FT : What exactly are we paying for? The legacy of privatising utilities

What exactly are we paying for? The legacy of privatising utilities
All-round expertise is lacking, but urgently needed to run key public services efficiently

Public utilities in Britain are in crisis. Thames Water teeters on the edge of bankruptcy, while campaigners draw attention to the dismal environmental standards of that and other water companies.

Spiralling energy prices have breached the Bank of England’s inflation targets. The undersupply of social housing has created a rental crisis. Light-touch regulation of financial services, which led to the banking crisis in 2008, is replaced by ever-expanding rule books whose complexity even expanded compliance departments struggle to master.

The Thatcherite revolution, with its emphasis on deregulation and privatisation, is now widely perceived as a failure. Today, widespread demands for more regulation to protect consumers are occasionally punctuated by calls to promote growth by regulating less.

Legislation to create Great British Energy has just received Royal Assent, and we will soon be commuting on Great British Railways. The signature privatisation of the present decade is the disposal of the government’s stake in what is again NatWest Bank, acquired after the newly regulated financial institution failed in 2008.

How did we get here? And where should we go now?

The performance of Britain’s nationalised industries in the pre-Thatcher years had mostly been dismal. Most seriously, the Central Electricity Generating Board failed to deliver the wildly expensive and ambitious plans put forward in the 1960s to supply Britain’s electricity from atomic power, and did not succeed in building an export industry around the technology.

The Treasury’s engagement with nationalised industries became a vain attempt to stop them acting as a black hole for taxpayers’ funds or obstructing the attempted control of inflation. As Ian Byatt, head of the government economic service through the 1980s, and then first director of water regulation, subsequently explained: “The failure to resolve tensions led to inefficiency and poor financial discipline.”

The claim of the reformers was that profit-driven private enterprise was generally more efficient and innovative than institutions managed directly by the central government and administered by civil servants. New regulatory agencies would represent the inescapable public interest in the activities concerned and devise a framework of rules.

Competition between providers was to be encouraged, but if a monopoly continued, as seemed inevitable in industries such as water and electricity distribution — with massive sunk costs in distribution networks — pricing policy would be constrained by regulatory determinations.

Provided they complied with the regulations, shareholder-controlled firms and their managers would be allowed, even encouraged, to make as much money as possible for their financiers and their managers. Privatisation began with the tentative disposal of British Railways hotels to established hoteliers, reached its zenith with the stock exchange flotation of British Telecom and British Gas, and ended in the 1990s with the break-up of British Rail itself.

Privatisation had not been central to the plans that Thatcher’s advisers had framed in opposition. The sale and flotation of state industries reached the Thatcher government agenda because of the large capital requirements of the telecoms sector, most urgently for investment in digital switching. A government determined to keep public expenditure within restrictive borrowing targets was anxious to take this investment off the public balance sheet. The conclusion, reached with some reluctance, was that this could only be done by removing the whole operations of British Telecom, now separated from the Post Office, from government accounts.

And that required the sale of at least half of the equity. Initially, large investment institutions were unenthusiastic about buying a slice of a nationalised industry but then advisers had the idea of appealing to the public at large, and the heavily publicised offer was four times oversubscribed.

Attracted by a small discount, two million people bought at least a few BT shares, many of them becoming shareholders for the first time. Wider share ownership became a professed objective of privatisation, culminating in the “Tell Sid” advertising campaign to promote the stock of British Gas in 1986. 

Aspects of this programme were an undoubted success, as anyone who has recently visited what was once a British Rail hotel can testify. Older relatives may recall the British Rail sandwich, without pleasure, and remember the days when there was a long waiting list to become a subscriber (as customers were then called) to the telephone network.

The notion that you could buy your own phone and choose between competing providers was beyond imagination. British Airways became an internationally competitive airline and low-cost competitors made travel affordable to a much wider audience.

A plethora of new regulatory agencies emerged — Ofwat (water), Oftel (telecoms), Ofgas and Offer, subsequently merged into Ofgem (energy), the Financial Services Authority (now the Financial Conduct Authority), and many others. The term Quango (quasi-autonomous non-governmental organisation) was imported from the US to describe this new phenomenon, expressing an ambiguity about status which persists to the present day.


