Add this topic to your myFT Digest for news straight to your inbox
Jacob Young, Conservative MP for Redcar, is no longer a member of the South Tees Development Corporation as wrongly suggested in an article on January 30.
Marion Maréchal, niece of Marine Le Pen, is campaigning in European elections for the far-right Reconquête party, not Le Pen’s Rassemblement National as wrongly stated in an article on January 26.
All of the largest US lenders submitted letters to regulators ahead of a January 16 deadline commenting on plans for stricter capital rules under the so-called Basel III endgame framework, not just Wells Fargo as wrongly stated in an article on January 23.
Neri Oxman was previously a professor of media arts and sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, not material sciences as wrongly stated in articles on January 15 and January 16.
The Justice for Subpostmasters Alliance won a High Court case against the Post Office in 2019, rather than a High Court appeal as incorrectly stated in several recent articles on the Post Office scandal
The US withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021, not 2020 as wrongly stated in an article on January 15
Richard Armitage is a former Republican deputy secretary of state, not a former secretary of state as incorrectly stated in an article on January 11.
The UK Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has reduced the number of long-term empty homes by more than 38,000 since 2010
Guinea is bordered by Mali, not Burkina Faso as incorrectly illustrated on a map in an article on January 8
Microsoft has a multibillion-dollar investment in OpenAI, rather than owning the company as incorrectly stated in a column on January 8
The Crown Estate is hoping to attract bids in the first commercial-scale floating wind auction in the Celtic Sea, not the Irish Sea as incorrectly stated in an article on January 3.
Europe accounted for 10.6 per cent of global IPO proceeds in 2023, rather than 5 per cent
Asylum applications to EU countries peaked at above 1.4mn in 2015-16 and were above 1mn in the past 12 months
Under Iliad’s proposed merger of its Italian business with Vodafone Italia, Iliad would receive a €2bn shareholder loan as well as €500mn in cash and a 50 per cent share of the new business
Based on a series of American financial asset returns dating back to 1871, stocks’ median outperformance of bonds over a 10-year holding period has been 3.7 percentage points a year, rising to 4.6 percentage points per annum over 50-year holding periods, not 2.3 and 4 percentage points, respectively
The On Wall Street column on December 16 wrongly referred to some $70bn of gains made by Michael Dell and Silver Lake from acquiring VMware and relisting it
A new 30-year trend extrapolated by European Earth observation agency Copernicus showed global warming could breach 1.5C above the pre-industrial average by February 2034, not February 2024 as wrongly stated in the text accompanying a graphic on December 16. The chart was correct.
A review of the book Stuffed in last weekend’s FT contained two misspellings of the author’s name
One in 182 people will be without a home in England this Christmas, rather than one in 18 as incorrectly stated in an article on December 14
On March 20 2023 we reported that TikTok had placed a fixed-term contractor on immediate paid suspension as it investigated her complaint of sexual harassment. In an adjudication, the Financial Times Editorial Complaints Commissioner has directed an amendment to the article to make clear that the individual was not suspended because she made a complaint and TikTok clarified she was placed on paid leave during the investigation due to concerns that this was necessary to protect the investigation’s integrity
The documents prepared by councils on child support are called Education, Health and Care Plans, not Emotional, Health and Care Plans as wrongly stated in an article on December 2.
Jacques-Louis David’s ‘The Emperor Napoleon in His Study at the Tuileries’ was painted in 1812, not 1804 as incorrectly stated in the Life & Arts essay on Napoleon in art on November 25
Suntory Beverage and Food is the soft drinks company of the Suntory Group. It does not include Suntory whiskies as wrongly suggested in the Women of the Year feature
The name of law firm Perkins Coie was misspelt in an article on November 28. We apologise for the error.
Lloyd’s List has estimated that if the EU carbon price remains between €80 to €90 per tonne of CO₂, total tax revenues from the coverage of shipping by the EU’s emissions trading scheme could amount to more than €7bn annually
International Edition