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What do bond markets know about the election?

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This is an audio transcript of the Unhedged podcast episode: ‘What do bond markets know about the election?

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Robert Armstrong
Ten-year bond yields are up and Wall Street thinks that’s because there’s a rising probability of a second Trump presidency. Today on the show, is the bond market telling us something about the election?

This is Unhedged, the markets and finance podcast from the Financial Times. I’m Rob Armstrong, coming to you from Unhedged world headquarters in downtown New York City. And today I’m joined by Derek Brower, who is the FT’s politics editor, US politics editor. (Inaudible) title correct?

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Derek Brower
US political news editor. Get it right. Full title. (Laughter)

Robert Armstrong
(Laughter) So Derek knows more about American politics than almost anyone because he has to read and edit all of the FT’s coverage on the topic.

Derek Brower
I know everything, everything about US politics ever. (Laughter)

Robert Armstrong
OK, Derek, so here’s what they’re saying on Wall Street. The 10-year bond is selling off. As a reminder to listeners, when bonds sell off yields rise. We’re seeing the 10-year yield rise. That may be down to that strong jobs report and growth.

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However, when I speak to bond managers on Wall Street, when I speak to bond analysts on Wall Street, the first thing they talk about is that this is a Trump trade. And they think this is a Trump trade because we might get a red sweep, which means crazy spending. It’s a Trump trade because Trump doesn’t care about deficits at all. He’s perfectly happy with deficits.

Derek Brower
Nobody cares about deficits.

Robert Armstrong
Nobody cares about deficits.

Derek Brower
I mean, that’s (inaudible).

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Robert Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, yeah. But he’s one of the everybody who doesn’t care about deficits. He’s gonna limit supply of labour by stopping illegal immigration and throwing immigrants out of the country. And finally, he’s gonna put tariffs on which are gonna restrict the flow of goods. All of . . . Those last two are inflationary. And so rates have to be higher for this hotter and more inflationary economy everyone thinks Trump is gonna create.

So let me ask you. The first question is, has it actually become more likely, according to the polls or the betting markets or anything else, in the last couple of weeks that Trump is gonna win? Is that something that’s gonna happen?

Derek Brower
Well, the betting markets, those are two different things, the betting markets and the polls. Betting markets are pretty sure that Trump is going to win. And we can get into the reliability of them or…

Robert Armstrong
Yeah, let’s do. 

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Derek Brower
Well, they weren’t super reliable in 2016, but neither was the Street.

Robert Armstrong
Anything else.

Derek Brower
Or anybody you asked among pollsters or anything. They may have been a bit more reliable in 2020, but that was an exceptional election because of the pandemic. So we don’t know. But they’re pretty convinced at the moment that Trump is going to win this. The polls have been drifting marginally in Trump’s favour in the past couple of weeks. And I would . . . If you looked at them all, you would see kind of a sea of red in the crucial seven swing states.

Robert Armstrong
Yes. Just remind us which ones those are. Michigan.

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Derek Brower
So Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania. Those are the three blue wall states, so-called because the Democrats used to rely on them almost every election. Trump kind of pierced that blue wall in 2016. Then Georgia, North Carolina, those are two southern states and sunbelt states that are close. And then Arizona and Nevada.

Robert Armstrong
And Nevada. And you see a sea of red in those seven.

Derek Brower
The only one in our like, in the FT’s poll tracker today, the only one where Harris is up — and these are tiny, tiny margins. But the only one of those that Harris is leading in is Michigan. And it’s by like 0.5 a per cent or something.

Robert Armstrong
So why isn’t this sort of open and shut under those circumstances?

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Derek Brower
Because the polls, I mean . . . 

Robert Armstrong
It’s so close.

Derek Brower
It’s so close. These are all within the margin of error, that’s the first thing to say. And we just don’t know. There are huge pockets of each of these states where we don’t know how they’re gonna vote. They could be decisive. And these margins are so tiny that whether it rains on election day or whether people get out of bed grumpy or not could affect them. And these are all swing. And also, by the way, as ever in a US election, the fate of America and possibly the world is gonna be decided by a bunch of people who haven’t been paying attention so far, these undecided voters. So it’s really, really hard to tell.

Robert Armstrong
Yes. I do wanna get back to the financial implications of all this. But I wanna dig in on the polls a little bit more. 2016, we all learned that there was something badly wrong with the polling. Is there good reason to believe that the polling techniques and methodologies have improved in the intervening years?

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Derek Brower
The pollsters would say absolutely. They’re doing a bunch of things, are doing this thing now where they ask people who they voted for last time, which is a way that they think allows them to control for the shy Trump voter, which was a thing in the past. Whether the shy Trump voter still exists is another question. But remember, in 2022, in the midterm elections, this was after Roe versus Wade. There was a big vote that was unexpected for the Democrats.

Robert Armstrong
Yes. Trumpy candidates, Maga candidates underperformed.

Derek Brower
Underperformed. And the ones that Trump endorsed, in particular, seemed to underperform. So who . . . I mean, frankly, who knows?

What we can say is the electorate is really clear that the economy is the biggest issue for them that comes up in all of the polling, including ours. Our FT-Michigan Ross poll is clear about that. The economy is the biggest issue.