But there is now widespread and well-founded dissatisfaction with the performance of these bodies. The water crisis seems urgent — how can you go bust providing water to the households and businesses of London at high prices while maintaining inadequate environmental safeguards? But Thames Water has so far avoided that fate only with eye-wateringly expensive emergency funding.

The present government looked for fresh wisdom from the not entirely happy experience of financial services. Sir Jon Cunliffe, a former deputy governor of the Bank of England, chaired a commission to review governance of water. Some 93 per cent of respondents to his inquiry judged the performance of the regulatory framework in the industry to have been “poor” or “very poor”.

What is needed, Cunliffe concluded, is greater and more co-ordinated regulation. A new agency should take over the existing powers of Ofwat to determine prices and review investment plans, as well as the Drinking Water Inspectorate’s prescription of water quality standards, the Environment Agency’s restrictions on sewage emissions, and Natural England’s role in the overall management of water resources. The new agency should base its exercise of these multiple powers on cost-benefit analysis.

So this super-regulator will need to employ a team of people with financial skills and economic expertise, environmental and public health expertise, detailed operational knowledge of the mechanics of water supply and wastewater disposal, plus the managerial skills required to integrate these capabilities and review the activities of a large and dispersed workforce. It is an ambitious, admirable objective. No such teams exist today and the creation of them will require its members to acquire a wide range of skills, and hone them through practical experience, a demanding but necessary task.

We do need to establish and train groups of people with that background, and it is obvious what they should be doing: they should form the executive management and board of a water company. The water industry illustrates particularly clearly the need for management to possess a range of professional skills which were inadequately provided when the activity was, historically, the responsibility of municipal water boards or more recently that of a corporation controlled by an international financial institution or consortium.

A privatised water company requires effective accountability to a range of stakeholders — water consumers in households and businesses, homes, streets and businesses relying on the disposal of wastewater, wild swimmers and river users, and a broad population which often derives unseen benefits from water management.

Balancing these legitimate and at times conflicting needs and expectations is the characteristic duty of a corporate board. Most people who work for businesses traditionally recognised that necessity. Yet the neoliberal era ushered in a doctrine that the primary, even the only, purpose of a corporation was to maximise its value for its shareholders. I recall an executive director of a failed bank expressing regret for the events which provoked the 2008 crisis. He observed: “The regulator should have stopped us doing that.” His excuse exemplified the confusion between the functions of the regulator and the functions of the board of the business that is at the heart of our present problems.

There are, of course, people and institutions whose primary interest in corporate activity is the opportunity to enrich themselves. But I am not alone in saying that I do not want these people and institutions supplying my drinking water. Nor do I want them running schools and hospitals or entrusted with my savings.


The idea that such arrangements will work if institutions whose purpose is to maximise the value of their shares are constrained by a sufficiently extensive rule book is implausible and has failed. This invites smart and greedy people to find ways to extract revenue from the business while pushing the limits of the rules. And that is what has happened in water. Financial institutions have taken advantage of the regulations governing the cost of capital and the regulatory asset base to pay themselves large dividends and their executives substantial bonuses, while bills increase and dissatisfaction with performance grows.

Water and sewerage are capital-intensive businesses, but raising capital for them is not very difficult. Investment there is long-term and low risk; the ownership of water pipes represents exactly the kind of activity appropriate for pension saving and other dull but necessary investments. The principal uncertainties of returns relate less to the business than to the future of the regulatory regime.

The need for complex financial engineering is minimal. The expertise of firms like Macquarie, the Australian investment bank, and KKR, one of the US’s most aggressive private equity firms, is not relevant or required, since the major challenges for the management of these industries are technological not financial.

I would like to see London’s water supply in the hands of people whose principal concern is to provide reliable and effective service to the people of London, and for whom the objective of providing exceptional returns to investors on a three-to-five-year timescale is secondary. I look with gratitude to 19th century figures such as Dr John Snow — the first water regulator, who saved thousands from cholera by removing the handle from the water pump in Soho’s Broad Street (now Broadwick Street), and Joseph Bazalgette, who planned and supervised the construction of the embankments, which contain the sewers of London.

It is people like them, with both relevant expertise and a sense of public purpose, we need today. One trained as a doctor, one as an engineer; both exemplified the combination of subject specific knowledge, practical experience acquired through apprenticeship, and adherence to a regulatory code. It is a background which used to be characteristic of the professions we once admired, and sometimes still do. 

