LONDON: The Financial Times today announces the appointment of Stuart Kirk as its global editor of Lex, the FT’s renowned business and financial column. Kirk assumes this role with immediate effect and will lead the team from New York until he relocates to London on 1st February 2012.

Kirk has written for and edited the column since 2006, serving most recently as deputy Lex editor. Prior to joining the FT, Kirk worked as a management consultant for Mercer Oliver Wyman and as a senior portfolio manager at Deutsche Asset Management. He read economics at the University of Cambridge where he was President of the Union.

Lionel Barber, editor of the Financial Times, commented: “Stuart’s contributions to the Lex column have been consistently clear and insightful. He brings a deep, practical understanding of companies and markets to the role and has helped strengthen Lex’s reputation as the premier financial column in the world. He is well-suited to lead its next phase of development across print and digital formats.”

Lex, the flagship daily opinion column that fills the back page of the FT and is available to premium subscribers online, first appeared in 1945. Truly international in its scope, its columnists are stationed in London, New York, Hong Kong and Tokyo.

Kirk joins Lex’s distinguished editor alumni, which include Nigel Lawson, former UK Chancellor of the Exchequer; Martin Taylor, former Barclays Bank chief executive; and Richard Lambert, former director general of the Confederation of British Industry.

He replaces John Authers, who will become the FT’s senior investment columnist.

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For further information please contact:

Darcy Keller
Head of Communications, The Americas
T: 212-641-6614
E: darcy.keller@ft.com

Kristina Eriksson
Head of Communications, EMEA
T: +44 (0) 20 7873 4961
E:  Kristina.Eriksson@ft.com

Azmar Sukandar
Head of Communications, Asia Pacific
T: (+852) 2905 5519
E: azmar.sukandar@ft.com

About the Financial Times:

The Financial Times, one of the world’s leading business news organisations, is recognised internationally for its authority, integrity and accuracy. Providing essential news, comment, data and analysis for the global business community, the FT has a combined paid print and digital circulation of 592,390 (Deloitte assured, 4 July to 2 October 2011) and a combined print and online average daily readership of 2.1 million people worldwide (PwC assured, May 2011). FT.com has over 4 million registered users and 247,807 paying digital subscribers. The newspaper, printed at 23 print sites across the globe, has a global print circulation of 344,583 (ABC, September 2011).

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