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The next thing that they constantly complain about, the voters, is inflation, or not just inflation but the legacy of inflation, ie high prices — how expensive everything is in this country, which everybody knows.

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. We’ve talked about that a lot on this show. Drives people crazy.

Derek Brower
And as you wrote about in that excellent piece you did a couple of weeks ago from the shopping mall in Philadelphia, that is a big deal if you’re paying $10 for ice cream in a mall and, you know, it’s crazy. And everybody knows. And they constantly complain about that in polling.

Robert Armstrong
Yes. And this reminds me, I mean, it has an echo of the 1980 election when it was Carter versus Reagan, and it was very similar in that inflation was coming down but the shadow . . . 

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Derek Brower
You were what, in your early twenties then?

Robert Armstrong
Yeah, I was 35 years old then. (Laughter) And the election was held. Inflation had fallen, but we were still operating in the shadow of inflation.

Derek Brower
Right. That’s the thing. And if the economy is the decisive issue, the polling on the economy is really bad. It was terrible for Joe Biden before he dropped out. It improved a bit for Harris. And funnily enough, the more people learned about her plans, it seems the less favourable they are to them. And now our own poll this week showed that Trump had retaken the lead on who Americans trust most on the economy.

Robert Armstrong
Yes, that’s our splash in the paper today, I guess.

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Derek Brower
Yeah, that’s right. And then the Journal also, the Wall Street Journal has more polling which shows that on the economy, again, the most important issue, it’s the economy, stupid, once again. On that issue, the polling is terrible for Harris, frankly.

The reason that we can’t be certain, even with those economy things, is that the Democrats hope and believe there is a huge swell of women who are going to decide this election and it’s going to be the same thing that gave them a good showing in 2022 in the midterms, and that is concerns about Republican or Donald Trump’s restrictions on abortion rights. And they think that that will overwhelm the economy side of things.

And the economy is improving, etc, etc. So they think that they can neutralise or they’re hoping that that vote from women neutralises the polling about the economy that would suggest that she’s gonna lose.

Robert Armstrong
So that’s what we’re kind of watching for when the results roll out. Let’s turn to the policy stuff. The consensus on Wall Street, as I said, is remarkably strong that Trump will be inflationary in these various ways.

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From your point of view, from the point of view of the FT coverage, is that right? So again, it’s we’ll get a red sweep. Anytime you have a sweep, red or blue, that leads to higher spending and higher deficits. And then on top of that, you have immigration and tariffs about which Trump is enthusiastic and are, in theory, inflationary. What’s our coverage on that been saying? What’s your feeling about those issues?

Derek Brower
Well, we have been covering the tariff thing because our readers care about that a lot. He wants to impose tariffs and what, 10-20 per cent, somewhere in that range across the board than 60 per cent, 100 per cent, whatever. He says different things, different times on China, particularly.

Robert Armstrong
And can he do that by himself?

Derek Brower
Well, that’s a debate. Probably not. Some people think he can.

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Robert Armstrong
So it’s a legal debate about whether he needs to pass a law or can do it by . . . 

Derek Brower
Yeah, by executive action.

Robert Armstrong
Right. So which leads us back to the red sweep. We’ve talked about the odds of Harris versus Trump. What does our polling say about the odds of a sweep, which would, of course, make it easier for Trump to get his tariff and immigration actions through?

Derek Brower
Well, I think the safest prediction is none of these are safe, but the safest is probably that the Senate goes Republican, because it may come down to this race in Montana where the Republican is ahead. This is a race that I think is probably the most expensive per vote in the history of elections.

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Robert Armstrong
Yes, ’cause there’s four people in Montana, as it turns out.

Derek Brower
Yeah, about four. Isn’t it three now, or four?

Robert Armstrong
Yeah, there’s three or four people and six cows. (Laughter)

Derek Brower
Six cows and a zillion dollars being spent on their votes per person. Yeah. No, I mean . . . 

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Robert Armstrong
It is extremely hard to get a cow to vote Democratic, in my experience.

Derek Brower
Which is why they are bombarding them with TV ads. (Robert laughs) It is an incredible story, actually. We wrote about it. It’s this Senate race between Tim Sheehy and Jon Tester, the Democrat. And there’s a lot of money being spent on that one because it might decide the future of the Senate and the future of American democracy, etc, etc. So there’s a lot being spent. Anyway.

Robert Armstrong
So the Senate will go Democratic by a small margin.

Derek Brower
The Senate seems likely to go . . . No. The Senate will go Republican, seems likely to go Republican. It seems likely. There are a bunch of other races that, you know, they could . . . depends on the size of what they get majority and so on. Or maybe they don’t. Who knows? But that’s the . . . That’s kinda the least controversial claim.

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The House is different. The House, I think the Democrats are hopeful in the House, partly because they happen to be running against a bunch of swivel-eyed lunatics and some really, really weird candidates who I think by and large have disgraced the Republican caucus. Some of them are running again. You know, George Santos, this absolute kind of…

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. Unbelievable story.

Derek Brower
Unbelievable story, yeah.

Robert Armstrong
So he’s gone.