This essay is not a call for water nationalisation. We know that the state-owned water industry was underinvested and overmanned. Delays and overruns at HS2 and Hinkley Point C serve as potent and continued reminders of the persistence of poor public management.

We need to give institutions providing public utility services the freedom to deploy professional management skills in their operation. The role of regulators should be similar to those that apply in other professional activities — not to duplicate or replace the management of the business, but to ensure that the individuals who occupy senior positions have the relevant abilities and experience (of which financial expertise is a small, if necessary, part). It should be clear policy that egregious failure to serve the public interest leads quickly and inevitably to loss of the operating licence.

We do not need and should not want a still more extensive rule book, nor nationalisation, nor financial restructuring. Instead, we should seek a better model of the structure and governance of public utilities. 

FT : City grandee Michael Sherwood says Revolut systems are now ‘Goldman quality

City grandee Michael Sherwood says Revolut systems are now ‘Goldman quality’
Former Goldman executive is a longtime board member of the fintech, which has struggled to win a UK banking licence


Revolut, the fast-growing fintech that has struggled to secure a UK banking licence, now has “Goldman Sachs quality” information systems, according to longtime board member and former Goldman executive Michael Sherwood.

“It’s hard to second guess our regulatory friends,” Sherwood told the Financial Times in his first interview since stepping down as co-head of Goldman Sachs International nine years ago. “But I don’t hear anything that makes me think [the licence] won’t come.”

Thanks in large part to the drive of chief executive Nik Storonsky, Revolut is Britain’s biggest fintech, growing at a rate of up to 3mn new customers a month and with a recent valuation of $75bn.

“He has a grasp of numbers, like almost no one I’ve ever met,” said Sherwood, highlighting the strong performance and “extraordinary ROEs [returns on equity]” of the group, which operates mainly in the foreign exchange and crypto investment sectors.

“I’m not a crypto investor per se,” Sherwood himself confessed.

The former Goldman banker — one of two “big beasts” on the Revolut board, alongside chair Martin Gilbert — admitted the company had experienced “growing pains”. In 2023, BDO, the group’s former auditor, said its 2021 revenues may have been “materially misstated”. It has been trying to get a banking licence since 2021.

Sherwood said the professionalisation of Revolut’s operations and governance was ongoing, with “one or two more” non-executives set to join to satisfy regulatory demands for more boardroom experience.

“They say, ‘well, you need more people with retail banking experience . . . ’ and so you say, ‘well, tell me which retail banks have done a great job’. Every single one of them, whether it’s PPI or car loans, you name it, [there’s been a scandal]. I think Revolut’s a breath of fresh air.”

Sherwood confirmed that once a UK banking licence was obtained, the plan was to proceed quickly with an acquisition in the US, but he played down the importance of such a deal to growth, stressing Revolut’s focus on currency exchange was not a natural fit in the US.

“The US is synonymous with being a mono-currency environment, so there are particular pockets that are interesting to us, like Mexicans who mail money back to Mexico. But I don’t think the US is going to be a massive driver of Revolut going forward.”

He also noted there was no prospect of an IPO for “at least” the next two years.

In a wide-ranging interview, Sherwood called US President Donald Trump a figure of “dread” whose “outcomes are extraordinarily good”. The former fixed-income trader characterised current market conditions as “relatively irrational” and “not dissimilar” to the dotcom bubble of 2000.

More professionalised cyber attacks were the biggest threat to markets, companies and societies, he said, urging collective action by government and businesses to tackle the problem.

He said that the mass adoption of artificial intelligence meant companies such as Revolut were hiring at a slower rate. The technology was doing the equivalent of “thousands of jobs a year”, he added, and could lead to millions of job losses across the economy. That would force governments to enlarge social security nets. And in turn, “some sort of robot technology tax is going to be inevitable for the world”, he concluded.

Reflecting on his time at Goldman, Sherwood praised former chief executive Lloyd Blankfein, while describing current boss David Solomon as “a survivor [who has] done a good job and the stock price has done amazingly . . . I’m a happy shareholder”.

The board seat at Revolut is now Sherwood’s only major finance role, though he is involved in other companies through his portfolio of angel and early-stage investments, managing a personal fortune of close to £200mn, according to the Sunday Times Rich List.

