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    Euro area inflation aligns with forecasts, Deutsche sees more cuts from ECB

    Energy prices, which often influence inflation rates, contributed significantly to the rise. However, this impact is not expected to concern the European Central Bank (ECB). Service prices showed a stronger increase than anticipated at 4.0% year-over-year, while goods prices increased by 0.5%, slightly below expectations.At the country level, Germany reported a higher-than-expected inflation rate of 2.9% year-over-year. This was primarily due to a rise in core inflation, although changes in the calculation method for the Consumer Price Index (CPI) in December make it challenging to discern clear trends. In contrast, the inflation data from Italy and the Netherlands did not meet expectations, balancing the overall inflation figures for the euro area. Deutsche Bank (ETR:DBKGn) analysts commented on the inflation data, indicating that the ECB’s approach to policy-making focuses on broader economic trends rather than individual data points. They noted that while the annual rate of services inflation has remained close to 4%, there has been a slowdown in the momentum of service price increases. Domestic inflation is still high but is beginning to decelerate, and wage growth is also moderating.Deutsche Bank maintains a positive outlook, anticipating that the slowing pace of service inflation will contribute to a return to lower overall inflation rates. They expect HICP inflation to drop below the ECB’s 2% target starting from February. If these projections hold, the ECB could potentially adopt sub-neutral policy rates in 2025. Today’s inflation figures, which did not show any significant negative surprises, support the prediction that a cautious easing of policy during the ECB’s January meeting remains the most likely course of action, the economists concluded.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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    Spain to issue 60 billion euros in net debt in 2025

    He added that gross debt issuance would reach 278 billion euros, versus the 257 billion euros issued last year, which was equivalent to 17% of the country’s gross domestic product. Cuerpo told a news conference that the government was giving itself “enough flexibility to respond to the reconstruction needs” following devastating floods in southeastern Spain that killed 224 in October.In terms of debt-to-GDP ratio, Madrid expects it to stand at 101.4% by the end of 2025, down from 102.5% at end-2024. Spain’s GDP “kept pace” in the fourth quarter of 2024, Cuerpo added, outpacing other large economies in the European Union. The government estimates GDP growth for the whole of 2024 was 2.7%. It expects the economy to grow by 2.5% this year. ($1 = 0.9606 euros) More

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    Divergence: the balance sheets edition

    $75 per monthComplete digital access to quality FT journalism with expert analysis from industry leaders. Pay a year upfront and save 20%.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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    China says U.S. suspicion of security risks in Chinese drones is ‘irresponsible’

    China is strongly dissatisfied with and firmly opposes the U.S. investigating its drone systems and said it will closely monitor the situation.China also urged the U.S. to respect facts and immediately stop what it called “erroneous practices”.The U.S. Commerce Department said on Thursday it was considering new rules that would impose restrictions on Chinese drones to restrict or ban them in the United States, citing national security concerns. More

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    Europe’s power price divide hits southeastern economies