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Derek Brower
He’s gone. There are others who are, you know, there are a lot of moderate Republican so-called moderate Republicans in New York State, for example, who won seats in kind of marginal Democratic areas who are in a bit of trouble this time, I would say. So the Democrats are more hopeful there. So it’s very possible that you get a split in Congress, which makes it difficult for Trump.

Robert Armstrong
OK. So that’s the most likely outcome, which makes it more difficult for Trump to achieve . . . But there is a chance.

Derek Brower
If he’s gonna legislate for stuff.

Robert Armstrong
There is a chance that he could, by executive fiat or whatever they call it, he could impose quite stringent tariffs.

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Derek Brower
Yes. Well, I think it’ll . . . There’ll be lawsuits and there’ll be challenges. But there is . . . It is . . . That is disputed. But yes, I think that’s what he thinks he can do and he will definitely try it that way.

Robert Armstrong
The reason I press you on this is because the Wall Street consensus that Trump is the inflation candidate strikes me as a little too pat and possibly biased. I don’t know if people outside of the Wall Street world know this, but Wall Street is relatively Democratic. It’s a New York institution. It’s quite blue. And also New Yorkers, who a lot of Wall Street people are, find Trump vulgar and unattractive and they don’t invite him to their dinner parties. Right? So there’s a certain amount of New York snobbery involved too, which would naturally incline people who work on Wall Street to like a story in which Trump screws things up and generates inflation.

So I wonder if they are exaggerating the risks of a Trump presidency: of very high deficits, of stringent tariffs and of big crackdowns on immigration.

Derek Brower
I don’t have a dog in this fight, as you can tell from my accent. But what I would say is there are a bunch of surrogates out there: you know, Howard Lutnick, Cantor Fitzgerald guy; Scott Bessent, ex-Soros guy; John Paulson, hedge fund guy. You know these donors, big donors, more powerful . . . 

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Robert Armstrong
So these are big money Wall Street people.

Derek Brower
Right, of Trump and they are . . . I think their message to the Street is a bit more plain vanilla: that he’s not gonna be . . . his bark is gonna be worse than his bite on tariffs.

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. Bessent, we had a piece on him in the FT and as far as I could tell, his claim was that Donald Trump is secretly Ronald Reagan.

Derek Brower
Right. Exactly. (Robert laughs) I mean, everybody, this is the thing with Trump, by the way. Everybody everybody kind of projects their wishes on to this . . . 

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Robert Armstrong
Sees the Trump they want to see.

Derek Brower
 . . . because he doesn’t really believe in anything or he doesn’t . . . I don’t think . . . I think it’s pretty safe to say he doesn’t think deeply about these things. He just thinks instinctively and so people project onto them what they think he’s kind of like.

But then on the other hand, you have JD Vance, who is pro-Lina Khan. He is a protectionist. So there is an argument that he will have a lot of influence in the administration and he is a true believer, so they say, in this kind of protectionist stuff. But that’s the tariffs thing. And then…

And by the way, on the inflation side and on the supply side and whether he’s inflationary, let’s not forget that what nobody’s talking about is pumping like trillions of dollars into the economy like has just happened, which was the kind of source of the inflation, one could argue.

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So Trump could be held back a bit by Congress. He could be less severe. I’m just kind of making building the case here, not necessarily agreeing with it. He could be less severe than the language suggests.

And then he also is really, really, really focused on trying to bring down energy costs, which are an expensive input and have been super expensive for a period of time. I think like gasoline prices are 40 per cent higher, have been 40 per cent higher under Joe Biden or they are now than when he took office, and they’ve been going up and down.

Robert Armstrong
Yes. They’ve been coming down now. They’re under $4, which is kind of the magic level now.

Derek Brower
Yeah. $3 about in New Jersey, right?

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Robert Armstrong
Yeah. So that’s a bit better. But they had been high.

Derek Brower
It’s better, but they’re higher. I mean they were much lower under Trump. Energy costs were lower. He went through . . . I mean, he oversaw or he was president while there was a historic oil price crash. So that kind of helped. (Robert laughs) Thanks. Oil prices literally cost like was negative for a while, the oil price, so that helped bring down the energy costs in the economy. And there was a pandemic, etc, etc. So it’s not kind of a fair comparison. But he does focus on bringing down energy costs, which he thinks have been inflationary.

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. So he probably right.

Derek Brower
He’s probably right. So . . . 

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Robert Armstrong
Puts and takes.

Derek Brower
Is he gonna be as inflationary or not? I mean, it’s debatable.

Robert Armstrong
So let’s try to wrap up this discussion. I think we’re talking about a lot of things that are kind of on a knife edge or a margin. But let’s kind of go through and sum up. One, the polls have gotten a little stronger for the Republicans.

Derek Brower
A little bit.

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Robert Armstrong
A little bit.

Derek Brower
All within the margin of error. With huge uncertainty. Anybody calls it right now is an idiot.

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. OK. (Laughter) That’s very clear.

Derek Brower
Seriously.

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Robert Armstrong
The betting markets are strongly Trump, but we’re sceptical, OK? That’s number two. And the Wall Street consensus that Trump is the inflation candidate might be a little too simplistic. Let’s go through just summarising the reasons for that.

Derek Brower
Yeah. So on the first one, you want me to go through all three of them?

Robert Armstrong
Yeah. You were just saying.