He said he also devoted a lot of energy to Greenhouse Sports, a children’s charity he helped found more than 20 years ago, which runs coaching in table tennis, basketball, tennis and a range of other sports in more than 60 schools with a focus on economic disadvantage.

This weekend, Greenhouse is launching a 36-hour fundraising drive, largely on WhatsApp. The “For Every Future” campaign’s £6mn fundraising target is designed to replenish the charity’s reserves following the £8mn restoration of its London hub, which houses its office and a community centre offering sports sessions.

Sherwood himself is a keen amateur table tennis player and his father played for England. The charity’s 100 staff and 65 coaches-cum-mentors help about 9,000 children a year, focusing on sports and wider life skills. “It’s much more likely that your sports teacher is going to be your life skills mentor than your maths teacher,” said Sherwood. “You get to bond with those people a lot more.”

FT : Spain drafts king into China charm offensive

Spain drafts king into China charm offensive
King Felipe VI’s upcoming state visit highlights Madrid’s warm relations with Beijing amid US-China tensions

The Spanish king will travel to China next month as part of his country’s efforts to bolster ties with Beijing, the first European monarch to embark on such a trip in seven years.

The royal household is preparing to announce a state visit by King Felipe VI in November, according to people familiar with the matter, in a move that Spanish officials said underscored the “very high level” relations between Spain and China.

The king’s visit has been orchestrated by the leftwing government of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who leads the most openly pro-China administration in western Europe as he seeks to strengthen economic ties with the country despite pressure from Washington to be cool towards it.

“Asia was the region where Spain did not have a historical presence. If you want to have a global foreign policy you have to talk to everyone, especially China and India,” José Manuel Albares, Spanish foreign minister, told the Financial Times.

US President Donald Trump has had a rollercoaster relationship with Beijing since returning to the White House. Tensions eased in the latest chapter on Thursday as Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed to postpone export controls on rare earths and chips as part of a one-year trade deal.

Earlier this year Scott Bessent, US Treasury secretary, warned Madrid that aligning more closely with China “would be cutting your own throat”. He did not repeat the warning on a visit to Madrid in September, when Spain hosted US-China talks that paved the way for Thursday’s trade truce.

Albares insisted that engaging with China did not mean Spain was distancing itself from the US. “We have a good dialogue with China. We have an alliance with the US,” he said.

While the Spanish king will be making his first visit to China in 11 years on the throne, Sánchez has already met Xi three times in less than three years.

The EU in recent years has taken more aggressive steps against China’s subsidised exports and insisted on more technology transfers. But some governments have struggled to find the right balance, with German foreign minister Johann Wadephul recently forced to cancel a trip to China due to mounting tensions.

The Spanish monarch will be accompanied by a large group of corporate leaders from sectors including autos, food, energy and pharmaceuticals, according to one business official. His trip coincides with the 20th anniversary of a “comprehensive strategic partnership” agreed by Madrid and Beijing.

The last European royal to make a state visit to China was the king of Norway in 2018.

Spain is eager to attract investments from high-end Chinese manufacturers, notably in the electric vehicle sector, where it sees China’s technology as key to guaranteeing the future of Spanish industry.

Madrid also wants to export more to China. In the first eight months of 2025, Spain had a €26.9bn trade deficit with China that was equal to 77 per cent of its total deficit of €35.1bn.

Chinese-built factories, such as a €4bn battery plant planned by CATL near Zaragoza, have the potential to reduce imports from China while also creating jobs. But union officials and China experts have warned that Chinese companies will be reluctant to share their technological secrets.

Spain’s engagement with China has been marked by a lack of domestic dissent. By contrast, China policy in the UK, France and Germany has sparked fierce debates over how to balance economic interests with concerns about security and over-reliance on Beijing.

Madrid resisted US pressure after the heads of intelligence committees in the US Congress criticised the Spanish government for signing a €12mn contract to use Huawei hardware to store wiretaps, warning it was “playing with fire” and putting national security at risk.

Spain is also in Trump’s cross hairs for rejecting his demand to spend 5 per cent of its GDP on defence — which all other Nato allies have agreed to. This month Trump mused about ejecting Spain from Nato or punishing it with tariffs.

Spanish officials say they have no choice but to build ties with China because the “unipolar” era of US hegemony is over and Spain needs to be on good terms with rising powers such as India, Brazil and the Gulf states.