    ATHENS/PARIS (Reuters) – For Athens restaurant owner Christos Kapetanakis, rent has always been high, but now he faces what he calls “a second rent” as soaring electricity bills slash profits and force him to raise prices. Kapetanakis pays between 3,000 and 3,800 euros ($3,083-$3,905) a month on power, up 40% since Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022 and triggered a European energy crisis. Electricity used to amount to 3% of monthly turnover and now it’s more like 15%, he said. “The continuous increase in prices, especially in the tourism sector…will lead Greece to become less competitive compared to other Mediterranean countries,” he said from his restaurant in the historic Plaka neighbourhood. His predicament has been echoed across the continent since the Ukraine war interrupted Russian pipeline gas supplies to Europe and forced countries like Greece to seek more expensive alternatives. But southeast Europe has felt the impact much more than the northwest. Experts say that will only widen as winter hits, and will have a knock-on effect on economic growth.Wholesale power in Greece and Italy in August were 12 times higher than in Nordic countries and even dwarfed other southern European countries which were experiencing hot weather. HIGHEST IN THE EUSince 2021, Greece has spent 11 billion euros on energy subsidies to try to protect customers. In 2022, the spend amounted to 5.3% of GDP – by far the highest in the EU and double that of second-placed Italy, according to France-based energy consultancy Enerdata. Despite Athens’ efforts to shield citizens from the energy cost rises, the situation has exacerbated a cost of living crisis in Greece in the wake of a 2009-18 debt crisis that slashed wages, pensions, and investments in power production and transport.”Increased energy prices and a negative impact on GDP are a tautology,” said Nikos Magginas, a senior economist at Greece’s National Bank. “Increased prices have a negative impact on household consumption and on the cost structure for industries, airlines and shipping.” Much of the contrast between southeast Europe and its neighbours comes down to investment. While the northeast has power and gas lines that allow the easy transfer of energy between nations, as well as a strong mix of renewable sources, much of southeast Europe is fragmented and isolated.Power storage, which is becoming increasingly important in northern European countries, is nonexistent in parts of the southeast. Germany has 1,668 megawatts (MW) of large-scale storage capacity, versus none in mainland Greece, according to data from LCP Delta, an Edinburgh-based power consultancy. “Southeast Europe and the Balkans are lacking in (electricity) interconnects. Whenever there is a power shortage, and renewables output is low, they struggle to import the necessary volumes,” said Henning Gloystein, head of energy, climate and resources at Eurasia Group. In contrast, Spain’s renewable power generation has skyrocketed in the past decade, in part thanks to EU funding. It generated almost 60% of its electricity from renewable energy in the first half of this year, up from 51% a year before. “If you don’t invest, energy prices will stay high,” Gloystein said. MORE TO BE DONEEurope’s power network is in many ways a great success. In 2022, France increased imports from Germany when nuclear power output dipped. When Russian gas supplies to Europe via Ukraine were halted last week, the price impact was muted because the bloc had found alternatives. But for some, more needs to be done. After power prices spiked in Greece last summer, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis wrote to the European Commission demanding a solution to the “unacceptable” differences in electricity costs across Europe.Greece is not alone. Much of the Balkans relies heavily on fossil fuels and the regional power system is weak. Last June, a power outage hit Montenegro, Bosnia, Albania and Croatia when the grid was overloaded by air conditioning needs during a heatwave. Kosovo, which generates more than 90% of its power from coal, is struggling to catch up with the rest of Europe in installing more renewables. In December, it launched an auction to install 100 MW of wind capacity. But the World Bank estimates that it needs 100 times that – at least 10 gigawatts of new capacity – to meet its target of eliminating coal usage by 2050. This transition is estimated to cost Kosovo 4.5 billion euros, a daunting sum for the small economy. Without enough cross-border integration or storage, sometimes there is too much power for one market, forcing producers to curtail supply. “If the target is more concretely to reduce prices, the easiest way to do that is to increase penetration of renewables or nuclear,” said Fabian Ronningen, an analyst at consultancy Rystad Energy.While Greece has no nuclear plants, Aristotelis Aivaliotis, secretary general of the Energy Ministry, is upbeat, noting renewable output is on the rise, two new gas-fired power plants set to come online this year, and battery storage to be built by 2028.Plans also call for power links with Italy, Albania and Turkey to be upgraded by 2031 at a cost of about 750 million euros. “Wholesale prices will gradually fall … and this will definitely get passed on to consumers at some point,” Aivaliotis told Reuters.Greek customers are not convinced. Taxiarchis Fekas, who lives in a suburb of Athens, struggles to pay school tuition and allowances for his three children because power bills are so high. He urges his kids to reduce their laptop and tablet use to save power – a tough ask for young children glued to their devices.”We are on the verge of becoming a financially struggling family,” he said. “The government needs to pay attention.” ($1 = 0.9730 euros) More

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    India forecasts 2024/25 economic growth of 6.4%, slowest in four years