Derek Brower
On the first one — look, on the polling, I would say I’m so uncertain about it that you could see a blue sweep, ie, Harris could sweep all of the swing states or you could see Trump do it. But the only thing that I trust as a journalist, as an editor who’s been sending people out across the country for months, is our reporting. And our reporting has felt a bit more Trumpy than Democratic. That’s what I would say. I’ve been sending reporters into areas and they come back and say, ooh, it’s Trumpy.

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Robert Armstrong
But we still might get divided government. The chance of divided government are high. That’s kind of the central hypothesis which softens Trump’s ability to do the kind of supply-restricting things he’s trying to do, right?

Derek Brower
Yeah. And he’s an extremist in his language constantly. Whether he lives up to that — and we’re not talking about the democracy stuff, we’re just talking about the financial side — whether he lives up to that is yet to be seen. Like he’s . . . I think we need to be very cautious about believing that America is going to impose a zillion tariffs on everybody.

Robert Armstrong
And throw out 20mn.

Derek Brower
And throwing out 20mn immigrants or illegal immigrants. Logistically, this is gonna be super, super hard. And that’s not even contending with all the Wall Street and corporations up in arms and bending his ear to stop him doing this. It’d be really, really hard. Again, not going into the morality or the ideology of this; just logistically moving that many people will be something that has never really been undertaken by a normal democracy before and will be hugely controversial, not to say awful for a lot of communities and so on, but logistically very, very difficult.

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[MUSIC PLAYING]

Robert Armstrong
All right. On that note, we will be right back with Long and Short.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

This is Long and Short, that portion of the show where we go long things we like and short things we don’t like. I’m long something today, Derek.

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Derek Brower
What?

Robert Armstrong
I’m long Coca-Cola. So Coca-Cola is . . . 

Derek Brower
Not McDonald’s?

Robert Armstrong
I’m also long McDonald’s, but I’m long Coca-Cola because their results, their quarterly results came out yesterday or the day before. And once again, they got 10 per cent revenue bump in the United States from price. People will just pay whatever Coca-Cola asks them to pay for this bubbly, sweet liquid. It is unbelievable. Inflation may be dead in America, but it’s not dead on Coca-Cola. And I just think that this is an incredible brand.

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Derek Brower
Can I be like a classic long/short hedge fund and go both? I’m gonna be long John King on CNN, who’s their guy who does the maps and says, now Miami-Dade’s vote count is coming in. Because he’s gonna be around for a long time, over many days from November 5th. And that’s the reason, that’s my other short, which is that I’m short that the election is gonna be over on November 5th because there’s . . . I mean, even in Pennsylvania, which is the key swing state, it’s gonna take a while.

Robert Armstrong
It’s gonna go on forever. And what’s interesting . . . 

Derek Brower
We may never know who the next president is.

Robert Armstrong
I was talking to a markets person the other day, you know, off the record and he said generally, after an election is resolved, stocks just go up. It doesn’t matter who wins. It’s like the uncertainty is taken out of the market. So it’s good after an election is decided. It’s good to be long the market for a month or so.

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But he was like, that’s not gonna happen this time because we’re not gonna get a resolution. And that’s gonna be rough for markets. He said the only thing that will make markets go up is a Kamala concession. Not because Kamala losing . . . 

Derek Brower
Right. It would just be certainty.

Robert Armstrong
It would just be certainty. And that’s the only scenario in which we get certainty anytime soon.

Derek Brower
What if Trump comes out and says, oh, fair and square. You guys did it to me again. Way to go, guys, you know.

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Robert Armstrong
(Laughter) every vote is (inaudible).

Derek Brower
Go, America. I’ve never seen a fairer election.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

Robert Armstrong
On that completely fantastical idea, listeners, we will be back in your feed next week.

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Unhedged is produced by Jake Harper and edited by Bryant Urstadt. Our executive producer is Jacob Goldstein. We had additional help from Topher Forhecz. Cheryl Brumley is the FT’s global head of audio. Special thanks to Laura Clarke, Alastair Mackie, Gretta Cohn and Natalie Sadler.

FT premium subscribers can get the Unhedged newsletter for free. A 30-day free trial is available to everyone else. Just go to ft.com/unhedgedoffer.

I’m Rob Armstrong. Thanks for listening.

[MUSIC PLAYING]

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Money

Three fright night recipes that are perfect for Halloween and tips to use up leftovers

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Three fright night recipes that are perfect for Halloween and tips to use up leftovers

MAKE a scary Halloween meal without freaking out your finances.

You can conjure up these three courses for little witches and wizards for just £2.62 per person.

We have three delicious Halloween recipes

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We have three delicious Halloween recipesCredit: Getty

And with ideas for leftover pumpkin as well as using up that pile of sweets after trick-or-treat fun, nothing will go to waste.

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  • Meal ideas from recipes.lidl.co.uk. Cost per serving based on proportion of ingredients used to make the dish.
  • Prices correct at time of going to press.

Bonfire chilli graveyard

(Serves six)

Total cost: £8.10 Per person: £1.35

This spooky chilli tastes as good as it looks

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This spooky chilli tastes as good as it looksCredit: Lidl

GRAB a tombstone tortilla to dig and discover what lies beneath this ghoulish graveyard.

