Will Japan’s next PM revive Abenomics?

日本下一位首相能重振安倍经济学吗?

FT News Briefing

2025-10-06

11 分钟
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Israel and Hamas head into crunch-time negotiations in Cairo, and Japan’s prospective new prime minister will have work to do to bring her party back together. Plus, Europe is facing a flood of cheap Chinese textile imports, and investors are piling into an unproven technology to power the US artificial intelligence boom.  Mentioned in this podcast: Israel and Hamas prepare for crunch ceasefire talks Japan gears up for ‘Takaichi trade’ as first female leader prepares for power China reroutes clothes exports to Europe after US tariffs upset trade US and investors gambling on unproven nuclear technology, warn experts Billionaire beef baron warns US not producing enough to satisfy protein craze Today’s FT News Briefing was produced by Ethan Plotkin, Victoria Craig, Katya Kumkova, Sonja Hutson, and Marc Filippino. Additional help from Alex Higgins and Peter Barber. The FT’s acting co-head of audio is Topher Forhecz. The show’s theme music is by Metaphor Music. Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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  • Good morning from The Financial Times.

  • Today is Monday, October 6th, and this is your FT News Briefing.

  • Hamas and Israel head to another round of negotiations,

  • and Japan is bracing for a new and boundary-breaking Prime Minister.

  • Plus, can small nuclear reactors help power the AI energy boom?

  • They offer to solve a problem for data centers,

  • which is that they need reliable, clean energy at an affordable price.

  • I'm Victoria Craig and here's the news you need to start your day.

  • All eyes are trained on Cairo today where indirect talks between Israel and Hamas are set to take place.

  • The two sides, with the help of Arab and American negotiators,

  • will get down to brass tacks on President Donald Trump's 20-point plan to end the war in Gaza.

  • Hamas said it's willing to release Israeli hostages and hand over Gaza's governance to a Palestinian committee,

  • but it's not clear whether the militant group will accept disarmament, a key pillar of the plan.

  • Speaking on NBC's Meet the Press, U.S.

  • Secretary of State Marco Rubio said addressing those gaps is key to long-term peace.

  • All that work, that's going to be hard,

  • but that's critical because without that you're not going to have lasting peace.

  • You may get the hostages back, you may get a cessation of hostilities,

  • but in the long term it's going to happen all over again.

  • Pressure for a deal is mounting after Trump said he will quote, not tolerate delay.