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    France services PMI dips amid political concerns

    Political uncertainty in France is impacting the country’s services sector, according to a recent survey. The HCOB France services Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) dropped to 46.9 in November, a decrease from the 49.2 recorded in October, signaling a contraction in the sector’s activity. The final reading, however, did show a slight improvement over the flash services PMI of 45.7 points reported earlier in November.The broader final composite PMI, which encompasses both services and manufacturing, also experienced a decline, registering at 45.9 points in November, down from 48.1 points in October. This marks a continuous loss of momentum for France’s services sector, which has seen three consecutive months of declining ground. The temporary boost in business experienced during the summer, attributed in part to the Paris Olympics, has since been overshadowed by growing political concerns.Hamburg Commercial Bank economist Tariq Kamal Chaudhry commented on the downturn, noting the fleeting nature of the positive trends observed during the summer months. Chaudhry highlighted that the recent data underscores the vulnerability of business sentiment amid the political uncertainty surrounding Prime Minister Michel Barnier’s government. The potential collapse of Barnier’s minority government, particularly due to a budget deadlock, is adding to the anxiety within the French business community.Furthermore, the survey indicated that French business confidence in November fell to its lowest level in over four years, reflecting the apprehension felt by businesses in the face of the political instability. The situation with the government and the subsequent impact on the euro zone’s second-largest economy remains a focal point of concern for investors.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    German firms in China report record low business sentiment

    German companies operating in China are experiencing unprecedentedly low business sentiment due to increased competition and a slowing Chinese economy, according to the German Chamber of Commerce in China. A survey conducted by the chamber revealed that over half of the German businesses reported a deterioration in industry conditions this year. Additionally, a mere 32% anticipate any improvement by 2025, marking the most pessimistic outlook since the survey’s inception in 2007.Clas Neumann, chair of the German Chamber of Commerce’s east China chapter, highlighted the challenges faced this year, leading to a negative revision of future expectations. Despite this, he noted that a significant 92% of German companies are committed to sustaining their presence in China’s vast economy.Germany serves as China’s largest European trading partner, with major companies like Volkswagen (ETR:VOWG_p), BMW (ETR:BMWG), and Bosch (NS:BOSH) having substantial investments in the country. This troubling sentiment among German firms echoes similar concerns raised by a British business survey conducted the previous day, which also depicted a gloomy scenario.Foreign direct investment (FDI) in China, though only a small fraction of the country’s total investment at 3%, has seen a decline for two consecutive years. This trend suggests waning confidence from international investors. The chamber’s findings show that 87% of the 51% of German businesses planning to increase their investment in China over the next two years are doing so primarily to compete with local firms. This represents an annual growth of eight percentage points in investment motivation.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    Euro zone business activity contracts in November

    In November, the euro zone experienced a sharp decline in business activity, with a significant contraction in the services sector adding to the downturn already seen in manufacturing. The final composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), a key indicator of economic health, compiled by S&P Global for the currency union, dropped to 48.3, down from October’s neutral score of 50.0.Although the November figure was marginally above the preliminary estimate of 48.1, it remains below the crucial 50 threshold that distinguishes economic expansion from contraction. The downturn in services is particularly concerning as it had previously been supporting the overall economy. This marks the sector’s first contraction since January, as noted by Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank, who highlighted the negative implications for growth prospects within the major euro economies.The services PMI fell to 49.5 in November from 51.6, indicating the first contraction in the sector this year. Moreover, the composite new business index, which measures overall demand, saw a steep decline to 46.8 from 47.9, reaching its lowest point in 2023.Despite the overall downturn, there was a slight increase in employment within the services sector, with the employment index inching up to 51.0 from the previous month’s 50.3. This suggests that services firms are still recruiting even amidst reduced business activity.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    OECD cuts German growth outlook for 2025 amid political woes

