Sept 26 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories in
the Financial Times. Reuters has not verified these stories and
does not vouch for their accuracy.
Headlines
- Starmer and von der Leyen to hold talks on resetting UK-EU
relations
- Rightmove ( RTMVF ) rejects third offer from Rupert Murdoch-owned
REA
- Britain presses Spanish group to bid for Harland & Wolff's
UK shipyards
- Boeing's ( BA ) supply chain shudders as workers walk and
production slows
- OpenAI chief technology officer Mira Murati to leave in
latest shake-up
Overview
Keir Starmer will visit Brussels next week to meet European
Commission president Ursula von der Leyen, and launch the start
of talks about what he hopes will be a "reset" of the UK's
post-Brexit relationship with the EU.
Rightmove ( RTMVF ) said on Wednesday it had rejected a third
offer from Australian rival REA Group ( RPGRF ), describing the
bid as "unattractive".
The UK government is seeking to persuade the Spanish defence
company Navantia to bid for four shipyards owned by Harland &
Wolff, as ministers try to avoid job losses at the
struggling British shipbuilder.
Spirit AeroSystems ( SPR ), Boeing's ( BA ) struggling
supplier, will begin furloughs in three weeks if a strike at its
biggest customer continues, in a signal of how the work stoppage
in Washington is rippling through the aerospace supply chain.
Mira Murati, Microsoft ( MSFT )-backed OpenAI's chief
technology officer, is one of several employees leaving the
company, triggering a leadership shake-up at the AI start-up as
it discusses changing its corporate structure.
(Compiled by Bengaluru newsroom)