    NEW DELHI (Reuters) -India forecast annual growth of 6.4% in the year ending in March, the slowest in four years and below the lower end of government’s initial projection, dragged by a weaker manufacturing sector and slower corporate investments. India’s had initially projected a growth rate of 6.5%-7%.The forecast by the National Statistics Office (NSO) follows several disappointing economic indicators in the second half of 2024 – including low growth, high inflation, anaemic capital flows and a record trade gap – that cast doubt on the robustness of the country’s growth.Last month, the Reserve Bank of India (NS:BOI) lowered its growth forecast for the year ending March 2025 to 6.6%, from its earlier forecast of 7.2%, after India reported lower-than-expected growth of 5.4% in July-September, its slowest pace in seven quarters.The full year projection suggests growth will revive somewhat in the second half of the year to 6.7%, said Aditi Nayar, chief economist at rating agency ICRA.In nominal terms, which include inflation, the economy is expected to grow 9.7%, compared with the 10.5% estimate in the annual federal budget announced in February 2024.Nayar added that given the slowdown in government spending earlier this year, India might trail its budget gap estimate of 4.9% for the current financial year.Private consumption, which accounts for nearly 58% of GDP, was seen expanding by 7.3% year-on-year compared to 4% in the previous fiscal year.But private investment is seen rising by 6.4%, lower than 9% growth in the previous year. Government spending is estimated to rise by 4.1% year-on-year in 2024/25, up from a 2.5% increase in the previous fiscal year.Sectorally, growth is seen supported by a pick-up in farm output, which contributes about 15% of GDP and employs more than 40% of the workforce. Farm output growth is seen picking up to 3.8% in the current fiscal year, from 1.4% a year ago, following an abundant monsoon.Manufacturing, which accounts for about 17% of GDP, is projected to expand at 5.3% year-on-year in 2024/25, compared with 9.9% a year ago, while construction output was seen growing by 8.6%, down from 9.9% in the previous year, data showed.The advance estimates will see further revisions and Madhavi Arora, economist at Emkay Global, said the figure might be optimistic. The economy might face “downward pressure, implying a downside risk to the 6.4% estimate,” amid weaker investments by companies, she said. GROWTH DEBATEIndia’s central bank said last month the underlying reason for the slowdown in growth was inflation, which has eroded purchasing power of urban consumers.But in a rare comment, the government’s latest monthly economic report said the central bank’s monetary policy stance and regulatory measures may have caused a demand slowdown. The report added the growth outlook for October to December appeared bright, with rural demand remaining resilient and urban demand picking up.Indicators from corporate earnings have remained mixed.Among the first major corporates to report third quarter earnings, India’s Dabur, which makes products ranging from honey to toothpaste, estimated its revenue rose in the low single-digit percentage range in the third quarter due to subdued demand for healthcare and beverage products. But jewellery and watch company Titan reported robust demand.Growth in the year beginning April 1, 2025 will be influenced by global and domestic uncertainties, said ICRA’s Nayar, projecting GDP growth of 6.5% in the next financial year. More

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    US CFTC chair Behnam to step down on Jan. 20, FT reports

    His departure on Jan. 20 would pave the way for Trump to name a successor who could be more aligned with his deregulatory agenda as Washington prepares for a new cadre of federal regulators. The U.S. derivatives watchdog did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment outside business hours.Trump is expected to replace Behnam with one of the agency’s Republican CFTC commissioners – Summer Mersinger or Caroline Pham – as acting chair.A permanent chair would need Senate confirmation and Trump’s transition team is also considering external candidates.A commissioner at the derivatives regulator since 2017, Behnam became acting chair in 2021 and was later given the role permanently. He was also a senior counsel to Senator Debbie Stabenow, a Democrat who chairs the Senate Agriculture Committee. The CFTC under Behnam was seen as less harsh toward the cryptocurrency industry when compared with the hardline approach that Gary Gensler, as the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission had adopted. But the crackdown on crypto exchange Binance for violation of anti-money laundering laws by the CFTC ended in one of the largest corporate penalties in history and the exit of its talismanic chief, Changpeng Zhao. Trump has picked Paul Atkins, a Washington lawyer known for his crypto-friendly stance, as the next SEC chief.Behnam told the FT the regulation for the crypto industry remained insufficient. “You still have a large swath of the digital asset space unregulated in the U.S. regulatory system and it’s important… that we fill this gap,” he said.The CFTC remained “well positioned to be a spot regulator for digital commodity assets”, he told the British newspaper. Under Behnam, the CFTC had squared off with event contract marketplace Kalshi, rejecting the use of derivatives to bet on the outcome of political events such as the U.S. presidential election. But a court ruled in Kalshi’s favor, boosting the popularity of election-related betting as Americans headed to the polls in November.Behnam told the FT he was concerned about the legality and social impact of bets on political and other events.”The line is going to be very blurred about what is legal, what’s illegal,” he said, as technology and high retail demand drive growth in these markets.In line with his focus on climate-related market risk, the CFTC in September approved the first guidelines for trading voluntary carbon credit derivative contracts in the U.S., a move expected to bolster confidence in the nascent market. More