    The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has revised its economic growth forecast for Germany, predicting a slower rate of 0.7% in 2025, a decrease from the previously projected 1.1%. Isabell Koske of the OECD highlighted the nation’s expected underperformance, stating, “In 2025, Germany will bring up the rear among OECD countries.”This downgrade comes in the wake of political turmoil following the collapse of Germany’s ruling coalition last month, which is anticipated to exacerbate economic challenges. The recent victory of Donald Trump in the U.S. presidential election has also heightened concerns over potential trade conflicts with the United States, Germany’s key trading ally.The OECD pointed to the heightened medium-term uncertainty stemming from the inability to finalize the 2025 budget and the disintegration of the coalition governmentAs a result of the political instability, several economic stimulus measures planned by the government are now unlikely to be enacted before the early elections scheduled for February 2025.Germany, Europe’s largest economy, is expected to trail the euro-zone’s average growth rates of 1.3% in 2024 and 1.5% in 2025. Despite the near-term challenges, the OECD foresees an uptick in economic activity for Germany in 2026, with growth accelerating to 1.2%.Supporting factors for the economy include low inflation and increasing wages, which are projected to bolster real incomes and private consumption. The OECD also anticipates a gradual recovery in private investment, fueled by high corporate savings and a slow decline in interest rates. However, persistent policy uncertainty is likely to continue dampening investor confidence, according to the OECD’s economic outlook.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    BoE Governor sees gradual rate cuts in next year

    Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey has indicated that a series of gradual interest rate cuts is likely to occur over the coming year, asserting that the decline in inflation is solidly taking hold. In remarks made at the Financial Times Global Boardroom event, Bailey emphasized that while inflation had decreased to the Bank’s target during the summer, expectations were set for a subsequent rise above the target level.Despite a drop in British inflation that aligned with the Bank of England’s 2% target over the summer months, October saw a larger-than-anticipated increase, propelling inflation rates above the target once more. The acceleration of underlying price growth was also noted.Following Bailey’s interview, the British pound experienced a downturn against the U.S. dollar. The Bank of England had factored in financial market expectations of four interest rate reductions in the next year into its latest economic forecasts. Bailey clarified to companies anticipating these cuts that the Bank’s projections are based on current market rates, which had indeed suggested four cuts, and he stressed the term ‘gradual’ in the Bank’s report.Bailey also addressed the complexities of predicting inflation in the context of increased protectionism and the potential rise in trade tariffs should Donald Trump return to the White House. He stated that while trade tariffs influence traded prices, the overall impact on inflation is complicated and depends on various factors, including the responses of other countries and the behavior of exchange rates.This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C. More

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    US think tanks’ policy ‘grand bargain’ offered as bargaining falls from favor

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – In another era, agreement among analysts from leading left, center, and right-leaning think tanks over a sweeping plan to address major fiscal and social issues might carry some heft in Washington policymaking.In today’s culturally infused, party-line politics, when establishment voices particularly among the U.S. Republican party have been sidelined, perhaps not so much.But after a yearlong debate and analysis, Brookings Institution, Bipartisan Policy Center, and American Enterprise Institute economists and analysts have still given it a shot, outlining a national “grand bargain” addressing everything from immigration and decarbonization to tax and entitlement reform.Launched on Tuesday with a forum at Brookings, the authors have no illusions about how their plan will be greeted by the incoming Trump administration. While some of the ideas aren’t inconsistent with things the president-elect and his circle often favor, such as expanded school choice, stricter teacher accountability, and regulatory reform, it also recommends things they don’t, such as adopting a carbon tax, a bigger safety net for the poor, a large federal role in building out a decarbonized electric grid, and increased federal taxes as a share of gross domestic product.The point, said American Enterprise Institute economist Michael Strain, who co-chaired the group along with Brookings senior fellow and social policy expert Isabel Sawhill, was to show compromise across broad principles at least was possible.”If someone felt that school choice is a huge concession, maybe they feel happy about a carbon tax or a Social Security system that is more generous to elderly Americans in poverty, or higher revenue to GDP,” Strain said. While the document as a whole might be considered a “second- or even third-best” set of solutions viewed from any particular political position, “it does move the country as a whole in a better direction.””You want to be clear-eyed and realistic. This is a 100% Republican controlled Congress, and they don’t have a ton of incentives to cooperate,” said Ben Harris, vice president and head of economic studies at Brookings and a former top adviser to President Joe Biden. “This is more a medium-term play. To solve some of the biggest challenges we need bipartisan compromise.”Harris, who participated in Tuesday’s forum, noted in an interview beforehand the “discomfort” many Democrats would feel around entitlement reform, for example, even as they’d cheer things like expanded school nutrition and richer tax credits for the working poor.The slate hits enough red lines for one group or another that the title page notes it represents the views “of the individual authors,” not their institutions or the sponsoring organization, the Center for Collective Democracy.The tradeoffs proposed are often explicit: Less devoted to retirement and health care “for affluent seniors,” for example, in return for greater spending on “vulnerable seniors,” education, and “earnings subsidies for the working poor.”The spending curves of the major entitlement programs would be bent slowly towards financial sustainability, with a cap on Medicare spending and a Social Security system made solvent and more progressive with a higher retirement age and benefits that grow more slowly for those better off.Tax increases would be relied on more at first, “phasing into a much larger share of the savings coming from spending cuts over time,” the document states. The “politically broken” income tax system would be changed to encourage investment and discourage consumption, with value added taxes replacing some income taxes, for example, and allowance for businesses to fully deduct investment costs but not interest on debt.More federal money would be spent on basic research, in hopes of improving the economy’s potential; immigration would increase, but through a doubling of employment-based green cards in hopes of using the system “to increase workforce and economic growth, fuel innovation, and increase the nation’s stock of human capital.”None of it may gain traction, Strain said, absent a “forcing event” like a sustained rise in government borrowing costs, perhaps, or Treasury auctions that struggle to find buyers.As current White House Council of Economic Advisers Chair Jared Bernstein said, it seemed to be a “highly rational report in a moment that is perhaps a little less rational.”But there’s still hope for the center even in polarized times, said G. William Hoagland, a senior vice president of the Bipartisan Policy Center and one of the document’s authors.The ideas may be “aspirational” in the current environment, he said, but “I would hope that at least some of the policy makers coming in at least glance at the document. Maybe they can’t agree. But at the margins I would hope they could see the benefit in the long run.” More

