Business
New Business Secretary Peter Kyle to reopen UK-China trade talks in Beijing

New Business Secretary Peter Kyle will travel to Beijing this week to hold the first trade talks with China since 2018.
Mr Kyle will use the relaunch of the UK-China Joint Economic and Trade Commission (Jetco) to seek market access deals worth more than £1 billion over five years, according to the Department for Business and Trade (DBT).
The trip forms part of the Government’s drive to revive UK-China trade ties and boost the British economy.
The former science and technology secretary, who was promoted in Sir Keir Starmer’s recent reshuffle, is expected to arrive in the Chinese capital on Wednesday.
He is largely taking on the schedule of his predecessor in the role, Jonathan Reynolds, now the chief whip.
Mr Kyle will be flanked by UK businesses as he pushes for greater access to the Chinese market in sectors including automotive, professional services and healthcare.
Jetco summits were suspended by Boris Johnson’s Conservative government after Beijing’s crackdown on pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong in 2019.
Mr Kyle will “raise challenges” in the relationship with Beijing, including practices that undercut fair trade and human rights, according to DBT.
There are long-standing concerns about the treatment of Uighur Muslims, constraints on freedoms in Hong Kong and China’s stance on Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Mr Kyle said: “Serious and strategic engagement with the world’s foremost economic players is what will deliver for working people and businesses across the UK.
“Restarting trade talks with China is an essential tool to put money into people’s pockets as part of the Government’s Plan For Change.
“British businesses will be an important part of my visit, helping open doors to greater commercial opportunities.
UK Government in the last financial year” data-source=””>
“More discussions and direct engagement with China will ensure trade between us can flourish, strengthen our national security, and create space to raise concerns constructively where needed.”
Ministers pointed to nearly £2 billion in exports to China backed by the Government in the last financial year, including the Premier League signing an exclusive three-season broadcasting agreement with China Mobile-owned streaming platform Migu, health science firm Cultech Group introducing a probiotic to the Chinese market, and Oxford University Press launching an exhibition at China’s national library.
The Business and Trade Secretary will also co-chair the first Industrial Co-operation Dialogue since 2022, focusing on industrial decarbonisation, the digital economy and standards in the automotive sector.
Ruby Osman, China expert at the Tony Blair Institute, said: “The Secretary of State’s trip follows a string of recent visits – Chancellor Rachel Reeves, former Foreign Secretary David Lammy – that could culminate in a prime ministerial one early next year.
“It’s a striking contrast with the last government, which managed just two ministerial visits to China in five years, yet calling this moment a ‘reset’ risks misunderstanding.”
In an op-ed, she wrote: “Look closer at the policy language and the continuity becomes clear – (Rishi) Sunak’s framework of ‘protect, align, engage’ has become Starmer’s ‘compete, challenge and co-operate’. Both get at the same simple point: China is too big and complex for a one-size-fits-all strategy…
“Britain’s engagement with China does not need fundamental reinvention, it needs continuity. Only consistency built on expertise and capacity will deliver progress – not just this week, but for decades to come.”
Business
AI Gold Rush Breeds Harsh 996 Work Routine In Silicon Valley

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Silicon Valley tech giants battle for AI dominance, offering huge pay and adopting the 9-9-6 culture in San Francisco startups.

AI Boom, Human Cost: San Francisco Startups Push 9-9-6 Work Schedule
The race for AI heats up, with tech companies in Silicon Valley pouring billions into overpowering others and grabbing the largest pie in the emerging market. Companies have reportedly begun poaching human resources by offering millions of dollars in a pay package. No one wishes to lag behind when things are high at stake. Everyone is ready to pour sweat and blood, literal and metaphorical.
At the center of this heated race, a new culture called 9-9-6 has emerged in the startups of San Francisco, USA.
What Is 9-9-6 Culture?
It means employees of these startups work from 9 in the morning to 9 in the evening, Monday through Saturday. It translates to 72 hours of work weekly, going away from 4 or 5 day work week culture being promoted across Europe, particularly Nordic countries for more leisure time.
An X handle named TBPN in the post said that they checked the receipts and found that the claims are “true” – Saturdays have become a workday. “The great lock-in is in full effect,” it added.
Many San Francisco startups claim they practice 9-9-6, so we checked the receipts.We worked with Ramp to look at the data and it’s true – Saturdays have become a workday.
The great lock-in is in full effect. pic.twitter.com/MbwAICe3Dy
— TBPN (@tbpn) September 8, 2025
AI War Among Tech Titans
Several big tech giants, including Meta, Google, Microsoft and Amazon, have poached the startup founders with a high paycheck to work with their teams building the smartest Large Language Models (LLMs) and improving the hot application-based technology. For instance, Meta shocked the tech industry when it announced to invest a $14.3 billion in data labelling startup Scale AI. As part of the agreement, Meta took a 49% stake in the company, hired its CEO Alexandr Wang to lead a new superintelligence lab and said it would deepen the work it does with Scale.
Since the inception of ChatGPT by OpenAI in late 2020, the official age of AI has begun. Two years after the trailblazing technology, there’s no official winner, but a sudden push to have everything as AI-laced.
A team of writers and reporters decodes vast terms of personal finance and making money matters simpler for you. From latest initial public offerings (IPOs) in the market to best investment options, we cover al…Read More
A team of writers and reporters decodes vast terms of personal finance and making money matters simpler for you. From latest initial public offerings (IPOs) in the market to best investment options, we cover al… Read More
September 10, 2025, 10:22 IST
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Business
Donald Trump’s tariff battle: US Supreme Court fast-tracks review; presidential power limits questioned – The Times of India