We’ll give you a hint: There are layers of devilishly delicious Tex-Mex flavours.

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I’m a parenting expert & next week will be Halloween hell if you don’t make 5 changes now with your little one

YOU NEED:

  • 2 red onions
  • 2 red peppers
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 tbsp ground cumin
  • 2 tsp chilli powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 750g pack of 10% fat beef mince
  • 2 x 400g tins chopped tomatoes
  • 250ml beef stock
  • 2 tsp clear honey
  • 2 tortillas
  • 1 x 400g tin kidney beans
  • 50g mature cheddar
  • Handful of rocket spinach and watercress salad

METHOD: Finely slice the onions, peppers and garlic.

Heat the oil in a large casserole. Fry the onions and peppers for six to eight minutes, or until soft.

Add the garlic and cook for a further minute.

Stir in the spices for a bit of kick and cook for one to two minutes, before adding the mince.

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Use a wooden spoon to break up the mince, then cook on a medium heat for four to five minutes, or until the mince has browned all over.

Add the tinned tomatoes, stock and honey and bring to a simmer.

Simmer gently for 30 minutes.

Meanwhile, preheat the grill to medium.

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Cut out some Halloween shapes from the tortillas and place on a baking tray.

Grill for two to three minutes, until crispy, then set aside.

When the liquid of the chilli has reduced to a sauce-like consistency, add the kidney beans and cook for ten minutes.

Remove from the heat and sprinkle the cheese over the top.

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Place under the grill for six to eight minutes, until the cheese is golden and bubbling.

To serve, stick the tortilla shapes in the top of the chilli and cover the top with some watercress and spinach leaves.

Warm Pumpkin Blondies

(Makes nine)

Total cost: £5.49 Per person: 61p

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These blondies are a great use of your leftover pumpkin

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These blondies are a great use of your leftover pumpkinCredit: Lidl

NOT sure what to do with leftover pumpkin after you’ve finished your Halloween carving?

Try this tasty spin on brownies, made with sweet white chocolate and pecan nuts. You can ­substitute the pumpkin for squash, if you prefer.

YOU NEED:

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  • 275g pumpkin flesh, cubed
  • 175g butter softened, plus extra for greasing
  • 2cm ginger, peeled and grated
  • 1tsp vanilla extract
  • 200g light brown sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 225g plain flour
  • 125g white chocolate, roughly chopped
  • 100g pecan nuts, roughly chopped

To serve:

  • White chocolate, finely chopped
  • Pecan nuts, finely chopped
  • Vanilla ice cream

METHOD: Place the pumpkin flesh in a saucepan and cover with boiling water from the kettle.

Boil for 15 to 20 minutes until tender.

Drain, return to the pan and mash, then set aside and allow to cool.

Preheat the oven to 180C/160C fan/gas mark 5.

Grease and line a 20cm x 20cm square shallow cake tin.

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In a large bowl, whisk together the butter, ginger, vanilla and sugar until creamy.

Add the egg and beat well. Stir through the mashed pumpkin.

Sift over the flour and fold into the mixture using a wooden spoon.

Fold in the white chocolate and pecans.

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Spoon the mixture into the prepared tin and smooth the surface.

Bake for 35 to 40 minutes, until an inserted cocktail stick comes out clean.

Cool in the tin for ten minutes, then remove and cool on a wire rack for a further 15 minutes.

If using for dessert, cut into nine squares and decorate with the finely chopped white chocolate and pecans.

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Serve warm with vanilla ice cream.

Scary veggies and guacamole

(Serves eight)

Total cost: £5.28 Per person: 66p

This dish is not only fun to look at but also healthy

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This dish is not only fun to look at but also healthyCredit: Lidl

A DEAD-GOOD veggie platter with cucumber, peppers, ­broccoli and carrots.

Dip into some spooky guacamole for an extra hit of flavour.

YOU NEED:

  • 1 large cucumber (300g)
  • 200g baby peppers
  • 160g long, thin carrots
  • 2 black olives
  • 100g low-fat Greek yoghurt
  • 200g Tenderstem broccoli

For the guacamole:

  • 2 ripe avocados
  • 1-2 tbsp lime juice
  • 1 tbsp minced red onion
  • ½ tsp minced garlic (optional)
  • Salt and pepper (to taste)

METHOD: First make the guacamole. Peel the avocados and carefully remove the stones from the inner flesh.

Mash the inner flesh with a fork then mix in the lime juice, minced red onion and garlic (if using).

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Season to taste.

For the spooky veggies, slice the cucumber into 1cm pieces.

On each cucumber piece, slice 5mm off the left and right side at an angle, tapering towards the bottom to make a skull shape.

Use a metal straw to poke two eye holes and use a chopstick to poke out the nose and mouth.

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Set aside one red pepper for the carrot fingernails. Half and deseed your remaining peppers.

Carefully carve out the eyes, nose and mouth with a paring knife.

Peel the carrots and cut three thin grooves into the middle of each using a paring knife – these will be your fingers.

Carve the fingernails from the red pepper you have set aside and place on the thinnest end of your carrots.

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Now for your spider, which will sit on top of your guacamole.

Cut one black olive in half lengthwise and use as the body.

Slice the other half, together with your second olive, to make eight thin legs.

