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Financial Times - Friday, June 4,

These are the most popular stories from the Financial Times. These stories have not been verified and we cannot vouch for the accuracy of these reports.

Headlines

- KKR feared a political risk in the Thames Water Rescue deal

UK Serious Fraud Office investigates company who sold solar farms Thurrock Council

British Industry Exempted From Trump's Doubling of Steel Tariffs

Rachel Reeves, British Finance Minister, will support the Manchester-Liverpool railway link as part of a boost to transport spending

Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England defends UK rules on ringfencing for lenders

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Thames Water has suffered a major blow in its battle to avoid nationalisation. The U.S. private-equity firm KKR withdrew from a multi-billion-pound rescue plan partly because of concerns over political interference.

The Serious Fraud Office in Britain (SFO), has announced that it has launched an investigation against Rockfire Investment Finance. This company sold a bond scheme that was linked to solar farms, which led to a council in England being declared bankrupt by 2022.

The U.S. President Donald Trump exempted the UK from doubling steel and aluminum tariffs in the United States, while British bosses urged British Prime Minister Keir starmer to act quickly on a deal that would completely eliminate these levies

As part of the Whitehall Spending Review next week, UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves approved plans to spend billions of dollars on a new rail line between Manchester and Liverpool as well as other transport schemes.

Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, has defended ringfencing regulations that force UK lenders separate their retail activities from other activities. He said that removing these rules would increase mortgages and other loan costs. (Compiled by Bengaluru Newsroom)

(source: Reuters)