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Bloomberg MarketsAegea Investors, Equatorial Bid in One of Brazil’s Biggest Deals This YearBloomberg MarketsOil Holds Decline as Traders See Progress Toward Iranian DealFinancial TimesCarney warns Alberta separatists of Brexit-style regretFinancial TimesMexico agrees to host Iranian World Cup squad as US-Iran tensions simmerFinancial TimesNetanyahu orders Israeli military to step up attacks on HizbollahEconbrowserHow Glum? Bloomberg Consensus on Conference Board Confidence IndexBloomberg MarketsHungary Sees May 28 Deal With EU on Frozen Funds, PM Magyar SaysFinancial TimesIran’s top negotiators travel to Qatar amid intensified efforts to secure dealBloomberg MarketsVigilant ECB Hasn’t Yet Seen Second-Round Effects, Villeroy SaysBloomberg MarketsGhana to Start Buying 30% of Large Gold Mines’ Ouput From JuneBloomberg MarketsCox Group Took 20% Bridge Loan for Iberdrola Mexico DealFinancial TimesCounting the cost of New York’s sky-high food billsBloomberg MarketsCzech Premier Urges Interest Rate Cut as Inflation Risks GrowBloomberg MarketsTop Bauxite Producer Guinea to Unveil Export Controls in JuneFinancial TimesTwo LNG tankers pass through Strait of HormuzBloomberg MarketsAegea Investors, Equatorial Bid in One of Brazil’s Biggest Deals This YearBloomberg MarketsOil Holds Decline as Traders See Progress Toward Iranian DealFinancial TimesCarney warns Alberta separatists of Brexit-style regretFinancial TimesMexico agrees to host Iranian World Cup squad as US-Iran tensions simmerFinancial TimesNetanyahu orders Israeli military to step up attacks on HizbollahEconbrowserHow Glum? Bloomberg Consensus on Conference Board Confidence IndexBloomberg MarketsHungary Sees May 28 Deal With EU on Frozen Funds, PM Magyar SaysFinancial TimesIran’s top negotiators travel to Qatar amid intensified efforts to secure dealBloomberg MarketsVigilant ECB Hasn’t Yet Seen Second-Round Effects, Villeroy SaysBloomberg MarketsGhana to Start Buying 30% of Large Gold Mines’ Ouput From JuneBloomberg MarketsCox Group Took 20% Bridge Loan for Iberdrola Mexico DealFinancial TimesCounting the cost of New York’s sky-high food billsBloomberg MarketsCzech Premier Urges Interest Rate Cut as Inflation Risks GrowBloomberg MarketsTop Bauxite Producer Guinea to Unveil Export Controls in JuneFinancial TimesTwo LNG tankers pass through Strait of Hormuz
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Financial Timesglobal

Carney warns Alberta separatists of Brexit-style regret

Financial Times
Monday, May 25, 2026 at 9:23 PM
~4 min read
Energy

Original Report

Canada’s prime minister says oil-rich province’s push for independence is a ‘dangerous bluff’

Glass House Analysis

Energy prices affect virtually every aspect of daily life—from commuting costs to heating bills to the price of groceries (which must be transported). For working families, energy represents one of the most volatile and impactful line items in their budgets. Energy policy decisions ripple through the economy, affecting everything from manufacturing competitiveness to household financial stress.

The implications extend beyond the immediate news cycle. Every economic development creates ripples that affect employment, prices, and opportunities in ways that may not be immediately visible but are deeply felt. By tracking these connections, we can better understand how the economy truly works—not as an abstract machine, but as a human system shaped by and shaping the lives of millions.

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