Some experts, however, warn that Spain risks locking itself into a relationship of dependency.

Juan Luis Manfredi, senior lecturer in foreign policy at the University of Castilla-La Mancha, said: “China is a neocolonial power trying to increase its bargaining power on European issues through Spain, and it can do that because we need money, we need finance.”

“Spain is not well-placed to stand toe-to-toe with China because Spain lacks statecraft. It lacks the capacity to co-ordinate military power, foreign policy and aid,” Manfredi added.

Chinese officials regularly scold their European counterparts for not being more independent from the US in their foreign policy. During a visit to Europe last year, Xi lavished praise on China-friendly governments in Serbia and Hungary.

Charles Powell, director of the Elcano Royal Institute, a think-tank, defended Spain’s stance on China, noting that the EU was divided on how to deal with the Asian powerhouse. “So in reality everyone is breaking ranks. Spain . . . is neither among the most conciliatory nor the most confrontational members.”

>>> US After Hours Summary: NFLX +3.3% on 10-for-1 stock split; some notable nam

After Hours Summary: NFLX +3.3% on 10-for-1 stock split; some notable names reported -- AMZN +13.5%, WDC +8.8%, TWLO +8.5%, RDDT +8.2%, TEAM +6.9%, AAPL +3%, ZG +2.8%; SPSC -24%, APPF -10.1%, ROKU -5.4% on downside

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: ATEC +18.9%, ARDX +16.8%, BFAM +14.1%, AMZN +13.5%, TVTX +12.6%, IRTC +11.8%, RYAN +11.4%, RKT +9.7%, WDC +8.8% (also increases dividend), TWLO +8.5%, RDDT +8.2%, NET +8.1%, WEAV +7.6%, BJRI +7.4%, TEAM +6.9% (also authorizes new $2.5 bln share repurchase program; CFO to retire), MMSI +6.7%, STRT +6.4%, FIP +6.3%, ILMN +5.7%, GDYN +5.4% (also authorizes new $50 mln share repurchase program), WERN +5.4%, CWST +5.3%, AXTI +5.3%, DXC +5.1%, FND +5.1% (also names new CEO, current CEO to become exec chair), FSLR +5%, LUMN +4.8%, SEM +4.7%, SKYW +4.6%, LOCO +4.5%, MSTR +4.1%, ACA +3.6%, FBIN +3.5%, AAPL +3%, ZG +2.8%, COIN +2.7%, GLPI +2.4%, RIOT +2.4%, BTE +2.2%, EW +2% (also CFO to step down), SPXC +1.8%, OSIS +1.7%, ARW +1.6%, HTGC +1.5%, LPLA +1.3%, OHI +1.3%, INGM +0.9% (also increases dividend), NEXT +0.9%, VALE +0.6%, SXI +0.5%, VICI +0.5%, ATGE +0.4%, EXPO +0.3%, KWR +0.2%, AX +0.1%, CUBE +0.1%, PK +0.1%, RSG +0.1%, ARI +0.1%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: METC +14.7% (signs R&D agreement with DoE), SLDP +7.1% (collaboration with Samsung SDI and BMW), LUNR +4.8% (US Air Force contract extension), ALIT +4.3% (expands collaboration to deploy IBM watsonx), NFLX +3.3% (approves 10-for-1 stock split), CYH +2.9% (to sell their 80% ownership interests in two joint ventures), MNR +1.9% (stock offering by selling shareholders), INTC +1.3% (in discussions to acquire AI chip startup SambaNova, according to Bloomberg), AGX +1.1% (to proceed on EPC contract for power plant in Texas), VST +1.1% (increases dividend), SLI +0.9% (Smackover Lithium joint venture receives key final integration approval), AUB +0.5% (increases dividend), CLDX +0.2% (results from Phase 1 Trial of CDX-622)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: SPSC -24% (also authorizes new $100 mln share repurchase program), OSPN -16.2%, GSIT -15.2%, SVV -14.2% (also authorizes new $50 mln share repurchase program), DXCM -12%, RMNI -11.6%, JAKK -10.7%, APPF -10.1%, TBBK -9.3%, ALKT -9% (also names new CFO), CPS -8.7%, ATR -6.2%, DMRC -6.2%, AJG -6%, COLM -5.8%, ROKU -5.4%, MSI -4.2%, MPWR -3.2%, EGO -2.9%, SYK -2.5%, IR -2.1%, RMD -2%, RMAX -1.9%, MTZ -1.8%, TFII -1.7% (also increases dividend), HR -1%, GILD -0.7%, EIG -0.6%, WY -0.6% (also announces updates on recent actions to enhance portfolio quality), GDDY -0.5%, CUZ -0.1%, FHI -0.1%, HLI -0.1%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: CRBP -13.9% (stock offering), RCUS -7.1% (commences stock offering), GBCI -1.7% (files mixed securities shelf offering), NI -0.6% (files mixed securities shelf offering), TREX -0.3% (expands its relationship with Weekes Forest), FCPT -0.1% (files mixed securities shelf offering)