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    Eight UK economic themes for 2025 – Deutsche Bank

    “It’s not all doom and gloom. Yes, uncertainty is high – but economic tailwinds are still with us. Government spending should be a boon for the economy. Household balance sheets remain healthy. And business investment remains on a tear — despite the weaker activity data seen thus far in H2-24,” analysts at the German bank said, in a note dated Jan. 6.“The big fly in the ointment will be how the increase in payroll taxes washes through the economy. This will have important ramifications for inflation and the labor market. A temporary resurgence in inflation is our base case – particularly as energy prices also push higher.”Overall, the bank expects the UK economy to remain steady, despite some turbulent headwinds spilling over into 2025. “We see growth this year reaching 1.3% in 2025 (2024: 0.9%), lifted in large part by continued household spending (including a sustained increase in house prices), business investment, government spending, and some inventory building. Risks to our projections are balanced,” Deutsche Bank said.Deutsche Bank currently forecasts Q4-24 to see 0% q-o-q GDP growth – signalling no growth in the entire second half of 2024. But it doesn’t expect 2025 to be as weak, as underlying GDP growth has been stronger than the headlines suggest. Gas prices have soared recently – something households will be watching closely. The Ofgem Price Cap has already registered two consecutive quarterly increases. Our models now point to a hefty spring increase of near 7%-10% should gas and electricity futures prices remain steady for the next month or so. This would add another 0.25pp to our already elevated headline CPI projection for Apr-25.The consensus may be underestimating inflation, the bank said. A central hypothesis of ours is that headline CPI will reverse course in 2025 – albeit temporarily. After averaging 2.6% y-o-y, we see price momentum rising to around 3%, citing higher energy prices, a reversal in food price momentum, the rise in employer National Insurance Contributions to also add to retail prices, and  continued services inflation keeping headline CPI above-target. A push higher in the unemployment rate looks likely, with jobs demand having slowed – particularly following the Autumn Budget. We see the jobless rate rising above 4.5% by late spring— above the MPC’s and OBR’s projections. Equally, we expect pay settlements will likely come in softer. As unemployment rises, and the labor market cools, pay settlements are likely to fall further. The German bank remains optimistic on house prices this year for a number of reasons. With CPI around the BoE’s target, savings becoming more liquid, we expect housing demand to pick up in 2025, adding the recent rise in mortgage approvals over the last few months is indicative of growing demand. From a fiscal policy perspective, there will be three key things to brace for in 2025. First, big revisions to the OBR’s macroeconomic projections are likely given market rate expectations and recent growth data. This should shift fiscal projections meaningfully following on from the Autumn Budget. Second, spending pressures are likely to only pickup as economic growth fails to match the fiscal watchdog’s more optimistic projections (including social benefits). Third, as a result of the above, more borrowing and tax rises, we think, will be likely this year. The Government will publish its long-awaited Industrial Strategy in 2025 – something that will make many headlines. Where the Government focuses its efforts in raising productivity – including investment – will be important. The execution of planning reform will also be critical in directing infrastructure and housing investment.  International events will matter to the UK economy, namely how the US decides to deal with UK trade going forward. The implementation of tariffs – both direct and indirect – will weigh on domestic growth. The UK’s reset with the EU will also be an important economic and political milestone. More