Spoon the guacamole into a shallow bowl and place the yoghurt into a squeeze bottle or piping bag and draw a web on top of it.

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Carefully place the olive spider in the web.

Arrange your veggies, including the Tenderstem broccoli, around your spooky guacamole bowl and enjoy.

USE UP ANY LEFTOVER PUMPKIN

STIR up some magic with these tasty dishes made from leftover pumpkin flesh.

The full instructions can be found at recipes.lidl.co.uk.

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ROASTED PUMPKIN AND PESTO SPOOKGETTI

This spaghetti teams pumpkin with bacon

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This spaghetti teams pumpkin with baconCredit: Lidl

Roast the chopped pumpkin flesh and serve with fried bacon lardons and pesto on pasta.

ROAST PUMPKIN RISOTTO

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This risotto is a great use of pumpkin leftovers

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This risotto is a great use of pumpkin leftoversCredit: Lidl

Drizzle the pumpkin with olive oil, roast and stir into a risotto.

PUMPKIN POTION SOUP

This soup is a perfect warming autumn dish

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This soup is a perfect warming autumn dishCredit: Lidl

Whizz roasted pumpkin flesh into a warming soup with onion, garlic and spices.

NUTTY PUMPKIN HOUMOUS WITH SPICED TORTILLA DIP

This delicious dip is great for tortillas

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This delicious dip is great for tortillasCredit: Lidl

Make a delicious pumpkin dip by mixing the roasted flesh with tinned chickpeas, garlic and peanut butter.

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Serve with tortillas brushed with oil and sprinkled with smoked paprika.

USE UP ANY LEFTOVER SWEETIES

PROLONG the Halloween fun by using up Trick Or Treat sweets and chocolate.

CRUNCH TIME

These delicious cakes are a great use of leftover sweets

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These delicious cakes are a great use of leftover sweetsCredit: Alamy

USE up chocolate that has already been opened by melting it down and mixing with cereal for delicious chocolate or cornflake crispy cakes.

Decorate them with a sprinkling of mini ­marshmallows.

CHUNKS OF FUN

Chocolate bars can be used to make yummy brownies and blondies

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Chocolate bars can be used to make yummy brownies and blondiesCredit: Alamy

CHOP chocolate bars, such as Twix, Mars and ­KitKats, into smaller pieces and use in brownies and blondies.

DEVILISH DECORATION

Spooky sweets can help make cakes more Halloween-y

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Spooky sweets can help make cakes more Halloween-yCredit: Getty

USE spooky sweets to decorate fairy cakes, giving the sugary treats a darker side.

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HOME SWEET HOME

Once Halloween is over, use your sweets to decorate a gingerbread house for Christmas

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Once Halloween is over, use your sweets to decorate a gingerbread house for ChristmasCredit: Getty

SNAFFLE sweets away and use them to decorate a Christmas gingerbread house in a few weeks’ time.

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The ironclad commitment to Israel hurts US interests

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Banker all-nighters create productivity paradox

Whoever is the next president of the US, their urgent goal should be to regain control over US foreign policy (The Big Read, October 8).

As it stands, US foreign policy has been held hostage by the administration’s “ironclad commitment” doctrine towards Israel, which unfortunately means the de facto support of virtually any policy action the Israeli government takes, no matter what its nature (for example in relation to international law), and irrespective of the implications for how the US is perceived by the rest of the world, and irrespective of the implications for US involvement in a war clearly contrary to its own interests.

No country anywhere in the world should have such an “ironclad commitment” from the US government. No country anywhere should be able to do anything it feels appropriate for its own national interest and perpetually drag the US with it, no matter what the implications are for the US. I say that as a recently naturalised citizen of the US.

The current state of affairs is very damaging to the US, with implications both for American lives and for the legitimacy and effectiveness of the US as a world leader and guardian of the rules-based world order.

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Andreas V Georgiou
Darnestown, MD, US

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College leaver career schemes offer leg-up amid tough competition for graduate roles

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College leaver career schemes offer leg-up amid tough competition for graduate roles

NATIONAL Graduate Week kicks off on Monday – and is the most popular time for employers to open applications for prestigious jobs for those fresh out of university.

With around 800,000 students leaving higher education annually, competition for top graduate roles is always fierce, but this year it is tougher than ever.

Ipek Sahbazoglu is a graduate data analyst at Jaguar Land Rover

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Ipek Sahbazoglu is a graduate data analyst at Jaguar Land RoverCredit: Supplied

More than A MILLION applications were made for such jobs in the last 12 months — a record high — new figures from the Institute of Student Employers show.

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Employers get on average 140 applications per graduate job, 59 per cent up on the previous year.

The most sought-after roles, in digital and IT, attract 205 applications per vacancy, while the charity and public sectors are the least competitive with 74 and 85 applications per role respectively.

While some of the surge is due to hiring managers ditching the need for a minimum 2:1 degree, to make recruiting more inclusive, employment experts say soaring use of AI makes it faster for students to apply.

‘Opportunities growing’

ISE chief executive Stephen Isherwood said: “As AI makes it ­easier to apply for jobs, volumes are pushed up and quality goes down, creating more rejections.

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“While this marks a positive move from employers, encouraging applications from a broader pool of candidates, the downside is that it has amounted to millions of rejection messages to students in the last year.