WSJ : ‘Philip Roth’ Review: The Masks of a Writer

‘Philip Roth’ Review: The Masks of a Writer
Roth’s fiction drew heavily on his own life and literary reputation in ways that blurred imagination and reality.

Philip Roth liked to booby-trap his biographers. In “Exit Ghost” (2007), he calls biography “the lowest of literary rackets.” Yet one version of biography kept drawing him back. “Making fake biography, false history, concocting a half-imaginary existence out of the actual drama of my life is my life,” he once said.

In “Philip Roth: Stung by Life,” Steven J. Zipperstein springs the trap. His approach is straightforward: center the writing without pretending the life is dispensable. “There was nothing of greater importance to Roth than his books,” Mr. Zipperstein insists, “his true loves, and the only reason that justifies spending years of one’s own life writing and rewriting a book about him.”

Mr. Zipperstein begins by anchoring Roth’s art in his origins. “What is your background?” William F. Buckley Jr.’s wife, Patricia, once asked Roth. “I didn’t have one,” he replied. “We were too poor.” The poverty of Newark, N.J., in fact, served as Roth’s inexhaustible native ground. In evoking that territory and its immigrant strivers, Mr. Zipperstein writes with the passion of a reader whose life was altered by Roth. He recalls himself as a teenager, encountering Roth’s writing for the first time: His “confessional voice, explosive intelligence, and impatience with dishonesty to oneself all had the feel of a barrage of urgent letters addressed just to me.”

Roth’s honesty with himself acts like a solvent. It removes the epidermis and leaves the nerves exposed. The result is astonishing. Thirty-one books across half a century: the decorous debut of “Goodbye, Columbus” (1959); Alexander Portnoy’s acrobatics with apple, glove, bottle, brassiere and a slab of liver in “Portnoy’s Complaint” (1969); the Kafkaesque metamorphosis in “The Breast” (1972); the filial exasperation of “Patrimony” (1991); the high-tragic architecture of the American trilogy (“American Pastoral,” “I Married a Communist” and “The Human Stain” in 1997, 1998 and 2000); the counterfactual audacity of “The Plot Against America” (2004); and the late-life stoic parables such as “Everyman” (2006) and “Nemesis” (2010). Few American novelists have ventured across so many registers of comedy and calamity.

Mr. Zipperstein is acute about the discipline that made such prolific range possible. Like his fictional stand-in Nathan Zuckerman, who called himself an “unchaste monk,” Roth lived that paradox: monastic at his desk but promiscuous in the freedoms he demanded from every other human arrangement. This was his way of protecting the imagination, of keeping it “on call,” as he once said of his sparse routine in his home in Litchfield County, Conn.: “I’m like a doctor and it’s an emergency room. And I’m the emergency.”

Mr. Zipperstein portrays Roth as “willing to challenge himself on all fronts, to lay bare all his limits as a writer, son, and Jew.” But the biographer also makes clear that Roth cultivated reticence with the same zeal with which he flaunted candor. “Few contemporary writers have shown themselves to be quite as self-referential as Roth,” Mr. Zipperstein writes, “and few self-referential writers have managed, for so very long, to be quite so cagey.” That play of masks—at once disclosing and disguising—animated Roth’s fictional alter egos, incarnations both intimate and inscrutable.

