Latest episodes
FT Money Show The FT Money Show brings you engaging and insightful coverage of the week’s major personal finance issues. Matthew Vincent and his team of FT journalists dissect the news with the help of leading industry commentators and discuss how the latest events will affect you and your pocket.
From pensions to private equity, building society accounts to bank shares, the Money Show tackles difficult topics in an entertaining and informative way.
The FT Money Show is produced by Lucy Warwick-Ching High earners' pension tax relief targeted FT Money reporters analyse whether the Chancellor is about to take a knife to pensions tax relief. We also look at a junior Isas paying 6 per cent and a new mortgage deal that tracks and fixes rates.
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From pensions to private equity, building society accounts to bank shares, the Money Show tackles difficult topics in an entertaining and informative way.
The FT Money Show is produced by Lucy Warwick-Ching High earners' pension tax relief targeted FT Money reporters analyse whether the Chancellor is about to take a knife to pensions tax relief. We also look at a junior Isas paying 6 per cent and a new mortgage deal that tracks and fixes rates.
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World Weekly with Gideon Rachman Each week World Weekly focuses on some of the major international political stories that are making the headlines - drawing upon the FT's team of foreign correspondents and international analysts to make sense of world events
Presented by Gideon Rachman
To take part in the show or to comment please email audio@ft.com Further uncertainty in Greece and Chinese princeling Bo Xilai under pressure This week Gideon Rachman discusses with Peter Spiegel, FT's Brussels bureau chief, whether time really has run out for Greece. He also talks to Jamil Anderlini, FT's Beijing bureau chief, about Bo Xilai, the Chinese princeling who recently suffered a severe blow to his chances of becoming a member of the Communist party leadership.
Produced by Amie Tsang and Serena Tarling
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Presented by Gideon Rachman
To take part in the show or to comment please email audio@ft.com Further uncertainty in Greece and Chinese princeling Bo Xilai under pressure This week Gideon Rachman discusses with Peter Spiegel, FT's Brussels bureau chief, whether time really has run out for Greece. He also talks to Jamil Anderlini, FT's Beijing bureau chief, about Bo Xilai, the Chinese princeling who recently suffered a severe blow to his chances of becoming a member of the Communist party leadership.
Produced by Amie Tsang and Serena Tarling
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Banking Weekly Each week the FT banking team discuss the biggest banking stories of the week, bringing you global insight and commentary on the top issues concerning this sector.
To take part in the show or to comment please email audio@ft.com
The banking team are:
Patrick Jenkins, banking editor
Patrick covers major global banks with a particular focus on Europe, as well as leading the FT’s global financial services reporting team.
Megan Murphy, investment banking correspondent
Megan specialises in finance and banking, with a particular focus on global banks.
Brooke Masters, chief regulation correspondent
Brooke covers financial regulation and white collar crime in the UK and globally . She was previously City correspondent and a senior business writer based in New York.
Sharlene Goff, retail banking correspondent
Sharlene has also worked as the FT’s deputy personal finance editor. She has won a number of awards including the 2007 Headline Money Award for the Rising Star of the Year.
The Libor investigation and Barclays' bonuses The FT's Sharlene Goff and Megan Murphy discuss the significance of the multinational regulatory investigation into alleged manipulation of Libor, and how to interpret the changing size of Barclay's bonus pool
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To take part in the show or to comment please email audio@ft.com
The banking team are:
Patrick Jenkins, banking editor
Patrick covers major global banks with a particular focus on Europe, as well as leading the FT’s global financial services reporting team.
Megan Murphy, investment banking correspondent
Megan specialises in finance and banking, with a particular focus on global banks.
Brooke Masters, chief regulation correspondent
Brooke covers financial regulation and white collar crime in the UK and globally . She was previously City correspondent and a senior business writer based in New York.
Sharlene Goff, retail banking correspondent
Sharlene has also worked as the FT’s deputy personal finance editor. She has won a number of awards including the 2007 Headline Money Award for the Rising Star of the Year.
The Libor investigation and Barclays' bonuses The FT's Sharlene Goff and Megan Murphy discuss the significance of the multinational regulatory investigation into alleged manipulation of Libor, and how to interpret the changing size of Barclay's bonus pool
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FT Arts Each week the arts podcast brings you interviews and studio discussions on the latest arts stories and cultural trends, with contributions from the FT’s roster of critics and commentators Bollywood now The Indian film industry is famously prolific, turning out hundreds of movies of year. Some of these are "masala movies" – made to appeal to all ages, with plenty of melodrama and musical numbers – but others are very different. Like the rest of India, Bollywood is changing fast.
Jan Dalley is joined by Rachel Dwyer, Professor of Indian Cultures and Cinema at SOAS, and Prakash Bakrania, who distributes Hindi films in the UK for Reliance Entertainment. She asks them: is Bollywood escapist? Is it starting to tackle real life issues? And do different films fare well at the Indian and global box offices?
Produced by Griselda Murray Brown
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Jan Dalley is joined by Rachel Dwyer, Professor of Indian Cultures and Cinema at SOAS, and Prakash Bakrania, who distributes Hindi films in the UK for Reliance Entertainment. She asks them: is Bollywood escapist? Is it starting to tackle real life issues? And do different films fare well at the Indian and global box offices?
Produced by Griselda Murray Brown
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Listen to Lucy Lucy Kellaway, the FT's management columnist, pokes fun at management fads and jargon, and celebrates the ups and downs of office life UBS’s silly menu leaves a bad taste It is time to worry when companies write witless things and then hand them to their customers, says Lucy Kellaway
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FT Connected Business Information technology provides the infrastructure backbone for companies today. The Connected Business series of podcasts examines how business leaders can use IT to improve performance and exploit new opportunities for growth.
Presented by Stephen Pritchard Unified comms, and on the trail of the black rhino Can technology help to save endangered species?
In the first of a short series on novel uses of data analytics, Connected Business speaks to the scientists behind the charity WildTrack, which is using IT tools to monitor animals such as the black rhino.
Plus, could unified communications be coming back into vogue?
Presented and produced by Stephen Pritchard
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Presented by Stephen Pritchard Unified comms, and on the trail of the black rhino Can technology help to save endangered species?
In the first of a short series on novel uses of data analytics, Connected Business speaks to the scientists behind the charity WildTrack, which is using IT tools to monitor animals such as the black rhino.
Plus, could unified communications be coming back into vogue?
Presented and produced by Stephen Pritchard
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FT News News and analysis from FT reporters around the world Clive Cookson talks neutrinos with Pier Oddone FT science editor Clive Cookson talks neutrinos with Pier Oddone, director of leading US particle physics centre Fermilab
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FT Alphachat In each edition of Alphachat, the bloggers from FT Alphaville and an invited guest will delve deeply into a topic or theme related to financial markets. Expect the same wonkiness, humour, and occasional irreverence that you find on Alphaville itself. Interview with Goldman’s Jan Hatzius Jan Hatzius, the chief US economist for Goldman Sachs, explains to FT Alphaville’s Cardiff Garcia why he expects US growth to slow in the first half of 2012. Mr Hatzius says the US economy is particularly vulnerable to European banks with significant US holdings.
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