with different price points (CA$48–105 per month) and print options like FT Weekend Print; it does not contain any news article about sabotage or Britain. Consequently, no facts regarding state-sponsored attacks can be summarized from this content as none exist in the text you supplied.

Can Europe break free from US tech dominance? Submit your questions

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Is it time for me to buy equities again?

The provided text does not contain news about buying equities; it is an advertisement promoting various subscription plans (Digital, Premium) from The Financial Times for individuals or organizations at different monthly prices and terms of service apply during a trial period to unlock full access after the initial offer expires.

Interest rates take fright

The provided text is an advertisement offering various subscription tiers, including digital print options at different price points such as CA$1 per week or up to $80 monthly for premium access with expert analysis and weekend newspaper delivery in Canada. It highlights benefits like saving 20% by paying annually upfront while noting that terms apply and users can check if they already have institutional coverage through their university or organization.

The war over tail risks is in full swing

The provided text does not contain any news article or factual information about tail risks; it is exclusively an advertisement promoting various subscription plans, pricing options (such as CA$1 for 4 weeks), and access features from The Financial Times. Consequently, no facts regarding the war over tail risks can be summarized because none are present in the source material.