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Preliminary GDP data had indicated that the Italian economy was still in a phase of stagnation in the third quarter. The second estimate, released today by Istat, revises the figure slightly upward, showing quarterly growth of 0.1%.

Preliminary GDP data had indicated that the Italian economy was still in a phase of stagnation in the third quarter. The second estimate, released today by Istat, revises the figure slightly upward, showing quarterly growth of 0.1%. From the supply side, Istat confirms that value added increased in agriculture and services, while it contracted in industry.
As usual, the second GDP estimate includes details of demand components. The slight quarterly growth was mainly driven by net exports (+0.5% contribution), household consumption and gross fixed investments (+0.1% contribution each), which more than offset the negative contribution from inventory changes (-0.5%).
The negative impact of inventories is stronger than we had expected, while investments in machinery and equipment and household consumption are more robust. The sharp drop in inventories in the third quarter increases uncertainty for the fourth quarter; in our view, the probability of a positive surprise is now higher, even without radical changes in consumption and investment trends.
On the consumption side, given the decline in consumer confidence in November, we expect only marginally positive dynamics in the fourth quarter. As for investments, we expect continued momentum from infrastructure projects linked to the recovery and resilience plan and investments in machinery and equipment, which should benefit from the spending of the last available funds under the Transition 5.0 plan.
Overall, Italy's updated third-quarter data seems to indicate a gradual exit from stagnation. Business confidence data for the fourth quarter also suggests a timid improvement in industry, though risks remain due to the potential impact of US tariffs on Italian exports. For these signals to gain strength, we will likely need to wait until Germany's ambitious investment projects start to materialise.
Based on today's data, we slightly revise our forecast upward to 0.2% for GDP growth in the fourth quarter and 0.6% for average growth in 2025.
The ex-husband of Virginia Giuffre, who was one of sex offender Jeffrey Epstein's most prominent accusers and took her own life in April, may add his name to the list of those fighting over her estate, lawyers in an Australian court said on Friday.
Robert Giuffre, an Australian martial arts instructor who was married to Virginia from 2002 until shortly before her death at the age of 41, according to media reports, could join as a party seeking access to the estate, alongside the former couple's sons Noah and Christian, their lawyer Jon Patty told the Supreme Court of Western Australia.
Court filings show the two sons applied to manage the estate but were opposed by Virginia's former lawyer Karrie Louden and former carer Cheryl Myers.
Robert could also join as guardian to their young daughter, Patty said in a short case management hearing. Patty added that an independent party could be appointed to represent the daughter to prevent a conflict of interest. The court did not allow publication of the daughter's name because she is a child.
No representative for Robert was present in court and he could not immediately be reached.
Virginia Giuffre gained global attention with allegations that she was trafficked to Britain's former Prince Andrew as a teenager. That case was settled in 2022 with a substantial donation and undisclosed payment. Andrew was stripped of his titles in October after the release of Giuffre's posthumous memoir, which detailed new allegations against the 65-year-old who is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
Giuffre was involved in at least four lawsuits when she died, according to court filings. But she did not have a valid will so the court appointed an administrator to oversee her estate, effectively reopening the cases.
At the hearing, registrar Danielle Davies heard the list of people vying for access to Giuffre's estate might grow.
A $10 million defamation claim filed in 2021 by a person associated with Epstein is among the pending lawsuits. Epstein was jailed in 2008 for child sex offences and killed himself in prison in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex abuse charges.
Australian court filings show there are also contests over Giuffre's memoir rights and inheritance claims.
Davies, the registrar, gave the parties until Monday to submit more documents outlining their claims, and said a date for the next case management hearing would be set next year.
"We've cleared some major hurdles. I didn't leave here until 2:15 a.m., but it was worth it," Markus Söder, chairman of the conservative Bavarian CSU, said on Friday morning at the Chancellery.
Looking a little tired but satisfied, Chancellor Friedrich Merz (CDU), who sat next to Söder at the press conference, echoed this sentiment.