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    BoE governor expects four UK rate cuts next year as inflation eases

    $1 for 4 weeksThen $75 per month. Complete digital access to quality FT journalism. Cancel anytime during your trial.What’s included Global news & analysisExpert opinionFT App on Android & iOSFT Edit appFirstFT: the day’s biggest stories20+ curated newslettersFollow topics & set alerts with myFTFT Videos & Podcasts20 monthly gift articles to shareLex: FT’s flagship investment column15+ Premium newsletters by leading expertsFT Digital Edition: our digitised print edition More

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    BIT Mining Limited Announces Commitment to Litecoin (LTC) and Dogecoin (DOGE) Mining

    “At BIT Mining, we believe our cutting-edge technology and forward-thinking strategy uniquely position us to adapt to market shifts and seize new opportunities,” commented Xianfeng Yang, CEO of BIT Mining. “By combining innovation with agility, we are enhancing our competitive edge and creating value for our stakeholders. As the cryptocurrency market continues to evolve, we are ready to grow alongside it, leveraging our strengths for long-term success.”As of November 27, 2024, the Company has mined 84,485.42 LTC and 227,908,250.38 DOGE since it started the LTC and DOGE self-mining business. With over 5,552 active LTC/DOGE/BEL mining machines (capable of mining three coins at the same time, BEL coin is newer and relatively more volatile) delivering a combined hash rate of 18.94 TH/s, the Company currently represents 1.32% of the total global network hash rate in LTC/DOGE/BEL, as one of the largest participants.BIT Mining’s commitment to Litecoin (LTC) and Dogecoin (DOGE) is a major strategic action following the Company’s 2021 acquisition of Bee Computing, a semiconductor company dedicated to blockchain hardware design and development. Since the acquisition, the Company has launched power-efficient LD3 miners, one of a few cutting-edge machines that delivers highly cost-effective performance while offering the shortest payback period for LTC/DOGE/BEL mining, increasing profitability and solidifying its position as a market leader. Beyond many years of chip design knowledge accumulation, and three years of dedicated efforts developing crypto miners, the success of LD3 has proven BIT Mining’s forward planning and long-term devotion to blockchain technology, where miners stand firmly in the foundational base to validate and support the whole ecosystem.”The recent rally in Litecoin and Dogecoin, fueled in part by Elon Musk’s influence and the changing regulatory landscape in the US after the Trump win, has had a major impact on mining profitability,” noted Dr. Youwei Yang, Chief Economist and VP of Mining at BIT Mining. “Ongoing advancements in blockchain technology, particularly in network interoperability, are fueling optimism in the crypto market, with Dogecoin and Litecoin gaining significant momentum. Many analysts predict this upward trend will continue through 2025, reflecting confidence in DOGE’s potential and the broader growth of the cryptocurrency industry.”Having recently announced an expansion into Ethiopia, the Company continues to be at the forefront of industry and technology innovation, securing premium mining and data center resources while building strong international partnerships. With a renewed focus on mining machine development, self-operated mining, and data center operations, the Company is well positioned to thrive in the rapidly evolving crypto environment.To learn more about BIT Mining, visit www.btcm.group. More