“However, applicant volumes have always outstripped vacancy levels and overall opportunities are still growing despite the challenging economic environment.”

The average graduate salary is up two per cent on last year to £32,539, according to jobs platform Adzuna, while some schemes in law and finance can pay up to £60,000.

Here is our Sunemployment guide to the top six schemes to apply for.

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As one of the UK’s biggest em­ployers of graduates, BAE ­SYSTEMS will hire 1,000 new starters.

You’ll need a minimum 2:2. Search at baesystems.com/en/careers/careers-in-the-uk/early-careers.

JAGUAR LAND ROVER has 175 places across engineering, manufacturing, design, commercial and other areas. Apply at jaguarlandrovercareers.com.

Consulting giant CAPGEMINI has places for 270 graduates across management, technology and ­busi­ness consultancy. See capgemini.com/gb-en/careers

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As well as traditional finance jobs, LLOYDS BANK’s 400-strong in­take includes positions in software engineering, cybersecurity and data analytics.

For details, see lloydsbankinggrouptalent.com/our-opportunities/graduates.

Opening on November 21, there are 100 business and head office roles at BRITISH AIRWAYS including commercial, engineering, tech and analytics. See careers.ba.com/graduates-bps-and-interns.

AWE NUCLEAR SECURITY TECHNOLOGIES is seeking 124 graduates. Find out more at awe.co.uk/careers/early-careers

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DO US A FLAVOUR

LOOKING for a tasty new career? Food firms offer some of the most interesting roles and fastest career progression available anywhere.

PREMIER FOODS, which makes brands including Oxo and Mr Kipling, has up to 24 places available in marketing, sales, finance, procurement, IT and operations. HR Director David Wilkinson said: “It’s a great place to grow a career.”

Apply from November at bit.ly/4dWYSpX.

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Want to work on brands like Maltesers? MARS is hiring 30 grads across management, engineering, supply chain, procurement, finance and R&D. See bit.ly/4fbMzqK.

MDS trains managers for the food supply chain and there are 60 places. See mds-ltd.co.uk/.

How to beat the crowds

WITH a million applications for graduate roles, how can you make yours stand out from the rest?

Here STEPHEN ISHERWOOD, chief executive of the Institute of Student Employers, shares his expert advice . . . 

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Stephen Isherwood

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Stephen IsherwoodCredit: Supplied

1. WORK IT: Treat your search for employment as a job in itself – spend more time on fewer applications, focusing on the positions you really want to land and are suited to.

2. SHOW THE REAL YOU: Relying too heavily on AI can lead to candidates coming across as less authentic to potential employers. Make sure your application genuinely reflects who you are and what you can do.

3. GAIN WORK SKILLS: The number of former interns landing jobs gets higher every year, but pretty much any work experience will boost your chance of success in the crowded jobs market.

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4. ADAPT TO NEW TECHNOLOGIES: Video chats and AI-led interviews are becoming more common, so be familiar with this approach – career services can help.

5. DON’T BE DISCOURAGED: Employers dealing with endless applications means there are more rejections. Avoid the trap of believing the jobs market is impossible.

Commitment to hiring graduates remains strong – the market isn’t shrinking and opportunities are still out there to be seized.

YOU’RE WORTH IT

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BEAUTY is big business – and top cosmetics company L’Oréal is searching for 23 graduates for its UK arm.

There are jobs available across commercial, supply chain, marketing and finance, based at the firm’s London HQ.

Emily Chiverton, HR Director L’Oréal UK & Ireland. Said: “We are looking for passionate people with ambition to build amazing careers at L’Oréal.

Our management trainee program is our talent accelerator to prepare the future of L’Oréal.

“It allows graduates to be trained and prepared for a future management role within the company by rotating between different disciplines for up to 18 months.”

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Apply by the end of today at careers.loreal.com.

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Grupo Televisa’s chair Emilio Azcárraga steps down amid Fifa probe

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The chair of the world’s largest Spanish-language broadcaster Grupo Televisa stepped down on Thursday as the company faces a US investigation over activity related to Fifa football rights.

Televisa in August said it was being investigated by the US Department of Justice over its dealings with football’s governing body, Fifa, and that the outcome of the probe could have a material financial impact on the company.

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It said Emilio Azcárraga, 56, who first took the helm of Televisa in the 1990s and is one of Latin America’s most powerful business leaders, would step down with immediate effect.

Televisa, best known for producing telenovela soap operas, is the largest media company in Latin America and the biggest shareholder in US Spanish-language broadcaster Univision. In 2023 it paid $95mn to settle a shareholder lawsuit alleging it bribed Fifa officials to win rights to show World Cup matches.

Azcárraga, whose grandfather founded the company, was chief executive for two decades until 2017 and served as chair until Thursday. It was not clear whether he would return after the probe’s conclusion. The company said it was co-operating with the recently disclosed investigation.

Shares in Televisa have been falling since their peak in 2015 and hit an all-time low this year, as its cable and content businesses face greater competition.

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In its third-quarter results published on Thursday, it said revenues at its cable and satellite businesses fell 4 per cent and 13 per cent respectively. Overall revenue fell 6.4 per cent to 15.36bn pesos ($775mn).

