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Iryna Mudra is now deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential office, not deputy justice minister as wrongly stated in an article on May 3
Venture capital fund Silverstripe backs mortgage lender Perenna, rather than Silverstream
Luminate is an independent music data analytics company and is no longer owned by Nielsen Music
Epsom College in Malaysia is giving UK parents the chance to pay a frozen fee rate of £28,000 a year for the duration of a British student’s education between Year 9 and Year 13, not £26,000 as wrongly stated in an article on May 4
Russian media outlet Interfax is not state owned as incorrectly stated in an article on April 23.
A recent poll by Savanta has been corrected to show that West Midlands mayor Andy Street was three points behind his Labour rival Richard Parker
The late photographer worked for Getty, not AP as wrongly stated in an article in April 6/7’s FT Weekend Magazine
Stripe co-founder John Collison’s name was misspelt in an article on March 16. We apologise for the error
An advertisement illustrating an article on central heating in House & Home on March 23 was from the 1960s, not the 1970s as wrongly stated in the caption
From Gordon Springett, London SW18, UK
Japanese brewer Asahi plans to increase the share of beverages with 3.5 per cent alcohol or less from about 10 per cent last year to 20 per cent of its product mix by 2030, not 30 per cent as wrongly stated in an article on April 15
Susan Neiman’s book is titled ‘Left Is Not Woke’, not ‘Woke Is Not Left’, as wrongly stated in a book review in March 23/24’s Life & Arts
Labels showing the number of Labour and Conservative candidates running in the UK’s local elections were transposed in a chart on April 19. There are 2,512 Tory candidates and 2,427 Labour
Private sector companies have to date raised $6bn in private funding for fusion energy projects, not $6mn as wrongly stated in a Special Report on Nuclear Energy on March 21.
The billionaire real estate developer bought credit default swaps during the 2008 financial crisis, rather March 3/4’s FT Weekend Magazine
The environment department is allocating £11mn collected in fines against water companies to environmental restoration projects, not the Environment Agency, as wrongly stated in an article on April 9.
An analyst’s quote in an article on March 5 was wrongly attributed to Charlie Chai of 86Research. It should have been Charlie Dai of Forrester.
...Indeed, conditions are ripe for a correction. The AI stock market boom has been pricing in too much too fast....
A chart accompanying an article on the trading of Nvidia options on February 19 was wrongly labelled
A US jury award of $60mn in damages to a mother who said her baby died after consuming Reckitt’s Enfamil baby formula was $35mn more than the sum sought by the plaintiff’s lawyers, not $25mn more as wrongly stated in an article on March 16
The Labour party donor moved to the UK 35 years ago, rather than 13 years ago as incorrectly stated in February 17/18’s FT Weekend Magazine
An article on steak in the FT Weekend Magazine on March 23 incorrectly stated that Antonio Mata and Oklahoma State University failed to gain a patent for the extraction of the “Vegas Strip” shoulder steak. A patent was granted in 2017.
Embraer’s 195-E2 aircraft can carry 146 passengers, not 132 as wrongly stated in an article on January 29.
The Office for Budget Responsibility has warned that freezing fuel duty in the long run would cost the Treasury £6.3bn by the end of the decade, not more than £8bn as wrongly state in an article on March 7
The US withdrew from Afghanistan in 2021, not 2020 as wrongly stated in an article on January 15
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