208 episodes

From hostile takeovers to C-suite intrigue, Behind the Money takes you inside the business and financial stories of the moment with reporting from Financial Times journalists around the world.
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Behind the Money Financial Times

    • Business

From hostile takeovers to C-suite intrigue, Behind the Money takes you inside the business and financial stories of the moment with reporting from Financial Times journalists around the world.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Introducing Untold: Power for Sale

    Introducing Untold: Power for Sale

    Introducing Power for Sale, a new season of Untold from the Financial Times. In Untold: Power for Sale, host Valentina Pop and a team of FT correspondents from all over Europe investigate what happened in the Qatargate scandal, where EU lawmakers were accused of accepting payments from Qatar to whitewash its image.
    Subscribe and listen on: Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.

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    • 2 min
    Dispatch from Omaha: Berkshire after Warren Buffett

    Dispatch from Omaha: Berkshire after Warren Buffett

    Late last year, Warren Buffett’s close business confidant Charlie Munger died at 99. Munger’s death and Buffett’s upcoming 94th birthday have renewed questions about the future of Berkshire Hathaway. What will the empire he’s built look like after he’s no longer at the helm? 
    Behind the Money and the FT’s senior corporate finance correspondent Eric Platt travel to Omaha, Nebraska for Berkshire Hathaway’s annual shareholder meeting, to get a better sense of how the next generation will lead America’s “last great” conglomerate. 
     
    Clips from CNBC
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    For further reading:
    Berkshire after Buffett: is Greg Abel up to the top job?
    Berkshire after Buffett: prized energy business faces upheaval
    Berkshire after Buffett: the risk ‘genius’ pulling the insurance strings
    Berkshire after Buffett: can any stockpicker follow the Oracle?
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    On X, follow Eric Platt (@ericgplatt) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07), or follow Michela on LinkedIn for updates about the show and more.
    Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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    • 23 min
    Coming soon: China, the new tech superpower

    Coming soon: China, the new tech superpower

    In a new season of Tech Tonic, longtime FT China reporter Jame Kynge travels around the world to see how China is pushing towards tech supremacy. Will China be able to get an edge in crucial technological areas? What does China’s attempt to leapfrog the west look like on the ground? A 6-part series looking at China’s tech industry.
    Presented by James Kynge. Edwin Lane is the senior producer. The producer is Josh Gabert-Doyon. Executive producer is Manuela Saragosa. Sound design by Breen Turner and Samantha Giovinco, with original music from Metaphor Music. The FT’s head of audio is Cheryl Brumley.

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    • 1 min
    Was the Archegos implosion illegal?

    Was the Archegos implosion illegal?

    Three years ago, chaos struck Wall Street. Companies saw their share prices tumble, seemingly out of nowhere. Major banks lost billions of dollars in the fallout. Eventually, that chaos was linked to a family office, Archegos Capital Management, and its founder Bill Hwang. 
    This week, Hwang heads to trial in New York, where he faces charges including racketeering, and securities and wire fraud. The FT’s US legal correspondent Joe Miller examines the “novel” case prosecutors plan to pursue.
     
    Clips from CNBC, Fox Business
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    For further reading:
    ‘To what end?’: the murky question of Bill Hwang’s motive in Archegos trial
    Archegos founder’s charity was financial ‘escape pod’, suit alleges
    Hedge funds and brokers take aim at post-Archegos trading reforms
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    On X, follow Joe Miller (@JoeMillerJr) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07), or follow Michela on LinkedIn for updates about the show and more.
    Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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    • 23 min
    How shale rewrote the global oil order

    How shale rewrote the global oil order

    For decades, countries in the Middle East have dominated the oil market, pumping large quantities of the world’s supply. Along with that has come a pattern: when there’s conflict in the region, oil prices rise. The pattern seems to be breaking though, mainly because of one thing: US shale. The FT’s Myles McCormick explains how production in the country shifted oil’s epicentre away from the Middle East, and how long that may last. 
    Clips from Al Jazeera, CBS, CNN
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    For further reading:
    How US shale keeps sheltering America from the next oil price surge
    On markets and geopolitics, it is a mistake to forget about shale
    Why oil prices remain steady even as Middle East tensions escalate
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    On X, follow Myles McCormick (@mylesmccormick_) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07), or follow Michela on LinkedIn for updates about the show and more. 
    Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

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    • 17 min
    When M&A goes wrong

    When M&A goes wrong

    When a company is sold there tends to be a standard playbook: There’s some tough negotiations. Then, the buyer gets a business and the seller gets a check. Everyone’s happy. That’s not what happened when a private equity firm recently bought a California grocery store chain. The FT’s Wall Street editor Sujeet Indap explains how the deal went off the rails, and how the supermarket’s owners might end up paying millions of dollars to sell their company. 
    Clip from KCRA 
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    For further reading:
    The inequity method of accounting
    Opposition shadows Cerberus windfall from Albertsons supermarket deal 
    The pool is closed, part 1
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    On X, follow Sujeet Indap (@sindap) and Michela Tindera (@mtindera07), or follow Michela on LinkedIn for updates about the show and more.
    Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 20 min

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