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A picture of Barack Obama at COP26 in front of an image of the globe stands out from the front of the Financial Times, while its main story grapples with the starkly different responses of central banks around the world to the surge in inflation. While the US and UK signal an interest rate rise soon, the Eurozone is resisting any shift in policy, the paper says.

Financial Times Front Page 13th of December 2025

The EU imposed an indefinite freeze on €210bn in sovereign assets linked to a sanctioned regime, backed by Britain and partners. The step seeks leverage for diplomacy and could channel proceeds to reconstruction. The targeted state has filed a legal challenge.

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Financial Times Front Page 12th of December 2025

Talks on the OECD global minimum tax are close to collapse as China and several EU countries oppose a US carve‑out meant to ease compliance for multinationals. Officials warn failure could upend the pact and revive threats of retaliatory tariffs, leaving cross‑border tax rules in limbo.

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Financial Times Front Page 11th of December 2025

The Fed cut interest rates to a three-year low, its third reduction in a row, saying a softening jobs market now outweighs inflation. Powell said the call was close, policymakers were split, and guidance remains data-dependent amid risks to employment and growth.

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Financial Times Front Page 10th of December 2025

Washington has given Kyiv’s president days to respond to a proposed peace framework that would cede territory in exchange for security guarantees and economic relief. Allies, including the UK, urge a swift, credible plan that upholds sovereignty, with discussion of a seasonal truce.

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