The Supreme Court on Tuesday agreed to take up a fast-track review of the Trump administration’s sweeping global tariffs, setting a November hearing that could decide the fate of one of US President Donald Trump’s most significant economic policies. The justices approved an unusually brisk schedule after a federal appeals court last month struck down much of the program, ruling in a 7-4 decision that Trump unlawfully invoked the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose steep import taxes on major US trading partners. The tariffs, however, will remain in effect during the litigation. Five small businesses and a dozen states had challenged the duties, arguing that Congress — not the president — holds the power to levy taxes. “Congress, not the President alone, has the power to impose tariffs,” said Jeffrey Schwab of the Liberty Justice Center, representing affected enterprises that warn of near-bankruptcy under the duties. The administration countered that the 1977 emergency law gives the president broad authority to regulate imports when national security or the economy is threatened. Solicitor General D. John Sauer warned that the appeals court ruling “casts a pall of uncertainty upon ongoing foreign negotiations that the president has been pursuing through tariffs … jeopardizing both already negotiated framework deals and ongoing negotiations,” as quoted by NYT. The stakes are high: Trump has used tariffs both as leverage in trade talks and as a revenue source, with collections reaching £159 billion by late August — more than double last year’s figure. Officials also cautioned that overturning the tariffs could force the Treasury to refund billions, potentially affecting resources earmarked for fentanyl control and support for Ukraine in its war with Russia. The case marks the first time the Supreme Court will hear full arguments on Trump’s expansive use of emergency powers, after previously granting temporary approvals for other policies. With a conservative majority that includes three Trump appointees, the court will now weigh whether presidential authority under IEEPA extends to such far-reaching trade actions — or whether Congress must reclaim the power to tax.
Business
Contactless card payments could become unlimited under new plans

Kevin PeacheyCost of living correspondent, BBC News

Contactless card payments are set to exceed £100 and potentially become unlimited under new proposals to allow banks and other providers to set limits.
The proposals from the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) mean entering a four-digit PIN to make a card payment could become even more of a rarity for shoppers.
If approved, purchases which can cost more than £100 – such as a big supermarket shop, or large family meal in a restaurant – could be made with a tap of a card.
The move would bring cards in line with payments made through digital wallets on smartphones which have no restriction, and reflects the ongoing changes in the way people pay.
When contactless card payments were introduced in 2007, the transaction limit was set at £10. The limit was raised gradually, to £15 in 2010, to £20 in 2012, then to £30 in 2015, before the Covid pandemic prompted a jump to £45 in 2020, then to £100 in October 2021.
If approved, the latest plan could be put in place early next year.
Every rise has been met with concerns about theft and fraud, and the FCA said card providers would only permit higher-value contactless payments for low-risk transactions and would carry the burden if things went wrong.
However, the freedom for banks to raise or even scrap the contactless limit suggests the four-digit PIN could soon become relatively redundant.
The FCA has proposed the changes, despite the majority of consumers and industry respondents to a consultation favouring the current rules.
Some 78% of consumers who responded said they did not want any change to the limits.
The FCA said it did not expect any quick changes, but providers would welcome the flexibility over time when prices rise and technology advances. They could also give customers the option to set their own limits.
Fraud and theft fears
The idea of high-value payments being made with a tap of a card will raise concern that thieves and fraudsters will target cards.
Various protections are already in place. In addition to the £100 single payment limit, consumers are often required to enter a PIN if a series of contactless transactions totals more than £300, or five consecutive contactless payments are made.
The FCA’s own analysis suggests raising the limits would increase fraud losses, but said detection was improving and would continue to get better.
It said any change would be reliant on providers ensuring payments were low-risk, through their fraud prevention systems.
Consumers would still get their money back if money was stolen by fraudsters, according to David Geale, from the FCA.
“People are still protected. Even with contactless, firms will refund your money if your card is used fraudulently,” he said.
Many banks already allow cardholders to set a contactless limit of lower than £100, or switch it off completely, and the FCA expected this option to be made widely available.
It argued that time savings, less “payment friction”, and a reflection of rising prices over time would make changes in the limits worthwhile.
Payment terminals would also need to be altered, as most are programmed to automatically refuse payments of more than £100 by card.
‘I only use my phone to pay’
Smartphones already have an extra layer of security, through thumbprints or face ID. That allows people to pay without limits.
Nearly three-quarters of 16 to 24-year-olds regularly use mobile payments, according to industry research.
Near the appropriately named Bank Street in Sevenoaks, 24-year-old Demi Grady said she rarely bothered carrying her cards around anymore because she used her phone for everything.
“I was in London the other day, my phone died and I couldn’t pay for stuff because I couldn’t remember my card details,” she said.
Her mum, Carrie, in contrast, uses her card when shopping.
“It would worry me more than be of benefit if they were to lose the limit of £100,” she said.

Robert Ryan, who had just bought a “winter-ish jacket” at a Harveys Menswear on Bank Street said he did not regard entering a four-digit number when paying as a hassle. Instead it could be a useful budgeting tool.
“I feel more secure in what I’m buying and it does give me a bit of a prompt to make sure I’m not overspending on my tap-and-go,” he said.
Richard Staplehurst, the owner of the store, said the majority of his customers were paying via a device.
He said that removing any obstacles to payment was great, but he did not want to be landed with a bill if a card was used fraudulently.
Stimulating the UK economy
The idea of removing the contactless limit was highlighted as one way the FCA was responding to the prime minister’s call to regulators to remove restrictions to create more economic growth.
The government has been striving to improve the UK’s economic performance, which has been slow for some time.
Other countries, such as Canada, Australia and New Zealand allow industry to set contactless card limits.
The FCA will consult on its proposals until 15 October.
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