"The coalition is capable of acting," said the chancellor.
There had been doubts about its ability to govern in recent days, mainly because a group of young lawmakers in the conservative government faction wanted to block a planned pension bill they said would prove too costly to younger generations.
On this tricky issue, the coalition of Merz's CDU, Söder's CSU and the Social Democrats said on Friday it would not change the pension bill, but to commit to comprehensive pension reform after 2032.
Whether that will be enough for the young conservatives will be seen next week — that is when the pension bill is to be brought before the Bundestag.
The coalition has only a majority of 12 votes, and at least 18 conservative members of parliament voiced strong opposition to the bill. So it could be a close vote.
Merz, for his part, said he was "counting on approval."
11/28/2025
Parliamentarians in Berlin on Friday are expected to pass Germany's 2026 budget after months of wrangling. This year's budget diverges from those of the past by depending heavily on borrowing to finance big-ticket programs after decades of balanced budgets and calls to stick to the so-called "black zero" policy of incurring no new debt.
Approved by the country's Budget Committee, the plan allocates a total of €524 billion ($607.7 billion), €97.9 billion of which will be borrowed. Some €58.3 billion will also be poured into new infrastructure investments through a special budgetary measure that passed in March and is exempted from prior rules clamping down on debt spending.
Germany's so-called "debt brake" — from which special funds are excluded — limits new borrowing to 0.35% of GDP.
Germany has increased investment 10% year-on-year over 2025, pumping it up to €126.7 billion for 2026.
Total new debt resulting from the budget and special funds will be around €180 billion, an amount surpassed only at the peak of the coronavirus pandemic.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) projects Berlin's budget deficit will grow to 4% of GDP in 2027, with debt expected to climb to 68% — the lowest in the G7.
Ethereum (ETH) reached a critical trendline in 2025, sparking speculation about a $10,000 target. Institutional inflows and key opinion leaders highlight potential growth opportunities.
The trendline suggests strong market optimism towards Ethereum, influenced by whale accumulation, ETF inflows, and whale sentiment, which may accelerate ETH's climb closer to the significant $10,000 mark.
Ethereum has reached a historic trendline, prompting discussions among investors about a possible $10,000 price target. Analysts emphasize the importance of recent price action and accumulated interest from large investors.
Key figures like Vitalik Buterin and institutional investors are integral to Ethereum's current trajectory. Whale accumulation and Ethereum ETFs position the cryptocurrency market for potential significant gains.
The cryptocurrency market has seen increased positivity as institutional investors show growing confidence. This influx suggests a shift in how Ethereum and similar assets are viewed, particularly among large-scale investors.
Continued institutional inflows reinforce Ethereum's role in the market. These trends reflect potential changes in broader financial strategies, highlighting a more bullish sentiment driven by large stakeholders.
Ethereum's market position is strengthened by its historical behavior during similar periods. Analysts draw parallels to past bull runs that saw substantial gains following initial accumulation phases by large stakeholders.
Insights indicate that financial, regulatory, and technological outcomes may substantially alter Ethereum's pathway. Underpinning factors include historical trends and ongoing market analyses predicting price trajectories and long-term growth potential.
Ali Martinez, On-Chain Analyst, - "If Ethereum closes decisively above $3,980, we may see a run toward $4,500, possibly setting the stage for a $10,000 scenario later in the year."
Britons reacted overwhelmingly negatively to Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves' budget, the first opinion poll since it took place has found, suggesting little relief for the Labour government's slumping popularity.
Respondents to a YouGov survey conducted after Wednesday's statement said they saw it as unfair rather than fair by a margin of 48% to 21%. That's the second-worst score recorded by YouGov for a budget since it began tracking sentiment in 2010. Only the infamous market-roiling "mini-budget" held under former Conservative prime minister Liz Truss in 2022 fared worse.