The Jewish question, inevitably, looms large. Roth was reviled for turning Jewish mothers into suffocating grotesques and Jewish sons—“boiling with temptations,” as he put it in “The Anatomy Lesson” (1983)—into ingrates. He was resented for puncturing euphemisms of communal self-regard. For this he was called a self-hater, a shande, or hopelessly obsolete. “It may be,” the author Cynthia Ozick told an interviewer this year, “that Philip Roth especially is likely to leave little or nothing heritable, since he was the product and the purveyor of a sociological outlook; and his sociology is dead.”

But if Roth’s interest in Judaism was intermittent, his engagement with Jewishness—as temperament and as argument—was lifelong. He grappled with Israel’s dilemmas in “The Counterlife” (1986) and “Operation Shylock” (1993) and wrestled with antisemitism in “The Plot Against America,” his novel about an attempted fascist takeover of the U.S. in the 1940s. Roth, in Mr. Zipperstein’s telling, probed Jewish life—and its collision with American ambition—with more fidelity than any rabbinic sermon could offer.

What distinguishes Mr. Zipperstein’s volume—composed with the tact of a historian who has read the archives and the novels with equal care—is how deliberately it resists the temptations that have undone earlier efforts. Previous accounts of Roth, including the one found in a memoir by Claire Bloom, Roth’s ex-wife, have chased the tours d’amour. Mr. Zipperstein suggests that the real drama was not in the bedroom but at the writing desk, where Roth’s quarrels with himself became art. Mr. Zipperstein faults Blake Bailey’s nearly 900-page authorized biography as “curiously tone-deaf to the writing at the epicenter of Roth’s life” and proceeds to tune our ears back to that center.

Mr. Zipperstein records the accusations that clung to Roth—misogyny most of all. But he allows countervailing testimony both from the work itself, which housed women as figures of power and empathy; and from the life, which included unadvertised acts of generosity to friends in trouble (among them the novelist Janet Hobhouse, whom he quietly aided during her final illness, and the Romanian-born writer Norman Manea).

The point isn’t exoneration; it’s proportion. Mr. Zipperstein also restores to view the curatorial Roth and his public literary citizenship. During the course of roughly a decade, Roth curated Penguin’s “Writers From the Other Europe,” smuggling masters from behind the Iron Curtain into American sight: Tadeusz Borowski, Danilo Kiš, Milan Kundera and, crucially, Bruno Schulz. Above all, Mr. Zipperstein returns us from the grievance ledger to the pages where Roth fought his real fights, his struggles with syntax and structure.

The life mattered, yes—its appetites, its feuds, its Newark-ness. But Mr. Zipperstein builds a biography that shuttles us back to the fiction, heritable or not, where the man hid in plain sight. Roth championed writers such as Schulz so they wouldn’t be lost to American readers; this biography returns the favor, rescuing Roth from the noise and restoring him to the exuberant sentences he spent his life turning around.

If literary biography is a racket, this is the honorable version: one that knows when to let the sentences speak.

>>> US Gapping down

Gapping down
In reaction to earnings/guidance
:
  • FMC -29.4% (also President stepping down, reduces dividend sharply), SFM -23.9%, WOLF -19.7%, CMG -18%, PI -13.2%, WPP -11.9%, TMDX -10.3%, EBAY -8.8%, META -8.7%, CVNA -8.4%, WNC -7.2%, MUSA -6.4% (also names new CEO; also authorizes new $2 bln share repurchase program and raises dividend), IP -6.2%, ASTL -5.4% (also CEO to retire, names new CEO and new CFO), STLA -5.4%, RRX -5.1% (also CEO to step down), WLK -4.6%, ALSN -4.5%, XRX -4.4%, SPOK -4.1%, ENTG -3.8%, AGI -3.7%, STEM -3.6%, VNT -3.6%, BIO -3.5%, TEX -3.5%, MO -3.5%, BBIO -3.3%, SBUX -3.3%, PBF -3.3%, HWM -3.2%, MC -3.1%, TNK -3.1%, MRK -3.1%, MEOH -2.9%, BIIB -2.9%, MGM -2.8%, ETD -2.5%, MELI -2.4%, EHC -2.3%, FLWS -2.3%, MSFT -2.2%, TTE -2.2%, TT -2.2%, THG -2%, AVB -2%, TAK -2%, EXP -2%, OPCH -2%, CDE -1.9%, VMC -1.7%, PBI -1.6% (also increases dividend), EXR -1.5%, PPC -1.4%, APTV -1.4%, NTGR -1.3%, ARE -1.3%, DBRG -1.1%, TDOC -1%, CSL -1% (also increases share repurchase target to $1.3 bln for the full year)
Other news:
  • NTLA -15.7% (FDA places clinical hold on 2 Phase 3 trials)
  • CLF -9.2% (pricing of its underwritten public offering of 75,000,000 common shares for expected gross proceeds of $964 mln, before discounts and expenses)
  • DBVT -3.6% (sells ~$30 mln of ADSs through its At-The-Market (ATM) program on Nasdaq)
  • BE -3.2% (announced its intention to offer, subject to market and other conditions, $1.75 bln aggregate principal amount of 0% convertible senior notes due 2030 in a private offering; Bloom Energy agreed to issue to Oracle (ORCL) a warrant)
  • ADEA -1.9% (Federal Court of Canada issues favorable judgment)
  • GBTG -1.8% (stock offering by selling shareholders)
  • MNMD -1.2% (prices offering of 18,375,000 common shares at $12.25 per common share)