Mexico’s media companies are grappling with the shift to digital streaming and tougher competition for ad revenues. Televisa’s largest competitor in the country, broadcast group TV Azteca, is also facing a lawsuit over alleged non-payment to some of its international creditors.

The 2021 deal to combine Televisa with US broadcaster Univision was aimed at grabbing market share among Latino audiences, particularly in the US, where its Vix streaming service aims to compete with giants such as Netflix.

After the deal, Televisa spun off several assets into a new company run by Azcárraga, including Mexico’s largest football team Club América and the iconic Azteca Stadium, which is being renovated ahead of the 2026 World Cup in North America.

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Our seven step easy-to-follow guide to pumpkin carving this Halloween

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Our seven step easy-to-follow guide to pumpkin carving this Halloween

HALLOWEEN is creeping up on us, so make sure you’re prepared to scare with the perfect pumpkin.

Here’s our guide to carving the most boo-tiful Jack Lantern in town.

Use a stencil to mark out the face - a bigger pumpkin will make this easier

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Use a stencil to mark out the face – a bigger pumpkin will make this easierCredit: Alamy

1) PICK YOUR PUMPKIN CAREFULLY: Try to avoid ­damaged or mottled pumpkins as they may rot more quickly.

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Harder ones will last longer and are also easier to carve. Seek out a thick, green stem to ensure yours is fresh and will look good for longer.

2) SIZE MATTERS: Smaller pumpkins are great for decoration but are harder to carve.

Choose a bigger pumpkin as you will have more leeway to correct any mistakes.

3) TAKE YOUR TIME: Wait until a day or two before Halloween to carve yours, as pumpkins only last for three to five days afterwards, before they start to rot.

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Aim to carve from October 29.

Once the face is carved, cut the lid out at an angle, so it will sit back on top, then scoop out the inside

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Once the face is carved, cut the lid out at an angle, so it will sit back on top, then scoop out the insideCredit: Alamy

4) COOL TOOLS: Use a pumpkin carving kit or improvise with a knife and ice cream scoop.

Cut out the lid at an angle so it will sit back on top then scoop out the inside.

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Supervise your kids at all times.

I’m a parenting expert & next week will be Halloween hell if you don’t make 5 changes now with your little one

5) SUPER STENCILS: Draw on your design with a pen and cut out.

Carving templates are a big help — download one for free at pumpkinlady.com.

6) DON’T USE A NAKED FLAME: A traditional candle can be a fire hazard and should never be left unattended. Instead, pop an LED tea light into your pumpkin.

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pop an LED tea light into your pumpkin and you're ready to scare

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pop an LED tea light into your pumpkin and you’re ready to scare

7) LITTLE GHOSTS AND GHOULS? Get tiny tots involved too.

They will love drawing faces on small pumpkins and squashes with felt-tip pens.

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UK chancellor to unlock financing for critical minerals supply

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Companies that import critical minerals into Britain for use by manufacturers will be able to obtain financing for the first time from UK Export Finance, Rachel Reeves will announce in the Budget on Wednesday. 

The chancellor will say that the measure is needed to help Britain in the global race to secure materials such as lithium, graphite and cobalt that are key to making products ranging from phones to electric vehicles. 

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The Treasury said this would be particularly beneficial for manufacturers in industries such as defence, aerospace and making batteries for electric vehicles. Carmakers Nissan and Jaguar Land Rover-owner Tata are building battery factories in the UK, which experts say is one important step towards growing a domestic critical minerals supply chain.

The goal of shifting energy systems away from fossil fuels and towards renewable energy sources such as solar and wind will require a huge increase in the use of critical minerals. 

The UK is part of a coalition of 14 nations and the European Commission called the “Minerals Security Partnership”, which is trying to increase international collaboration and co-financing for the sector. 

The US and China have been embroiled in a trade war in which Washington has imposed export curbs on semiconductors and other advanced technologies, while Beijing has retaliated by restricting exports of some minerals. 

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The tension has also spilled over into the EU, which this month said it would impose tariffs on imports of Chinese electric vehicles following months of ratcheting tensions between Brussels and Beijing.

Chinese companies control 90 per cent of the world’s processing capacity for rare earths and more than half the processing capacity for nickel, lithium and cobalt.

Jeff Townsend, founder of the Critical Minerals Association, said it was crucial that the UK develop a domestic critical minerals industry to secure long-term supply, a push that the government would need to support.

“There might be projects that don’t work [commercially without government support] but where the strategic value to having your own supply chain far outweighs that,” he said.

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“You’ve got to build everything all at once,” from mines to processing and refining and battery manufacturing, he said. “We’re in a global race.”

The government said the change would make it easier for UKEF, the UK’s export credit agency, to secure finance contracts for critical mineral suppliers in countries such as Australia with large mineral deposits. 

“This addresses a gap in the UK’s existing financial support for manufacturers looking to secure these key minerals, who previously would not have been able to access government support in order to do so,” a spokesperson said. 

They added that the decision strengthened “UKEF’s world-leading export finance support”, bringing the country in line with competitors.

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It comes on the back of the government’s launch of its modern industrial strategy, which will drive “long-term growth that is supportive of net zero, regional growth and economic resilience”, they said.

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