Half of those surveyed by YouGov said Reeves' budget would leave them and their family worse off, compared with 3% who said they would be better off. Only 3% said the economy was in a "quite good" state, with 0% saying it was in a "very good" state. Two-thirds said they expect it to get worse in the next 12 months.
The numbers show the scale of the challenge faced by Reeves and Prime Minister Keir Starmer to turn around their fortunes. Just 16 months into power, voters have turned on the Labour government after a series of mis-steps and policy U-turns that have left Starmer's position in question.
YouGov found some individual measures were popular, such as reductions in energy bills, a freeze on rail fares and new taxes on mansions and gambling. However, a tax rise on workers and the expansion of family benefits were considered by a majority of voters the wrong thing to do at this time.
Taxing workers, by freezing thresholds for a further two years, contradicts Labour's key election promise not to increase the tax burden on 'working people.' A day later, the government announced it would drop a key measure from its flagship workers' rights package that awarded day one protections against unfair dismissal, another manifesto pledge.
Another pollster Luke Tryl of More in Common, said voters would be unimpressed by the chaotic run-up to the budget, and noted that Starmer and Reeves appeared to have prioritised the interests of their governing Labour Party and financial markets over voters.
"If they had three audiences, the public, the markets and the parliamentary Labour Party, they chose the last two because they matter most for short term-survival and they think they've got longer with the public," Tryl said in an interview with Bloomberg.
Markets rallied after Reeves expanded her buffer against her fiscal rules though declined on Thursday in something of a reality check. Labour members of Parliament, especially those on the left of the party, expressed support for measures such lifting the two-child cap on benefits and higher taxes on the wealthy.
"Measures to help with the cost of living such as lowering energy bills are likely to be well received. Some Labour voters will also like scrapping the two child benefit cap," said Ipsos' Keiran Pedley. However, he cautioned that "tax rises are likely to be controversial, as we are already seeing a gradual increase in sentiment that taxes should be cut".
"The wider issue for the government is that public negativity about the state of the economy and performance of the government is at such a level that it is very hard for them to get the benefit of the doubt," Pedley said.
Leading economists also criticised the lack of a plan to boost economic growth in Reeves' statement and warned that her proposals to repair the public finances may not be credible.
"It was a bits-and-pieces budget. There was no sense of reform or direction, I think is the most worrying part of this," Paul Johnson, a former director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, told Bloomberg Radio. "You look at what they have actually done so far, and net, it's clearly had a negative impact on growth."
"Most of the fiscal repair job has been put on hold for three years," said Ruth Curtice from the Resolution Foundation, a left-of-centre think tank with close links to the Labour government. "Appearances can be deceiving," she added, warning the country faced "plenty more bracing budgets".
Euro zone consumers raised their near-term inflation expectations a touch but kept them unchanged further out, a European Central Bank survey showed, supporting bets that price growth remains around target and no more rate cuts are needed.
Inflation has been hovering around the ECB's 2% target for most of this year and policymakers see it around this level even over the medium-term, a rare success for a bank that struggled with ultra-low inflation for a decade before a post-pandemic surge to above 10%.
Consumers surveyed in October see inflation in the next year at 2.8%, above the 2.7% predicted a month earlier, while price growth three years ahead was seen at 2.5% and five years out at 2.2%, the ECB said on Friday.
The figures, based on a survey of 19,000 adults in 11 euro zone nations, appear consistent with policymaker views that inflation is no longer a worry and, even if some domestic price pressures continue to linger, prices are on the way down to target.
This is why financial markets see almost no chance of a rate cut next month and see only a one-in-three chance of any further easing next year, with most economists betting that the interest rate cycle has bottomed out.

Income and spending bets also supported this narrative. Consumers' income growth expectations in the next year rose to 1.2% from 1.1%, while expected spending growth was unchanged at 3.5%.
While the ECB is keeping the door open to more rate cuts, it made clear it was in no hurry to change policy and some policymakers even argue the bank may be done cutting after halving the deposit rate in the year to June.
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