>>> US Gapping up

Gapping up
In reaction to earnings/guidance
:
  • GH +27%, GKOS +20.3%, EBS +18.6%, AAP +16.1%, ALGN +14.7% (also announces ClinCheck Live Plan), FORM +14.2%, INSM +13.8%, CHRW +13.6% (also authorizes new $2 bln share repurchase program), VIAV +13.4%, MAX +13.2% (also authorizes new $50 mln share repurchase program), ALGM +12.2%, COMM +10.7%, VRRM +9.9%, MCW +9.8%, CAH +9.5%, RES +9.5%, OMCL +8.2%, TAL +7.9%, CALX +7.7%, CMCO +7.6%, GOOG +7.5%, BHC +7.1%, PRM +6.5%, LXU +6.4%, WHD +6%, TENB +6%, ROG +5.8%, MDXG +5.7%, IART +5.7%, JBSS +5.5% (also special dividend of $1.00/share), EL +5.5%, ING +5.4%, ASX +5.3%, LLY +5.3%, SIRI +5.3%, UPBD +4.7%, CROX +4.7%, UTZ +4.4%, PFS +4.3%, ATRC +4.2%, BLDR +4.1%, GRBK +4%, SPGI +3.9%, VAL +3.5%, SNCY +3.5%, AME +3.5%, LCII +3.4%, HII +3.2%, JOE +3.1% (also increases dividend), AMRX +3.1%, KMB +3.1%, LNC +3%, LKQ +3%, NOW +2.9% (also approves 5-for-1 stock split; also expands strategic collaboration with FDX Dataworks), SKWD +2.9%, TW +2.7%, RWT +2.4%, ARMN +2.4%, NVCR +2.4%, ARGX +2.3%, ABEV +2.3%, MGY +2.2%, CVI +2.1%, BWA +2.1%, CCCS +2.1%, AEM +2%, MKL +2%, TTMI +1.9%, QSR +1.9%, BMY +1.9%, UDMY +1.7%, RIG +1.6%, XEL +1.6%, FCFS +1.6%, XPO +1.6%, CGNX +1.5% (also increases dividend), MORN +1.5% (also authorizes new $1 bln share repurchase program), APLS +1.5%, CMCSA +1.5%, RSI +1.3%, PRU +1.3%, CI +1.3%, FIBK +1.2%, WAY +1.1%, AWK +1.1%, BUD +1%, DINO +1%
Other news:
  • TECX +22.4% (reports Phase 1b results for TX45)
  • GPRK +19.1% (confirms rejection of acquisition proposal from Parex Resources)
  • MTSR +19.1% (Novo Nordisk (NVO) Submits Proposal to Acquire Metsera)
  • SVRA +3.9% (prices $130 mln offering consisting of common stock and warrants)
  • FRMI +2.1% (secures 157.5 MW turbine deal to power world's largest private energy grid)
  • NBHC +2% (increases dividend)
  • WVE +1.1% (Activin E data from its INLIGHT clinical trial of WVE-007)
  • OCS +1.1% (announced the pricing of offerings of an aggregate of 5,432,098 of its ordinary shares at $20.25 per share for total gross proceeds of $110 million)
  • CENX +1% (Jamalco joint venture resumes production following landfall of Hurricane Melissa)
  • DINO +1% (expansion of its Midstream refined products footprint)