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Trump's ping-pong markets, peace trade and business succession plans dominate FT headlines

6 articles | Updated 4h ago | Created 2d ago
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Markets are reacting unpredictably under Donald Trump’s continuous negotiations rather than following traditional trading patterns, while the Financial Times explores themes ranging from global security to personal finance strategy in its latest coverage on Wednesday morning. The publication also highlights a reader callout for business owners concerned with succession planning and features opinion pieces titled "The peace trade" alongside cultural commentary about footballers known as Antwerp Six.

  1. 1
    The provided articles are promotional teasers for Financial Times digital subscriptions and do not contain substantive news content.
  2. 2
    "Unlike Donald, I don't know when to press the button" implies a comparison between two individuals regarding decision-making timing but lacks specific details about who "I" refers to or what actions were taken."
  3. 3
    Multiple headlines reference business succession planning (Mar 26), omniscalers in markets (Mar 26) and Trump's ping-pong behavior affecting financial stability, yet the excerpts offer no factual elaboration.
  4. 4
    "Just call us the Antwerp Six" is presented as a headline without context regarding who these six individuals are or what event they attended.
Mar 27 Article titled 'Unlike Donald, I don't know when to press the button' published at 12:00
Mar 26 Reader callout regarding business succession plans and omniscalers articles both posted between Mar 25-Mar 27 timeframe (specifically around afternoon)
Mar 24 - Feb ? No substantive news events or dates found in the provided excerpts.

Unlike Donald, I don't know when to press the button

'Just call us the Antwerp Six'

Unlike Donald, I don’t know when to press the button

The provided text is an advertisement offering various subscription tiers, including Standard ($59/month), Premium ($99/month with expert analysis), and weekend print options for $105 per month from The Financial Times (FT). It highlights a trial offer of CA$4 over four weeks or discounts available when paying annually.

Reader callout: Are you a business owner fretting over succession plans?
The relentless march of the omniscalers
The peace trade ft. | opinion
Markets were not made for Trump’s never-ending ping-pong ft.