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...This may come as a surprise to some....
...However, there were also signs of banks starting to stabilise the availability of credit to the economy in the first three months of this year, following a four-year tightening period, as they cut the cost...
...Officials have begun large-scale cost cuts at dozens of state-owned groups as part of their effort to balance Argentina’s budget this year, opening up fierce conflicts with staff and unions....
...*This article has been amended to reflect that the loan to Yellow was from the federal government...
...If the Reagan‑Thatcher revolution was about crushing union power, the pendulum seems to be shifting in favour of labour. Unions are changing too....
...The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation is expected to show that price pressures eased slightly in January, but progress is likely to be limited given what is already known about inflation last...
...The latest tightening of credit spreads comes as improved investor confidence helped push European stocks to a record high this week, boosted by blockbuster results from chipmaker Nvidia, which “transformed...
...focused on letting banks borrow as much as they need through regular short-term financing operations....
...As the union pushes to expand into more locations, Starbucks has raised benefits and mandated employee meetings that discuss the downsides of unions, workers said....
...Exclusive: Brookfield Asset Management is in advanced talks to buy a majority stake in $22bn private credit manager Castlelake, a specialist lender to airlines, as the world’s second-largest alternative...
...Students at Munich’s technical university are able to take part in programmes at UnternehmerTUM as part of their degrees, where they are able to receive the same amount of credits as for an academic course...
...changing behaviour,” the BPI and the American Bankers Association said in a joint submission to the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporate and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency...
...The US president sought to ease the pressure on would-be homeowners through tax credits outlined in this month’s State of the Union address, but that benefit is unlikely to have as big an impact as lowering...
...The last pieces of that puzzle — conceived by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and known as Basel 3.1 — are now close to being slotted into place across the western world....
...The Bank of Japan has held off on lifting negative interest rates, sending the yen lower as its governor said it was in no rush to change its policy before the US Federal Reserve considers cutting rates...
...Nominal credit card debt hit a record $1.13tn in the last three months of 2023, growing at one of the fastest rates in more than 20 years, according to the New York branch of the Federal Reserve....
...As recently as early November, investors on both sides of the Atlantic were fearful about the implications of “higher for longer” interest rates, as central banks continued to wage battle against inflation...
...He is about to go to the US to visit the architects of the Inflation Reduction Act, which has led to huge private investments in US manufacturing capacity due to the simplicity of its tax credits....
...The federal structures are far too complex for that.”...
...The US Federal Trade Commission last month sued to block Kroger’s $24.6bn bid to buy rival Albertsons, the largest supermarket deal in history....
...Need to know: UK and Europe economy The Bank of England’s financial stability watchdog said today that private credit and leveraged lending markets remained vulnerable to “sharp revaluations” as the war...
...Biden has promised homebuyers a tax credit worth up to $400 a month for the next two years — though such a measure would require congressional approval....
...The proposal issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on Tuesday would subject non-bank companies that offer digital payments to a regulatory scheme similar to that for banks or credit unions....
...So, my question to you, Ed, is — why isn’t Biden getting more credit for all this? And what, if anything, can he do to grab some?...
...The threat posed by the subsidy race, however, is again to the single market as a whole, not to the monetary union....
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